Yeah, you two! I don’t care if he’s your brother— you can’t shove him into the pool. No, you can’t shove anyone into the pool. No, you can’t dunk him and hold him under either. I don’t care that he ate your cookie.
No, you can’t blow my whistle. Because it’s a lifeguard whistle, and you’re not the lifeguard. Yeah, you can wear my hat. For a minute. I need it back. To keep me from getting sunburned. Yes, I see your sunburn. It’s a doozy. Yes, yours is a doozy, too.
What are your names? And you’re how old? I’m 18. Yes, I coach one of the swim teams. You want to be on the swim team? Well, let me watch you swim. Yes, your brother, too.
Can you put your face in the water? Blow bubbles? Turn your head to the side and breathe? Yeah, like that. Good.
Nice handstands. No, we don’t do handstands on the swim team. But it’s great that you can do them.
Let’s see how fast you can swim. Sure, I’ll blow my whistle. Ready? On your mark, get set, go!
•••
Thanks to Genaro Molina of the Los Angeles Times for the inspiration and his excellent photo.
(In honor of Brother David Steindel-Rast’s 100th birthday)
To swim, you must trust, said a wise man who has now achieved 100 years on the planet.
“You can learn as much as you want about swimming from books,” he said. “You can stand in the water
and move your arms. But unless you really let yourself down into it, you’ll never swim.”
You don’t trust the water, which will hold you, if you allow it; you must trust yourself, he says,
a bigger challenge. Learning to swim then, means learning to trust the unknowable, the unseeable,
what some call God, as well as the physics of bodies in water. If we allow ourselves
to relax and float— a lesson we practice again and again—we build trust in our fragile,
undependable, often get-it-wrong selves, coming to see that we, quirky and oddly made,
truly are our own best gifts.
•••
Brother David Steindel-Rast is an author, scholar and Benedictine monk, known throughout the world for his philosophy that gratefulness is the true source of lasting happiness.
Widely considered the “grandfather of gratitude,” Br. David has been a source of inspiration and spiritual friendship to countless leaders and luminaries as well as one of the most important figures in the modern interfaith dialogue movement.
We knew it’d show up eventually, after weeks of saying to each other, “Perfect weather, isn’t it?” and “Best summer I can remember.”
Because we live in a land of too hot, a state of hot-hot, with the always- hottest place in our southern desert that’s got the word “death” in it.
But here—near the top of California’s great central valley, where sizzling spots like Red Bluff often win the prize for hottest in these parts—this week
we enter the landscape of century temps. We avoid the eastern and southern humidity, but boy, can we cook. And boy, are we about to.
Which is why God, in the guise of Willis Carrier, created in 1902 a system to control temps and humidity in a Brooklyn print shop,
though it wasn’t until 1906 that engineer Stuart Cramer dubbed it air conditioning. Think about that, friends, when we step outside
into 100 degrees, then turn our sweaty selves ’round and head back in, offering our perspiry thanks to Messrs. Carrier and Cramer
and the kabillions of their descendant engineers and technicians working to ensure that we stay cool, baby—
Listen, an experienced gardener warned, you want to watch the wisteria.
It gets away from you, its dime-sized seeds burrowing into the ground, it’ll grow and grow and grow into a constrictor, a green strangler. I’m not kidding.
But, I said, I like the pretty clusters that drape like lavender waterfalls before the leaves burst out.
Yeah, he said. Just wait.
Same with the morning glories that took over the fence with their glorious purple blossoms, open-throated to the sun.
And mint. Everyone warned me about mint. Subterranean invader, they said. It’ll pop up everywhere like whack-a-mole. You won’t be able to get rid of it.
You want to leave a legacy after you die? Plant mint.
But spearmint, I said. For tea. And the smell.
Yeah, they said. Just wait.
Today I stretch tall to clip the constrictor’s searching arms roaming the fence, get it away from the neighbor’s house as it reaches for me, snagging some tenacious morning glory with it.
Crouching, I yank out a little mint by the roots, plucking some of its wrinkly leaves for tea later, consider transplanting lemon thyme where I have de-minted—
“my darling lemon thyme,” I hum—
growing so happily under the maple in the front yard. Will it do well here in so much unrelenting sun?
You never know till you try, I think, the perennial motto of gardeners, whose ranks I have now joined as an apprentice, bringing my minty-thyme hands to my nose, closing my eyes, and—yes!— inhaling deeply.
Morning glories mixed with wisteria leaves on the fence / Photo: Jan Haag
You know how you wake up some mornings, the bad dream running laps in your brain, telling yourself it’s not real, but you carry the hangover of free-floating anxiety in your satchel of woes, which, most days, you can set in a corner, say, There, there, to the worries that do you no good to fret over?
For whatever reason you’ve shouldered them today, along with the persistent headache that points to something blooming outside that’s bugging you, so you go back to bed for a while, hoping that it will ease, that you might doze, awaken again feeling better, but no soap, so you lie there thinking, This is dumb.
You rise with a groan and make the bed so the cat can assume his usual place in your spot—or, more accurately, his spot that you’ve borrowed overnight—and while there is much to do—always much to do—you think, Start with easy, pulling on shorts and a lightweight T-shirt, adding your shades and, slipping into the flip-flops by the back door you keep there, tugging on the somewhat stuck door that swells in summer.
When you step into the sunshine, you feel a bit like Dorothy walking into Oz, blinking behind your shades, and because it’s a watering day, you pick up the magic wand, turn the spigot and presto! There’s the delicate shower of water that you aim at the leafy arms of the tomato overgrowing her wire cage like a too-small bra, a simile that makes you smile because the plant variety is, after all, named Juliet.
As you set aside the squirter and gently touch one of the reddest ovals, low to the ground, the first cluster to bud, it comes off easily in your hand, which lifts you somehow. And you cup another little gem, and another, and now you hold a trio of tomatoes, as if they were just waiting for you to show up, which you deposit in a small cardboard square box and take some photos, which you think is a bit silly—just tomatoes, for heaven’s sake.
But that’s the point: Holding a bit of heaven in hand that you grew from a sprout, even as you chuckle, thinking, All I did was plant her and water her, knowing that forces far greater than you shaped and continue to nurture Juliet—and you, for that matter—an everyday miracle that softens your old heart into once again loving this loveable life.
If you believe that you were not born to sing, then you must allow the birds to tutor you,
sitting in places where they do, allowing them to feel comfortable enough to vocalize near
you in your scary human suit. You will think, at first, that they are all brilliant sopranos,
with their warbling trills, and, if you are fortunate to study with an owl, you may
want to imitate its throaty hoo-hoo. And you should, for allowing your throat
to open and sound to emerge is what you do every day. Singing is just sustained talking,
after all. And the point is not to be good or to necessarily harmonize with others.
The point is to sing out on a deep breath a note of meaning—perhaps a joyful one,
but ones of sorrow and despair, too— a long note. Do not worry if it wavers
or your voice breaks. Listen. The birds falter, too. Join them. Let them remind
you that you are of a species that is born in song. Sing your own tra-la to the wingéd
ones in trees, especially to those in cages. In fact, open the cage and slowly climb in.
Do not mind the feather ruffling; settle in on any available perch. Leave the door open.
Open your mouth. Let a note take wing. See what happens.
•••
(For singers everywhere—
like my friend Lilly Ganly, a rock ‘n’ roll singer who turns 17 today—
and Martha Kight, my high school friend, still singing, still acting her heart out,
and my friend Katie O’Rourke, music teacher, opera singer and chorus member, who, with members of Chanteuses, a Sacramento women’s chorus, recently performed at Carnegie Hall in New York with dozens of singers from around the country.)
Sculpture: Where did you learn to sing? / Artist: John Weber