Window Seat

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I made a deal with the camera.  I said, I have to take pictures today sitting down, because I am sick.
Ok.

The books made a deal with me.  They said, give us those buttons and we’ll sit here in the window for you.
Ok.

Now you make a deal with the picture.  Say, I will grant you three wishes – simply tell me what they are and they will come true.

And then wish for everything to be just like this.
Ok.

Sibling Violets

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I tend to think in terms of “we” – in terms of “one for each.”  And yet in the murk of sibling rivalry, I first size up the bigger half, and decide if I want it.  Oh, yes, there is such a thing – a bigger half.  Split a sandwich between any non-identical twins under the age of 8, and ask them.  It’s always obvious which is the bigger half; and the curse of getting the smaller half is in no way cured by the triumph of the receiving the larger half.

“She got more than me.”  It doesn’t matter who says it.
“Give your sister a bite of your sandwich,”  Mother says, reaching toward your plate to even the score.  Or worse:
“You can have an extra cookie.  Now eat your lunch.”

At this point, feelings may simmer, or explode.  There is no justice in this world, as your permanent, undetachable other self (who is always stealing what you want the most) continues munching what should be YOUR sandwich – or tries to grab YOUR extra cookie for herself.  Or, most cruelly of all, eludes the conflict altogether, shrugging off her tinier portion with an escape artists’ precision, spoiling the taste of all that extra peanut butter and jelly with her indifference.

What Tulips Had in Mind

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Everything here is ordinary.  No special housekeeping pains were taken- the sunlight entered as usual, finding clusters of flowers, and books skidding across the floor in normal distribution.  The floral department at Miller’s Market – a cooler and some buckets – is no special hub of blooming perfection, still it supplies sufficient pinkness for my home.  I am not feeling especially good, so as I observed the tray of flowers from behind my camera, I didn’t expect much creative transcendence.  And yet…

This picture is what I came for, what I intend to say each and every time, the only thing I feel completely certain of.  The beauty I need is in the life I have right now, and it is filling your life, too.  There isn’t anything you can do to stop it, and if you will glance toward that faintly pulsing beacon with patient eyes, and ask with a curious heart what it has show you, you will be amazed at what you find.

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Tulips Second Helping

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Today’s blog post is brought to you by the letter: Crud.  As in, I have the crud, so whatever is lying around the house today will have to suffice for creative material.  Buying tulips when I went to the grocery store last weekend turns out to have been a wise decision.  Even slightly bedraggled flowers make the house a better place to be.  I think I will get up and give them a fresh cut – their waterglasses are looking a little cloudy.

I don’t seem to be that interested in focussing on words, what with my elevated temperature and all.  Tomorrow, you will have to put up with some more pictures of tulips, though.  Forgive me.  They just seem so pretty in the window.

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Bay Light Good Fortune

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People like to say that you make your own luck, but tulips and peonies and the particular cast of sunlight bouncing around between the Pacific Ocean and the stucco walls of Berkeley tell a different story. Such luck can be hatched or seized, but never made. Maybe I spend too much effort trying to keep that distinction in mind, and I lose out on the hopeful side of hunger.

On the other hand, I did follow the directions I found in my fortune cookie: You will attend an unusual party and meet someone important. So when an invitation presented itself to follow a friend to a gathering of Kung Fu meets Mathemeticians, I went – hoping, like any Cinderella, to meet Someone Important.

And I will tell you what was so unusual about that party. Perhaps because I wanted to find out if my Dessert Oracle was accurate, I carefully listened to new jokes and stories, following along until there was a moment when I felt a “connect.” And of course the more I listened, the more obvious it became: Everyone there was important. Even, maybe, me.

Isn’t that lucky?

In the Beginning

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There were only a very few minutes when you were in this world without me –  April 4th, just about 9 a.m., Chicago, Ill. You braved the newness alone – the exhilarating coldness of air meeting lungs, the whiteness of light engulfing vision all at once. But then I caught up to you.  And when I did, I know I felt that I was the one who was no longer alone.  That was fifty years ago, today.

Thanks for waiting for me, honey.  I owe you one.

The Before of Butterfly

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Mom tired me out today.  She knew just what she wanted to do.  First, we had to write the blog post from London.  Then, even though everything in the apartment is a complete mess – books spread on the floor, butterfly backgrounds by all the windows – she said, “Honey, let’s go somewhere.”

Once I was in the car (and had a little espresso in me), her directions were clear as a bell – “Let’s visit the antique mall first, then go to Vinnie’s.”  And it dawned on me – this is the day.  Her last day.  This is the day she really needs me.  By tomorrow, there is nothing I can do for her anymore.

After the antique mall, where the garden display with the indoor fountain was resplendent in Easter pastel silk flowers and white painted wicker furniture, we walked next door to St. Vinnie’s Thrift Store, and walked right out again 10 minutes later without spotting a single treasure. (Hey, sometimes the magic works…keep reading…)

At 2:41 I heard the next bell:  Olbrich Gardens.  “But Mom, its so grey and we are heading to this other place and tomorrow the weather will be nicer…”  “Olbrich Gardens, honey.”  “Ok,” I say out loud.  “I’ll turn the car around.”

Of course, she was right.  There were things at Olbrich Garden we needed to see and hear, from our bench in the shadow of the two story Rose Tower, which looks across a wide lawn encircled by pergolas, over the traffic and the large city park beyond, to the domestic beauty of Lake Monona, the last of the lakes Mom was able to call her own.  Robins and grackles swarmed the trees, and the air was almost frantic with the trill of red-wing black birds.  Brick paths puddled with reflecting pools, criss-crossing the repeating pattern of the deep red pavement with the clear, floating image of branches and trellises above.  I stuck mainly to the dryer, gravel walks, circumambulating twiggy rose beds and the formal herb garden with its English boxwood hedges. In Olbrich’s lobby, the prettiest gift shop Mom ever saw in Madison was full of the prettiest scarves and cards and Everything Butterfly you can imagine.   I told the young woman there how, of course, my Mother loved this place.  I could tell she hears that all the time.

Did you know that when she was little, Barbara Ann Downtain’s favorite special meal to have on her birthday, was Creamed Hamburger?  So we stopped at Mr. Miller’s Grocery – whose owner (“I’m Carl,” he always says, “Mr. Miller was my father!”) gave Mom such a treat by delivering her weekly order of frozen broccoli and Twinings Irish Breakfast himself – and bought tulips and heavy cream, and roasted salted pecans for dessert.

At home finally, I sat for a while and listened as the birds and the traffic slowed down for the night – listened to how good they sounded, filling the present with the most it can actually contain, if you are just spending a few quite moments in a cozy old slipcovered arm chair by the window at home.  And I heard one more bell – not ringing but chiming, very, very deep.

“Celebrate me.”  she said.  “Celebrate, honey.  Celebrate.”