Friday, August 19, 2016

No Agenda

Dear Delphi,

Sunset: Buck Mtn. Jan 2015
I’ve decided on a writing adventure. It is time to give my soul something new to organize, anticipate, and otherwise reroute me from the angst that keeps swearing it will catch up to me like a bully Sasquatch, flog me for all my former good works, break all my fingers so I can’t type or wrangle a pen, and render me a perpetual couch potato, fully baked with a split belly covered in olive oil, cayenne, and homegrown chives.  I thought of this during a late night when I was watching the film, Mrs. Brown. It's about Queen Victoria’s prolonged mourning over the loss of Albert, her partner in life and in national governance, and her subsequent relationship with Mr. Brown, the Royal Stable's Groomsman. The film is also a biopic on how the Queen unwittingly led the loyal subjects of the British Empire into a prolonged despair about its future as a Monarchy; for like, forty years. Heavy. But I felt better for having watched the film.  Somehow, I was able to count my blessings and shift out of a creeping despair of my own.

I obviously rediscovered the warm, fuzzy comfort of  'movie therapy,' for the fourth or fifth time in my life, that is.  I was recovering from a bike wreck that happened in July of 2015.  No one would call me wreckelss, but I was riding - with a fully loaded bike trailer - down Geer Lane.  It is basically the steepest road on Orcas Island (WA), only to jack-knife on the mixed gravel and dirt surface.  First, let me say I was very lucky. There were no cars or trucks to complicate my crash landing. My life did not flash before my eyes; I had no impending sense of doom. I did, however, have a face-to-face encounter with a rather hard-packed road. 

When I, with bike and trailer intact, went sliding through that weird time distortion that comes from the sense of inevitability, I knew I was going to lose that particular battle with the g-forces. I managed to avoid a tree and defy gravity just long enough to land, almost, on the side of the road where there’s an embankment, with a softer, leafy mulch to cushion the impact. Almost. A softer landing seemed like a promising goal at the time, seeing as how my other options were a six-foot cliff, two garbage cans, and a sixty-foot tall, deeply rooted sycamore tree.

Geer Lane is a one-lane, dead-end affair in a private housing development.  It serves a few year-round residents and hosts several vacation rentals. The vacation rentals piece is why I was even there in the first place. At the time, my business (read:"me") was managing several vacation rental cleaning teams, scheduling childcare for events like destination weddings, operating a face and body art booth at the summer farmer’s market on the village green, tutoring at the high school level, and performing consultant and program coordinator duties for a local leadership organization. Those of us in the service industry, here in the San Juan Islands, tend to juggle more than one income generating endeavor because the primary economic drivers are seasonal. The work-week is 1,000 hours long from Memorial Day to Labor Day, but more typically normal in the shoulder seasons. Unless you are gainfully retired, or work for the county government, utilities, or schools, the winter months are a foregone conclusion of retreat time. Rumi calls it wintering in. Winters can be financially lean if you haven’t planned well, or a welcome respite if you have. I have experienced both.

On the day of my bike incident, one of my subcontractors had called in to suddenly withdraw from the team cleaning schedule, having broken up with a boyfriend overnight. She had decided to leave the island immediately. My policy and practice, as the owner-manager of the business, was to step in, myself, whenever a last minute change occurred. That day was not a great day for me. I was just two days away from a July 4th wedding event in which I was providing the primary childcare. Because it was the peak of the tourist season, no other subcontractors were available to step in, as they were all dispersed to other client locations. On top of this pressure, I had a business meeting that afternoon with a potential business partner, someone who I hoped could take over the cleaning accounts in the near future. I have performed professional cleaning services since I was 15. At 56, it shouldn’t be a surprise that I was ready to retire from the cleaning aspect of my work-life. It was never my chosen career but it kept food on the table, a roof overhead, and it helped me pay for education for my children and myself. 

In two years' time, I probably biked down Geer Lane well over a hundred times. It has a 15% grade incline in the first ¼ mile. Because I’ve been car-free since 2008, I always walked up that road, pushing my bike and equipment-filled trailer (including a Sentra II Kirby vacuum!). Then, when it was time to go back down, I would literally brake, tightly, all the way down to the bottom.  A few times before, I actually walked down the steep part, also with my brakes fully on, so the bike didn't get ahead of me or pull me down. I generally replaced my brake pads about every 15 months or so. I had other clients in other areas, but at this point, I was doing less and less of the cleaning and more of the training, as well as managing the administrative elements of the business.

Loading the bike trailer is a mindfulness practice in its own right. The idea is to balance the weight of the load. For the most part, when you pack a car you don’t generally think about the weight of items and making sure everything is balanced out, unless your packing items on the roof. Most people with pack in terms of spatial relationships. With a bike, and this is for those who don’t bike as their main transportation, you have to pay attention to how any cargo weight is distributed because it will effect not only your balance but how the bike performs under stress. On my crash day, I didn’t take my usual care with packing my bike trailer.  I was intent on making my afternoon appointment with a potential business partner. Therefore, I suffered as a result of ditching my usual practice.

May 18, 2016: Eleven months after crash
and loaded for the local airport. Heading to Midwest for the
 Celebration of Life for my father.
I wasn’t going fast. Going fast would have been impossible, even for a car. But the road was extremely dry and powder-like on its surface, from a lack of rain and the lack of road maintenance. Now, here’s the part where I get to say it was my fault. When I rode up and out of the vacation rental driveway, I stopped, and standing atop the hill, I straddling my bike. Thinking. I felt hesitant about the balancing act of heading down that steep grade. In fact, a very soft inner voice suggested that this would be a good day to walk my rig down. I had the time. I had just texted my next client that all was well. Having confirmed the time and meeting place, why did I fail to heed that intuitive whisper of caution? 

I rationalized with myself that if I felt wobbly, I’d simply get off and walk the remainder.  As you might imagine, writing about this fourteen months later, I do wish I had listened to that soft, inner voice of wisdom. I wish I had taken the self-care to deliberately walk down that otherwise treacherous road. And yet, other lessons were waiting to be born.

North Trailhead Entrance:
Turtleback Preserve
August 2016.
By the time the paramedics arrived, I was partly sitting up, sipping some water, but unable to get up or stand on my own. Four people happened to be outside at the exact moment I crashed.  Two of these person's had been walking down from behind me when they witnessed the entire debacle. They saw me grapple with seemingly invisible forces, until I ended up twisted and tangled in a strange heap of metal, rubber, and cleaning equipment. I'm not sure why this feels important but this was a rather quiet wreck, too.  I never called out. I remember clenching my jaws in exertion.

When I finally tried to talk, I had the sensation I was speaking from a deep, echoing tunnel. My helmet was busted.  I was seeing slightly doubled images of the people and trees in front of me.  My right ear was ringing and burning. The area around my right orbital bone was swelling rapidly. My eyeglasses were several feet away, as was the shoe that had been twisted off my right foot.  The yoga pants I was wearing were shredded on the left knee, and yes, I was bleeding. Not profusely. The strangest sensation I recall was wanting to laugh but not doing so when I lifted my right arm to see that my wrist had a mushrooming bulge. My fingers and palm were tingling. Disconcertingly, my fingers quivered all on their own. I was aware that I was shaking all over but couldn’t seem to stop it.

Parked at North Trailhead:
Beginning to train for longer hikes, August 2016.


To my great relief, three of the four members of the medic team, who had arrived to scoop me up, were familiar to me from other, non-emergency settings.  Living on a small island, with 5,000 year-round residents, definitely fosters familiarity with those in the emergency services. I was terribly embarrassed that I couldn’t stand on my own and had to be lifted by four men into the rescue vehicle. Then I was transported to the medical helicopter. It was a lot of fuss, really.  But there I was, swelling in various parts of my body, feeling intermittent nausea, and unable to keep up my end of the conversation very well. All the while the team was getting me readied for a $10,000.00 helicopter ride.

It took over an hour before we lifted off. I managed to request that I be strapped partially on my side, so I could see out of the clear part of the fuselage. My arm and hand were in a sling high on my chest, ice was packed around my right ankle. It hurt to move. But I wanted to see the view!  Head phone ear protectors were placed on my head. The initial jerk into the air was enough to make me lose my lunch, if I had eaten any.  Under the circumstances, I was grateful for an empty stomach.  My sense of timing might be off, but I think it was around 3:30 or 4:00 in the afternoon when we were finally airborne. I had been injured around 1:45 p.m.

1.5 miles up North Trailhead: Lookout over Waldron Island
August 2016.
The view of the San Juan Islands from the air, and especially of  Orcas Island with its diversity of mountains and lakes, is not to be missed. The first time I had ever seen the islands from the air was in 2008, when I had a business trip to make to Chicago via Portland, Oregon. I flew out from the West Sound Marina in a sea plane. I was delighted to have the co-pilot’s seat. The pilot was a twenty-something woman, who, I learned, had earned her pilot’s license when she was 19. As she told it, she had secretly begun taking flying lessons when she was 14 - keeping that important fact hidden from her parents - until she earned her license. Her father was a commercial airline pilot, but she had known she wanted to fly small aircraft. I recall feeling admiration that she followed her dream faithfully and still loved the route she took. I was impressed by her calm, confident and alert demeanor.

The pilot deftly flew us to another cove, this one by Shaw Island, and landed us softly on the first approach. I climbed out so she could load a family of four into the rear seats. There were two boys, about 3 and 7 years old, who were appropriately awed - asking rapid-fire questions about the immediate flight - until we took to the air and the engine noise made it impossible to hear each other talk. My thoughts drifted back through time to my pre-teen years.

In the early 70's, I had flown, several times, with my step-father in both two-seat and four-passenger Cessna's. I was often in the co-pilot’s seat.  Getting my hands on the controls was quite a heady experience for a ten-year old. However, I had never flown in a sea plane until that day in 2008. And I loved every second of it! Nonetheless, it was the jolting of my helicopter evacuation in 2015 that forced me to rely on that early thrill of my first seaplane adventure. Though the pain I was in caused me to break into a sweat, with nausea kept coming in waves, I surrendered to the power of recall to get me through it. I wouldn't take my eyes off the view.

Mt. Constitution: 2,398' elevation; Looking Northeast. July 2016.
You can get a 360 view from this location.
Breathtaking on a clear day.
During my seaplane flight I recall being struck with awe at how close to the water and sea we could fly, and how short the actual length of the water taxiing was before we achieved lift off. Sea plane landings are fascinating, too. Like jumping off a hay loft and landing in the hay, with a little more give and bounce to make your tummy flip.

My MedEvac trip took about 15 minutes. We landed at Peace Health Hospital, in Bellingham, Washington. That same destination, if approached by ferry and land travel, would have required three hours. While I can visually recall what I saw out of the window that day, hovering in the air, my body memory has added the sensation of the straps that kept me immobilized, the muffled sound coming through the ear protectors, the ice pack moderating the swelling on my ankle, the inflammation around my eye socket, the throbbing in my head and neck, and the shooting pains and tingling in my arm, hand, and wrist.  I was grateful I didn’t have to talk.  I was grateful to be surrounded by people I was knew, people who exuded calm, and who kept their professional vigilance while remaining noninvasive.

While at the hospital, I was run through the various x-rays and assessments and my mind was a congress of anticipation over the impact of my injuries. I had a re-scheduling nightmare ahead of me that would last several days. Who should I call and what could I reasonably postpone?  The childcare for the wedding needed someone to take my place right away. Ultimately, I would hire two people to replace me.  By evening, the assessments of my injuries were complete enough that I could be discharged without staying in the hospital.  I serendipitously managed to connect with an island friend who was just pulling into the ferry line on the mainland side. It was after 8:00 p.m. She quickly turned around, got her husband to call and change her ferry reservations to the next morning, and sweetly arrived to wheel me out to her car by 9:30 p.m. or so. The nurse had administered some pain relief, but it made my mind a bit loopy, so I didn’t take any more of it. I only used some Advil to take the edge off of the general discomfort. I’m highly sensitive to both drugs and herbs, so a little goes a long way. I avoid drugs because I don’t like to give them control.  Several of my immediate relatives have died of complications from their addictions. Alcoholism, like diabetes, runs in the family gene pool, so I tend to avoid situations that I think might activate what I consider to be a predisposition to life-long addiction.

After my friend drove us to the Anacortes Inn, I slowly settled into a queen bed. I don’t recall sleeping so much as listening to the sounds of the night outside. I was no longer accustomed to an urban setting, after so many years of island living. Eventually, my friend’s soft and rhythmic breathing lulled me into a light trance, but by 2:00 a.m. I was mentally taking inventory on all the physical and practical adjustments that needed to be made to my immediate life. I had three primary sprains: neck, right ankle, and left knee.  Multiple abrasions and bruises. Plus, the wrist and arm had multiple fractures, requiring follow-up scans in ten days. Nonetheless, I still felt lucky. My orbital bone was not fractured, my eye wear was scratched but not broken, and my wrist and arm fractures were straightforward enough that I would not require surgery.  Phew!  Ligaments, however, were going to take a while.  I had been wearing my leather bicycle gloves, which had spared my hands not only from abrasions - they also protected my wrists from snapping at the moment of impact and compression.

It would have been so much easier to have listened to that soft, inner voice that suggested I walk down that hill on Geer Lane.  Even so, some rainbows in this cloud of temporary doom can be seen. I don’t think I mentioned that I was, and am still (at this time of writing), a student in a doctoral program.  At the time of the wreck, I was six months into a 3 ½ year program.  I wisely took one eight-week session off, using that time to recoup and figure out a strategy for dispersing my client accounts and navigating my little life domain as a limping, one-armed but possibly dangerous woman. I rented out two of the bedrooms in my home to make up for loss of income. Two of my young adult children came to help out for a few days. Slowly, as the weeks unfolded, I took the time to rethink, to pray, to read, and to seriously consider simplifying my income strategies. Oh, and to participate in some extended movie therapy binges.

I started with comedies, for obvious reasons, but it didn’t take long for me to discover a wealth of films based on true life or time travel. I'm not thoroughly convinced these are mutually exclusive genres but that's for another post. After watching films I hadn’t seen for years, I realized I was actually on the hunt for something new. In this, my fourth or fifth movie therapy supplement to a life filled with sharp transitions and little media, I discovered foreign films. I like to turn down the volume, put in my earphones and cocoon myself into blankets. Even in the summer, here in the temperate zone of the Pacific Northwest, you can do that. I have a lightweight blue cotton blanket that is soft and comforting  just for this purpose.  The thought has occurred to me, more than once, that this is my grown-up version of hiding under the bed, such as when I was threatened by the close proximity of certain monsters - which I could not tame, nor can I name them, without legal ramifications.

Physical therapy for my hand and wrist started about four months into the healing process. This turned into a chance for me to reconnect with the miracle and physicality of healing, and determine how to stay connected to that. I picked up knitting again. I started to work out chords and strumming on my ukulele again. I got back on my bike, with a new helmet and definitely more caution. With the intensity of my doctorate studies and all the time spent in digital communications for various consulting projects, even in an island known for its natural beauty, I discovered it can be rather easy to become nature-deprived.  

When I celebrated my 56th birthday in December of 2015, I quietly took an end-of-year retreat to examine my relationships to the people and issues closest to my heart. It has been a fruitful endeavor.

As I write this entry for a new blog, it has been 14 months since I went face down into the dirt. I haven’t solved the cause of wars, or poverty, or eradicated the effects of human trafficking – yet. But the latter has been the original intention behind my earning an Ed.D.  More on that later, too.  In a bullet-proof nutshell, a whole lot of change unfolded, in the last 14 months:

  •         Housemates coming and going;
  •     Grown children visiting and/or choosing not to visit;
  •     Ongoing coursework, completed and graded;
  •     Ending my participation with one nonprofit and starting with another;
  •     Closing my business and imagining a different career; 
  •     Forming a co-housing cooperative venture; 
  •     Creating a humanitarian project and submitting it as a proposal for funding;
  •     Losing my father in a tragic farm accident; 
  •     Eight distant siblings coming together, for the first time ever, remembering the life that made our lives possible; 
  •     Being confronted with my mortality, knowing there are dreams yet to fulfill; and,
  •     Opening to new friendships and simple pleasures that can put past events into a new perspective.
It was during my birthday retreat in December that I made the decision to consider relocating to Bellingham or beyond. When I first moved my family to Orcas Island in 2003, my children were 3, 6, 6, and 8. I imagined I was done moving. Now, my kids are 16, 19, 19, and 21, and all in college at the same time.  I have not enjoyed the empty nest.  Primarily, this is because I was forced into it incrementally by a prolonged divorce process. That is a story that could fill a book with as much intrigue as any good mystery novel.  My bike incident came just a few weeks following my three youngest relocating to Seattle.  I had yet to process a rather gigantic grief to my psyche. That bike wreck landed me squarely in the embrace of the emotion of change. Shortly thereafter, I read somewhere that emotion is simply 'energy in motion' and should be supported rather than suppressed. Amen to that! Ergo, the movie therapy and the the increase in journal writing. All of this neatly, or not so neatly, tucked in-between my studies and coursework deadlines, as well as consulting activities, too, of course. I'm seeing a pattern here of the necessity of change.

I’ve been so interior for the last year that several people in my island community thought I had moved away. I did experience a few days when, shortly after the bike crash, I was feeling disoriented and down, uncertain about my value as a person if I wasn't constantly producing.  I couldn’t keep up the pace of the life I had been leading. That much was clear.  Slowing down made that apparent.

Many months later, it has been a relief to let so much go.  I’m become aware that in creating space for what’s next, I open to possibilities I would not have considered before.

 Daisies in June: Orcas 2016
This particular life transition has been more thoughtful than others I've encountered. For one thing, I refuse to be rushed. As my tag line indicates, if I were a clay vessel, the cracks are where the light of wisdom can seep in and the shy soul can seep out. I have managed to skip over succumbing to several potentially debilitating depressions throughout my life.  Since December of 2015, I have followed the advice of Parker Palmer (Let Your Life Speak) and allowed myself to investigate the inclination of my heart to grieve. There has been much to grieve, including relationships and events that will never be as I dreamed they could be.  Nonetheless, I gained some clarity and lightening of my burdens, I can better recognize my capacity for humor, art, music, creativity and friendships.  I liked the idea of being on a nourish and flourish path - so I adopted this as a living practice.

I didn’t know if I was ready to begin sharing on a memoir level until I attended an event in July of this year. A European filmmaker, by the name of Nic Askew, premiered two short films he made with two men who were joined in life partnership to each other. One was dying of ALS.  They spoke for themselves and I was riveted where I sat. The room was bright with emotional resiliency.

Nic’s approach is to film close up -in black and white - all the while listening in such a way that the person interviewed is lovingly snagged into a soul journey. The resulting films are called soul biographies and can be accessed at www.nicaskew.com

After the premier event here on Orcas Island,  Nic asked for a volunteer from within our small gathering of 16 or so, to try the process, live. I raised my hand, saying I didn’t want to go first, but that I was willing to try his technique. Well, you can probably guess how that went. At first, he asked me to just sit in front of the camera, so he could 'fix the lighting.' Once I sat down and he had adjusted his equipment to his satisfaction, the last words I recall hearing Nic say were, “No agenda…” and then, in front of an audience of people I did know a little, but they seemed to fade into the periphery, I said what I had not rehearsed or intended to say.  I felt my way through and listened to what was true. It was powerful - like a prayer. The feedback from those in the audience was that they were deeply moved. A spontaneous healing occurred, sweetened by the unexpectedness of  it.

When the film is edited and published, I will place a link to it on this blog's menu. In the meantime, the poem that follows will have to suffice:

No Agenda
A camera lens
A digital recorder
An invitation –
And a light draws on a dark background.
An energy sets in motion
A window’s breadth of shadows
And a chair channels a prayer,
Tonight.
While witnesses of heart and sound and sight
Gather wisdom like fallen leaves
From the tree I am yet to be.
Amen.
No agenda.

(July 14, 2016)


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