I am MOM

I am MOM
If I knew then what I know now . . .
"I take a very practical view of raising children. I put a sign in each of their rooms: 'Checkout Time is 18 years.'"
Erma Bombeck

Saturday, August 29, 2015

Hope



I stash my bicycle in the long grasses by the side of the highway. Out of the front carrier, I grab the dollar-store air horn that my daughter bought days ago—to “prank” the boys, my phone, and a bag of cat treats. I slip the phone into the waistband of my shorts and begin to walk through the ditch alongside the 1A. The long grasses brush against my leg whisking the chaotic frenzy already at play in my nerves.

♡♡♡

Yesterday, on my regular walking trail at the cottage, I stopped on the spot where I had last seen Jazmin sitting. Our grey tabby blended in with the trail mulch, which had weathered over the years since it had been laid; she sat perfectly still. I watched her on that day, just over a week ago. The rain had picked up and I felt certain she would turn around and head for the comfortable deck furniture on our covered deck. Never had I heard of a cat who took “walks” with their owner. The summer after Jazmin joined our family, if she heard us pick up the dog’s leash she jumped up to follow; and if she was already outside roaming, she meowed to let us know to wait for her. Whether the walk was fifteen minutes or an hour, she jogged along, panting by the end. In our first year together, she lost over four pounds. When I took our dog Abby off-leash, Jazmin walked alongside, or scurried right underneath Abby’s belly. Abby, bent down and licked her face. Jazmin tilted her head upwards.
♡♡♡

I walk, just along the edge of civilization, my imagination tumbling over itself. My plan is to sneak into the fenced-off pasture, and walk up and down the hills, and into the small forests, calling—Jazmin, Jazzy, here girl—while shaking the bag of cat treats. The damn cars on the highway are camouflaging the melody of my voice, the one that Jazmin will recognize, and I look over at them, annoyed at their oblivion. My stomach tumbles in angst, and my eyes scan the edges of containers I can’t see into. Stands of trees. Valleys. Grass. The grass is longer than it looked from across the highway. I realize that if a predator is hiding here, I am lunch. My protective air-horn is not even going to have time to yell it’s offending honk. Still, my trigger finger is poised.
♡♡♡

It has been eight days since the rainy day walk. Jazmin had been sound asleep on the fleece checkered-blanket on the front deck when I walked out with Abby. I stopped at the van to get my solid umbrella, the one I would use on the sidelines of a soccer game. I slipped on my gortex pants, and we took off, hoping to get out and back before the storm fully descended. I didn’t bother putting Abby on her leash; who else would be out walking in this weather? The temperature had dropped over 25 degrees in the last day. “Meow,” I heard in the distance, and turned back. Jazmin ambled out, stretched, and scurried after us. “Oh Jazmin, go home, it’s raining,” I implored. “Meow,” she answered. I walked on.

♡♡♡

This summer there have been sightings within our small cottage community in the foothills, of a bear, a cougar, and coyotes. I am what you might call . . . skittish. I tramp across the grassy ditch, and stare alternately at the barbed wire fence, and the fields beyond. Trespassing. Unknown. Wildlife. Jazmin. I lay down on my belly, and roll underneath, like a robber slipping past a laser security beam. I’m in.

♡♡♡

Just as we turned off our cul-de-sac, I saw Dutch with his new police dog. I leashed Abby, who had already given a warning bark to Jazmin. She scurried into the long grasses, unseen. I thought she might go home. Dutch waved to us, and ducked inside his garage. We reached the coulees, and I unclipped Abby again; she sauntered ahead. The trail wound up and down through a grove of poplar, aspen and pine. The rain revived the cedar mulch, and the smell of peppermint wood floated on the air. “Meow,” I heard, and turned back to see Jazmin coming along.

♡♡♡

I lie momentarily cradled by the swaying grasses, and the smell of earth grounds me. With hope, I get up, and continue my plea, “Jazmin, come on girl”. I walk toward the first stand of aspen. In the midst of the clump of trees stands a deer. Her large diamond-shaped ears swivel in my direction catching the sound of my breath. Her gaze fixes on me, and I pause—reverent. I walk slowly by, turning my head to watch her, as she mirrors her head movements to mine. After I pass, I shake the bag of cat treats again, and call out. In answer, just the whizz of the passing cars.

♡♡♡

Jazmin continued meowing at me, so I stopped to rub her chin just underneath her collar. She flopped down on the wet trail, and arched her back to expose her cream-colored belly. I gave her a thorough scratch. “You really are crazy,” I said, “It’s raining. Now go home.” I continued down the hill. All of a sudden Abby barked. I tensed. A brownish-grey, lean, short-haired dog bounded around the corner. I had never seen this dog before. The dogs did their traditional canine greeting, hey, let me smell your butt… Jazmin, who usually took Abby’s bark as a signal to disappear sat right in the middle of the path at the top of the hill. “Go Jazzy,” I said, with tensed lips, and a head nod. She sat. Just then the dog noticed her, and took off. Jazmin sprinted away. She has been known to “toy” with dogs before, so sure of her own leaping, ducking, climbing, and hiding capabilities. Even though the dog, built for racing, had long legs, I had faith in Jazmin. The dog owner showed up; his strong stride relayed his youth, and his wet and tousled blonde hair shifted with the wind. He spoke to me with an accent I drank up, “What’s going on then?” “Your dog just took off after my cat,” I said. “Oh. All in fun. No harm,” he responded, and walked on.
♡♡♡

I walk down a hill, the grass now cutting lines into my leg as if whipping me for some crime. I am itchy. I stumble and fall, as the earth melts away into an unseen depression. My breath catches, and I half scream. I scold myself for being such a damn sissy. It’s a field Wendy, get a hold of yourself. It is not only the possibility of becoming prey to animals, I am also imagining a crazy ranch owner barreling through the field with his shotgun. I don’t know why I would have such a ridiculous thought. My emotions are having a field day. I pass the second and then third stand of trees, and I am afraid to enter, even though I can see clear through. I hear a tiny, repetitive squeaking sound, a mix between a cat and a bird. I stop, finger on the trigger of the air horn. “Hello,” I call out, and from the grasses directly in front of me springs a full grown, molting deer. She runs parallel to me. I jump and nearly fall over from the surprise of it. And then I see the spotted fawn in the grass. Mama deer gives a signal, and the baby takes off in the opposite direction.

♡♡♡

The rain started coming down hard, and I wondered about abandoning the dog-walk. But, it was supposed to rain heavily for the next two days, and I really needed to get out. Jazmin, the dog, and the owner had all disappeared from view. It had never been my habit to go looking for Jazmin after a “chase”—sometimes she merely took off because too many small children came over to maul her—she always met me back at the cottage . . . eventually. If only I had known that this time would be different. If only I had seen where she went to hide, so that I could go tell her when it was safe to come out. If only I hadn’t “let her” come on the walk with us that day.

♡♡♡

I walk through miles of grassy land peppered with Potentilla bushes in full yellow bloom. I shake the treats, which I now realize is a ridiculous gesture in amidst the noises of nature, and traffic. I call out, “Jazzy, come on girl,” and my voice cracks. The tears start streaming down my face, and my chin quivers. I shake my head back and forth, in silent argument with myself.  She’s here, I know she’s here. Yesterday, when I walked on the path at the cottage, I stepped onto the spot that Jazmin had sat just before being chased away. I had the feeling—an intuition—to go across the highway, and walk through the fields. I was filled with hope, after basically crying my way through the days of the week since she’d disappeared.
I stand in the field staring into every space, as if maybe just looking in the right direction will produce the result I want. I feel desperate to hear her meowing conversation. I stand still—reluctant to move, to leave, to carry on with the dinner plans I’ve made. My body begins to shake, and I cover my face with my hands. I wish . . . oh, I wish . . .






Friday, August 14, 2015

Death's Shadow


An aged woman possesses grey and tangled hairs of wisdom, finely etched creases and imperfectly mapped lines of experience, and eyes that see less of what is tangible and more of what is perceptible. 

I am not that woman, not yet, but she does breathe inside of me. 

The older I get, the more death’s shadow crosses my path. Others get sick. Others have diseases for which there is no cure. I don’t understand how it is that some get sick, and others are spared. It confounds me. When someone is diagnosed, I wonder, Why them? As others die, I attend celebrations for their life, and I look around, Who is next? Will it be one of us? 

I know, I am creeping you out with my morbid thoughts, but death has to serve a purpose for the living. 

A woman that Ward and I have known for a long time went into hospice this week after attempts to resect and subdue a fast growing tumour in her brain, were not successful.  

Another friend of mine, lost an uncle to lung cancer.  

Both, in their sixties.

In these moments, we have no choice but to pause and think about life—the precursor to death. We celebrate the aspects of their lives that made us joyful, and the moments that signified their success, uniqueness and worthiness. However, the loss mirrors our own mortality, and that of those who are closest to us. We pull our loved ones near, or berate ourselves for not being able to. 

Slogans remind us: 
Carpe Diem (Seize the day)”,
“Live life to the fullest”
“Live—Laugh—Love” 
“You only live once”. 

While sitting in thoughtful memory of someone who has recently died, it seems not only possible but imperative that we change our wicked ways. However, the sun lazily melts the shadow of death, just as it lifts the fog from the coastal shoreline. With imperceptible amnesia, we return to our lives. 

But memories, with fleeting insistence, sink us in reality. Thoughts of those diagnosed, undergoing treatment, dying, or already gone, appear suddenly—like hiccups. With grievous sadness, we say goodbye to the person that we knew and loved, and remember the shape of them in our lives. And we learn, as the old woman knew in her bones, that we are changed people for the experience of knowing others. 

***

The Ship

I am standing upon the seashore. A ship at my side spreads her white sails to the morning breeze and starts for the blue ocean.  She is an object of beauty and strength, and I stand and watch until at last she hangs like a speck of white cloud just where the sea and sky come down to mingle with each other. 

Then someone at my side says, “There she goes!”

Gone where? 

Gone from my sight ... that is all. 

She is just as large in mast and hull and spar as she was when she left my side and just as able to bear her load of living freight to the place of destination.  Her diminished size is in me, not in her. 

And just at the moment when someone at my side says, “There she goes!” there are other eyes watching her coming, and their voices ready to take up the glad shouts “Here she comes!”

This is how I see and understand death.


Henry van Dyke (1852 - 1933)