love
open and full
0I am a nurturer. I am a caretaker. I am a heart that is open, full and expanding more.
When someone I care about hurts, I want to find a way to take that hurt away. I want to wrap that person up in my arms, absorbing the hurt.
I know this isn’t always possible. I know it’s not even desireable all of the time.
When someone does not allow that and pushes me away, I feel slighted. It’s such a silly thing to feel because it’s not really about me at all. That person just needs space, needs to deal with the issues solely.
I ache when someone I care about hurts. It makes me hurt.
fine literature
0Opening a woman should be like opening the finest book of poetry, the most lovely book you’ve ever owned. You take care with the spine of the book, working not to crack it, ever diligent about its condition. You turn the wispy thin pages slowly, savoring each one.
A woman should be savored. Each piece of her is a delight, an ever-changing story to unfold.
How will she react when I touch her here? Here? Maybe here?
What words will bring her to her knees in desire?
What tone will make her breathless?
Read her carefully, thoughfully, and you will receive bountiful rewards. Care not for the words written across her thighs, her belly, the small of her back, and you will not fully understand her, cannot fully appreciate her.
Open her like a fine book of literature, feeling each honey-dipped word dripping off of your tongue.
—
Decade
Amy LowellWhen you came, you were like red wine and honey,
And the taste of you burnt my mouth with its sweetness.
Now you are like morning bread,
Smooth and pleasant.
I hardly taste you at all for I know your savour,
But I am completely nourished.
personal revolt
0I recently wrote this to someone: I’m ready to love and give and dream again. I haven’t had that for a very long time.
I’ve always found a way to be distant, to be removed from people. I’ll let you in…but only so far. If I let you in further, I risk something. I risk losing a piece of myself. I risk being hurt. I risk loving. I risk caring.
But don’t we all? Don’t we all risk those things?
What makes me shut the door and lock it all up?
I’ve decided to have a personal revolt. I’m unlocking that lock. I’m throwing the door wide open.
I want to feel. I want to be felt.
I want to be empowered and empower someone else.
I want to be in awe of myself and of someone else.
I want to worship that power.
—
When the Roses Revolted
Ralph Fletcher
The roses were fed up
They were sick sick sick
of being symbols for love.
One night they revolted,
crept out of flower shops,
jumped out of windows
and touched the dirt!
They spent that night
Drinking real night air,
Carousing with clover,
Boogying with bluebells,
Dancing with dandelions,
And in this way they
Rediscovered their
Roots.
love letters
0I want to write my lover letters. I’m not talking about post-it notes strategically placed here and there to remind him of me throughout the day. I’m not talking about short postcards to tell him that I’m thinking of him. I want to write him love letters in the grand spirit of the Adamses, the Brownings, and Keats.
I want to use superfluous language, grandiose concepts, and poetic verse to tell him that he is loved. I fancy telling him that the way he hurt me last night made me love him more, ache for more, hunger for more. I desire to dance with him in the world of words, to float upon the euphoric clouds of adoration.
I want to remind him that I’m smitten with him. I hope he knows that every day brings a new experience to be treasured because it includes him.
Writing good love letters seems to be a lost art. Writing them in long hand, with the perfect pen and good paper seems to be passé. I want my lover to know that each sweeping motion of my hand to paper has a thought, a glimmer, a piece of him woven into it.
—
Abigail Adams to John Adams, her husband, December 23, 1782
My Dearest Friend,
…should I draw you the picture of my heart it would be what I hope you would still love though it contained nothing new. The early possession you obtained there, and the absolute power you have obtained over it, leaves not the smallest space unoccupied.
I look back to the early days of our acquaintance and friendship as to the days of love and innocence, and, with an indescribable pleasure, I have seen near a score of years roll over our heads with an affection heightened and improved by time, nor have the dreary years of absence in the smallest degree effaced from my mind the image of the dear untitled man to whom I gave my heart.
—
To Elizabeth Barrett Browning:
…would I, if I could, supplant one of any of the affections that I know to have taken root in you – that great and solemn one, for instance. I feel that if I could get myself remade, as if turned to gold, I WOULD not even then desire to become more than the mere setting to that diamond you must always wear.
The regard and esteem you now give me, in this letter, and which I press to my heart and bow my head upon, is all I can take and all too embarrassing, using all my gratitude.
- Robert Browning
(1812-1889)
—
Wednesday Morng. [Kentish Town, 1820]
My Dearest Girl,
I have been a walk this morning with a book in my hand, but as usual I have been occupied with nothing but you: I wish I could say in an agreeable manner. I am tormented day and night. They talk of my going to Italy. ‘Tis certain I shall never recover if I am to be so long separate from you: yet with all this devotion to you I cannot persuade myself into any confidence of you….
You are to me an object intensely desirable — the air I breathe in a room empty of you in unhealthy. I am not the same to you — no — you can wait — you have a thousand activities — you can be happy without me. Any party, anything to fill up the day has been enough.
How have you pass’d this month? Who have you smil’d with? All this may seem savage in me. You do no feel as I do — you do not know what it is to love — one day you may — your time is not come….
I cannot live without you, and not only you but chaste you; virtuous you. The Sun rises and sets, the day passes, and you follow the bent of your inclination to a certain extent — you have no conception of the quantity of miserable feeling that passes through me in a day — Be serious! Love is not a plaything — and again do not write unless you can do it with a crystal conscience. I would sooner die for want of you than —
Yours for ever
J. Keats
being real
0There are times when the best things to be said have already been written and recorded. Today, The Velveteen Rabbit by Margery Williams is one of those things. I’m thinking about what makes us tick, what makes us do the things we do.
The Skin Horse had lived longer in the nursery than any of the others. He was so old that his brown coat was bald in patches and showed the seams underneath, and most of the hairs in his tail had been pulled out to string bead necklaces. He was wise, for he had seen a long succession of mechanical toys arrive to boast and swagger, and by-and-by break their mainsprings and pass away, and he knew that they were only toys, and would never turn into anything else. For nursery magic is very strange and wonderful, and only those playthings that are old and wise and experienced like the Skin Horse understand all about it.
“What is REAL?” asked the Rabbit one day, when they were lying side by side near the nursery fender, before Nana came to tidy the room. “Does it mean having things that buzz inside you and a stick-out handle?”
“Real isn’t how you are made,” said the Skin Horse. “It’s a thing that happens to you. When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but REALLY loves you, then you become Real.”
“Does it hurt?” asked the Rabbit.
“Sometimes,” said the Skin Horse, for he was always truthful. “When you are Real you don’t mind being hurt.”
“Does it happen all at once, like being wound up,” he asked, “or bit by bit?”
“It doesn’t happen all at once,” said the Skin Horse. “You become. It takes a long time. That’s why it doesn’t happen often to people who break easily, or have sharp edges, or who have to be carefully kept. Generally, by the time you are Real, most of your hair has been loved off, and your eyes drop out and you get loose in your joints and very shabby. But these things don’t matter at all, because once you are Real you can’t be ugly, except to people who don’t understand.”
One evening, when the Boy was going to bed, he couldn’t find the china dog that always slept with him. Nana was in a hurry, and it was too much trouble to hunt for china dogs at bedtime, so she simply looked about her, and seeing that the toy cupboard stood open, she made a swoop.
“Here,” she said, “take your old Bunny! He’ll do to sleep with you!” And she dragged the Rabbit out by one ear, and put him into the Boy’s arms.
That night, and for many nights after, the Velveteen Rabbit slept in the Boy’s bed. At first he found it uncomfortable, for the Boy hugged him very tight, and sometimes he rolled over on him, and sometimes he pushed him so far under the pillow that the Rabbit could scarcely breathe. And he missed, too, those long moonlight hours in the nursery, when all the house was silent, and his talks with the Skin Horse. But very soon he grew to like it, for the Boy used to talk to him, and made nice tunnels for him under the bedclothes that he said were like the burrow the real rabbits lived in. And they had splendid games together, in whispers, when Nana had gone away to her supper and left the night-light burning on the mantelpiece. And when the Boy dropped off to sleep, the Rabbit would snuggle down close under his little warm chin and dream, with the Boy’s hands clasped close round him all night long.
And so time went on, and the little Rabbit was very happy — so happy that he never noticed how his beautiful velveteen fur was getting shabbier and shabbier, and his tail becoming unsewn, and all the pink rubbed off his nose where the Boy had kissed him.
Spring came, and they had long days in the garden, for wherever the Boy went the Rabbit went too. He had rides in the wheelbarrow, and picnics on the grass, and lovely fairy huts built for him under the raspberry canes behind the flower border. And once, when the Boy was called away suddenly to go to tea, the Rabbit was left out on the lawn until long after dusk, and Nana had to come and look for him with the candle because the Boy couldn’t go to sleep unless he was there. He was wet through with the dew and quite earthy from diving into the burrows the Boy had made for him in the flower bed, and Nana grumbled as she rubbed him off with a corner of her apron.
“You must have your old Bunny!” she said. “Fancy all that fuss for a toy!”
“Give me my Bunny!” he said. “You mustn’t say that. He isn’t a toy. He’s REAL!”
When the little Rabbit heard that he was happy, for he knew what the Skin Horse had said was true at last. The nursery magic had happened to him, and he was a toy no longer. He was Real. The Boy himself had said it.
That night he was almost too happy to sleep, and so much love stirred in his little sawdust heart that it almost burst. And into his boot-button eyes, that had long ago lost their polish, there came a look of wisdom and beauty, so that even Nana noticed it next morning when she picked him up, and said, “I declare if that old Bunny hasn’t got quite a knowing expression!”
I think this is exactly the journey so many of us are on. We are willing to go through the pain of love to become real. I want my breath taken away. I want to bleed and hurt. I want to feel the struggle to know, when I emerge, that every moment has made me more of the person I can be: more real, more loving, more giving, more alive.
finding time
0On Saturday, I went to pick up my niece so we could take some of my photography to enter it into competition at the County Fair.
We get buckled into the car, I start to pull away and I hear this small voice being very serious.
“Aunt Dawn?”
I turn to look at her as we pull up to the stop sign. “Yes?”
“School starts on Monday.” She is starting kindergarten at the Spanish/English immersion school and is very excited about it.
“Yes, it does. Are you excited?”
She nods. She’s upset, though, and I can tell.
“What’s up?”
“Aunt Dawn? I will be in school all day for 5 days.” I know she means five days a week and I nod.
“When will I see you? I want to still see you.”
My heart fills to bursting. She has this uncanny way of touching me in places no one ever has. She has the ability to make me love beyond all human capacity. I’m overwhelmed by this little girl sometimes.
She’s worried that we’ll no longer have time for our Friday play dates. They’ve become important to both of us. It’s our time to be with one another. What she doesn’t realize is that she will probably get too busy for me long before I’m ready to give up my time with her.
“We will find time, sweetie. I will make sure we will find time.”
“Good. Because I love you very, very much.”
I think my heart is going to explode.
“I love you, too.”
fine line
0Life is too short to play games when it comes to emotions or matters of the heart. I want to be in a mature, communicative relationship. I won’t do that silly “wait 3 days before calling” thing. I want to move forward.
I think that when you’re getting to know someone, the most difficult part is understanding how he works. Does he want me to probe, learn about his life that way? Does he want me to be patient, listen to the subtle cues he gives? We may come from extremely different backgrounds with diverse experiences and how will that manifest itself in the “getting to know you” stage?
This is where I’m most impatient. I’m an impetuous soul. If I feel something, if I think it will be good for me, if I enjoy it, I will rush in. I want to feel the joy and euphoria. It comes around so seldom that when it does, I want to wrap my arms around it and hold it close. Is this smothering? I suppose it could be. Am I too much? I suppose I could be. When I give myself, I give all of me…good, bad, indifferent. I will give the world.
Sometimes the world is too much.
I teeter on that fine line of patience and impatience. I want to be patient, give time and space. I want to rush in and share joy, though, too.
I’m trying to find out where that line is and what is right to do in my life.
This is not the easiest of lessons.
—
“Have patience with everything unresolved in your heart and try to love the questions themselves … Don’t search for the answers, which could not be given to you now, because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps, then, someday far in the future, you will gradually, without even noticing it, live your way into the answer.” ~ Rainer Maria Rilke ~
slice of life
0The phone rings. I pick it up. “Hello?”
Heavy breathing.
I look at the caller ID. It’s someone from my brother’s house.
“Hello,” I say again.
Heavy breathing and then a soft whistle. Then a giggle.
“Omigosh!” I exclaim. “You’ve learned how to whistle!”
She giggles again and tells me, “But it’s a sucking-in whistle. Not one I blow out.”
She’s five and her previous attempts at whistling have been a vocalized whistle. “Woo-oo-woo” she would sound off. Now, she whistles in my ear…even if it’s just an inward whistle. It’s music to my ears.
“Aunt Dawn…”
“Yes?” I’m still reeling from one more action that is showing she’s growing up before my eyes and there’s nothing I can do to make her slow down.
“Is this how you learned? Did you suck in before you learned to whistle out?” She wants to belong, to know she’s doing it right.
“Absolutely,” I tell her. “It’s the easiest way to learn.” I suck a whistle in to show her.
She giggles and whistles, whistles and giggles.
And I’m in love all over again.
motherhood
0“The true miracle is not walking on water or walking in air, but simply walking on this earth.”
— Ven. Thich Nhat Hanh
The last six months have been tumultuous, to say the least. They have been a rollercoaster of excitement, despair, sadness, and complete, overwhelming joy. They have been full of life.
I think, having watched my sister give birth to Kooper, that I’ve been handed a new lease on life. I was witness to a miracle. I can’t explain it in any other way. I have such a new respect for women who give birth. I’ve always found them to be admirable. I think that being a parent is the toughest job in the world. But now…now I’ve seen it from another point of view. I watched a child emerge from deep within his mother to greet a whole new world.
My sister was amazing during her labor. It was hard labor for about 3 hours and during that time, she was valiant. She was brave. She didn’t ask for an epidural until she had about 15 minutes of labor left and she was so proud of herself for having a natural birth. It was important to her.
I comforted her for a time. I washed her face with a cool cloth, I talked to her in quiet tones, and I brushed her hair back from her hair. When labor really started, though, I was holding one leg while her husband held the other. I was on the front lines. I was watching Kooper emerge. I saw a little white spot at first and wasn’t sure what I was seeing. The doctor explained to us what was going on. Then I saw hair: a little tiny round circle of hair. I kept thinking that his head was too small. I was wondering if that’s really how babies are when they come out. Little did I realize that I was seeing about a tenth of his actually head.
When my sister actually started pushing, his head really came into view and I began to understand what I was witnessing.
I think I cried halfway through it. I was so overcome with the moment and what it all meant. I was overjoyed. I had never been prouder of my sister than at that moment.
Kooper arrived and the umbilical cord was cut. Willow , my 3 year old niece, joined me and we watched the placenta being delivered and the doctor explained it to both of us. It was just as much of a learning experience for me as it was for Willow. I think it was a joy for me to share that moment with her.
I can still smell that primal baby smell, sweet, tart, and spicy. It was the smell of a miracle.
ceremony
0Ceremony
“From your parents you learn love and laughter and how to put one foot before the other. But when books are opened you discover that you have wings.”
– Helen Hayes (b. 1900), American actress, Academy Award winner
I’m pretty shy about being a part of ceremonies or even being publicly recognized for things. I don’t really like being the center of attention too much. It embarrasses me and makes me feel like I may have to produce something to uphold that recognition. I mean…I like recognition but it’s different when it’s in front of a lot of people. It’s harder to deal with.
Even though I’ve been ill, it was important to me, though, to take part in the induction ceremony for Phi Theta Kappa, the international two-year college honor society a few weeks ago.
I’ve worked hard to get a good grade point average. I haven’t always had an easy time of it and it took a lot of work to get back to the point where my grade point average was something to be proud of and something that I could share with others.
I invited all of my family but most of them had previous engagements and couldn’t make it. My dad, however, called me that afternoon and told me that he thought he could make it. He told me that he was coming straight from work so he might be dirty. It didn’t matter. I don’t care if he had grease smudges on his cheeks, blackened hands, and extremely dirty clothes. I was just so honored that he wanted to be there with me to see this happen. I almost cried when he called. I told him that it didn’t matter how he looked.
I was nervous when I got there. I’m not good in crowds and I felt more shy standing there with people I don’t really know. I can tell you that the minute my dad walked through the front doors of the school, I was so proud. My heart leapt with joy that he was there.
I was worried that he would be bored. I was worried that he would think it was silly. He didn’t. He told me that he really enjoyed the whole thing and that he was glad he came. I smiled from the inside out at that.
We had some cake, talked to a few people, then called it a night. He walked me to my car and we hugged before we each headed to our own homes.
I have to say…that was one ceremony I didn’t mind.