Digesting

Today I sit with a changed reality.  We have power, heat, lights. It will take time for the local grocery stores to restock but we are fine.  We were always fine, despite the continuing alerts and warnings to prepare to evacuate, which went out when the cell towers overloaded and closed down.

What I’m with this morning is how fragile “civilization” is.  When our local grocery store knew it had to close, they gave away ice cream.  People were fighting over free ice cream. No one was hungry. In this affluent area, people probably rarely eat ice cream anyway, but I think there is a sense of survival that when activated means eat while and what you can.  My cats ate more than usual. They seemed to know it was important to stock up. Who knows when food will next appear? It’s primal.  

What I’ve come to understand in this short lesson in how fragile survival can become, as one becomes concerned with the basic needs of food, warmth, and feeling safe.  Next comes cleanliness and internet connectivity. I’ve now ordered an AM-FM rechargeable battery powered radio like we had in the old days so I know what is going on.  

I’ve also realized that we often classify homeless people as mentally ill, but I must admit I saw people wandering around looking for ways to charge their phones, and they did not look their most competent best.

What does a week on the streets do to a person?  How would I do? I could feel my nervous system unraveling as I was on constant alert.  Will I be evacuated? What should I take? How much can I carry? What about my cats? I smell smoke.  Where is it? How close?

Today, I’m allowing myself to come back to center, to let my nervous system feel it can soothe, and return to a calmer way of being, but the truth is that the infrastructure where I live is fragile.  It has not been maintained. As a country, we have not looked toward the future. We’ve been short-sighted. Will we change, or is it the beginning of the end of life as I’ve known it? I’m an optimist and prefer to look on the bright side but I think we need a leader right now.  We need leadership and I hope this election allows a leader to emerge and deal with the challenges of these times.  

I’m Back!

This is quite a journey when one doesn’t have power or yesterday even cell phone availability. Yesterday I went to Sausalito hoping to post but their wifi was overloaded and I couldn’t get on, so I’ll post here what I would have said and then make a new post for today. Perhaps what’s most challenging right now is it’s cold, but Steve’s office got power this morning and though our home is still dark, I’m here in warmth and light.

Tuesday, October 29 –  Checking In  

I haven’t been able to post as there’s been no electricity or wifi in the county in which I live.  I’ve been keeping track though so may go back and share a piece of these last few days.  I understand that there is now power around me so perhaps I can go to another town today and connect to my blog and post.

It’s 6:20 in the morning and still dark, and rather cold.  I sit in meditative mode much of the time though yesterday we went to San Francisco for gasoline for our car, and the generator we borrowed from our son.  It powers our refrigerator much of the time, a lamp, our phones and computers.  Our barbecue uses propane so we have coffee in the morning.  Last power outage a few weeks ago, we lost thousands of dollars of food.  I tossed everything out, so now we’re trying to save the food that replenished what was lost.    

One could hardly call this roughing it and yet it is a change, and that’s where I come to Michael Lerner and Commonweal.  The world as we may have thought we knew it has changed.  Marin County is one canary in a mine.  The counties north and south are others.  

There are many reasons for this change, social, political, technological, but perhaps the biggest is climate change.  A friend of mine lives in Guerneville.  She was evacuated from her home in the spring for flooding and now in the fall for fire.

Resilience is now required of each of us.  If you have power, and are reading this, check this out: Google: http://www.resilienceproject.ngo

And now I’ll go backward and return to Sunday morning, October 27, which seems a long time ago.  I was sitting outside with my computer observing how clearly, “a moment is a moment”.  The power had been turned off the day before, and we were learning to navigate like bats in the dark.  It’s amazing how dark it is when all lights in your county are off.  Candles help, yes, and lanterns, and yet, there is an awareness when darkness comes, a primal awareness that it is time to prepare, and when morning comes, a different awareness that it’s time to utilize the light.

We spent Saturday with family, which now includes a “young-un”.  When I woke the next morning, I stayed in bed, watching the world come to light.  Without power, I felt no need to rise. 

Lying there, I noticed I was resting in the same position as the little guy, the five day old grandson I’d been with the day before.  I’d spent hours watching him and somehow had become him. 

I was holding my hands like his and my head was tilted just so.  Then I noticed my fingers. I’m enchanted with his, with the intricacy, length, and aliveness.  I could feel my fingers reaching, stretching, receiving, bending, exploring, in and touched by the world.  

And there are the eyes.  I’ve never thought of myself as a visual person. I’ve been myopic since fourth grade, preferring to read and see internally. I like to sense the energy around me, but after so much time looking into his eyes as he looked into mine, I feel a transmission of a new way to see or maybe a reconnection with how I saw when I first came, an intake without division, wholeness.

I remember the morning of my 44th birthday in Nepal.  It was 1993 and we were camped at the steps of Tengboche Monastery at 13,000 feet in the Everest region of Nepal, Khumbu.  I was trekking with two woman, and one still slept in her tent, but my friend tapped at my tent door and said, “Come,” and I did. We walked up the steps to enter splendor, a spiritual extravaganza of monks and horns,  chanting, and guttural singing, and splendid dress.  

We were offered a hot drink and sat to the side with flickering rows of yak butter lamps.

As I listened, I felt myself carried on a journey of expansion, the beginning and ending of formation and time, all of it happening all at once, birth and death, all One, over and over again.  

That’s what I feel and see when I look into, and with this Little One’s eyes. I feel the wisdom of the newly arrived.  This little bundle in his snug cap transmits.  My guru is here. 

Sunday I attended a sacred hula performance at The Palace of Fine Arts.  My friend Elaine was part of the performance.  The ending consisted of over 200 people in red shirts honoring the Hawaiian mountain Mau Koana.

Mau Koana offers the best place on earth to place a telescope and see into our past.  It’s hard to argue with scientific advancement, and yet, the Native People want to honor this sacred mountain and keep her as she is.  There are protests, and those protests pit family members against each other as the community is small, so the one arresting may be a cousin, a friend.  There are many sides to what’s involved.  Is the telescope a desecration or a next step?

Patrick Makuakane, who directs Kumu Hula, and creates and orchestrates their performances, this one called, “A New Current”,  has been to the mountain, has seen the protests, and is changed by them.  He points out that tourism has simplified the Hawaiian heritage, well,  first it was brutalized, and then, simplified. The word “Aloha” is used as hello or goodbye, or Love.  

The deeper meaning though is Empathy.  Empathy. The protesters honor the word and meaning of Aloha with empathy.  There is no violence, only a knowing that those hauling them away are doing their job to feed their families, and those protesting are doing their job to say we don’t need this telescope right here, right now.  This 30 meter telescope desecrates a holy site. 

I sit with that as I look up.  Is that fog on the ridge?  Or smoke?  In this light, it’s hard to tell.  When I go outside, I’ll know by the smell.  And now it’s gone, a momentary swell within the light.

What I do know now is that when it comes to looking into our past and where we come from, we can pause and look into the eyes of a newborn child.  Our ancestry is there.

Aloha!

Camellia blooming in my yard

Inspiration

I’m inspired by Elijah Cummings, yes, but listen to this by his wife, now widow, Maya. Integrity. She spells it out loud and clear.

I’m also inspired by my grandchild Keo who asserted himself yesterday. On his fourth day, it was not easy to change his diaper and swaddle him again. He wants those hands and feet free. My son said how strong he is and how it wasn’t easy to change his diaper and wrap him up again. I remember, and think how it is for each of us when we claim our strength and space, and, in that, proclaim what it is to live with Integrity, aware that in proclaiming our individuality, we are one with All.

We’re driving down to visit Keo and his family today, and will probably return to a house without power. I’ve again pulled out the flashlights and lamps. Candles are ready for a spark to the wick, and I think of how it could be if money that’s been wasted on war, weapons, elections, and outlandish salaries for corporate executives went to infrastructure, education, and preservation of the environment we all share.

Peace!

On the wall at my local independent book store, Book Passage

Amphibian

Lately I’ve been feeling like an amphibian, like I’m living in two worlds, in that I inhabit young and old.  I know age is a number, but when one has a 7 followed by a 0, there is a sobering pause to digest. I feel young.  My heart dances lightly, and then there is the thought of that many years. When someone kindly commented that I was entering my eighth decade, again I had to pause.  That’s a long time, and my life has been rich and exciting, calm and nurturing, tender and stimulating, all separately and at one time.

Now, today, I find myself integrating.  I feel so tied with Little Keo as we both negotiate this new world.  I feel us entering a new life together, this little guy grandchild and Oma, me.  

Balancing Worlds

I’ve now watched two videos of Keo this morning.  What a guy, and what a world where he is there, and I am here, and I can see him entering his fourth day.

I think of how he’ll see himself from the very beginning.  That amazement is juxtaposed with the fire danger today and threats of power shut-offs.  Perhaps because the fire yesterday was so close by, I now think “Fine, shut off my power.”  It’s more real.  

This morning I saw a design for a Frank Gehry building which I thought might be the ugliest I’d ever seen, but then, I Googled and found more of his designs.  I admire Frank Lloyd Wright who honored nature in his plans, evolved structures organically with an eye to simplicity, flow, and function.

How does that contrast with this?

Construction beginning on Frank Gehry building in Dubai
Frank Gehry Lou Ruvo Center for Brain Health

Perhaps the function of the second one is to disrupt brain functioning, so you need the help of the work within.

Maybe I’m more aware of organic processes, simplicity, and function, as I watch little Keo learn to use his fingers and eyes, to explore and discover how to inhabit this world into which he’s born.  He’s integrated and integrating, and as I watch, so am I.  

Evening

Keo had a busy day, was checked out by his pediatrician, and now tonight his dad says this.

Wow indeed. He’s magic. Showed him around the yard today.  And he helped with composting.

I find myself listening to Louis Armstrong tonight, “It’s a Wonderful World.”

I saw Gail Collins speak today at Book Passage on her new book No Stopping Us Now, The Adventures of Older Women in American History.

We’ve gone up and down, and backward and forward and yes, there’s an obstacle right now which is falling away as men and women share equally in life here. You can read Gail Collins column today and decide who you think is the worst one in Trump’s cabinet.

And to counteract that, here’s Keo.

Keo sleeps after a big day, his third.



A Morning Walk

This morning, I took my car in for new brakes and walked home along the marsh. Children were riding their bikes to school. I felt like I was in Europe as they pedaled along, some with determination, and others with a sauntering smile.

My request for photos was answered as I walked. Here is Chris “skin to skin” with Keo. It’s a wonderful new world when fathers get paternity leave too.

Chris and Keo

Morning Wisdom

I don’t want to be one of those people who talk incessantly about their grandchild, but there is something about new life, new being, that doesn’t seem to belong to me, or any one person, so now I understand that impulse to share.

When someone I love passes, a portal opens for me to see a little more. This is different, and yet it is also an opening to something more. There is peace and discovery and trust.

The Little Guy is home now, and all is well.

Home and Snuggly

Expanding

I wake this morning, changed. I lie in bed, absorbing and integrating this gift of being a grandmother, and understand why it is said grandmothers will change the world.

With the birth of my sons, I turned inward, knew I would do anything to protect what came from my womb, and this turning, this birth is an expansion, a spreading wonder out.  This little man, being, angel, teacher, guide, Keo Jay Edgette brings me to the softest light of tears, prisms my world into expansion and openness, and a knowing of trust and peace.  He is a candle in my life. 

I soften into what he brings, what birth of a new being brings.  He is so delicate and dependent, and yet, so strong. His tiny presence is so strong.  All these adults gather around him waiting for the gift of holding him, and there he is swaddled with his little hat, eyes opening and closing, brow furrowing and unfurrowing, absorbing this new world for him, this gift we now all share.

This morning I feel like an apple, cored, as though there is new room in my chest, a room without walls, only doors, and I trust that all is as it should be and this Little Light Keo, is giving me, Oma, all I need.

Blessings on us All!

Uncle Jeff and a ten hour old Keo



Grandpa Steve with a young Keo


Moving along through this new day. Keo is now 34 hours old. Time is moving along for him and for me.

Keo at 34 hours


Baby Is Here!

Baby was born early this morning. An easy, natural labor delivered a beautiful little Zen-like boy.   

I was out on the deck much of the night watching for shooting stars.  At one point an owl flew over and now, my shooting star is here.

My heart is tied in a bow of love and gratitude.

May the world be safe and peaceful for this amazing Little Guy!!

Chris and Baby