Tuesday, January 31, 2012

A Force to be Reckoned With

 Speaking power to all my relations:

I honor my great-grandmother, Mary.  Born into spirit - into enduring, strict and difficult relationship with God. Born into simplicity. I imagine that her family was connected to spirit, that their faith was constant and easy; I imagine that I get my dreams from some hereditary river of spirit, going back to the old-order Amish. I can’t help but idealize her life - a life immersed in spirit, a life so separate from the “world” that connection to God was palpable.  In reality, after she was swept into the “English” world, she and my great-grandfather were shunned and turned away forever by their families and community. They could never go back. This doesn’t speak to me of an easy faith, no matter how palpable.

I name Mary: Pathfinder

I honor my grandmother, Isabelle. A smile and beauty that turned heads and hearts. A revelation that is difficult: my grandmother was schizophrenic. Recently, I asked mom if she thought schizophrenia was just a way of explaining the unknown, that maybe some people really can see things the rest of us can’t. Mom was adamant – she lived her own mom’s disease as a child. Grandma Izzy could not mother my mother, and my mom suffered for it, along with her brother and sisters. But, I still wonder. Mom says Grandma Izzy talked to Jesus Christ, sometimes maybe thought she was Jesus Christ. I wonder why we question this. Being a generation removed from the pain, my reality is that I believe in ambiguity.

I name Isabelle: Seer

I honor my mother, Victoria. A remarkable intelligence, faith without question, and a will to overcome any obstacle. An extraordinary mother - mom has a miraculous gift for mothering. She’s a minister, a chaplain, a leader – called to lead as a teenager. I believe mom got a gift from Grandma Izzy’s disease – she can overcome any obstacle. At 71, she walked across England, the entire island, dipping her feet in the ocean on either side. She is a powerful and strong, indomitable and faithful woman.  

I name Victoria: Leader 

I honor my daughter, Shey. Limitless capability, beauty and strength. When Shey was born, I knew her already – she turned out to be a little soul I remembered, what a surprise! I’ve been learning from her ever since. Shey has the capability and intelligence to do anything she puts her mind to. At 20, she has just finished circumnavigating the earth, bringing the world into our lives in ways I never imagined. With a will to rival Victoria’s and an ability to easily cross unspoken boundaries, Shey will take us places we can’t imagine now. She tests the waters, jumps in and takes us with her. Alaska is not big enough to hold Shey.

I name Shey: Adventurer

I honor Brenda. An ambi soul, willing to jump over convention to see what’s on the other side. Her curiosity and openness take her over the edge - her connection to spirit carries her to the other side. She honors dreams and has the strength and will to lead others to follow visions, but she will voice Cassandra to follow a difficult dream alone without looking back. She stands with her feet on either side of deep chasms and sees far in all directions.

 I name myself: Pathfinder, Seer, Leader, Adventurer, Visionary

 Mitakuye Oyasin

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Victoria - Men

In the dream I had been out of town and arrived late to a workshop, which had
been in session for several days. As I arrived, a man stood up, very angry,
and addressed the group of men and women. He put his hand down the front
of his pants and took it out again, then said how he wasn’t sure, but he
thought it was the lack of money that had caused all of his problems.

Then, another man got up, and putting his hand down the front of his pants,
and taking it out again, he very angrily said that it wasn’t the lack of money, it
was women who had caused all the problems for men. In all, five men got up,
and did that same gesture. Each one had a different reason for their outburst:
our culture, their job, real estate, finances, retirement, the list went on.

I raised my hand and the facilitator called on me. I said, “At first, I thought you
guys were doing an aggressive gesture, like Michael Jackson. But then it
seemed that you did it to assure yourselves that what you had was still there
and to protect it somehow. I’m sorry I’ve missed so many days of this
workshop. But I think I’ve missed a lot more than that. Where have I been
that I did not see the desperation and anger in men?”

The facilitator said, “I know you have not been in prison, and that you keep up
with the news—but what is your work? Are you a stay-at-home Mom?”

“No, I’m a minister.”

“Ah, that explains it,” he said.

Not wanting to disrupt the workshop or monopolize it, I dropped the query but
couldn’t quit thinking about it. Recently, I’ve said to a few people, “We have
to do something about the fact that our men die so much younger than we
do.” The most frequent answer I get is, “hormones,” meaning that to be male
works the body harder and it wears out faster. Yes, there have been studies
on giving men female hormones and watching them live longer. But not many
men want to do that, knowing they lose maleness.

Maleness and Masculinity—intertwined, but different. It’s like art, we don’t
know much about it, but we all know what we like. I’ve pondered how the
human race keeps procreating when, in our culture, men and women become
more alike in what they do and think. Sort of, like my pondering how birds tell
each other apart. What is this urge to procreate that is so strong, it unerringly
finds the opposite?

Having been raised in the 20th century, a time of cultural change between men
and women, I’ve seen traditional ways of being and interacting stood on its
head. No longer do women wear skirts, men wear pants. No longer is the
kitchen women’s bailiwick and carpentry, (fixing things) the bastion of men.
I’ve accepted that my role can be expanded, but it seems that his has been
diminished in the process.

Maybe its because the things formerly thought of as women’ work had less
status, so when men do them, they have less status. And, the things men did
had more status, so when women do them, they have more status. Statistics
show that when women begin to work in a formerly male job, such as ministry
and teaching, the make less money than men in the same job. In fact, all
teachers and ministers make less money now. Economics is another avenue
to explore, but not as interesting as the evolution of masculinity.

Maybe the “civilizing” process socializes men away from masculinity,
beginning at a very young age in school. Boys have a harder time sitting still
and learning to read. But they have to have this skill to get along in the world.
Maybe they are still geared to be cave men and current culture not only does
not reinforce that, but frowns on it. After being married to two men (consecu-
tively, not concurrently) and known a few others (not in the Biblical sense) I’m
often amazed at how men conduct themselves through the civilization’s maze.

How do they decide to show their masculinity in a world that no longer values
their hunting prowess, (except in Idaho) or their ability to lift and carry heavy
things? Hod-carriers of America, unite! I read a book once that delineated
women’s part in keeping men masculine. It was trite in some ways, but true, I
found out by experimentation. It idealized females in fiction who acted
properly feminine and helpless around men.

So, that night, I decided to see if I could get my way by stomping my little foot
and acting helpless. When my husband, Ernie, came home from work, instead
of griping straightforwardly (as was my usual mode) about something he had
not done, I acted like I was going to cry, pushed my fists down like little
Shirley Temple, and told him in a child-like way, “You make me so mad!” Poor
guy, he didn’t have a chance—he melted. In that moment, I could have had
anything he could provide. I knew then, that I could keep that marriage
together, but at what price?

I have to admit, though, that I learned two valuable things from that book: men
like to be complimented on how they handle money and their job. (And
anything that is seen as exclusively a male skill.) I have been grateful, many
times, to have someone bigger and stronger than me to lift and carry heavy
objects; to turn the screwdriver in surfaces too impermeable for me; to
change a tire; to get something from a high cupboard; to build a campfire; to
fix a car or motorcycle; to mow the lawn; the physical list goes on. But, I want
all you men to know that a woman, with the right tools, can do the same stuff
as men, it is just harder.

And when it comes to mental work, we now realize that it is old-fashioned to
think that men have a better handle on facts and figures. Women’s brains
work just as good as men’s. Not only that, but women, using their brains,
have not come up with any more ways toward world peace than men have.
You thought that when women got the vote, they would change the world—
make it a better place to be. Fat chance—women are just as egotistical, war-
like, self-seeking and greedy as men.

The French have a saying, “Vive la difference!” So, what is the difference?
Why do I get a thrill just hearing my husband, Willie, talk in that deep voice of
his? What is it about Robert Redford or Colin Firth or Hugh Grant that turns
me on? They don’t act particularly masculine, whatever that means. Except
in that movie, “Bridget Jones’ Diary” where the two guys actually have a fist
fight in the street and restaurant over Bridget. Maybe that is the reason I’ve
seen that movie five times.

So, what can we do as women to help our men live longer and get their hands
out of their pants? I say value them as individuals, not because of what they
have in their pants, but because of what they have in their heads and hearts.
It is the same thing we women want—not to be lumped together with all other
women. Meanwhile, if he can check the tires, I don’t have to. If he knows the
constellations, he can point them out to me. If he can build a good campfire,
I’m willing to gather the wood. If he makes a mean scrambled egg, I’ll wash
the dishes. If he tells a good joke, I will laugh.

And as we get older, we’ll take each other to the hospital as needed; to the
movies as wanted; to church every Sunday; to the bedroom where what we do
is nobody’s business but ours. We’ll count the birthdays and the grandkids.
We’ll mourn friends and family who die on us—“how could you? I needed you
to be here a little longer.” Last, but not least, we’ll praise God for making us
different, even if we are not French.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Brenda – Trusting A Singing Heart

This is life. If you’re wondering what on earth I’m talking about, it’s C.A.Kobu’s  “A Year With Myself”. Try it – it has been freeing for me.

This week was a turning point in the process of responding to AYWM’s questions. It became clear that I need to do exactly that - spend a year with myself. This writing is mine. No worries about how it comes off, no worries about never having been a writer before, and no worries about self indulgence. I’m immersing myself in this process NOW and becoming a Brenda investigator.

What is my soul’s compass?

Considering my chosen paths, it’s too coincidental that a compass comes into the conversation. A compass, to me, is the thing that guides me home, the thing that brings me in safe, the thing that I can depend on when all other information is conflicting. On the ground, in blizzards at night with all spatial cues only leading to confusion – my compass has stood between me and disaster. In the air, in clouds or an endless landscape, that compass is never wrong. It’s there for the times when the other clues I’m getting don’t serve and has never failed to guide me in the “right” direction.

Last night I was driving home for the weekend and near the house (finally home!) I came into a big herd of buffalo. Buffalo on either side of the little road, with their funny red eyes in the dark. Big, beasty, elemental buffalo with no agenda. And my heart sang. I don’t know how else to describe it. My heart got that amazing little uplift that makes you want to sing and cry and laugh and shout out, “I’m alive!”

When I got to the house, the wind was blowing, the stars were OUT, and the world was dark; coyotes were singing and I could practically hear the sky. And my heart sang again. I laughed out loud. It was then I realized, these are parts of my soul’s compass! My soul’s compass is made up of all the things that make my heart sing. My soul’s compass is all the things that bring me back home, safe to myself – no wonder my heart was singing!

Brenda, you should listen to this because it’s important: these are the things that you need to depend on to follow the right course home. You should use them before it gets really necessary - use them before you really need them for safety. Think about letting them guide you home every day and even every moment rather than just when you’re desperate. Think about trusting them. Think about trusting them enough to bring you home to yourself. What could be wrong with that? What could be more right?

My soul’s compass - what makes my heart sing:

§         My dreams  
§         The land, the animals, the sky, the quiet, the dark
§         360 degrees of open  
§         My connection to spirit, that great mystery, but not a great mystery at all, the connection to the one who listens and sees me, the wonder of it
§         John, hanging with John, the man of John  
§         The kids, laughing with them, sharing their joys and sorrows, learning from them  
§         My tiospaye; listening around a sweat and realizing that this is my family and they love me for who I am, they find me funny - the hodgepodge family that has sprung up to greet me here; the family whose faces are my face
§         Learning
§         Blazing trails
§         New adventures
§         Analyzing, solving complex problems, difficult thinking
§         Creating
§         Estrogen (sad, but true, and soon to be gone - brace yourself)

Done ditty done. I believe I will print this and stick it up. Blog, be damned – there are no more rules.

Tuesday, January 3, 2012

Brenda's Three Words for the Coming Year

Yesterday I went up on the hill. I took my time getting there by a route I’d never taken before, one that would be foolish in the summer for all the rattlesnakes, but that has a singularly different view this time of year. A view of the home place. Buffalo, grass, the frozen creek, the house and barn, the orchard, the old schoolhouse, Harney Peak in the distance. Harney Peak is best known for being the tallest mountain in South Dakota, right up tight behind Mount Rushmore, but for me it is the mountain where Black Elk saw. 

I climbed to the top and sat below a tree, a prayer flag already tied there. I pray here, and each time I end my prayers and open my eyes, I’m amazed all over again at the beauty of coming back from wherever I went. I don’t think too much on it, just wonder. I’ve asked before where it is that I go when I’m praying and Everett’s answer is, “where do you think you go?” This is typical.

I started down, this time by a route I’m familiar with, one that often holds cat tracks. Lately there’s been a cat visiting our place; sometimes the horses get all fluffed up and run from one end of the pasture to the other with only the scent of the cat chasing them. He’s brave enough to cross between the shop and house while one of us is out working in the yard and he thumbs his nose at us with the scat he leaves behind.

So, I was aware of him on the hill with me as I started down. I was walking and thinking about how our family thinks of the cats as ghosts, when all of a sudden I got the sudden urge NOT to turn around.

What a backwards thought! Every nature sage will tell you, “let the cat know immediately you’re aware of it, make yourself big, back away, don’t run”. In direct opposition to everything I’d ever ingested about living with cats, I was getting the clear call to ignore him, and leave my back open for attack.

This was an almost impossible call to follow. I’m brave, I’m curious, I'm alive! I don’t ignore things that might threaten me. I meet life head-on. And yet, here I was, with a clear call, “don’t look back.”

So, I didn’t look back. I kept walking with a little smile in my heart and gratitude for the lessons I’ve learned here the last few years. Some that included not looking back as I headed into the spirit world. I knew if I trusted this call, there would be gifts.

Last night, my husband, John, was driving home from work and as he neared the house, his headlights caught the distinct glow of big animal eyes. He turned the truck to aim his lights down in the creek bottom and there he was, the big cat, the one who’s been taunting us, leaving his kill piles and scat behind. It’s the first time we’ve seen him, a moment to be thankful for, a simple gift from a ghost.

You might think my three words for the coming year are “don’t look back”. But, it’s more complicated than that. Sometimes we’re called to look back and sometimes we’re called to look forward. Always called, though, and then, even entreated to follow the call. 
It’s simple, and hard and wonderful - 2012 – Follow the Call.