Archive for August, 2008

In sync

I am looking out over an empty cove under blue sky. It is a shame to sleep in on such a day. The air is chilly; it is, after all, the last day of August, right on cue the summer is ending and the fall starts with the frenzy that accompanies back to school and back to work. I went to Staples to buy supplies for my upcoming trip and realized too late that my timing was really bad. The usually quiet store was filled with weary parents and whiny kids. “Dad, I don’t want that plastic ruler, it will break!” “Sorry, you will have to be more careful!” (plastic ruler lands in basket, dad grins, son pouts).

I have finished my last two vacation sewing projects, something for myself and something for a doll (for whom? asked Axel, in a typical utilitarian male way – not for anyone, just for the fun of it, I answered). The sewing table has been cleared so that there is room to put out everything that has to go with me to Abidjan. The table is filling up with electronics/facilitation supplies and stuff to give away; there is a little to make myself comfortable in my hotel room (teakettle, coffee and tea, watercolor set, books)’ the remaining space in my suitcase is for clothes (very little).

I used to prepare weeks ahead of time for my trips but lately I stopped doing that. Partially because I did much of that in my own time (which happened to be vacation in this case) and partially because I will be working with a team and it is not good form to arrive with everything thought through already, even though they may prefer that. And maybe the third reason is this card I bought at the bookmill in Montague with Sita on Thursday. It is from Brian Andreas who makes whimsical illustrations of well known but ignored truths. The card shows a woman holding on to a pole with her body and feet in the air and underneath the words ‘If you hold on to the handle, she said, it’s easier to maintain the illusion of control. But it’s more fun if you just let the wind carry you.’

One of my team mates is Oumar who I worked with years ago in Guinea. When we write to each other we always start with the words ‘cher frère, chère soeur.’ He was also in a terrible accident (road) and we haven’t seen each other in our recovering states. I am looking forward to see him.

Joe and Axel went to the ballgame last night, which left me with a delicious late afternoon and entire evening alone. I worked in the garden planting our fall crop, sat on the porch reading, and puttered around in my room, going through my library and making a four-feet high pile of books to give away. It was a trip down memory lane as I read scribbles or flagged pages that indicated what I was learning when; some books were signed and took me back to lectures attended in a period when I was like sponge absorbing everything I could about organizations. The books that landed on the pile seem boring, irrelevant, or stating the obvious; I got rid of all the Tom Peters books and wondered what happened to him, a meteor who disappeared into a comfortable retirement maybe?

Joe is finally done with his work for MSH. I watched him from my vacation vantage point as he got up in the dark and came home exhausted, in the early evening, day after day. It is as if I was watching myself. I have enjoyed not getting up at 4:30 and have decided, by way of experiment, to start going into work late, after the morning rush when I get back from my trip – I am liking this waking up and going to bed at the same time as Axel does – our clocks more in sync.

American story

We went for a visit to Sita and Jim in their new home in Haydenville, just a little further into rural America after Northampton where droves of students were busy finding their way around town and the Smith College campus.

 

The village of Haydenville is so small that you could easily miss it when driving through. There is no cell phone coverage, no signal to get any interesting TV or radio, no fast internet connection and in the beginning no phone either. For a couple whose livelihood depends on good and fast internet connections, this made for a slow start. Now they are somewhat connected and living (very) rural at the same time.

 

They live next to the police station and across from the fire station. An empty lot next door has been turned into a badminton court and no one has complained. There are no fences and gates and little of the ‘me and mine’ attitude that is so present in Manchester. There is a brook down the street with a lovely little beach that includes a bunch of small waterfalls with stone seats beneath them; those are good for upper back and shoulder massages.  Someone told Sita there are water snakes and so she is not using this free offering of Mother Nature.

 

Their house is lovely, half of an old farmhouse with porches front and back and brightly colored rooms, one yellow, one orange, one pink and a large turquoise and black kitchen. The cats adjusted quickly and seem less neurotic. The yard has a joint vegetable garden, an apparatus that produces sun dried tomatoes and other vegetables, and a little boy on a swing set while his mom, their neighbor, plays the guitar. It is the kind of scene I remember from record album covers of American bands that stood in contrast with the large, fast and big image that I first had of the USA. I fell (then) and still fall now for such a romantic scene.

 

Sita took us to the Montague Book Mill, a half-hour drive to a most picturesque old mill, next to another brook, and, as the name says, full of books. Their motto: ‘books you don’t need in a place you can’t find.’ It is way off the beaten path, on the Connecticut River and not easy to find if you don’t know about the place. Axel and I happened to know about Montague, or Turner Falls as it is known on the aeronautical map because of its tiny airport, where we landed and picnicked on July 14, 2007, hours before the unhappy ending of that day at Gardner airport.

 

Axel was the only one who exercised self restraint by not buying any books; Sita and I had no such restraint and we each came home with a few more books ‘we don’t need’ while our mates rolled their eyes.

 

By the time we got back to the house Jim had returned from his Manchester-by-the-Sea office which is in his dad’s house. He still needs to be there several days a week until he has sorted out how to do his job, which I still don’t understand, from their rural home.  Jim was too pooped to cook or think about dinner at home and so we took everyone out to a sushi fest in Northampton, followed by ice cream and coffee before we parted to our respective homes.

We drove down (East) on the Mass Turnpike while listening to Obama’s acceptance speech. All through it I marveled at this wonder that put the grandson of a Kenyan farmer on a direct road to the White House. It’s a very American story.

Vacation, cont’d

The end of my vacation is beginning to appear on the horizon. With that also comes the vague outline of a trip to Africa. The malaria pills have been purchased and a trip shopping list is taped to my computer.

 

But before that happens I have a few more days to enjoy living in this most beautiful place. It was another glorious day today, for flying, gardening, reading and doing nothing.  The last two evenings, before the sun went down, we took the boats out, Axel in his kayak and I in the Alden shell, to enjoy the end of the day. On Tuesday we went to Singing Beach, today to Manchester harbor.  It’s a short outing, not too strenuous but good exercise for Axel’s arm and getting our strength back, without it feeling like ‘have-to’ exercise.

 

Last night we had a cookout on the beach, the first of this summer, a bit late. By the time Joe joined us it was dark and the mosquitoes gone, the fresh tuna grilled and the (home grown) potato salad ready with cold ratatouille, one of our favorite summer dishes, hot or cold.

 

Both of us had therapies today. Axel made another visit to the vestibular therapist at MGH, a short therapy that uses up the entire morning because of the time it takes to get there (by train).  He is learning much about how the brain coordinates what comes in from the senses and when it can learn and when it cannot. The experience lends itself to countless organizational metaphors. He is making progress and I expect the therapies will all be ended in the next few months, after which he and his brain are on their own.

 

My (physical) therapy may have been the last for some time, as I am waiting for the doctor’s opinion about what is going on in the sacroiliac region. The therapist told me I am mechanically OK, everything is aligned as it should be. The problem remains with tendons and muscles, all the ones in my neck and upper back are still full of knots and tight as elastic bands.  May be it is time for a weekly massage again. The problem is that no one reimburses that and it gets a bit costly at $80 an hour.

 

So far I have managed to stay away from my computer to check emails. I know there will be a price to pay for this later but this is the first vacation in a long time that I have completely unhooked from work. It is working! I am as stress free as one can get.

 

Tomorrow we are going to visit Sita in her new home in Haydenville near Northampton where she used to live. I would have liked to fly there but no one in our family is ready for me to fly with Axel in the co-pilot seat. So, instead of a 40 minute flight, it will be a 3-hour drive each way, which will take up a sizeable part of the day. It is good that we like each other’s company so much.

Rainbow

On the way home in the plane I read Axel some more from Tolle’s latest book. I could see from his furrowed brow that he was trying to figure out how to get enlightened as per Tolle’s prescription. Since it does not include any action verb (as in ‘doing’), Axel was racking his brain how the heck to do that, when the word ‘do’ was itself out of bounds. Finally he threw his hands up in exasperation and said, “What does he want me to do, just be a rainbow?” Clearly, Axel is not even close to being enlightened. He agreed on that. I am not either but because some of the things he talks about do resonate with me, according to the book, I am on my way. I do get the thing about being present in the present.

In Atlanta Axel had his pinky nail painted in hot pink by Ingrid’s cousin Amanda from Seattle, along with other guys who fell for her charms. She lifted everyone’s spirits, as one would expect from a stand up comedienne. Axel kept his pink pinky until we got on the plane, back to the ordinary world where no one is enlightened and would understand this guy with a beard and a pink pinky who wants to be a rainbow.

We drove into Cambridge after we landed in Boston to pick up a pair of Red Sox tickets for a game this Saturday from Phil and Joellen who could not use them. The last time I saw Joellen was when she treated me to a birthday lunch, hours before my nightmare commute home that lasted 10 hours on that fateful blizzard day in the middle of December. Phil just finished his latest book, Yankee Go Home, which is being edited before being released to the world of potential publishers. It is about anti American sentiments which he explored during his many travels around the world. It should be good. We stayed for a bit to catch up and then headed home, driving only a few miles ahead of Joe who had just flown in from San Diego to continue his consulting assignment with MSH. It is the same work we started in June, helping one of MSH’s Centers get centered, with as desired outcome a clear identity and a three year work plan.

Dinner was, once more, a mostly homegrown affair after which Joe went off to bed and we settled in front of the TV to see the start of the National Democratic Convention. I lasted for about 15 minutes. I could not stand the inane talk that was delivered as commentary before and after each speech. There is something about campaign rhetoric that I am allergic to. After my live experience of the stamping and clapping and sign waving at Deval Patrick’s primary victory celebration I got enough for a lifetime. As a psychologist I watch the mass hysteria with professional interest, but as a US citizen I find it scary. The whole event is slightly more bearable when I listen without watching; I did listen to Ted Kennedy and to what I hope will be the next first lady and the spontaneous comments from her two girls.  I was not touched by any of it, the use of words and references, quotes, and probably color of ties and dresses are too scripted for me, even though I appreciate excellent speakers. I imagine that everything is finely tuned and calibrated to win over the millions of fence sitters in this country. I hope they were watching more intently than I was and that this will influence their vote in November.

Parting

It’s another dreary day in Atlanta. Hurricane Faye is still hovering over the southeastern states. We are leaving in a few hours to go fly back to Boston and hopefully resume the glorious late summer we left behind on Saturday.

The service for Linda was attended by many, pressed together under a tent in a beautiful park near her home in the Candler area of Atlanta. We were greeted by a blue grass band, the same that played at Erik’s funeral 18 months ago. Music was a big part of their lives; I learned that Linda had a beautiful voice and frequently performed in public with her dad when she was in her late teens.

Outside the tent swarms of butterflies and an occasional hummingbird were trying to get our attention; passing messages from the other side, I imagined, about beauty, caring, nature, transformation and joy, all words that had some connection to Linda. Her children spoke, with great difficulty – grief and words hardly go together – about what it had been like to have her as a mother, recounting moving and funny episodes of their lives with her. We sang Alice Krauss’ Fly Away through our tears and then watched a slide show of Linda’s life amidst all those who were near and dear to her, some sitting with us under the tent, others long gone.

And then came the saddest part of a funeral, the parting of the guests, family and friends. Death and funerals are of course about departing. The run up to the service takes and brings so much attention that the raw grief about the loss is held at bay; but when the departing starts and all is over and the ‘new life without’ has started, then large waves of sadness come rolling in from all sides. At least that is what I imagine for those in whose lives Linda played a big role.

We rejoined a few at the parental home, now without parents, with piles of papers, bills, possessions, unfinished business and a thousand reminders of them; a house and a household that had gotten little attention, as all was focused on Linda in her dying days. Axel was so overwhelmed by it that he left the house to simply be in the gardens, once beautiful but now utterly neglected because of the drama that had played out inside over the last few months.

We said our goodbyes and went back to our hotel for a nap. Although we spent much time searching the internet for dining and movies in Atlanta, we ended up at a local strip mall Thai restaurant, and watching a rerun of an inspector Linley on TV, which we remembered more and more as it neared its dramatic ending.

Happysad

We are in Atlanta now. We arrived last night and made it just in time to the restaurant where everyone had gathered for dinner, to see the bills being paid; we ended up eating leftovers at the house where everyone, family and friends, gathered around Ingrid and Todd, leftovers themselves now that both their parents have passed away; a house full of memories of Linda and Erik. The last time we were here we had come to bury Erik, less than 2 years ago; now it was their mother. It was nearly the same crowd that had come together the night before for a communal dinner of remembrances and reconnections.

Before we left for Logan airport we made a cameo appearance at the Magnuson family reunion which, in true Magnuson fashion, got off to a slow start. This meant we got to see only a very small percentage of the relatives, including Sita and Jim who arrived when we left. We were sad to leave and Axel had a particularly bad time, being torn between relatives in Gloucester and Atlanta; the Gloucester reunion a happy event in glorious weather, the Atlanta event a sad one in rain and overcast skies, caused by the latest hurricane to touch the South East. A death in the family can be like a hurricane in its devastation.

A notch of confidence

When Arne told me this morning that my plane was available all day, and the briefer told me the weather was going to stay perfect all day along the route I selected, I knew the time had come to venture out on my own for a long cross county flight. My colleague Wolffy and his wife Carol were going to be a destination for a few more days and that clinched the deal. I set off at around 10 AM, heading to Katama via Provincetown and Barnstable and arrived a little after the estimated arrival time. I got a little lost after P’town because I had not properly programmed the GPS. I am sufficiently at ease now talking with traffic control along the way that I simply requested the correct heading to my destination which got me straight into Katama. Part of me was excited and part of me was very nervous; and so was Axel.
Wolffy and his dog waited for me at the airfield and saw a less than stellar landing on the grassy field, but a landing nevertheless. He took me to his lovely Main Street home where he and his wife Carol fed me ice coffee and something to eat; less than two hours later I asked to be dropped off again at the airfield. I could not quite relax the way one should when on Martha’s Vineyard in the summer because there was still that second half of the trip to complete. On the way back I turned on the automatic pilot and trimmed the plane to keep its altitude at exactly 2800 feet after which there was little else to do than watching the sail boats underneath and the miles counting down to Beverly.

Still in the plane I immediately called Axel after I landed; I knew he had mixed feelings about this trip, actually no different than mine. It was nice to tell him I had succeeded and that my confidence was, once again, one notch up from what it was before I set out on my own. He was having a late fried clam lunch at Woodman’s in Essex, something he craves a few times a year, an indulgence I don’t care that much about. He took his cousins Ben, 88, and his son Clark who had flown in from Florida for the family reunion. They had the same kind of craving.

When I came home I prepared a mega version of my Manhattan (Kansas) potato salad from a recipe that I learned from our friend Pam who hails from Manhattan, while we both lived in Dakar. It is a recipe that dates from the time when sugar, eggs and butter were considered good for you and so I rarely disclose the ingredients list (it has all of these in large quantities – ask me if you really want to know). I still have the 28 year old yellowed and by now brittle piece of paper with her handwritten instructions tucked in the front of my Joy of Cooking cookbook. I have created a reputation for the best potato salad; Axel’s bragging landed me the job of making such a salad for some 45 people for tomorrow.

Tessa and Steve and several friends congregated at our house on their way to a wedding of one of their own, one of the first I believe for her cohort. I never see these kids dressed up and it was quite a sight to see them in their Sunday best; except Steve who simply chose a tuxedo tee-shirt – this in sharp contrast to Tessa who loves to dress up. She had traded in yesterday’s shoe selection for another pair, with a wedge that was even higher, lifting her up to the length of a basket ball player.

When everyone was gone Axel and I donned our swim suits and sat by the high tide’s water’s edge, enjoying the view and the quite time, appreciating our luck to be living in the most beautiful place in the world, with the emphasis on ‘living.’
 

 

Projects

My vacation is being continued at home. Work appears far away, as far as Maine. I had been collecting projects in my mind before my vacation started and I tackled them today as if there was no tomorrow. The first project was putting various plant and bush cuttings in soil. This was a cinch even though one of the cuttings had been waiting for about 6 months for this event. The second project was varnishing an old table that we bought at a yard sale for 5 dollars. It will be our porch table and needed a new finish. This project will carry me through Saturday morning.
Next I pulled up the zucchini plant that had taken possession of a significant part of the garden real estate; and even though it was full of blossoms and baby zucchini, it had to go to make room for something Axel has in mind. I staked the tomatoes and took all the large green ones off the vine to ripen on the windowsill; some creature was eating them as soon as they turned pink. I cut the raspberries back, pulled up the last of the beets and carrots and weeded Axel’s unused patch. I also uprooted another couple of potato plants and harvested another few pounds. From now on we will be eating our own vegetables and nothing else to keep up with the production.

It was a ten plus summer day, no wind with clear blue skies that made me regret I had not planned to fly to the Vineyard as conditions were ideal for my first long cross country solo since last July. May be tomorrow.

Axel went to Boston for his speech therapy and was picked up by cousin Nancy on his return to go food shopping for the Magnuson reunion on Saturday that we will mostly miss because of the funeral in Atlanta. Our daughters will represent us for the full afternoon.

Coated with sweat and dirt from project number three I washed everything off with a swim in the cove, followed by a bike ride to the physical therapist who concluded that all is not well with my sacroiliac joints, a compression and an inflammation which may explain the pains I have each time I get up from a seated position. “It feels boggy down there,” she said and recommended ice packs and another set of exercises. The long walks in Maine are also coming to haunt me and by the end of the day I walked like an invalid.

Tessa returned back from an interview for an internship with an organization that sometimes competes and sometimes collaborates with MSH and was offered a paying internship on the spot with a title that will look nice on her still very barebones resume. She was very excited and will start to work right away on her first assignment: putting a photo database in order for graphic designers to use. I am very proud of her and know they made a good decision to hire her. Unfortunately I cannot follow what she will be doing because of the sometimes competitive nature of our two organizations.

Steve and Tessa’s friend Roy (who, together with Steve, made the mini ramp into my sick room last July) arrived with girl friend Rose for dinner. They are in the area because of a wedding. This was the occasion for Tessa to cash in her share of the spa gift certificates that Ellie gave the three of us last summer. I would have accompanied her to get my nails done too if I hadn’t sliced my finger on a clam a few days ago. My trip to the nail spa will have to wait until the fingertip has healed and when I too have an occasion for painted nails. Maybe I will do that with Sita who also still has her gift certificate. After dinner we talked a reluctant Tessa into modeling her top two choices for the wedding event and helped her make up her mind: brown dress and matching shoes. Axel and I (as parents do) thought she looked stunning.

Small Point Trilogy – part three – Clams

Today is our last morning in Maine of this vacation. It is a still and cold morning, the air is crystal clear after yesterday’s winds and rains, and it feels like fall. Fall comes early in Maine and I believe it has arrived. People are leaving, summer houses are cleaned out, students go back to school, all the traditional summer activities have been played out, the play, barley bright, the tea party with the handwritten invitation. Andrew left last night with the kitties so no one is meowing or wanting attention of me and I can sit here and write in peace. Only the cat hair on my computer is there to remind me of them.

Yesterday started with sun at low tide and an ominous cloud deck in the south that eventually brought us wind and rain. But that was later. We clammed in the early morning sun. It was my first serious attempt at clamming. When Axel asked where the rakes were KB clawed her fingers, indicating they would have to do the raking. I got injured on clam number 3 when I sliced the top of my finger on its sharp edges; this left me a one-handed clammer for the rest of our outing but that did not slow me down. We produced enough clams to provide lunch to five people. The thrill of the hunt got a hold on Axel. Once he got his technique perfected it was hard getting him up to go home. He would spot the unmistaken hiding place of the clam (a tiny hole in the sand) and was back on his knees, digging again, shouting from time to time, “got yah” as he pulled out another clam; “one more,” he pleaded, over and over again. We had to drag him away.

When we arrived home, the clouds moved in. Wind and rain kept us inside for the rest of the morning and most of the afternoon. In between visiting relatives (the place is awash in relatives of our hosts) we kept busy with indoor activities, water colors for me and oil painting for Axel. I tried to recall my lessons on mixing colors and dragged up what I remembered with the help of a book and then through trial and error. I rediscovered that French aquamarine is grainy and leaves an edge while cadmium red or yellow does not. I had not painted in a long time and realized again how much fun it is. I only like to paint objects, alone or together as a still life; land or seascapes, no matter how breathtaking, frustrate me. On our walks I would look for interesting colors and shapes to find them in abundance: dried seaweed, shells, stones, shellfish remains, flowers; when you look for inspiration it is everywhere in the most ordinary places.

Later in the afternoon the clouds had gone and the sun sparkled on the water again, leading us out on another walk to another point. We followed a path that provided more abundance, this time of huckleberries, blackberries and the most stunning views which we took in listening to more stories about days gone by, family celebrations, tragedies and the simple life.

Evening brought more relatives who helped us clean out the refrigerator. We said our goodbyes to Andrew who needed to get back to work, and the kitties and settled around the big hearth with a roaring fire for more conversation. I took up my knitting, which is nearly a reflex when it is cold and joined the others in front of a fire with intense conversations going on to my left and to my right. I was happy as a clam (even though the real clams had come to an unhappy ending, alas!),

Small Point Trilogy – part two – Warm

Today it is Tuesday morning, August 19. When I started my computer this morning to write, a reminder popped up. It said: vacation. As if I might forget!

I woke up from a dream that had me back in a leg cast. First I was in a wheelchair but I forgot it someplace and a nice gentleman came to my rescue with crutches and accompanied me to a hospital that was without power. During a rare moment when power returned we took the elevator up to a floor with cancer patients and premature babies. It made my handicap feel very insignificant. The rest of the dream had vanished by the time I started writing.

We are living entirely by the tides; a sharp contrast with the life back home that is controlled by the clock. I have not worn my watch since we got here. It is lying uselessly on my bedside table. I will put it back on when it is time to go home, which is, much too soon, tomorrow already.

This morning the Cambodian cat is sitting by my side, wanting attention. She too has a motor that roars as she purrs like there is no tomorrow. She is skinny with a black and fox red fur that makes her look more like a wild animal. Her orange coated sister must have gone out hunting; she’s nowhere in sight. This is a good thing, writing with two purring machines that try to walk over my keyboard and rubbing my screen would have been a bit much.

I woke up at my usual time, the crack of dawn, an hour before dead low tide when we will go on a clamming expedition. We had planned to do that yesterday but not everyone was up. Axel slept in and we felt no need to wake him. Instead Katie Blair and I sat on the deck overseeing the sweep of the bay and the cloudless sky. It was a 10 plus day and we spent it entirely outdoors. A long walk to one of the many points, along a path cut through lush poison ivy interspersed with ripe blackberries on each side. I was the mosquito attractor and allowed the others to have a free ride; still it was wonderful. We sat overlooking the ocean and listened to Katy Blair explaining family relationships and landholdings, and when we had enough of those (there is no end to these stories), she told us classroom stories about children with Asperger or underdeveloped sensory nerve endings. Since we are reading much about brains and nerves, these stories are fascinating to us; beside, KB is a gifted story teller.

I collected crab remains that the sea gulls had left on the rocks. I was looking for shapes and colors that made them good objects for my water color painting, anticipating this activity with great joy later in the day. They were added to the fava beans, the raw beans, the cooked beans and the pods which were also waiting to be water colored. I fell for the many shades of green which I hoped to re-create. I brought the instructions from my water color mixing class, a skill I once possessed but have lost since.

The day slowly unfolded; a post-walk swim, a late lunch consisting of cold soups; a boat ride on the other side of the peninsula in white-capped waters and stiff winds that we had been unaware of in our lee-side hideaway; another walk on the beach, and finally the long awaited water coloring; and the day was still not over. We started cooking at 8 PM, a large wild salmon with the new potatoes and various grilled vegetables. Dinner too was a long and drawn out affair, as the entire day had been. But when dinner was over I had nothing left in me. I don’t even remember putting my head on my pillow.


August 2008
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