Janis Ian (who spells her first name the “correct” way, according to the woman
who gave it to me) sang that she learned the truth at 17. I believe her.
But, at 67, this Janis is 17 again— another odd truth. For instance, I’m back
in band, the only girl percussionist, playing orchestra bells, whose ringing steel keys
I knew well at 17. My teeth are being straightened again, voluntarily this time,
with molded plastic hugging all 28, instead of tortuous clamps and wires.
I’ve also lately dug out the ModPodge, dabbing blank postcards with watercolors,
affixing stanzas of my poems. At 17, I decoupaged images and words cut from
magazines onto clean cardboard tubs in which rainbows of ice cream once lived.
And later this spring, I’ll play in a band concert honoring America’s 250th birthday,
50 years after my bandmates and I struck up patriotic tunes for the nation’s bicentennial.
Just as I’m trying to wrap my (now gray) head around the half century ago part, I chuckle
at the time machine that’s put me here in my spacey poet brain (also part of 17),
picking up mallets and a gluey brush, preparing postcards with abstract washes
of color and typed words and who knows what else to fling me backward across decades
to land in the frame of that skinny girl percussionist with braces and aching teeth,
who directed the pep band and edited the school newspaper, scribbling daily,
hoping she’d be a Real Writer someday, someone who wanted to live a creative life,
without understanding that she, lucky girl, already was.
The Bandstand Bears are much more adept at the bells than I am at the moment, but I’m practicing. You can hear the bears play here. / Photo: Dick Schmidt
Gratitude is the confidence in life itself. In it, we feel how the same force that pushes grass through cracks in the sidewalk invigorates our own life.
—Jack Kornfield
•••
The essence that nudges tiny green bits upward, searching for light and air through the smallest sidewalk fissures,
by any name or none, elicits wonder in me on every walk, as though such a phenomenon is a rarity,
as if tiny growing things don’t find ways to enter the world. But I also think of the ones that don’t or can’t,
the prodigies that didn’t take root, the ones stopped before they could appear. Which makes me stop
mid-stride, bend and touch the bit of life coming through. Which might be taken for a weed and plucked.
Which, I, too, have plucked, and later wished I hadn’t. So nowadays I give the little plants that can a Yay, you!
before walking on, mindful of the marvel that any of us seeds landed and grew and thrived,
that, despite everything, we have somehow flourished in these lucky, lovely lives.
Walking across Virginia, Buddhist monks make their way closer to D.C., months after leaving their Texas home,
buoyed by love, tended by strangers at every stop. And somehow that, for me, quells the awful—at least for a bit.
I can’t say how following the journey of men on foot, silently moving in the name of peace helps, but it does. Somehow.
It is in the somehow that I live lately. It is in the somehow where, come to think of it, I have always lived.
Somehow I can rise again, even on another foggy morning in what seems like an endless winter of fog,
and I can feed the huge black kitty in my house who, after I inherited him a year ago, has decided that I am his,
as well as Hercules, the neighbor feline, who appears mornings on my porch, as if he does not get fed at home.
I can relate. “It’s always more fun to eat out, dude,” I tell him as he dives into the pâté du jour.
It’s in the somehow that we do the smallest things for others, and, of course, in that, for ourselves.
Somehow, even on another gray Saturday morning, I can gather up bowls and snacks, as I’ve done
thousands of times. I can unplug the laptop and sheath it in its soft sleeve imprinted with typewriter keys.
I can make copies of the prompt, retrieve keys to the loft, and drive to the place where writers arrive,
where, around a rectangle of long white tables, they spill words onto pages, which do not clatter, but land softly
under pens, under typing fingers. And when I ask, “Who wants to read?” someone always speaks up.
And somehow, in the gentle voices burbling into our thirsty ears, we perk up like cats waiting
to be fed, eager for the kind of sustenance we too often forget that we need.
•••
For the Team Haag writers who gather in the loft and online to write their art out with me. I continue to be grateful for your companionship and the community over many years.
Peace is not something to be found outside; it must be cultivated from within. Even in a divided world, peace is possible—not because the world changes, but because our hearts change. —Venerable Bhikkhu Pannakara, leading the Walk for Peace
•••
We are carrying the heaviest things these days— one among us with a massive old walnut tree threatening her house where a woman and her son with brain cancer live.
One among us having been recently rear-ended, the effects of which are pinging through her body like jolts of electricity—she, too, with a beloved in the late stages of cancer.
All of us staggered by the weight of cruelty and meanness of a corrupt leader and his minions in what we used to think of as our country, the land of the free,
the home of the brave. On our knees, wishing for relief on a day when hundreds of teenagers walked out of school, then miles to the Capitol of our state,
joining so many outraged, so many carrying signs: Wake up, America. We need to relearn empathy. Uncle Sam pointing his bony finger,
saying, I want YOU to defend democracy. We’re ready to defend; we’re saying no. But the walnut tree and the broken car and the aching body require TLC first.
So let us, just for a moment, put down the heavy, rest our arms, take a load off. Let us write, as a Buddhist monk suggests, walking with his brother monks across
America on a 2,300-mile peace pilgrimage: Today will be my peaceful day. Then breathe mindfully, sending kindness and compassion into the world.
It will feel like so little. It may look like nothing. But, the monks would tell you, it is everything to awaken the peace that lives within us all.
Students gather in front of the California state Capitol during a Jan. 30 protest against federal immigration enforcement in Sacramento. The student-led demonstration drew approximately 1,500 participants. (Photo: Greg Micek / CapRadio)