Category Archives: contemplative essays

various themes

Staying.

Growth!  O

In 1993, I got married. I was 36. My husband, a sweet man, didn’t love me – and, I knew it. My mother adored him, because he was a.) blonde; b.) white collar; c.) his parents went to Camp O’ the Woods; and d.) he was truly kind and attentive toward her. The night before my wedding, I stayed up til 2a.m. crying my eyes out with my BFForever, Lisa. Mum had made all the gowns, the fresh flowers I selected were due first thing in the morning, Aunt Margie had made a two foot liver pate carp with paper thin cucumber scales for the hor d’oeurves, and all the groom’s relatives had flown in from California. I prayed. I told God that, if this marriage were truly ordained, He[God] would sustain it; conversely, if it weren’t, would God, please, take care of it?

Apparently, God did.
Two years later, Mum died of brain cancer, and my husband left. One piece of paper filed in the state of Indiana, 100 bucks, sign on the line, relinquish the Oneida and the PC/keep the printer, and done. Feelings? Null. Void. Mum was dead. Who cared?

In the years prior to and since that wedding, I played the whiner like nobody.

And, I was hideous.

Wenhhhhh……”should he stay, or should I go?” Was anybody listening? It’s a wonder I have any girlfriends left. Oh. Wait.

Here’s what. As soon as we find someone we care about, seems we get stuck on this notion of Staying.

Why? What is Staying, really? Stay where? in the house? in the bed? in the room? What?

Stasis. Cessation of flow. Or, equilibrium. But, the acute absence of: growth?

Symbiosis. Two disparate, living beings coexisting in mutual agreement. Is that what we want? If we stay, that’s pretty much what we’ll get. Stasis. Or, symbiosis. They’re natural laws.

Stop spending so much energy deconstructing. If you come, come as often as you like, whatever, aftershocks, cry a little, get dressed. But, after you come? Go.
Go, joyously, exuberantly, spurred by the experience of being together, as far and as long as you like. Then, Return. Return to that which brought you in the first place. You might find that you both want to. How easy does that sound?

Love, they call it – the force that draws us, repeatedly, irresistibly, magnetically. But, it’s kind of a circular thing, and we should just submit to its movement. Not like hamsters in a wheel, repetitively, endlessly, to dissolution. I mean, ever forward, so that we never end up where we started. No; far beyond that place. Letting the circle take us, until we become it. I think somebody else said something like this a long time ago. You’ll pardon my reconstitution. The channeling vessel, and all that.

There’s a lot being said about Space – making some, needing some. But, maybe space is just a place in the whole movement through the relationship. Maybe it’s in the center of the circle. And, maybe, if we come, and go, and return, there’ll be plenty of space provided for us. We won’t even have to ask.

I am now old. Finally. Irrefutably. Not degeneratively. Not decrepit, not shriveled. Not quite yet. Just of age. I’ve reached the finishing stage, and with very great relief, thank you. No longer interested in asking for, or offering, any kind of promise to stay that interrupts growth. Because, yes; even old people can grow, and love had better.

 

 

 

Love to all ❤ littlebarefeetblog.

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© Ruth Ann Scanzillo

3/21/15 all rights to this piece the author’s. Please request permission to share. Thank you!

littlebarefeetblog.com

To Write.

Right now, I just can’t write a thing.

Confined. To a space, 12′ x 12′, no front door key with which to escape, cordoned off by plastic sheeting, the newly sanded hardwood flooring setting a first stain, I have been typing virtually all day.

Indeed, typing, back and forth, to get replacement musicians for a wedding in July whose hires bailed on me, yes; tapping the keys to search out music stalled in transit, only to discover that scheduling prevents going forward with its recital gig after all; and, stuffing myself with way more curried chicken and rice than Michael Jordan would ever eat in a lifetime, let alone a single meal, that from Golden Wok delivery, on account of the gas stove burners emitting a curious, kerosene-like odor upon ignition the cause of which none of the flooring crew acknowledges.

Yes; one can type ad nauseum, on auto-brain. But, write?

No.

Writing requires a fairly empty stomach. An alpha wave, or several, coursing through. A certain position of the sun in the firmament, either just ascending or peaking, but probably not waning, at least for starters; once off and running, so to speak, such conditions recede from all notice but, at the opening lines, yes; the prevailing atmosphere must provide a certain subconscious texture.

Threatening storm systems are ideal. Greying skies. Moisture at one’s fingertips. The security inducing, tall, north facing window panes, a bit of a rattle in their frames from the billowing wind – protective, yet inviting the subdued hues just beyond. But, so also the proverbial sunny day, though not without some brief liquid refreshment as prelude.

Munching works, but it must be dark peppermint chocolate or a fairly benign chip, not greasy or giving of crumbs. Just a little teaser.

The best stimulants, actually, are those which engage the body. Walking around the dining room table, grand bequeathment of one ex-mother in law who was sure every household needed one, in some kind of stepping plan, almost a dance, while the music plays; or, driving on the highway toward a single destination. Some mystery of physics playing with one’s head. Ideas feeding each other; entire stories unfold. Snatching the pen and the drive-thru receipt, scrawling without looking, elbowing the wheel, defying the state cops’ eyes peeled for cell phones, getting the seeds planted.

Yes, dear hearts. We write best then.

My dining room table is up on end now, hugging the overstuffed chair just behind the secretary and the stacked Pathfinders and Plato and the four matching chairs from Pistone’s that Tony Curtis said might be Portuguese; the vacuum cleaner-covering cozy, shaped like an angel in a calico dress, in front of the upright piano and the sofa bed and the shabby chic armoire from Big Flea that came from Thailand smelling like paint, all interred for three days in the tomb awaiting transfiguration.

The New Earth I’ll be calling my music room won’t have a table to circle any longer. A creme colored Steinway, orphaned by Rascal Flats and rescued from death row in Nashville, will soon occupy its very own throne. I’ll be riding that rocket ship into other dimensions before we know it.

The stove top fumes, according to John from National Fuel, are some synergy of natural gas and the polyurethane precipitating into the air surrounding everything. Time to haul out the ionizing air cleaning machines and pretend that they are sucking out the last of the poison. Enough Peppermint Patties might mask any ill effects, or at least any consciousness thereof.

But, meantime, no; won’t be writing tonight. Am a bit out of my element. Maybe this is what childbirth feels like, right before the water breaks. Or, death, right ahead of those final three catch breaths in the pocket of the throat. I’ll be waiting, somewhere between what might have been and what was for far too long, for that which is getting ready to greet me, right around the corner of the next turn of phrase.

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© Ruth Ann Scanzillo

3/20/15  all writes reserved. Wink.

littlebarefeetblog.com