Monday, September 30, 2013
D.H. Lawrence
The English novelist, poet, playwright, essayist David Herbert Lawrence ( 1885- 1930 ), who achieved notoriety for " Lady Chatterley's Lover", and "Sons and Lovers", was apparently not impressed with American culture : " The essential American soul is hard, isolate, stoic and a killer. It has never yet melted." That is a pretty pessimistic view, but I cannot deny its powerful impact. I have lived in the US for 37 years now, and there have been many times that I shuddered at the harshness of its psyche. The US is a country of extremes, and if the political climate is any indication, the cultural void created by it seems to fall in line with D.H. Lawrence 's prophetic pessimism. There is an inherent harshness in the way this country treats its children that perhaps explains the deep loneliness of the current generation. In all fairness, perhaps the reason this country feels so indifferent to me, culturally, is because it is a confluence of so many cultures, as evidenced in cities like New York. Perhaps the malaise is felt so strongly here, because there are so many elements to contend with. D. H. Lawrence felt absolute contempt and nausea for the lack of substance to the English psyche of his time, and there have been many times and there are times now, when I feel the same contempt for the US cultural soul as the English writer did a hundred years ago for England. Perhaps it is an artistic over-sensitivity I have been accused of by friend and foe alike, but I suspect the reasons are deeper than that. There is a fundamental element of isolation built into the American experience, and it did not end when people stopped trekking across the West in covered wagons. It seems built into the genetic code that doing things on your own for the pure sake of it is a basic requirement to being considered a full fledged American. My husband fits the reality of that. He is a deeply convinced loner, not just by nature, but by instinct. How we have managed these last 27 years with my gregarious and clan- driven nature will be the subject of future concerns and speculation. I think our obsession with things in American culture, which we now happily spread across the globe, is a telling story of how isolating the American experience has become and the difficulty at achieving true dialogue, even on a political level, let alone on an individual level. Modernity has reached an impasse, and the biggest stumbling block is our inability to have perspective. We are chasing our own tails, and getting high on the dizziness it causes. If D.H. Lawrence lived in the US today, his nausea existentially would be surprisingly similar to the nausea he felt a hundred years ago when he had grave reservations about the culture. About California he said : " California is a queer place- in a way, it has turned its back on the world, and looks into the void Pacific. It is absolutely selfish, very empty, but not false, and at least, not full of false effort. " It seems so unfortunately accurate from a philosophical point. The inability of this country to wrap itself around the issues that matter and save democracy for the future, is a sore and deeply sad reflection at its inability to come to terms with itself as a phenomenon. It has me worried. Dr. Toni Morrison was the last writer in this country to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature 20 years ago. Such a powerful nation, and where has its soul gone in the twenty years? It is lost, and we are adrift without a compass. And a nation without a soul is at risk of fading into the sunset, sooner rather than later. Let us hope that momentum will come about to turn the clock back on this most depressing scenario.
Saturday, September 21, 2013
The House by the Side of the Road
On the road to my son's former high school, and now his job, there is a large house, grey in tones,with a big bent tree in the front yard. The place is dark, silent and it feels empty. I drive by it, notice it and it never leaves me indifferent. It hurts to look at it. When I imagine people in that house, I see my father in one of his soft sweater vests, checking the mailbox. He is alone, looking like he is waiting for someone. Maybe me, maybe my mother who turned him out when he was already ill. Maybe he is thinking about my youngest sister, who hung herself when she was 35. Maybe he wonders about his other daughter, and her children. Maybe in the spirit world, he learned she died of a fast spreading cancer when she was 44, three years before he died himself of Alzheimer complications. Maybe he is looking for my son, who he knew as a small child, and who is now 21. I have no way of knowing where people's essence goes once their bodies die. I think they go and look for those they loved. In spite of my mother's valiant efforts to the contrary, I loved my father very much. She poisoned our hearts with endless deceit and lies, about him, about her own marvelous virtues as a wife and mother. The house by the side of the road is a sad looking place, but I look at it with longing, because I imagine that our family could have made that place a happy home, where there were no lies and deceitful games of betrayal and deadly bitterness. A home where the four of us children felt safe because we were, where our mother and father loved each other, instead of one hating my father, and the other being slavishly devoted to her every whim, only to be betrayed horribly. A home where my sister Ludwina never knew despair and was still alive, where my other sister was still alive and in a happy marriage with her two children. Where my brother was happy with his family, his life. But as I drive by, I see the house is ugly, dark and empty, and that my family no longer exists. Only ghosts live in that house for me now. Parents have no idea of the power they have to bring either hope and strength and happiness to their children, or tear their children apart with their determination to pull their children into their dysfunctional relationship. I was lucky. I married a very steady, solid and honest loving man, who overcame growing up with a violent alcoholic father and an emotionally twisted mother who encouraged the abuse. His strength helped me get the determination to believe in my own strength, and we are a good team, after 29 years of being together. If I have learned anything from the war that destroyed my family,it is that when people decide to have a family, with children, they better have their story and line-up straight, because whatever they bring to the relationship, good and bad, will affect the next generation 's hopes, dreams and talents. And the way their heart either breaks or smiles when they see an old house sitting by the road as they drive by it on their life's path.
Thursday, September 19, 2013
The Long Way Home
There is a beautiful song by the British rock band " Supertramp ", called "Take the Long Way Home". It is on their sixth album, "Breakfast in America", released on March 29th, 1979. I love the album ,and all of its songs, but the one that gets to me every time I hear it, is "Take the Long Way Home". The existential anguish expressed in the song take on an even deeper meaning to me as someone who has been living outside of her country of origin, Belgium, for 37 years now. I have been a citizen of the US for 19 years, have been married to an American born and raised citizen from California for 27 years, and we have raised together our son who turned 21 this summer and is an art student in his third year in college. Along the way, the parents I grew up with, and both my younger sisters, died tragic and heart wrenching deaths. My family fell apart like things fall apart in a war, and there was nothing but dust and rubble and death left when it was over. A suicide at 35, a death of a deadly cancer at 44, two small kids left behind with more questions than answers, Alzheimer's, divorce, alcoholism, betrayal, deceit. Did I leave anything out? But life goes on, so to speak. Your heart can be broken in a dozen or more pieces, but it will go on beating anyway. I have focused all my energy and strength on my small family with my husband and son. We are strong and united. That does not mean that it is easy to start from scratch, and without any support or interest from my husband's family. They might as well live in Australia for all the kindness and caring they have shown over the years. That is hard. No family on either side. Rejected by one, ignored by the other. Such a deal. So I take great pride in the fact that my husband and I are still going strong after almost 30 years, and that we have a great relationship with our intelligent and talented son. I am fiercely protective by nature, a bit of a tiger when threatened, and that feeling only became stronger as I fought hard for my and my husband's and son's dignity. Perhaps I feel so at home at my black baptist church for going on 20 years, because the African-American story in this country is one of forever struggling and standing up for dignity, acceptance, belonging, a long and hard search and fight for the re-integration and dignity of family life, hope, and future. Perhaps to some people the famous Negro spiritual song " Sometimes I feel like a motherless child, alone, alone", may just be another beautiful song, but to me, having been betrayed by my mother, and her family, and trying to make another country my own against at times discouraging odds, the song hits a raw and painful nerve. I am still on that long way home, sometimes the road is smooth and hopeful, other days it feels endless, empty and cold. I will not deny my life makes for an interesting perspective, with some very fascinating experiences, but there is a silence in me few can understand, a wound that never heals. It will be so good to go back to church, because it is one place where the warmth, compassion, spiritual wisdom and soul lifting music and its strength can recharge my battery and make me feel I matter after all, in spite of it all.
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Perte Totale
L'ete s'acheve presque comme un souffle. Le soleil est encore present, dans un ciel bleu, mais il y a un frisson dans l'air tot le matin. C'est toujours dur pour moi de voir se disparaitre la chaleur et joie d'ete, et je me bats contre la melancholie chacque annee quand s'annonce l'automme. J'ai un ami qui vit tres loin, mais qui a une gentillesse malgre la distance, et un talent d'avoir la patience dans ce monde presse de prendre le temps de m'ecouter. La blessure invisible de la melancholie est bien sur liee a la perte de beaucoup de personnes dans ma famille. Perte totale, et je me sens sourier quand meme un peu. D'une facon ou autre, je m'imagine qu'on est tous des " pertes totales", a cause des choses que la vie nous a faites soufrir. Mon copain me fait realiser, souvent pas avec des mots longs ou des jugements penibles, mais avec une patience et de la diplomacie exacte , qu'avec lui ce n'est pas question de validite, mais d'integrite, la mienne autant que la sienne. Cela montre une capacite de gentillesse qui est impressionante pour moi, et qui addoucit souvent mes crises existentielles. Il ne juge pas, il ne rejette pas. Il ecoute, et essaye de comprendre et donner une perspective nouvelle, realiste. Recemment, il me disait que chez lui, on dit "Seulement Dieu est parfait", me faisant comprendre de ne me pas prendre trop au serieuse. Perte totale. Oui, beaucoup d'entre nous sont bien imparfaits et blesses. Mais avec un peu de chance, on a tous un ami ou amie quelque part, proche ou loin, qui nous rappelle qu'on est bien aimable malgre nos defauts et incertitudes. La vie est comme un chemin sur lequel on se trouve, et la promenade est plus agreable quand on rencontre quelques personnes qui nous rappellent la beaute et la dignite d'avoir des compagnes sur cette route plein de mystere, ou on a tous plus des questions que des reponses.
Monday, September 16, 2013
The Art of Imperfection
This year we did our spring cleaning in August, which made us laugh. It just turned out that way. But, we were successful, each and every closet, drawer was gone through, and emptied, washed out, and what ever item of clothing or otherwise, was no longer used, was cleaned , folded and given away to the Salvation Army. The books were taken to our local library. It has always been my philosophy to give away what you no longer use, or have need of. Mend it, wash it and fold it and give it to another who can have good use of it. So, I was looking around my small country house, pleased with myself. Then, as was inevitable, I noticed old kitchen cabinets that looked a little bit outdated, some paint that could use refreshing, a garage screaming "Yard Sale!", and sighed, then just smiled. The thought came to me : the art of imperfection. The ability to live with things imperfect. It is an important one I believe, because things imperfect are connected to people imperfect, and we often live with these imperfect people, and they often live with our imperfections in turn. This is my home, meaning this is where my heart is, where my husband's and son's hearts are. So, if things are not quite as immaculate and organized as I would really like them to be, it is far less important than that my family feels as comfortable as I do, and that I am as tolerant of their at times infuriating stuff as they are of my campaign to eradicate it. Ah, breathe, relax, it is just stuff. But I am happy that my two guys are praising me for my hard work these last two months getting the place more efficient, more spacious and as a result more peaceful in spirit. For someone like me, who likes things clean and airy, living with two collectors and enthusiastic hobbyists leaving a path of their treasures around, electronic and otherwise, has been an exercise in patience, resourcefulness, tolerance and humor, trying to perfect the art of imperfection, in the name of home and love. However, there are a few things left on that list of cleaning up I need to remind my men of. Now, where did I put it?
Thursday, September 12, 2013
The Spider and the Pool
We had an unexpected spell of heat, and with temperatures hitting past 92 degrees Fahrenheit, it has been nice to be able to get into our 15 feet diameter above ground pool. As it is September now, it is also the season of the spiders spinning their fantastic handiwork across every available space. As we are tolerant of our garden creatures, we have spider webs everywhere, and we try hard not to disturb them. The spiders are all too happy to accept our hospitality, and yesterday as I was climbing the ladder to get into the pool, a very elegant web and a large spider in the middle of it, was blocking my way. I tried as best as I could to move the web, and the spider, with a reasonable result. My husband was a bit more impatient, and put the spider unceremoniously in the grass, taking down what was left of the web. Well, the next day, the spider web is back, and the spider, in yes, exactly the same spot. I will have to move her again, as there is no other way to get into the pool, and it is still quite hot again, and the house will once again have temperatures of above 80 degrees Fahrenheit, so it is important to cool down, and I am sure the spider and her web will be back. Impressive determination. There is something to be said for stubbornness, for sticking to your goals. I respect this spider for her decision not to give up. Very inspiring. Spider webs take time to build, and are pieces of art in engineering. I am glad the spiders are around. I needed some reminding that it does not matter what obstacles are in your way, it matters that you keep on keeping on, because that is what it takes, whether you are a spider, a writer, a painter, a teacher, a parent, a friend. Believe in what you do, and do not ever take no for an answer. No matter how many times you have to move your web, and start over again. Just deal with it, and go again. Why? Because if a spider stops making webs, it stops being a spider. If you stop believing in your talents and dreams, you cease being you.
Empty
We went to Cannon Beach in Oregon last week for a couple of days. It was wonderful, the weather was incredible, warm and sunny, the mood relaxed, the local seafood delicious. We took our Flemish Bouvier- Labrador, Yara, with us. We also have a cat, Tigger, and my longtime friend and neighbour, Diane, watched him while we were gone. It seems a simple thing enough, to watch a friend's cat for a couple of days, but as with everything Diane does, it was done with sensitivity and kindness, as she knows how much my animals mean to me. When my husband and I were at Dueber's store, one of our favorite places in Cannon Beach to get gifts, we noticed a pretty onyx jewelry box. It opened up to show a pretty pattern and light inside, and the sight made me think of how my friend has a heart where there is always room for more kindness. I was going to put something inside the onyx box, but I decided against it, because I liked the idea of the jewelry box being a symbol of her open, spacious heart. When we got back, and I told Diane why I got her the onyx box, and why I liked it empty, she was visibly touched by the analogy. I have known this petite and strong woman for 18 years now, and she is there for everyone, all the time, never saying no, always patiently listening, caring, helping, soothing, regardless of whatever problems and challenges she faces herself. It is quite remarkable in a world that encourages selfishness and narcissism. Like a quiet place, filled with moments of silence and reflection, Diane has a peaceful spirit that makes everyone who spends time with her want to be a better, more focused on what truly matters, person. Empty. Not as in void, without meaning, but filled with openness, breath, space. The kind of openness and space that heals, strengthens, encourages and recharges. A timeless, ever welcome gift in a distracted, anxious world.
Monday, September 2, 2013
Mud
There is a 2012 American movie directed by Jeff Nichols, simply called "Mud". The title of the movie is a reference to the main character, a fugitive, played superbly by Matthew McConaughey. The two main supporting actors are the young Tye Sheridan and Jacob Lofland, who portray two teenagers who decide to help the down on his luck "Mud". Mud is running from the police because he killed the abusive boyfriend of his former girlfriend, Juniper, played by Reese Witherspoon. Juniper ends up losing the baby she was carrying by the abusive man as a result from the beating. The two teenagers, Ellis (Tye Sheridan) and Neckbone ( Jacob Lofland) help get Mud parts for a boat so he can get a clean escape with he hopes, Juniper. Things go from bad to worse when Ellis gets bitten by a water moccasin and survives because Mud rushes him to the local clinic in time. Mud gets noticed and a vengeful posse, the father of the man Mud killed and his relatives, goes after Mud. Mud gets away, but it is unclear whether he survived the shoot out, however the audience is let in on the knowledge that Mud survives and is being nursed back to health by a father figure from his childhood, played very effectively by Tom Shepard. The story becomes almost irrelevant in face of the superb acting that is sober, real and is a masterful testimony to a very convincing southern drama. The characters are stripped of all illusions and have to rely on both courage and strength to make it through. The plot and its complications could have turned the movie into a melodramatic soap-opera, but that does not happen, not even for a second. There is a dignity to the execution of the challenges the characters face, that creates a beautiful rapport between the actors and the audience, almost like what happens in a very good play. This movie makes me proud that " Mud " is an American made movie. It shows the best of the American spirit, its tenacity, its quiet depth, and its fearless hold on hope in the face of the most trying circumstances.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)