Sunday, November 18, 2018

Arboreal Worship


There are many things in nature that I love. All the little critters, of course, except the big spiders, I am not fond of them at all. I love rock formations and the sunrise and the sunset and the quality of light and how it changes through the seasons. I love water in all its many guises. I love leaves and grasses and stumps and vines and fence posts and all the many varieties of acorns. I love it all really but most of all I love the trees!!

I have numerous favorite trees around the area. Some I have to worship from afar because I will not trespass on another person's land. Some I can walk right up to and some require more of a trek. Many of them are sycamores with their beautiful white bark. A few are gnarly, giant oaks with massive branches and I passionately adore the dance of Osage Orange (aka Hedge Apple) trees. 

I visit my trees and I talk to them. I mourn with them when they lose big branches. I feel an incredible sadness when they fall down or are cut down. I tell them how much I admire their resiliency and their ability to grow and spread their roots in impossible places. I admire the intricacies of their roots as they try to hang on to a rock face or an eroding river bank. 

This past Saturday I got to re-visit some of my favorite friends on a trail near Stockton Lake Dam. On this one trail are 3 massive, old, sycamore trees. One of them is particularly old and just huge. I am in awe of its size and majesty. It has a very strong presence. My favorite is another huge sycamore holding up a fallen tree that has died and now lies balanced in the sycamore's haunch. This dead tree is one of my all-time favorites. It has a beautiful, smooth texture and I know this sounds silly but bear with me, it has a kind of draw to it or a siren call if you will. I have to touch it and embrace it and it has this grounding spirit about it. I feel as if it is a friend that I have not seen in a long time and now we are reconnecting.

If you ever encounter my friend and I in the woods you will notice that we are touching the trees gently, or patting them, or resting our foreheads against their trunks. We are honoring their presence in this world and it feels like church to us. It's a very spiritual experience. Just try it sometime. Go out and about and find a tree that kind of speaks to you with its beauty or its presence. Say hello and quietly rest your forehead against it and feel the power of its quiet essence. Just stand there for a minute and listen. It will do your heart and your soul a world of good. 





Tuesday, October 23, 2018

A Tribute for my Aunt Wanda



My Aunt Wanda passed away this past Sunday morning. I could not find a portrait of her in my collection but I did find this one which is from such a happy and yet melancholy time. That sort of sums up Aunt Wanda's life. It was happy because the whole family is here. My beloved cousins Connie B. and Donny and you can't see him but Wanda is about four months pregnant with Tommy. It's melancholy because my uncle was suffering from the colon cancer that would take his life in just a few months. Resilient.

My Aunt Wanda was a wonderful human being. She was resilient, she was kind, she was loving and she was one of those rare things in this world...a true Christian. Life was not easy for her. She married my Uncle Harlan and I believe that he loved her and his family very much but he was a lot like my dad and did not know how to express it very well. He was gone off with my grandfather and my dad all the time and my grandmother Clayton dominated her kids lives in very unhealthy ways. Yet despite the often unkind treatment of my grandmother Aunt Wanda forgave her and even helped grandma when she needed it. Forgiving.

Aunt Wanda was devoted to my precious cousin Connie B. who was born with a developmental disability and she spent her life making sure Connie had the best life possible. She nursed my uncle through his illness. She dealt with my grandmother with grace and kindness even though grandma did not make that easy. She raised Connie and Donnie and Tommy on her own until she met Jim and later had James Jr.. She suffered more unbearable heartbreak when Donny was killed in car accident in 1969. Yet she carried on and she held her head high and she trusted in God to get her through the darkness. Kind.

Aunt Wanda was a loving woman who loved her children and her grandchildren and her great grandchildren very much. She even had room in her heart for me. And despite the fact that I am not sure she understood me she still loved me and never showed me anything but love and kindness. She was very important to me and very loved by me and everyone she came in contact with throughout her life. Loving.

I am not the worlds most religious person anymore. I have become a wee tad jaded about those who claim to be Christians but do not have the first clue on how to be one. My Aunt Wanda was the exception to the rule. She was everything I think a Christian and a spectacular human being should be. She was resilient, forgiving, kind and most important loving. I loved her very much and I will miss her forever but I know she is in heaven and I can hear her and Connie B. singing "Jesus Loves Me" and this image I will hold in my heart and I will try not to cry because I know they would not want me to be sad. They are all together and at peace and that's all we can really hope for in this life. 


Monday, May 28, 2018

Memorial Day Musings



So another Memorial Day weekend is winding down. I completed the cemetery tour Saturday. Some folks are considerate and have themselves all buried in the same general vicinity but not my folks. We are migratory even when picking a spot for eternal slumber. I visit 5 cemeteries on average and it can be eight if I can summon up the emotional energy. These are also spread out over Jasper, Lawrence, Newton and Barry counties. I called my Troll mother on the way this year to update her on my health saga and she asked if I would take her with me out to Park Cemetery as she had not made it there yet. I was most happy to pick her up and off we went. This year I enlisted the help of Beth because I am not so bendy anymore. She graciously agreed but now that she knows the routine I might be on my own again next year. You see...it doesn't just involved flopping some flowers down. There is walking, there is bending, there is pulling grass and weeds and cleaning off grass and dirt and whatever else has accumulated on the stones. There is dealing with my sadness and frustration. This is how the above picture happened. Beth can not be trusted.

My initial reaction was OMG!! Crop me out!! Then it was OMG!! I am HUGE!! You see I never see myself from behind. And WHY are my shorts ALWAYS crawling up my butt?? When I look in the mirror I never see myself as big as I really am. I think it's a lot of denial. The truth is I am a LARGE human being. Even if I were a more normal weight I would still be a large human being and you know what...that's okay. And the more I look at this picture the more I like it. Because I am walking with someone that I love and we are honoring those who should never be forgotten. I loved spending time with Neva and Beth taking care of those we care about and miss. She even said to me "look at all the pretty flowers Ermanelle." Don't worry if you don't understand...family story. It was lovely talking with her and driving her around to all our various spots. We checked on folks and talked about others who are now gone and it was all in all a wonderful time. As a side note...SHAME on whoever was supposed to mow the old pauper's cemetery this year. It is ridiculous that the grass should be waist high again. People have relatives there whom we take care of every year and we should not have to bring our own bush hog to get to the graves.

I am digressing again. Beth calls me a "keeper of lost souls". I like that. I believe with every fiber of my being that people should not be forgotten. All souls matter. If I was a millionaire every grave I saw that did not have a flower on it would have one at least once a year. It makes me said to see neglected graves. 

I love taking care of my folks but it is a bit of a melancholy task. I miss them. Grave tending reminds me of all the drama of human existence. I faithfully take care of my great-aunt Glady's grave although she died 27 years before I was born. Why you ask? Well...it was a tragic death (long story for another time) and so she wound up in the pauper's cemetery. Grandpa Clayton decided he would tend to his sister-in-law's grave because the county and her "no good husband"would not. Dad carried on the tradition and now it is left to me. I am not sure what will happen to Gladys when I am gone but I cannot dwell on the inevitable. 

I also find placing flowers on "the babies" graves very melancholy. My grandmother Barchak...God rest her soul...had 4 daughters that only lived a few minutes to an hour after birth. One is buried in one cemetery and the other 3 are at another. My mother was the only little girl that lived. It's a tragedy I cannot imagine living through but Grandma Annie was a resilient woman. I wish I had spent more time with her growing up. She died when I was 10 and I don't remember a lot about her but what I do remember feels happy. 

Visiting the babies this year made me stop to think about her life even more than I do normally. She married my grandfather in 1912. He was 38 and she was 21. She had her first child, Albert, the next year. From 1913 to 1930 she had 6 living children and lost four others. Can you imagine? And then in 1932 Grandpa Barchak died...it wasn't really his fault...but his timing was horrible. Smack dab in the middle of the depression Grandma is left in the country with no money and 6 kids to feed. Uncle Steve was not 10 yet. Mom was 5 and Uncle Mike was 2. The older boys were still teenagers. It was NOT fun for any of them but they survived. These stories and these emotions are an important part of who I am. 

I think what I am trying to articulate is that taking time out of our lives to tend the graves of our loved ones is so very important to the well-being of everyone's souls. By honoring the spots where their physical existence stopped we keep their memories alive. We honor both the beauty and the flawed nature of their souls. It connects the living with the dead.  We share memories, we spend time with those we love who are still with us and those that have moved on, we recognize the important roles they all play in our lives. I am a better person for having known each and every one of them. I am a more complete person by honoring their influence and recognizing how each of them affected my journey to becoming who I am right now. May they all rest in peace. 




Saturday, March 24, 2018

Uninvited Memories


Relationships are complicated. It's as simple as that. To intertwine your life with another can be exhilarating, terrifying, confusing, fulfilling or possibly soul destroying. It is especially difficult when you are young.

When you are young you are still trying to find you way your way in the world. You are still trying to determine who you are and how you will fit into this world. You think you know EVERYTHING but you don't know crap. Really...what you think you know...throw it away...because it will only confuse you even more when it all falls apart. If you are in your 20's for 30's right now trust me when I tell you that you will be a different person in 10 years. We change and we grow and we discover that we want different things. It's normal. It's natural. We are supposed to grow and explore our intricacies. 

I have made so much progress and right now...in this time...I am the happiest I have ever been in my life. I worked with a therapist for two years to rid me of the PTSD that haunted my every step and only recently did I have an epiphany about who I am that took years of resentment and seething anger and just melted it away. I am so much more even emotionally and so much calmer. It's been an adjustment. I keep wondering who this person is that has taken over my brain but I like her and we are keeping her.

All this being said there is this little irritant from my youth that keeps popping up from  time to time and I have been trying to figure out why. The memories are uninvited, unwanted and just generally annoying. Thanks to my work with my therapist these memories no longer send me "down the rabbit hole" but I don't like it so this blog in another step in purging this stuff from my brain.

When I was almost 21 I was manipulated into meeting someone whom I always refer to as "the Evil One". (We'll shorten it to E1 for this blog) Now...was she really evil you ask? I have honestly tried to see her as just another flawed human being but in reality she was a sociopath and her choices were "evil" in that she did not care who she hurt or who she had to manipulate to get what she wanted. She was ridiculously androgynous and I thought beautiful. She was everything...or so it seemed...that I was not. She was confident, bold, she knew what she wanted and I was infatuated with the idea that someone like her would want to be with me. Because I thought I was ugly and fat and shy and unlovable and weak and just less than everyone else. I let my self fall deeply in love with a total train wreak of a human being and the carnage was brilliantly epic. 

She took all my vulnerabilities and all my doubt and she used it to further whatever agenda she had going. Really...I should have known when she said she would visit me and then go on to Colorado to basically be another woman's mistress that she was trouble. How could I not see this as a red flag? Ah youth.... I think a part of me thought she was kidding. Who would want to live that way? I was so naïve. Maybe I thought I could rescue her of fix her? That was my modus operandi for most of my 20's and into my 30's. I think I was almost 40 when I realized I could not "save" everyone or "fix" everything that was wrong in other people's lives. 

I think we were only together for maybe 3 or 4 years but it was not fun. Toward the end I finally realized that she was sleeping with someone else and had been for awhile and had also most likely slept with all of my "friends" at the time or had at least tried to sleep with them. She decided she was leaving one early December and I asked her to stay until Christmas was over because my mother loved her and had no idea what kind of douche bag she really was and I did not want to hurt mom's feelings. My feelings, of course, did not matter because, after all, I didn't deserve to be happy now did I. By Christmas I had made progress into letting her go. I was going to be okay. And then Christmas came and went and she stayed. I was puzzled. I watched her break the woman's heart whom she was supposedly leaving me for and I mean that literally. She talked me into going with her when she told her she had never loved her. I should have ran screaming into the night but I stayed and kept trying to find a way to make her happy even though I later realized she was breaking her heart because she had already lined up her next mark. Evil.

I have not spoken to the E1 in almost 30 years. I have no idea where she is and don't care. I am sure she is still sleeping her way across the lower 48 manipulating people along the way to get what she wants. It's probably a little tougher for her now since she's in her early 50's but I am sure there is a whole new generation of women she can charm into giving her whatever it is she is searching for these days. So why does she pop up in my brain every now and then? It's usually triggered by a song or an emotional reaction to something else.

Maybe these memories are a reminder of how far I have come? Maybe I have to admit that deep down there is a tiny spot left, I think it's buried behind my pancreas, that still cares for the person I thought she was? When you realize that someone is a sociopath and you know you want nothing to do with them EVER but you find that you still care for them...it's unsettling and irritating and I think this might be why she still pops in every now and then. 

So...Dear Evil One:
I loved you with the passion that only youth can provide. It was reckless and foolish and soul destroying. Now all that's left is residual resentment and contempt and that tiny speck of love that I can't seem to purge from my soul. Your memories are unwelcome and unbidden. I will not ever be able to forgive you for the way you treated myself and others. I know that you do not care what I think or feel and that is fine because the feeling is mutual. Go on about your self-destructive ways and good riddance. A tiny part of me will always love the potentially decent human being that was buried in your heart and I will accept that fact now and put it away. I have said it out loud finally and now it can rest. 






Honoring the All

As a young girl I grew up with parents who came of age so to speak during World War II. My mom graduated high school in 1945 and four o...