Saturday, December 31, 2016

everything is tomboy



from the sea (5) –  merging and menopause  by freda karpf



 “There is not a drop of water in the ocean, not even in the deepest parts of the abyss, that does not know and respond to the mysterious forces that create the tide.” Rachel Carson

     Homilies are confusing animals. They burrow in the psyche.  Mrs. Scattergood barely understood them in school.  There was a time in her twenties, her thirties too, when she wanted to have them in her head the way others did.  She didn’t know the stories everyone grew up with and at least these sayings, she thought, would create a structure of the world for her, provide a ready wisdom.  A bird in the bush, two in the hand. That sort of wholesale cultural knowledge about commerce and frugality. Eventually she did absorb some of those into her vocabulary.  But she had no idea what sayings she needed now.
~
     “How do you know how to trust yourself?” A young woman at work asked her.  ‘How do you know?’ Mrs. Scattergood didn’t know. The woman didn’t understand the idea of trust. She didn’t at that age either. Mrs. Scattergood couldn’t summon up a way to explain.  She learned later that the young woman was living with another woman. Was that what was going on then?  Her fear of being who she was in the culture that, at the time, could only accept heterosexuals?  How in the world do you tell someone how to listen to themselves?  Should she tell her to listen for the snow?  Or listen for her inner pirate?  Or put a shell to your belly and listen to the ocean?  Some questions accumulate against the fence. Some blow through and you forget you even had them.
~
     Her feelings were the ladder she used to climb to that part of her brain that was words.  Translation is often a matter of time and experience; of knowing the idiom. Yes, it can take decades.  She would pause when asked a question.  Not to gather her thoughts.  She wasn’t sly or deliberate.  Although she recognized its function she couldn’t even figure on how to cultivate either quality. She had to taste her thoughts and words. 
~         
     Mrs. Scattergood had an impossible time remembering something and really wanted to.  It was something she thought she had caught and it felt important. But what was it?  She had no clue; only the certainty there was something. The desire to remember remained like a watered down pheromone. Whatever it was, even without topic, subject or key word, it still seemed important. That’s menopause. But it could also be a mind distracted with worry and woes. 
~
     Mrs. Scattergood was lost in her thoughts.  It used to be her favorite place to be.  There she cooked and plotted, planned and stewed, steeped and sautéed.  Then she’d gently fold them into her mind and drift through another moment. She captured her awareness as if she had netted a butterfly. Of course she wouldn’t do that to a butterfly.  She read that Nabokov and his scientist friend were walking through the woods sampling everything that came their way. Crickets tasted like lobster. Butterflies didn’t taste good at all.  If physicists that posit that form and form alone is itself matter she would think it bad form to eat butterflies.  Still she thought about their delightful patterns of color and shapes sliding down and merging with her being.  Delightful tasty thoughts that form and form alone would bring her. 
~
     It all goes. It flows. Memory has very large openings between the knots in its net. There are laws to protect small fish from the catch. These laws are truly loop holes, larger openings so that the fish can pass through. That is memory.  A small fish.  At times, even a school.
~
     Without knowing it Mrs. Scattergood was trying to claim herself back from the wild blues.  Back from grief and concerns over her home, even tried to recall the tomboy tenderness she fashioned from her own hands. One lover would come to her and say she needed a hug. If she held her too long, embraced too deeply, she would pull away. Nothing was said. Seemed like Mrs. Scattergood wanted to take something from her.  She thought all she had wanted was to send her love.  But was she trying to send a message?  A feeling with no voice? Was it a desire to purge her affection? Mrs. Scattergood wanted to give these feelings away, to find relief from the love.  She should have known. Mrs. Scattergood should have known. This one was attractive because she recognized melancholy as a legitimate way to entertain the hours.  But it was not livable.
~
     People share memories and try to find connections the way children work at pick-up sticks, paying careful attention to the details, how one piece of their common history touches another.
~
     “She wasn’t for you,” Baubo said as if that were a choice.  “I know. I know,” Mrs. Scattergood answered. “Her complaints became a barrier. I was too close, too far, not specific, too many details. I was a bad butch. I was a butch in training, a Pygmalion butch, a soft butch. A butch with no sense of style, with strings hanging from my clothes and a heart that got tangled. I was mishpucha. I was Diaspora dyke; I wasn’t butch enough.” 
~
     Mrs. Scattergood told Baubo as if she didn’t know already, “If I can't share my woes what good is sharing my joy with you? You won't know how high they can be without the measure of quality assurance that a woe can do.”
~
     It was foggy out just like her memory.  Dampness hanging in the air. All these years later Mrs. Scattergood still sized up trees now as a reflex.  Her hands remembered the feeling of bark that might have looked dried but held the morning’s moisture. The tender times are often in the morning when you can climb a tree or see the beautiful curves on a woman’s back and steal tenderness from her limbs.
~
     Mrs. Scattergood remembered moving up the tree. Every limb was coated with dirt that the wind blew. She had patches of dirt here and there where her sweat didn't keep it off her body. She was climbing through the shadows. You don't always look up when you're climbing but when you do, you see pieces of blue. It feels like you're breathing in the sky.

Friday, December 30, 2016

what you create matters




from the sea (5) –  merging and menopause, inner pirate part 2  by freda karpf


     What you create in the world matters. Tea should be nearby.  You are safe. Those that you loved were real. They were not shimmering mirages dissipating as the road draws near. Now they’re timeless companions that hold you to a certain universe and bring warmth to a distance that is not met by flesh and breaking bread but kept close and true by memory.
~
      Mrs. Scattergood finds joy in smelling summer on skin; in being pricked by the salt from the ocean drying on her. Summer is the season of connection. Old salts, old pirates always a notch away from the inner pirate that steered the course without a care but to follow the best winds in cahoots with the currents.
~
     Like other days, Mrs. Scattergood felt that today was a good day to capture something essential.  What was it though?  Vague feelings about to emerge like liminal thoughts on the cusp slipped back into the river like a fish. Mrs. Scattergood had been transcribing notes from writing pads, loose pieces of paper and a spiral bound notebook. Aren’t we all spiral bound?  Some more than others. Often she would look at these notes and not remember the why of it.  This is how writers become mystics. The cryptic note with important nouns, the fact of the note existing itself, a personal artifact cleaned from the surrounding area, just as an archeologist would make a find. Treasure comes in pieces. Putting the pieces together can be a job of placing the tiles in the glue like a mosaic. It’s like placing the meaning that bounces off the note back in the court of context.  Everything in this world is a part of a mosaic. Even passwords and sign-ins, sometimes our only way to express our unique connection to what is sacred, are the pieces that tie us to key parts of our past that aren’t anywhere visible in our current life.  Each part of the mosaic unlocks a connection to the why and wherefore of our place in the universe.
~
     The trees she climbed in the Cambridge courtyard called out the tomboy in her.  As she got older her awareness of nature’s fragility grew.  It was an awakening to understand that the whole issue was habitat.  She thought everything was about saving the ocean.  It’s not one thing or another any longer. It is everything and how everything is connected.  Tomboys, trees, rivers, a vibrant ocean with plenty of fish, the world as the world and not just in service to our hunger and haste. 
~
      Long before her periods came, Mrs. Scattergood remembered how she snugged up to a tree.  Each one was different but she would feel for the coils of the tree bark.  She remembered her braids.  Felt twisted in her thoughts, braided to her dreams, tied to the tree and free to travel down the stream of images coming at her.  She sat back and, like it or not watched the picture show that played before her closed eyelids.   Once after visiting the Museum of Natural History minerals would flash before her eyes like a flipbook.  If she tried to sleep she couldn’t.  Until they were finished or a certain symmetry had been met, it seemed she needed to play it out.  The minerals she saw were lit up.  They rose into magnificent towers of stibnite and massive monuments of quartz.  She’d see heavy squares of pyrite, mounded communities of kidney shaped galena.  The tropical blue of aurichalcite.  The disco colors of chalocpyrite, hot cinnabar running from scarlet red to near black.  Emotional staccatos in mineral geometries.  Native silver turning with the agonies of Agamemnon; worn smooth and twisted like a piece of drift wood.  Octagons of aquamarine smithsonite, pink rhodocrhosite crowding like popcorn pushing out of the hopper.  They came at her as if she were descending to a depth of memory rather than the unconsciousness of sleep.  Distant relations?  Mineral memory?  Galena, literally lead smooth sea, like a destroyed Piranesi complex sat in her vision like a public work.  Long straws of watermelon colored tourmaline, wands of rubies rested in the matrix.  Fluorite, halite, calcite, pyrite planted like Easter eggs in the mother rock, itself a core of iron that is the mother of us all.  Banded malachite and the midnight blue of azurite sleeping near copper wouldn’t let her sleep.  Even if she closed her eyes the rush of gems formed and transformed.  Fool’s gold, smoky quartz with black threads running through them like filaments, midnight blue amethyst raced through the rapid visuals until she was spent and could finally rest in the sudden quiet she felt before dreams took her into a wrap of its own. Memories’ braids unravel like Rapunzel’s hair allowing her dreams to climb into her mind and her heart to ride the easy breath that is sleep’s current.
~
     When she woke, Mrs. Scattergood left that journey and returned to the reality she was in, muttering as she went along, “This is M. M means menopause.” As much as Baubo came to help Mrs. Scattergood we know that when we are met we are also helped by what is meeting us. Baubo, had a reputation for being a crankenpuss. She'd go mutter jabbering all the time, but she'll also be there, the crone in shining armor, when everyone else has gone home and closed their hearts like a dent in dough.
~
     Mrs. Scattergood thought about wearing a cape representing herself as the M-woman. Part human, part superhero.  Just because she might only be parallel to the world of passion and desire doesn’t mean she is ineffectual or inert. The cape would alert people to her glorious state of menopause.  It might also be a big, “Watch out world, I’m not taking your shit.” Except that right now that bad ass attitude isn’t even in the neighborhood of what she was feeling.  In fact, everything felt new.  Baubo joked with her about it, after she had her tea, saying that she’s experiencing her femme side.  Got some looks with that one. 

Thursday, December 29, 2016

feed your inner pirate



from the sea (5) –  merging and menopause  - inner pirate , part 1 by freda karpf


“...each of us carries in our veins a salty stream… in almost the same proportions as in sea water. This is our inheritance...” Rachel Carson
     “NJ lies in the middle of the Atlantic flyway and thousands upon thousands of shore birds, waterfowl and other birds migrate along the shore each spring and fall.”  Joanna Burger

     What if it’s not just the birds that belong here?
~
     Mrs. Scattergood remembered when she prepared for her period; or when her period prepared her. When she became aware that is was coming she had already felt like she was swimming through the day. She’d command herself like the pirates in stories, “Arrgh.”  She would go around and “Arrgh” for a while because words weren’t available so much as guttural sounds with the vague promise of spit in them.  Her inner pirate would allow her to say “Arrgh”, to everything; to not worry about a thing. Whatever.  Whatever. Once she knew what was happening, she would take the day for herself. It was something they did a long time ago. Late in the game, she knew it was something she needed to do during the precious few periods left. She had to make this time with herself less of a thing and more of a not thing so that it takes place.  In the fecund fertile darkness of yin, encased in the yin night, possibilities.
~
     She felt a little lonely sad at times. A friend was heading over to her place to practice qigong.  The little bubble of time before her arrival allowed her to take in the last bit of the sun.  She had been hibernating; stowing away the good for another time. She would tell you, people crave people even when they desire solitude.  She thought her period was over. The blue period. The solemn period. No, it wasn’t; they weren’t.  Even a storm was coming to punctuate this time away with another permission slip. Work sent her home anyway.  Home a verb meaning to cook, to be, her body swimming through the day.  It was glorious. Wouldn’t you know all that nesting she was doing was her preparation for getting her period. She didn’t know. Her body knew like a shadow knows where it has to be.
~
     Pirates rarely take days off to be wrapped in the cotton of their menstrual cycle.  Well, who really knows about pirates? Their whole inner life stolen by fairytales and movies bringing unreality to the reality of everyday people basted in bad information.  Consensual reality is layered with the stories the culture wants to repeat. Feeling a connection to your own reality can feel like borrowed time. But it is burrowed time, often the same kind of time that a period brings on.  There may be some treasure in that.
~
     Mrs. Scattergood wondered if men know that far away feeling you can have within yourself. Wondered if when menopause finally leaves if the distance between that time and inner reality will be something she remembers. It is not longing. Will she remember what it is to feel as if something really important is near, in another string of reality abiding a parallel wave to this one?  Just two weeks ago she felt the isolation brought on by grief. Now she feels wrapped in cotton.
~
     The difficulty today is tomorrow. The job. Today, she knows her great fortune in friends; feels soothed and smoothed over by this last period. It is an old fashioned one. The kind she used to get and would call out, even though broke and desperate for money. She'd call out and be in her soul swoon, cocooned and in the place that this world does not offer often, a sense of timeless being.
~
     Bad mantras drumming through her brain. What mattered most was getting to the next morning. After that, it was a slide as long as there was black tea with goat’s milk and stevia. When the old birds fall out of the sky because they decided to stop flying you’ve got to ask yourself, “Did I opt in to this because the miserable bastard and my mom didn’t even consider birth control?”  Or, “Was there another reason for being on this blue planet?”  You know don’t you?  You know right there you got everyone, the gods, the heroes, the aliens tuning in to every mind on the surface. The animals and then your dear friends love the fact that you called up from the fabric of everything to remember we are on the blue planet.  Shoot, nothing better than that really.
~
     The mystery of the oceans will never go away no matter how mapped or mined.  And pirates should know, by the way, that it was a woman that mapped the oceans.  Just as it was a woman that mapped the hands and feet for reflexology.  You don’t have to stretch the taffy too far to realize that each map, almost always, there’s got to be an exception, right?  Each map is about the whole. It pretends to be an exploration about the particular but as it turns out, each particular is about the whole too.