Sunday, September 26, 2010

post script



1.  My trip to Kerrville, TX for the Retreat for Ministers to Artists at Laity Lodge  this past spring was such a smashing, scintillating experience it inspired not one, not two, but SEVEN follow-up posts

      p.s., Details for the 2011 retreat (May 26-29)!!!

2.  The IAM Reader's Guild read Unaccustomed Earth by Jhumpa Lahiri in September. My review is posted at IAM's blog.   

      p.s., We're reading Gilead by Marilynne Robinson in September.  If you're local and want to join the conversation, here's the scoop:Tuesday, October 5, 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm  at Erin McMahon's house, 3619 Watson Blvd., Endwell
please RSVP in the comment section of this post or via email: tmurphyATunioncenterDOTorg
bring your book, your copy of the discussion guide, and a small snack or beverage to share

International Arts Movement site


Sign up for IAM mailing list
Readers Guild page
Marilynne Robinson discusses Gilead on NPR


Saturday, September 25, 2010

On the Subject of A Place: an essay

August 2010

We have walked so many times, my boy,
Over these fields given up
To thicket, have thought
And spoken of their possibilities,
Theirs and ours, ours and theirs the same,
So many times, that now when I walk here
Alone, the thought of you goes with me;
My mind reaches toward yours
Across the distance and through time.
      -- Wendell Berry, Sabbath Poems

Person as place. Rest, hope, healing personified in floors and beams and tables as interchangeably as arms, necks, laps. A good and kind person, a beautiful and restful place take on the same essence in my perception and experience of them. If ever there was an argument for God's dwelling among men, the Midas-tough of incarnation, it could be in this way we internalize person and place. The ethos of both entities wrapping around us and through us, sensually and otherwise, an ageless presence of truth, goodness and beauty.

This week I sojourn with my four children and husband under the roof-top of a tiny, red-shingled cabin on the curve of a sparkling pond. I've come to this place for years -- almost twenty-five in a row -- traversing the grassy shoreline, rowing the lily-pad and stump-strewn  pond water, meandering the surrounding pebbly pathways. As an adolescent, I bloomed in the sensual soil of this place. During weeks like this one now, when I was the child vacationing here with my parents and siblings. Also, during picnics with extended family, commemorating patriotic holidays, or celebrating the birthdays and graduations and anniversaries of three generations underneath Grandpa's homemade picnic pavilion, eating Grandma's macaroni and potato salads.

Almost twenty-five years, I say, because the cottage as a Place and the cottage as a Person became tainted in the residue of a family split. While brooding on this history during our stay, I stumbled on this poetic lament in Wendell Berry's book of Sabbath poems. I read and re-read his lines, silently and out loud, to my husband and to the swallows skimming the speckled pond, as if to prove to us all their precision.

Schism happened. What had been a haven for kith and kin, all of us sharing the same bloodline loading  down picnic tables with laughter and giant marbled watermelons, later spilling out into the murky water wreathed in shiny, black inner tubes burning from the afternoon sun. Sounds that once arced through the air, cousins playing cards in the bunk house, uncles clanging horseshoes across the mown grass now whittled down to the quiet recollections between my grandparents sitting on the tree swing staring across an empty yard. Schism happened and we splintered, but good.

Still this place of rest, beauty, quiet had wound its way into the soul of the family, a surrogate mother for the heartbroken and exhausted, the poor and the restless. It had pushed its essence into our veins, our DNA, even unto a fourth generation. Like prodigal children we began to trickle back from lesser places to the waiting embrace of this feast on the small water. Schism continues as pebbles skipped into the pond, rippling back and forth through family lines. We are not able to be together, except through the familiar pathways of this little plot of land and little building upon it. We share the news of our growing families in pen-scribbled lines across the twenty-five year old pages in Grandma's guest book. The entries remind us of the events and dates before shalom was shattered.

I had forgotten about the book until this summer. It was the first thing that caught my eye when I walked in the door, laden with bags of vacation food spilling onto the kitchen table and speckled counter tops. Once unburdened, I picked up the little brown book from its place of honor among the familiar bric-a-brac. I sat with the book for awhile, reliving the memories attached to each entry, calling out old recollection to my children. All week, I re-opened its pages, tried to place the entries in the timeline of our family history.  I notice the gold-stamp scrolled atop the book's faux leather cover,  pronouncing a benediction:  May God Bless All Who Enter Here.

Today, my husband and I took the long, woodsy walk up Forshee Road, across the street from the family land. Mid-summer wildflowers, Queen Anne's lace, black-eyed Susan, purpled chicory, dried timothy wind the stony roadway, reminding me of the countless grubby bouquets held in plastic cups on Grandma's kitchen table. Blue sky, white clouds over top the leafy canopy calling us upward to the hilltop view of another lake overlooking fields of goldenrod and blackberry bushes. Always the reward for this climb, a visit to the lone ancient tree that sits atop the hill, a benevolent ruler of this back country kingdom. The tree that propped me up after this same walk during so many angst-ridden adolescent summers; the tree that can be seen from almost any spot walking around the lake below; that serves as a path-marker fingering the country sky.

Reaching the top of the hill, I realize that the entire landscape has changed. If the tree is even there at all, I can no longer make it out. I wonder if it ever stood as I remember. We can not walk further. Someone has claimed the land for their own, posted signs, built fences. If the tree is further up, I can not know. With my toe against the warning sign, I can not glimpse the lake below or, even, the blackberry bushes that had lined the pathway. We turn to leave and tears wash my sweaty face. This place has become loss instead of comfort. The sense of it has been altered; I feel betrayed.

Waves of loss wear down my thoughts. Not being able to re-visit the tree feels like a death of sorts. So much has been lost over these years, designating surviving icons as a source of comfort and pleasure. The flickering light in the bathroom delights all of us because it is familiar. Draining pasta for dinner last night, in the mustard-yellow colander my Grandmother had always used to prepare her salads, made me feel connected to so many good things.  Each sensory connection a tactile reminder: treading with bare feet the smoothed-over wood on the sun porch floor, dipping toes into the pond's soft liquid, sniffing the charry, eye-watering scent of burning logs on the campfire, discerning the smacks and warbles of invisible life among the lily pads.  All these sensations a Eucharist of sorts, connecting me to the memory of this larger, glorious past. Do this in remembrance...

And, so, after years away, we do this again. Eat the bread and drink the wine of this Place, but it is changing. And I am scared to lose all connection. We know that we'll lose the persons before us; this has been true since the beginning of Man. Cancer is crouching at my Grandfather's doorstep, threatening another sort of family schism. We hope, at least, to keep the kinesthetic comfort of a place.

Damn that tree for being lost to us.

If the Church's centuries-old sacramental theology holds any water, the belief that we are united in our collective remembering, our gathering of confession and gratitude across time and space, what might that mean for the gatherings in this Place? Might the worship we each give in our time here, the remembrance of good things past, the gratitude for good things present, somehow unite us across the man-made chasms separating brother from brother? Might we pray for reconciliation as we pass notes, like elements, words of old acquaintance left to each other in our coming and going?  A passing of the peace, a prayer: May God Bless All Who Enter Here.

And might that prayer save us all?

No mortal mind's complete within itself,
But minds must speak and answer,
As ours must, on the subject of this place,
Our history here, summoned
As we are to the correction
Of old wrong in this soil, thinned
And broken, and in our minds.
                                          -- Wendell Berry



Friday, September 24, 2010

in which I lament

7 quick takes sm1 7 Quick Takes Friday (vol. 98)
Blame it on the flu and infection keeping me in bed for seven days.  For the extra time to mull.  Blame it on the season of transition in which Brian and I find ourselves, surrounded by goodness upon goodness, yet feeling like we were made for something else.

I suspect this blog meme is intended for lighthearted banter at the end of a long week.   You'll forgive me that I just can't go there tonight.  My heart and mind are too full of sorrow for all that is lost to me and my children in the Westernized, generalized religious and civic worlds we've inherited -- and, seemingly, will be passing on to those who follow us.  I'll forgive you for re-naming me Doom 'n Gloom Palm.  
— 1 —
The loss of our imagination as Christians.  That we do not know how to wonder, doubt, groan, imagine, fantasize.  Or sing songs in a minor key.
— 2 —
Our music is almost lost to us.  Our books. Our great masterpieces of art.  We are so willing to settle for counterfeit light, trite rhymes.  We are impoverished in our minds and souls.
— 3 —
We do not know how to navigate nuance, inflection, rhetoric.  We only have ears for the black and white-ness of a thing.  The right or wrong. The truth or lie.  We do not know the language of poetry, abstraction.
— 4 —
— 5 —
We pledged our hearts so often to one nation under God that we began to believe the phrase literally.

— 6 —
We stopped marking time through the life, death, resurrection and ascension of The Word who dwelt among us, preferring to mark time by the words in our dayplanners and the greeting card aisles.  We do not even mark well the celebrations of the sacraments.


— 7 —
We forgot what it means to be neighbors, living in neighborhoods, coming in and going out in each others' rhythms, joining our wealth and poverty, joys and sorrows, births and deaths, eggs and sugar. 




Six reasons to celebrate.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

imperfect prose: a Place for rest

(one essay of a series I'm working on from summer vacation, August 2010)

If there were an easier location in the world to be together as a family, I’d like to know where it is.  A big, green, level yard for running, whacking a whiffle ball, toddling about with soft grass to land.  Pond water so shallow and clean we didn’t hesitate to plunk the bare baby bottoms down in the soft mud.  For several years, when my kids were the littlest, Grandpa thrifted an old porcelain bathtub into the soft soil of the pond, just past the rectangular deck.  This was the perfect place to corral squirmy offspring, as well as found turtles, guppies, minnows and the morning’s catch of sunnies.  Not all at the same time, of course.  We used that tub for several years in a row – since we had babies in the house for about eight years straight, it was an ingenious concoction. 

And no one does resourceful gadgetry better than Grandpa.  He’s the guy who can turn an old tractor trailer tire into a tire swing.  You’ve seen that done, but not like Grandpa’s tire swing.  He's the guy who can turn a tractor trailer tire into a swing that several babies can curl up simultaneously inside the black rubber, like a cradle with chain linking it to the crossbeams nailed into the tree trunk.  When my kids were little we’d fit two of them in there – one with legs draping over the front cut-out of the tire and the other, usually the shorter, with legs poking out the doughnut holes of the tire, one on each side.  Swing and swim. Swim and swing.  Swing and swim.  Those were the early days of raising kids in this Place. 

If we were lucky – and we made darn certain that we usually were – the kids would all tucker out for a long afternoon nap.  Right in the middle of the hottest part of the day, when the dragon flies were at their buzziest and the crickets at their lazy-afternoon droniest.  When the heat and activity had drained us of our purpose, we’d tuck them away into the back corners of the little square house, their pink cheeks pressed to the pillow or the playpen, curtains drawn, fans gasping out rattly air.   We would tiptoe around the floors outside their bedroom doors, slipping into our bathing suits, picking up our pillows and books and cold iced drinks to spend the afternoon in the sun, reading.  Reading did happen, but usually only for a few moments before our own day’s activity – that of pushing swings and lifeguarding swimming babies – caught up with us. 

The best naps of my life took place pond-side in that Place.  The kind where the sun and the bugs and the soft, lapping water provides the tranquilizer of choice.  No other nap has surpassed those naps, lying with blanket and pillow on the sun-baked dock.  Between the rhythmic lullabies chirping around me, the light soaking into my winter-paled skin, the musty smell of the just damp planks of wood underneath me, I didn't stand a chance.  The few pages I managed to read only added to the sleep-inducing haze of the cottage summer afternoon.

No matter how long this downtime lasted, it never seemed long enough.  When we heard sounds of the waking babes, we’d try desperately to coax a few more minutes of sleep.  A few more minutes of being masters of our own selves.  With toddlers, it seems that all of your time is spent between the two extremes of prying off clinging little bodies or chasing after little bodies running headlong into danger.  In this place, it could be the road up the short hill of a driveway with logging trucks and countrified pick up trucks barreling past.   The other direction’s danger was the murky water of the pond.  Only a few inches could be danger for an unattended child and, like one great maternal eye, we kept watch.  Grandma did her duty each year to talk us through her collection of stories involving drownings, fires, electrocutions.   She made sure we were well-versed in all that could go wrong and so we were vigilant.  This is the reason we pretended not to hear those first few calls from the back of the house, to give ourselves just a few more moments of stillness before the second half of the day when it all began again.  Swim. Swing. Swim. Swing. Swim.  And – swing again.

 Now, we come back to this Place after a long absence.  We find that we can take naps  any time we want.  It is a major difference and one that pleases us greatly.  Our children know the contours of this land and these buildings, can navigate them with confidence and comfort.  They’ve learned well the secrets of building their own napping caves.  How to curl up on the wooden planks with blanket and pillow – or better, yet, on the steamy rubber of a floating inner tube, baking under the cloud-sparkling sky.  Since they now drive the sloping driveway at the entrance with their own licenses, our concerns for danger have shifted.  They swim now across the width of the water, to the mysterious stumps jutting out, like a belt buckle across the belly of the pond.  We watch with one eye from our napping places.  Or we join them, free to move about the place with our own bodies intact and separate from theirs.  It is a different season, but a good one.  The cottage calls us into the same grassy lap, the same chirping melodies and we are gathered gladly. 


Linking:

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

pondering words and pictures on a Wednesday morning



family swim across Stump Pond, August 2010

Remembering this snapshot while pondering these words:
"Swimming in a pond in ninety-degree weather is pure bliss...I like to get into an inner tube and float quietly along the edge of the pond at frog eye level. You can see the most amazing things that way. Once I was watching dragonflies laying eggs on the leaves of grasses sticking out of the water. I pointed my finger up out of the water. Sure enough a dragonfly settled down and laid an egg on it."
-- excerpt from The Pond Lovers by Gene Logsdon, quoting David Kline in
Scratching the Woodchuck: Nature on an Amish Farm

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

a simple woman's daybook

Every once in awhile I wonder what might happen if I posted more than once a week.  Would I become more disciplined in other areas of my life or less?  Would I make more online connections that enrich my life or just plain old add to narcissism?  

This may only be a phase, but I'm going to try it out using prompts from daily blog memes.  I'll remain in the sphere of what this blog is supposed to be about:  the discoveries and ponderings  of a woman hoping to be transformed by the everyday disciplines of paying attention to an earth that's crammed with heaven.

Tuesdays prompt comes from The Simple Woman's Daybook:


Outside my window... the sounds of the neighborhood getting to work and to school, the pesky crows cawing at each other

I am thinking... I need to call the doctor as soon as he opens to get medicine for my annual fall flu/sinus infection.

I am thankful for... Mucinex-D

From the kitchen... I've been sick so there's nothing there but dirty dishes and a still-warm teapot.

I am creating... my first manuscript to be sent for publication.

I am going... as few places as possible until I feel better.  I called in sick to work and only have to take Alex to the federal building in Binghamton for his weekly internship at Maurice Hinchey's office.

I am reading...  The Sacraments in Protestant Practice and Faith by James F. White

I am hoping... to feel better quickly, to get the family into some kind of new normal in spite of everyone's crazy coming and going schedules.

I am hearing... Alex singing, playing guitar before he leaves for school (just like he does every morning, it's one of my favorite times of the day)

Around the house... time to put away all the summer garden flower vases and get out the autumn-y stuff

One of my favorite things... Turner Classic Movies on sick days

A few plans for the rest of the week:  get better, get back to work, meet a couple of people for coffee, get my hair cut and colored, make a CD of new hymn arrangements for the Elevate band

Here is a picture ... my writing desk







Monday, September 20, 2010

monday mixtape: [the art-in-community edition]

i chose a theme and mashed together some writing and other favorite art on the theme!


track 1: the teaser



track 2:  notes on a theme


(excerpt from lessons from camping, part two 07/09/07)
So, while we were sitting around the campfire the other night, soaking up the intimacy of the crackling fire and the quiet storytelling underneath a starry and expansive sky, my friend Scott wrote a new song. I don't mean he got out a pen and paper and a rhyming dictionary. I mean he started playing a tune and singing lyrics that had never been sung or played before in that same composition in the history of the universe. I wish I could remember the tune and the lyrics -- all I can remember was that it was a simple, cozy poem of gratitude for a happy day with good friends.

And if I could have recorded it I would have. But not because I think it was worth a million dollars and would go to the top of the charts. (although that may have happened...my friend Scott is pretty good)

The impact of the song was deep because it recorded the moment we were experiencing together. It translated what all of us were thinking and feeling into a tune and a rhyme. It was an utterance of words that we could not express fully, but the song came pretty darn close. It was a creative response to our glad Creator.
There is something especially profound about creation that happens in community.  Creation that reflects the DNA of a particular group of people experiencing a similar story in one season in time.  It could be a weekend camping together or a lifetime of living together in the same neighborhood. This week's mixtape is inspired by examples of art that springs up from the ground of community.


track 3: links


track 4:  Art Show on Main


The bi-annual art show I curate at our church is always a combination of art coming from within our church community and art from outside our church, our greater artist community in the city around us.  Each year we hope to cultivate beauty and community by making and appreciating art together. We made the decision to move this to an every-other-year event this year.  It's been five years since I've had free time in October, but I'll be glad when next fall gets here!   I've blogged lots of posts about this: here, here, here,  here, and here.


Art Show on Main 2009: Closing Recital with Scott & Kim LaGraff

track 5: "In Three Years" project 

I've been following the work of Sojourn Visual Arts (Louisville, KY) for awhile now.  I'm ultra-impressed with the innovative projects produced by this art/faith community (directed by Michael Winters).  This particular art-in-community undertaking involved the Sojourn artists spending time with some of the homeless in their Louisville community, listening to their stories.  Specifically, what would they like to see come true in their life in the next three years.  The artists then drew the dream in chalk and composed a photograph of the dreamer interacting with the chalk drawing.  Collaboration on so many levels makes my toes tingle I love it so much!

"In Three Years Linda Wants to Write a Book" 
(photo credit: SojournVisualArts.com)


Sunday, September 19, 2010

post script


1.  In last week's Monday Mixtape, I posted several art forms my kids have introduced and inspired.  Since I was taking the week to brag on the creators and cultivators that live in my house, I didn't tell you about another young craftsman whose work will enrich our family's celebration of the Advent and Lent seasons.

      p.s., homemade wooden wreaths for Advent and Lent at A Holy Experience


2.  Last July I told you about planting my first-ever perennial garden.  

      p.s., I haven't been able to take many photos of the garden's change over the summer months because my camera broke.  But this photo from June shows that the Asiatic lilies grew like crazy. Almost taller than me (which for most things isn't saying much, but for a flower?!?) 

Friday, September 17, 2010

pumpkin chip cookies on the first day of school

photo credit

Me blogging recipes is something like Donald Trump blogging knitting patterns.  

Enjoy this post because it's probably the only one you'll ever see of its kind.  I bake twice a year -- Christmas Eve (one of my favorite days in the whole  year) and the first day of school.  It's all a carefully planned campaign to brainwash my kids' memories of me.  I picked the two most memorable days of each year in their childhood and hand them baked goods like I'm Donna Reed.  So far this strategy is working quite nicely.

My mom made these cookies for us when I was growing up.  They are my all-time favorite cookie in the universe and a perfect complement to the coming of fall.  Please don't try to eat them without a glass of milk or mug of coffee.  

Pumpkin-Chip Cookies

1 cup pumpkin                         1 tsp. cinnamon
1 beaten egg                            1 tsp. soda
1/2 cup vegetable oil                1 tsp. milk
1 cup sugar                              1 tsp. vanilla
2 cups flour                              1 cup chocolate chips
2 tsp. baking powder                1/2 cup crushed walnuts
1/2 tsp. salt

Combine pumpkin, egg, oil and sugar; beat well. 
Sift flour with baking powder, salt and cinnamon; stir into pumpkin mixture.
Mix soda and milk together; add to mixture.
Add vanilla, chocolate bits and walnuts.
Drop from teaspoons onto greased cookie sheet.
Bake at 350 degrees for 12-15 minutes.

a couple important notes:

1.  I can't imagine baking these without the walnuts.  They provide a little bit of crunchy texture to the otherwise super-moist and melty cookie.

2.  My original recipe says you could substitute 1 cup of raisins. Sounds horrible to me, but whatever floats your boat.

3.  When I got married, I hand-copied several of my mom's recipes into a cookbook.  For some reason I wrote to bake these for 5 minutes.  As a good rule-follower, for several years I made extremely gooey cookies because the recipe couldn't possibly be wrong!  I've come to the conclusion that the cookies take at least 10 minutes to get toasted just the right amount.  They're still moist, I promise!

4.  There's probably a whole bunch of ways to health 'em up by tucking in some extra whole food type ingredients.  I'll leave that up to all you earthy types.  (feel free to add your ideas in the comment section)

Enjoy!
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