Writing by Yvonne Watterson

~ considering the lilies & lessons from the field ©

Writing by Yvonne Watterson

Monthly Archives: December 2015

We’ll Take A Cup of Kindness Yet . . .

31 Thursday Dec 2015

Posted by Editor in Act Two, Being a Widow, Death and dying, Dispatch from the Diaspora, Dispatches from the Diaspora, Friendship, Happy New Year, James Gandolfini, Love, magic and loss, Maurice Sendak, Milestones, saying goodbye, Seamus Heaney, Starting over, Ted Kooser, Time

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Auld Lang Syne, fireworks, Fleetwood Mac, Happy New Year, Holiday, James Gandolfini, lou reed, magic and loss, Maurice Sendak, New Year, Patti Smith, Robert Burns, Robert Frost

Life isn’t some vertical or horizontal line — you have your own interior world, and it’s not neat.

~ Patti Smith

20131110_3963Beginnings and endings are rarely tidy as this New Year’s Eve reminds me. Again, I ponder how best to pack up the stuff of the past twelve months before stepping into the new year.  Just begin. Pluck out a memory, wrap it up, put it in the box, and move on to the next. Handle with care. It’s the perfect day for it, New Year‘s Eve, a day designated for wrapping things up, for reminiscing and resolving; for Auld Lang Syne and kissing strangers; for holding on and letting go. For loose ends. For fireworks.

It’s not tidy. I find myself returning to 2013, the last year we spent as a family, to a certain sure time when we were three instead of two. Like lightning bugs, the memories flash. Ken tapping his feet at a Fleetwood Mac concert, marveling at the genius of Lindsey Buckingham, wondering what Lindsey must be on and if he could get his hands on some of it. Then my fiftieth birthday and my bare feet on the wood floors that had finally been installed and Ken hoping it would be enough if our little house in the desert could at least feel like my mother’s Castledawson living room underfoot. Paints and an easel, an artist’s supplies for Sophie’s summer college class. Binge-watching Breaking Bad to escape the heat of late summer in Phoenix. A September Sunday and the three of us watching on my computer screen an animated film in which a frail yet fervent 83-year old Maurice Sendak gives his final interview, each of us in tears when Sendak tells the interviewer,

Almost certainly I’ll go before you go, so I won’t have to miss you . . . Live your life. Live your life. Live your life.

Ken squeezed my hand at that part. If I try really hard, I can almost feel his fingers intertwined with mine. I wonder now if he maybe thought Mr. Sendak was speaking for him too? Now the tears come. But wait. Another memory and a smile. He with a wink, “So, baby. Are you ready for Tony and the boys?” every night at 8PM when HBO re-aired the entire series of The Sopranos.

In an instant – unthinkably – big, invincible James Gandolfini was gone. And then Seamus Heaney. And then Lou Reed. Lou Reed. Ken didn’t want to talk about Lou Reed dying. My darling man must have forgotten what Lou knew – that we cannot have the magic without the loss. Two weeks later, Ken would be gone too. And, if I could have just one more conversation, I would tell him that it is all going to be alright, because losing him and the pain of it will never trump the magic. Never.

Tomorrow, our girl and I will step into our third year without him. I find myself holding my breath, a tiny bit afraid of what might be around the corner. The roller-coaster cliche still does the job.


 

BarrysBigDipperBarrys Big Dipper~ Photo by Adam Shaw

Remembering my first time on The Big Dipper roller-coaster at Barry’s in Portrush, I close my eyes to better see myself once more hurtling through the North Atlantic air. Young and carefree, curls wild in the wind, mouth agape, eyes squeezed to block out light and noise and fear, I am half-hoping to stay aloft forever. At the top, breath suspended, I wait for the world to fall out beneath me. A sudden plunge at shocking speed has me thinking I am surely plummeting to my own death. But not yet. There will be more twists and turns, above and below. White-knuckled, I am clinging to the bar, only half-believing there is enough life in the clickety-clacking, old machinery to set me down again on solid ground. When it’s all over, I’m ready to go back to the way I was, albeit a little green around the gills, unsteady on my feet. As he helps me out of the car, I hope no one but the weather-beaten carnie can tell I am not as confident as once I was.

This New Year’s Eve finds me settling – at last. I am somewhere between Tom Petty’s ”Learning to Fly” and Robert Frost’s lovely “Birches.”

I’d like to get away from earth awhile
And then come back to it and begin over.
May no fate willfully misunderstand me
And half grant what I wish and snatch me away
Not to return. Earth’s the right place for love:
I don’t know where it’s likely to go better.

Neither do I. Nowhere would it go better than a place where I can find myself held up, daily, by the kindness of people who have and haven’t walked in my shoes, who acknowledge my pain, who abide. People who know a thing or two; people I may never meet but who hold me in their thoughts and prayers, who light candles for me in faraway places, who say something even when they know not what to say.

Writer, Ted Kooser, says that life is  “. . . a long walk forward through the crowded cars of a passenger train, the bright world racing past beyond the windows, people on either side of the aisle, strangers whose stories we never learn, dear friends whose names we long remember and passing acquaintances whose names and faces we take in like a breath and soon breathe away …”

Ready to step into 2016, I find myself in between two cars, aware that I still have some distance to travel. Forward. And I am ready for it. 

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But there are still so many cars ahead, and the next and the next and the next clatter to clatter to clatter. And we close the door against the wind and find a new year, a club car brightly lit, fresh flowers in vases on the tables, green meadows beyond the windows and lots of people who together — stranger, acquaintance and friend — turn toward you and, smiling broadly, lift their glasses.

For reading, for remarking, for taking a step or two on the hard road with me. Thank you. We are forever bound in a human chain.

May 2016 shimmer for you and yours.

 

 

 

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Ready to Turn ~ Winter Solstice 2015

22 Tuesday Dec 2015

Posted by Editor in Aging, Arizona, Birthdays, Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Death and dying, Diagnosis, Family, Fireworks, Irish culture, Irish mammies, John Hiatt, Loss, Love, Memoir, Memory, Mother Daughter Relationship, Muriel Rukeyser, New Year, Newgrange, No Country for Old Men, Northern Ireland Culture, Ordinary Things, saying goodbye, Soundtracks of our Lives, Starting over, Ted Kooser, Themes of Childhood, Time

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A new beginning, Christmas, Death and dying, death of spouse, first anniversary of cancer diagnosis, Javier Bardem, John Hiatt, New Year's Eve, Newgrange, Stonehenge, Ted Kooser, widow, Winter Solstice, Winter Solstice 2015

Again, the sun will pause for its moment of solstice before changing direction to move northward. From the Latin, solstitium, the apparent standing still of the sun, the Winter Solstice is a turning point, something I look forward to each year. At Newgrange, a neolithic burial tomb even older than Stonehenge, outside Dublin, Ireland, they hold a lottery to decide who will experience the solstice the way it was intended by those ancient folk who built it over 5,000 years ago.

In its roof, is a little opening, aligned to the ascending sun. When that morning sunbeam shoots through the roof-box, it illuminates for seventeen minutes the chamber below, highlighting the geometric shapes carved into the stone walls. It is a magic time, long before clocks and calendars and compasses measured time and the distance between us, signifying the turn towards a new year.

This year, out of over 30,000 applicants, only 50 were selected to experience the solstice at Newgrange. Unfortunatley, Irish weather was as you would expect with clouds and rain keeping the light out.

NEWGRANGE_ITIMES_800


 

From the outside, my house glitters like a Christmas card with its tree twinkling in the window and a sign for Santa to please stop here. A little house, it is no different than any other year, except the two women inside it are different, each of us adjusted and adjusting to a life and to living without the constancy of a man for whom our happiness was his heart’s only desire. Each of us wondering what’s next for us – what will begin and what will end.

I remember reading something about a woman who described two distinct lives – the one she lived before cancer and the one forever changed by the diagnosis – her turning point. When I close my eyes to recollect my own diagnosis, I can see myself get up and walk out the door, leaving behind the woman I used to be, offended by the nerve of that Breast Cancer Navigator telling my husband and me that I had cancer. Me? With cancer?

Like an unexpected snow, the pronouncement fell from her lips and rendered me wordless. In conspiratorial whispers, she informed my husband of all the details I would forget. It reminded me of the way we quietly speculate about the cause of a death when all the evidence points to hard living. On and on she talked, as if trying to soothe us even as she filled our ears with fear. So many scary words.  Not to worry. She stressed that what we were hearing that day in her dimly lit office was not a death sentence.

Nonetheless, I heard a crack, the sound of a life being altered that would have me pondering still and more how to handle poet Muriel Rukeyser’s question:

What would happen if one woman told the truth about her life? The world would split open.

I think it might.

I raged silently against cancer, indignant that it had barged into our lives, interrupting our plans to celebrate our daughter’s fourteenth birthday and Christmas. But we celebrated anyway. We decorated the house the way we always do. We had a party for Sophie and invited friends over. We remembered to laugh. We went to a  Bob Seger concert on Christmas Eve. We scheduled the blood-work and the biopsies, the mammograms, and the mastectomy. The healing began. Sort of.

And then, another Christmas, the cancer contained, the promise of a better year. Relieved and ready to celebrate anything, my parents came to Arizona to help us bring in 2013. We set off fireworks saved for a special occasion and for good luck, we designated my dark-haired husband “the first footer” after midnight. Such relief to shut the door against 2012, a year that had skulked in and scared us, each of us terrified by the cancer and what it might do.

For me – and the woman I used to be – cancer became The Scariest Thing in my life. Like every scary thing that comes to fruition, it had never previously crossed my mind. No. My mind was too consumed with all the things that most likely will never happen. All that worrying. Why? It is such a waste. But the cancer happened, and I wanted everyone to feel as sorry for me as I did for myself and howl about the unfairness of it all. I wanted sympathy – the kind delivered by an Irish mammy over endless cups of tea with reminders that there’s always someone worse off. Always. 

I remember my mother cursing the cancer for the thief that it is but she’d temper her remarks with reminders that I was so lucky to be married to the best man in the world.  “You could set your watch by him!” she’d say, and then she would jokingly ask him how in the name of God he had put up with me for over twenty years. Not known for my punctuality or having a place for everything and everything in its place, she regularly wondered aloud how I would ever manage without him since he waited on me hand and foot. Without him. In our house. Now that would be a scary thing. Me? A widow?

But in the wee hours of 2013 on a magical New Year’s Eve, I was still Ken’s wife, one half of an “us,” and I was looking ahead and happy. Like mischievous kids, we set off fireworks at the end of our street. My parents’ faces illuminated by sparklers bought one July 4th in San Luis Obispo, my daughter toasting us with cider that shone in one of the good Waterford crystal glasses, it was a magic time – life was sweet. I remember thinking, believing “All. Is. Well.”

20130101_2445

When everyone went to bed on January 1st 2013, I stayed up, savoring the silence of our slumbering house and the opportunity to consider Ted Kooser’s assessment of life, that it is “. . . a long walk forward through the crowded cars of a passenger train, the bright world racing past beyond the windows, people on either side of the aisle, strangers whose stories we never learn, dear friends whose names we long remember and passing acquaintances whose names and faces we take in like a breath and soon breathe away …”

It is just like that. And on the shortest day when the sun stops for a moment,  I find myself in between two cars, aware that I still have some distance to travel.  Forward. And I am ready for it. 

But there are still so many cars ahead, and the next and the next and the next clatter to clatter to clatter. And we close the door against the wind and find a new year, a club car brightly lit, fresh flowers in vases on the tables, green meadows beyond the windows and lots of people who together — stranger, acquaintance and friend — turn toward you and, smiling broadly, lift their glasses.

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Yvonne writes a fortnightly column for her hometown newspaper, The Antrim Guardian

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© yvonnewatterson.com Writing by Yvonne Watterson and Yvonne Watterson and Time to Consider the Lilies & Lessons from the Field, (Considering LIlies & Lessons from the Field) 2011-2020. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author and owner is strictly prohibited. Unless otherwise attributed, all blog contents and original images are created by and are the sole property of Yvonne Watterson, author, photographer, and blog administrator. Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given to Yvonne Watterson and Time to Consider the Lilies & Lessons from the Field with appropriate and specific direction to the original content. Writing by Yvonne Watterson participates in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for sites to earn commissions by linking to Amazon. This means that when you buy a book on Amazon from a link provided on this site, I receive a small percentage of its price.

The Lilies at Rideau Hall, Ottawa, Canada ~ photograph by Ken Kaminesky .

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From there to here . . .

Yvonne hails from Antrim, Northern Ireland, and has lived in the desert southwest of the United States for almost thirty years. Married, with a daughter who is navigating her path through the "teen tunnel," and a haughty cat, Atticus, she has spent the better part of the last three decades in the classroom as a student, teacher, and administrator. Her mid-life crisis came as a sneaky Stage II invasive breast cancer diagnosis which subsequently sent her to the blogosphere where she found a virtual home away from home . . .
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