Showing posts with label TD4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TD4. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

a curious tale of lost things found


POSTDATED: I wrote this a few weeks back en route to somewhere else. Just now getting around to posting it.

Chapter One.
Last night, en route to dinner, I fumbled around in my bag hoping to find a pack of gum that I almost certainly had stashed there, but found none.

Returning late from a ride around (in) the Galaxy with the World's Best Mechanical Engineer, I discovered the missing pack of gum leaning against the outside of my hotel room door. It was accompanied by a scattering of sweet offerings: 3 peppermints, 2 tootsie roll tootsie pops (miniature pops: one orange, one raspberry) and 4 after dinner mints (the buttery kind) wrapped in convenience packs that read "Thank You!"

There was also a ballpoint pen, the cheap give away kind, imprinted with: "Springhill Suites". The hotel in question, the hotel where I discovered the curious offering, was not Springhill Suites. The pen was pink.

Chapter Two.
While deplaning from my San Francisco flight in the Minneapolis Airport I was chased down by a young man who shouted "Miss!" and handed me a thick wad of bills saying: "You dropped this."

But I hadn't. I counted them: $148. They were folded in half with the $20s on the outside and were flat and compact as if they had been compressed in a pocket. I studied them, as if the bills would reveal themselves as kin that belonged to me through some familiar marking. They didn't. I gave them to the gate agent, along with the worried "what do I do with money that isn't mine" expression that I had worn the moment before.

Chapter Three.
On the ground in Minneapolis waiting to disembark I received a text message from a friend. A friend of his had sent it to him and I could see from the metadata of the message that he had sent it on to two others as well. It contained the simple story line of a dream, of a car ride in a large front seat reminiscent of last night's Galaxy, a Bulgarian sandwich shop, and a friend who is now dead who said nothing but nodded and smiled and looked younger than his years.

For a flash I felt him beside me, solid, a seat mate tired from our transcontinental flight. A tear jumped up. Then it was my turn to exit the plane and I wiped my face dry.

Saturday, February 16, 2008

asking the ghost to dance

deeply a part of me


This is my M’bira. It was a Valentine’s Day gift a long long time ago, a collaboration between my ex-, who knew I wanted one, and our buddy TD4, who played and taught and shared African music (much in Boulder, CO, frequently elsewhere) and knew how to get one.

This one was made by T.W. Chigamba of Zimbabwe, which makes it a big deal.

Tom taught me to play. As a teacher he was as kind and as gentle and as quietly, wisely prodding as he was a friend. Like sunshine coaxes a bud to bloom, that’s how his friendship worked.

keys


The day after his memorial service I ran into his partner over breakfast at Lucile’s. We hugged some, we cried. I had only met her the day before: the time that they had been together I’d been too busy and far away to visit their home. Recovering from my divorce; too broken up with memories.

She told me of a voicemail that I had left for Tom and of course her questions: “Who’s this D--?” And Tom, she told me, trying to tell her who I was, and maybe answering a question that she didn’t tell me she asked, summed it up as: “We loved the music together.”

My M’bira has sat quiet for some time now. I’ve tried, several times, since losing my teacher, to play, and every time it brings me to tears.

I know I need to take lessons again. The ghost needs to dance.

asking the ghost to dance


Today I took it down from the shelf where it sits mostly now, dusty and quiet. The light was nice in the kitchen (although cold. winter light.) and I was shooting odd things -- a seed pod that I’ll post soon; a teapot. I started to shoot the instrument. The light on the keys and the wood and the Fanta bottle caps that buzz when it sings.

And yeah, of course, I started to cry.

Because it seems it'll have its music from me, somehow.

fanta


p.s. Tom brought the instrument by shortly before the day we got the pu-erh.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

dreams are not fictions, part 2


planning tomorrow's route
Originally uploaded by suttonhoo.
I fell asleep thinking of TD4 last night, and he was kind enough to visit me in my dreams. His memory was stirred up by a Flickr thread about grief with a friend who’s recently lost a dear old dog who she’s grieving hard. I realized then that TD4’s birthday is today; realized that it’s the second one he’s missed. Realized, again, that I miss him.

The dream was tactile and musical, the way they frequently are. The cold metal edges of the m’bira under my fingertips; the warmth of his body near mine, cross-legged the pair of us, hands on our instruments; making music with the keys and with our laughter.

We had an awkward moment when I remembered that he was dead, and I started to mention this to him. He cocked his head towards me, like he did when he was listening, and the words caught in my throat. He gave me a forgiving look, like he knew what I was going to say and rather I wouldn’t; like it would hurt his feelings if I did. So we carried on and played some more; he taught me a few chords; we repeated them endlessly.

(Our lessons were always sporadic -- they happened when he passed through town for one thing or another, and we'd usually open with my playing for him what he taught me the last time. One time he said: “I didn’t teach you that” as I played for him the tune I remembered him teaching me; I caught myself, apologized -- figured I must have remembered it wrong, been practicing it wrong, and asked him to show me how to do it right; he said “No -- you teach me -- I like that. That’s good.”)

I’m reminded by his visit of what I’ve learned to be true about grief: when it first occurs it concentrates into every pore of right now, and then as time passes it disperses, dilutes across the hours, the days, the years.

It's easy to mistake not missing someone as often for not missing someone as much. But in truth it's about density, not intensity.

That void of missing someone is like those little nurdles of plastic that never quite manage to break apart into nothingness, because when you stumble across a memory of the one who went missing, the ache and emptiness rears up true and raw and just as immediate as it did when you first tried to wrestle the news out of this now and into that then when it wasn’t true, couldn’t be true, and your world was still whole.

That then when he sat beside you and played.

Sunday, August 19, 2007

TD4.9


I’m thinking now of the plums
Italian prunes
As I do each time
I tongue one
Tease out the moment
Before my teeth break
The flesh
Do now, a bowl before me

How you climbed
On the broad back
Of the rusted bus

To reach
The top branches
Pulled them out of the sunshine
Into the shade of the house

Your whole body a wag
Like a mutt ready to play

How our teeth tore
Through the tart skin
Wet from a quick tap bath
Into the sweet flesh
Irrevocable
We devoured each
Complete
Its own counterpart

Delicious

And then they were gone



More about TD4 »

Saturday, March 03, 2007

a story can never have too many shamans [1]

cloudscape


Sometimes you need to try a story out on a willing friend before you’re sure it will survive the telling. I’ve been carrying this one around with me since my return from Guatemala, and had a chance to air it out recently – I didn’t see it coming – he asked, and, after some hesitation, I spilled. It felt a little strange bringing it forward, but lucky for me my friend is a good listener and compassionate to boot, so he left me feeling like maybe there’s value to this story. Which made me think that maybe I would post it here too.

If you’ve been following detritus for any length of time, you know that 2006 was a bruiser for me. We kicked it off in high style on the first day of the new year with an email from my ex- -- received late in the night, without warning, that read:

Subject: I just got some terrible news

My Dad just called and said that he just learned that Tom Defore just died yesterday. I haven’t received any details yet from his family except that he was camping with some friends and fell off the side of a cliff at night.




dry run


I have a short list of people that I would lay my life on the line for, and TD4 was one. There’s something about losing someone you love that knocks a hole in your world – a stranger approached me at Tom’s memorial service and said exactly that. “You look like you have a hole blown right through you.” And I did.

That pretty much set the stage for the year to come.

Brillig would die next – my sweet little Russian Blue who had been with me for sixteen years. She was sick for about six months with kidney failure. My husband and I cared for her intensively with subcutaneous drips and special diets and a whole lot of loving and fussing. When she was gone there was a hole between us too.

zen cat


Soon after that I would speak at an industry conference and manage to come down with a whopper of a bronchial infection. The fever started during the Q&A and continued through the follow up interviews that I did with a couple of the industry rags. Reading the articles later it was clear that I didn’t. Quite. Manage. To articulate my ideas.

I laid up in my hotel room the following day with a fever that approached 103, having canceled my plans to drive through Joshua Tree and visit my grandparents in Arizona – a drive that I was living, hoping, dreaming for. I wanted to grieve in the desert. I needed to cry. Instead I got on a plane and headed home. Returned to the job that was killing me the next Monday, continued to work 60 hour weeks and commute three to four hours a day and watch my hair fall out in big clumps from the stress.

All of this laid the stage for the pneumonia that would visit me in April, the same time an old friend came out to play. I spent the last day of her visit in bed with that fever again, and all of the next week, trying not to die.

But of course, I was aware that things were very bad, and so I did what I could to find a way through it. The job was a problem. It was fancy-pants and all that, with a great title and responsibilities, but not enough staffing or budget to do the things we needed to do in a reasonable work week. And it was killing me. So I got out.

And I started to blog. I didn’t realize it at the time, but I needed needed needed to blog. Just as I needed to Flickr. I needed to do something to wake up that sleeping part of my brain and heart that I put on hold to work excessively long weeks and make piles of money for someone else that I would never see. I needed to remember who I was and what really mattered to me. Strange how blogging can do that if you let it.

But still there was this hole.

And then Kathryn died.

kathryn in the field


Once you’ve lived for a while with grief you forget what it’s like to live without it. It soaks into everything like a sponge, dampening your world.

The bronchial thing continued to be a problem. All year long I cycled through infection after infection after infection. In addition to the docs who gave me the pills I needed to get through it, I started to see an acupuncturist. She went to work on my lungs. She told me that in Chinese medicine it’s believed that grief settles in the lungs and causes all kinds of problems. She also said to me: “There’s an authentic sadness about you. You don’t seem depressed – depression is stuck anger – you seem really, really sad.”

And then I went to Guatemala.

As my friend said last weekend: “So it sounds like the Guatemala trip was really hard.” It was. I got sick again – more lung stuff, accompanied by the fear that the one last antibiotic available to me -- I had developed allergies to the others, in the course of my illness -- afraid too that this last one would also prove to be poison. And it was cold in the highlands. No central heating, high altitudes, not enough blankets. I shivered and whimpered and wished I was home.

The anniversary of Tom’s death was approaching, and on one day in particular, my head and heart and mind were flooded with thoughts of Tom. Not entirely accurate: they were flooded with thoughts of his death. How he died. That he died. That one small step took him away. From me. From all of us. From the rich, varied, enduring life that he lived.

Goddammit.

And I holed myself away and cried. My phlegm production was especially impressive, layered as it was on top of the infection that I was incubating.

So the stage is set: I’m fucking miserable.

Tangential to all of this I’m traveling with some really nice folks and seeing some really great things. We’re traveling with Nick, Kathryn’s husband, through country that we've traveled with them both before, which means her ghost is traveling with us. We stop in Chichicastenango and I make an offering at the central church – and I ask, please, finally, can I have a break from all this? From the grief. From the tears that live in my lungs.

On the second day of the new year we visit Iximché, a post-classic Mayan site that’s just enough beautiful to take your breath away. The sky is blue and the sun is shining and cuddly cumulous clouds float by so close that you feel you can reach and out and touch them. I lay on my back on the top of a mound for a while and imagine doing exactly that.

There’s nothing I love doing more than laying on my back and feeling the earth solid beneath me and seeing the sky high above me. I don’t know why that is, but it comforts me like no other mother.



As a group we head to the far end of the site, in the company of Luis Morales, a Mayan Shaman who has joined us for the day. We intend to have a new fire ceremony.

And so we do.



Our Shaman arranges the fire. He lays down copal incense. He has prepared herbs and grasses and sprinkled them with salt. Much of this he lays around the perimeter of what will be our fire. He lays four colors of candles to each of the four directions: North. West. South. East. In the center he sets a bundle of green and blue candles: these are for the World Tree. The Axis Mundi.



He lights the blue and green candles and we begin our prayers. We pray to the lords of the twenty days who govern the passage of time. We pray to our ancestors. We hold them in our heart and thank them for our inheritance. We acknowledge our responsibilities. We stand; we kneel. The gravel of the ground cuts into my knees. The smoke of the incense blows over me. The mountain sun shines down. I’ve taken off my hat and before the hours have passed I will be deeply sunburned. I blow my nose. I have a cold and I’m crying.

Several times we traverse the circle and add to the fire: A candle. A splash of rum. A handful of sweet-smelling herbs. I remember Tom. I remember my Bompa. I remember Kathryn. I remember Brillig. I wonder can standing in the sun and praying to the days and to the ancestors really make a difference? Either way, it’s a beautiful day, and I’m enjoying this. The focus. The intention. The voice of our Shaman. His Mayan prayers. His explanations in Spanish. And in the smoke a phrase fills my mind. It’s unexpected and it sticks, playing itself over and over, like a mantra.

How you lived; not how you left.


Later I think more about it and realize that this is what has soaked my days – not memories of the ones I’ve lost, but memories of the ways they left their lives. Thoughts of Tom slipping off the cliff. Of Kathryn collapsing in the shower. Of Brillig on the table at the vet – the fear. The life leaving her.

Thoughts of wanting to undo what is done.

But right then I just let the thought play itself in my brain, and let the tears soak my face and the smoke sting my eyes.

“Did it stick?” my friend wants to know, as I wrap up the telling for the first time. Catharsis is one thing – the misery leading up to it, the transcendent moment that results from ritual. Folks have studied it, written of it, know that it can happen.

But undoing the “how they left” is something altogether different, and replacing it with older memories, faded moments, is a difficult thing to do. Thoughts become more persistent with repetition – they wear a groove in your soul. They become part of you.

It did. It stuck.

My days are different now. The grief has a different cast. It may just be the passage of time, but the memories that run through my mind are of my friends when they were living -- not when they were dying. I can feel the flame that used to flicker inside me before the tears dampened its light. I'm not as sad. And just recently I thought of Tom, of something he said once, that was perfectly appropriate and entirely odd and insightful, just like it always was, and I laughed.

cloudscape


[1] Many thanks to b1-67er for the title of this post. And for asking.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

TD4.8

This is the gesture that remains:
side by side
we're shuffling instruments

trying to find a home for each
their weight makes music
as they settle to the floor

rough chords that announce
what each is capable of

Listen.

Your proximity is unremarkable
(standing near you
I'm home)

and I try
to call it back

the weight and magnet of your being close
the way it pulls
like the moon on the tide


about TD4 »

Monday, October 09, 2006

TD4.7

a happy unbirthday
to you
(dear friend)
ten months and many miles
past your exit

(I would rather you had missed
that turn in the road

than be missing you now)

you who hover
very nearly always here

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

TD4.6

it's the music, friend
(wishing you could hear these notes)
that conjures your ghost

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

TD4.5



There was nothing remarkable
About the day we got the pu-erh
Except maybe
The drumming of your heart
Your gentle breath

Not long before we asked for
Two pots steaming
(Yours china white; mine green)
Your fingers set bottle caps
Buzzing
Stroking the beaten spoons

(“They’re not spoons”
You had scolded me before
Laughing)
But still I made the mistake
Picking up Chigamba’s
Masterful M’bira

The one you brought
(A gift) with the others
In your pack
Where the music slept
Until you woke it

And it flowed
Through you

Knowing it was home

There was nothing remarkable
About the day we got the pu-erh
A few loose ounces
Purchased for a friend

Except of course
The reverence
You gave me
For the whiskered leaves
Old souls
Born of ancient trees
Set to ripen into wisdom
Over decades
In the dark caves of China

(It was so often this way)

What you knew
You offered
Like a kind monk would water
To a thirsty traveler
Exhausted by the world
Dusty from too much doing

(I loved to drink from the deep stores of your mind)

There was nothing remarkable
About the day we got the pu-erh
Except not knowing
How soon
These hours
Would empty
Like a teapot

Fragrant leaves still clinging to the sides



WTF »

Thursday, June 22, 2006

TD4.4

death is messy work
never one for clutter, friend
you took one clean step

Friday, June 09, 2006

TD4.3


passing rose, detail
Originally uploaded by suttonhoo.
wonders behind us
like desert flowers revived
notes rise from the flames


My buddy Tom died on New Year's Eve. Memories of him still visit me daily. I decided to do something about the those visits and turn them from painful events into small offerings for my dear friend's ghost. So when you see a scrap or piece labeled "TD4" here at detritus, it's for Tom.

Wednesday, June 07, 2006

TD4.2

I had no business reading your mail

you spoke little of her
and I pried less

but when you left the postcard
with its pleasantries
face up beside the guest towels
that you rolled with your
brilliant, brutal hands

I didn't look away

IWALY she signed her name
I will always love you

you are ashes now, friend
but she speaks, too, for me
as I roll this towel
and tuck it carefully aside

WTF? »

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

TD4.1

local honey

oats: raw. wounds: honey.
like two crones at a cauldron
we swap recipes

The TD4 project is all about serving up offerings for a dear ghost in my life. I can promise you that they aren't going to make a whole lot of sense, but as long as he isn't cutting his hair we should be all right.

Monday, March 20, 2006

movie date

File this one under Movies I Love Even More than I Might Because of the People I've Loved Them With

  • Masters of Light* because of TD4, who turned me on to John Ford skies and was never without his light meter

  • Shane and Zorro (the one with Tyrone Power, 1940) because my Bompa would declare a movie night whenever they aired on the networks and we'd stay up late in our PJs to watch (and because it tells you in an instant what he valued most)

  • Kitchen Stories because of my darlin' companion and the kick he got out of watching that old bachelor farmer drink his coffee in the kitchen (it's a Norwegian thing); this is one of the best movies about friendship ever -- if you don't mind subtlety it'll wreck you good

  • *I'm having a hard time finding an online reference to Masters of Light, a documentary that I saw a long time ago at the Seattle International Film Festival, although Amazon features a book with the same name and subject -- a series of interviews with Cinematographers -- which I have to assume is based on the film. I'll keep looking.
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