from here to belonging

image from all the way back in the middle of the month when the leaves were 1/2 up and 1/2 down.

It has been slow, and I think that if I were not looking for it I really might miss it, but over the course of the last couple of months, I have been feeling more on the inside of things here, in our not-so-new-anymore home. As opposed to on the outside peering in. Almost three and a half years later. Like I said, it has been slow. For all of the obvious reasons. Vermont and New England in general are slow to warm and even slower to welcome. Which is something that I expected, and yet living it is another thing. I think compounded even more by hailing from the Upper Midwest where the belonging is deep (even as the fitting in can be somewhat more complex). I have almost always, especially as an adult, felt very certain of who I am along with my place in things there, some regions more than others no doubt, but it has most often been a certainty that has felt secure.

I was reminded recently of something Alycann Taylor said to me when we first landed in Viroqua from Santa Fe in the months before Maple was born. She and her hubs and newborn (now 17 year old!) had recently made the move back to the midwest from Idaho and they were our first friends in our new town. She said that being from Wisconsin is a lot cooler when you are not in it. It makes me chuckle to remember. Both for its ridiculousness along with the truth of it. I am not slow to claim the rolling hills, rich soils, rivers, and lakes as a big chunk of my heart. And my fervor for that claim has always inflated itself significantly when the Upper Midwest seems like a far-off land.

But like I said, not all regions are the same, and the resonance I felt in some places was not there in others. So it goes. Like we had to really carve out our home in some areas as opposed to the way we had more of an immediate arrival in others. When we first moved from Viroqua to Mount Horeb, I remember Maple just being furious with me. She hated the smallness of our yard. It took her a while to see the bigness of the park and forest right across the street. It was the same for me really. I had to work my butt off to carve it out. The first time that our friend Jess visited us from Viroqua the misalignment of my place was reflected in some of her first words: Yikes. Wrong Habitat.

And honestly, I struggled with it for some time. A few years. The suburbs of Madison were a tough pill to swallow, in part due to the conventionalness of everything, but also because town life, in general, took some getting used to. We did find our way there, mostly. Through a lot of effort and desire, we were able to claim our identities and felt, over time, a strong sense of belonging, even if we still felt a little bit like the weirdo outliers.

And yet, we always knew that it wasn’t forever. We almost left a number of times, but just couldn’t quite find the right spot. There was one moment in particular that stands out as a catalyst for this move. It was Chris and Eider in the driveway looking up at the night sky. Eider said something like: wow! look at all of the stars papa! and chris was like oh my god there are like 10 stars visible and I have failed you Eider. We think about that often now and throw our heads back to laugh as we look up at a sky that on a clear night is all stars from horizon to horizon. It is the little/not so little things that find us here I guess.

When we were visiting and searching out our Northern Vermont landing spot the high school that Maple goes to now, Peoples Academy, stood out to us as something that would work for her. I cannot really say why. It is a public high school with many of the problems of most but somehow we got a hit of something that felt like it would gel for her. And we weren’t wrong. Eighth grade sucked, and then of course Covid blew everything out of the water, but the last almost 2 years at PA have landed her in a sense of community and belonging that I am not certain she would have found to quite this same degree anywhere else. Certainly not in Mount Horeb. She said something the other day about how dad wanted to move here because of the stars and isn’t that funny, isn’t that perfect, because her school has such a strong astronomy program and an incredible telescope. A few weeks ago she was there observing Saturn with some of her friends. She is a Capricorn, ruled by Saturn, and I think for her it feels as though everything has fallen into alignment in this way that simultaneously makes perfect sense and supports a deep and true feeling of belonging in her.

In part, her gravity has been pulling me toward the same sense. Much more slowly and with a few more obstacles standing between me and the purity of that feeling. But slowly, slowly, yes. For me, everyone else needs to be more or less sorted out before I can begin to find my own way and that has been slower than all get out. First I was so concerned about Moo as she navigated social dis-ease followed by mental health obstacles (and gifts), and then as she began to resolve and then really click into place my concern shifted to Eid and the enormity of his loneliness and isolation. But he has recently clicked as well and the weight that has lifted has been so complete that the remaining task of making sure our little one is social and happy and active and engaged in his world has become the easiest and best of daily tasks.

What is left is me and what makes me feel like myself, whole and curious and alive and meg. And slowly but surely. Teaching has always helped me feel like me and as ever I am finding the more I do the more I am. I feel it like roots weaving their way deep into place and into community, by virtue of all of the things. School and school involvement is a huge piece for sure and I am happy to be showing up in those spaces both as my kids’ parent and also as myself. I am also so pleased to be teaching at Sterling Forest and planning for more in that space is both grounding and exciting.

As it turns out I am not alone in the slow-to-be-welcomed-in Vermont experience. I have heard folks say that it has taken as long as five years to really feel it here, so I think then maybe I am fortunate to start sensing it just beyond three. This summer was hard with visits to Maine and Wisconsin both, where my sense of place is easy and complete. It made coming back a challenge, every time, and yet when pressed I never could say that I wanted to give up on this place. This is right for us right now and probably for quite some time. I want to plant and build and grow here. I want to be real and alive and awake here. It is not perfect but it is home. More and more every day.

So we’ll get tattoos to mark our place and time and keep on reaching for engagement and connection and adventure. Maybe we stake a claim that lasts for generations- in spite of our signs and our wanderlust- or maybe this is just a moment. Whatever comes to pass, I want to look back and see as few gaps in embodiment as possible. I want to live and love, know and be known, right here. Right now.

community // concert

Maple and I saw Brandi Carlile in Boston on Friday night. I’m not sure that I am even beginning to come down from the experience yet, it was so much, on every level. We bought the tickets way back in January for Maple’s Birthday and, as it always is in the life of a child, it is incredible how different things are now than they were then. We each feel like so much more than we were back then. Both healed and hardened from this year of moving into the endemic world. Simultaneously licking our wounds, and growing strong new flesh around scars that we couldn’t know how deep were running as we were making them. Brandi’s music was there for us through all of it, both a microscope and a life raft.

Maple says that Brandi is her “ring of keys”. Do you know what that term means? I had to look it up. She had said it to me sometime last year; that listening to “The Joke” helped her know that she wanted to come out. And then she said it to me again on Friday night, through all of the tears and the hugs that carried us through the concert. It was magic y’all. The whole thing, from the first note to the final bow, like something perfect and precious made special for all 30,000 of us. For the LBGTQIA+ community, Brandi is a beacon of courage and love and belonging and there is not one single aspect of that that can be undersung. For a queer kid like moo to grow up with big examples like Brandi Carlile and her family and the community that she just keeps on creating and creating is life-changing. There is so much to relate to: being a gay artist living in rural America with a heart full of love and faith in something brighter and more luminous than any small-minded antiquated ideology could ever bring to bear.

It was magic. I loved every single moment and every single person that was there, on stage and in the massive audience. Every song was perfect and thrilling and made me so thankful to be alive and to be me and love who I love and thankful that I am learning to see and know and love people more and more every year. We stayed in the fancy-ass hotel above the venue that I will be paying off for a while and it was a perfect little nest; like we were birds perched in a canyon skyrise cave looking out over the bright lights and life of downtown. Me and my nearly grown girl. The one who, beyond any doubt and all measure, split my heart open to her and to the care and tending of my life, and my family, and the world. It was all the stuff of mama’s dreams.

Earlier in the week, I taught the first Yoga and Mindfulness class at Peoples Academy, Maple’s high school. The whole thing came about because she asked me to teach some yoga to the track team last spring and afterward we could both see how important it would be to offer to the teens in general. In the days leading up to this first class, Maple asked me what I was going to say, how I was going to lay the foundation for what I was going to be doing with the kids that showed up. She caught me a little off-gaurd and truthfully, I hadn’t thought about it specifically yet at that point. So I asked her what she thought along with what she says to kids who come to the Fiber Arts Club that she started at the high school last year. She said that she would start by recognizing that life is hard, for everyone, and that here (yoga class) is a place to both acknowledge that and build some tools for dealing with the difficulty. (Uhh yeah this is my kid teaching me forever and for the record- along with this: she was always listening. She sure was.) Then she said that one of the big intentions behind Fiber Arts, and really all of the school groups and clubs in her opinion, is for community. For kids to have a place where they feel a sense of belonging along with a knowing that they are a part of something and that they have value in that space, and in all spaces really. She is brilliant, I swear.

I was reflecting on this a bunch throughout the week not just in the classes that I taught at school and at the lodge, and it was in the forefront of my thoughts when I spoke with a woman who is interested in coming to the retreat that Sam Rice and I are leading together in Stowe this Winter. She, similar to me, lives in a place that doesn’t feel proximal to a yoga community, whether by virtue of her own new motherhood or by physical location or both. This dynamic really got me thinking about all of the divergent paths and forks in the road I have either followed or turned away from over the course of my life. Especially as an adult and especially as it relates to yoga and motherhood. Early on it felt big and lonely to choose to begin a family over countless classes and hours spent in the studio with other practitioners and teachers. My friends and my people. And then I had to claim that choice over and over again through the years, through feelings of separation and distance and loneliness. I seldom feel that way ever any more; it was made better in small part through online yoga, certainly; that has helped and you can probably read about it in the countless captions attached to videos I shared during Covid, where that was an ever-present theme and muse. But mostly, my capacity to maintain a sense of belonging has been made possible and been nourished through the regular, all be it occasional efforts made by myself and others to gather and share our breath and movement and heart by immersing ourselves in a practice and a tradition that we each love in our own, yet powerfully similar, ways. It has been another life raft of sorts to carry us through. It has certainly carried me.

I know that when I announced that the retreat Sam and I would be teaching would be an intermediate-level practice experience, it gave some folks pause while they questioned whether or not it was for them; if they belonged in such a “level”. I also know that I haven’t really taken the time to explain what the thought behind that is, in part because I wasn’t quite sure how I could say it that would convey the intention. What I have been saying when I talk to folks about it is more along these lines: that it is intermediate because we are going to spend a lot of time in the yoga. It is not an add-in to a relaxing vacation. It is the central focal point, it is the thread that connects us and draws us together. What I want to say is that it is intermediate because there is an element of the yoga being a force in each of our individual lives that we have given ourselves to. Through time, through space, through loss, and change, and all of the other turbulence that makes up a life, the yoga has held us. Whether through an era of daily practice or a season of seldom making it onto our mat, the light that lives inside of our hearts for practice, has burned. Intermediate is by no means to say that we can do all of the poses, of course not; it doesn’t even mean we can do most. Rather what it speaks to is that the yoga can hold our attention for 5-6 hours and day over a long weekend, and that that stretch of time is a part of a longer conversation and relationship each of us has with practice. This is what we hope to convey through the use of the word “intermediate”.

This mood of community connection through time and space came alive for me at the concert on Friday night. So much of the big coming together of all of these new and old Brandi Carlile fans and her whole vibe of inclusivity and welcome really spoke to the belonging that lives even through the loneliness. So many of her songs weave this theme through them and I think it is in part what makes her music so real and raw and hopeful for so many. When I attach this post to a reel, I will probably put it with a version of “Right On Time” from her newest album (and the delux). I think right now it is one of the very best ballads for expressing where we find ourselves in the pseudo-post-Covid world. Full of recognition for our pain and loss running right alongside our strength and humanity and hope. I think it is just right.

I am sure I have so much more to say about all of this in the coming days and weeks. Especially as it pertains to parenthood and presence and continuity and community. But this is what I have for now. Thanks for being here.

contradictions

A couple of weeks ago Maple helped my mom drive from VT to Wisconsin to deliver a packed car full of baby stuff to my little sister. Yes, there is a new baby coming in the new year and I am over the moon about the whole thing. For real. I actually cannot get into it too much right now because I am here to write about something else this morning, but trust me when I say: O M G I cannot wait to be this little bb’s auntie and I cannot wait for Freddy (and moo and bear) to have a lil’ cuz/sib. The very best. I’m dead.

However! I am here to share something far less exciting and far more irritating than all of the sleepless nights could ever amount to. For some. I actually think that it is a little tricky to figure out how bothered you should or should not be by what I am going to relay. It may seem slight, or average, or just how it is, but I want to encourage each of us, especially myself, to continue to ask why that might be and in so doing buck a little bit more of the cultural expectations and deferential surrender that this world and the status quo ask us to live inside of. Let’s see ok?

To start. We have all been dealing off and on with these interminable colds for much of the fall. It is ridiculous and unending and we are all over it. I have been down with it again this weekend which only bears mentioning because I was also feeling shitty the weekend that Maple and my mom left to drive west. Which was weeks ago now. So, yay, in and out of immune reboot or some such. Maple herself had actually been feeling quite poorly as well and there was some talk of her not going along at all, but clearly, in the end, she did. And while I am glad for it and also proud of her for doing so much of the driving to get there, I am also a little remorseful of what it feels like this kid has to deal with both in terms of familial expectation as well as in the world at large.

The incident actually took place at the very tail end of her journey. She was sitting in the Burlington airport waiting for me and wilfs to pick her up; we were late due to all of the peeper traffic in Stowe. Of course. We were on the phone actually. She was exhausted from her trip physically but also mentally and emotionally worn down from her time with her gran, which can be simultaneously wonderful and complicated. They have always had a very particular relationship and as maple has grown it has become more complicated as both her awareness and understanding of the dynamic and whatever inappropriate tendencies are at play have developed. It is hard. And she is a champ about it. Over and over again. It is delicate you know. Especially with our elders, to navigate the line between respectful deference and clear vision with a perspective that is rooted in reality.

I do not know how it is for other folks in their families, but I have observed in myself simultaneously a desire for along with a lack of any wise elder. It is a source of immense guilt in me. Like I am unable to perceive something that does indeed exist or that maybe it was a false narrative to begin with. I really do long for wise elders in my life. Guides, people to emulate or strive to one day become. It is an absence for sure but also seems to be somewhat the trend when I look around. Especially those of us whose parents are Boomers. They are missing something, are they not? There is an arrested development there that I can see in the culture as a whole but also within the context of my own family. It is also a gross generalization, I realize that. But there is something to it, I am certain, and it leaves the relationships lacking for those of us who are oriented toward the growing edge of our own development as humans. Plus, it is a compounded bummer to see the trickle down effect it has on my kids. And it is triggering in terms of my own parenting as well. Ok, so its a lot!

Anyhow. She was fresh off the excavating of some ancestral wounds, tired, and waiting for her mom to come and get her. She was perhaps a little weepy. And she was on the phone with me, her mother, when an older woman comes up to her, puts her hand on her head, tells her she noticed her in the airport, asks her name, and tells her that she would like to pray for her. Maple, stunned, says that she is ok and that she is on the phone with her mom and does not tell her her name. The woman walks away but Maple is shaken. Or, shook, as the kids say.

And now listen, this may seem like no big whoop. In fact, when she told Chris what happened that was more or less his response. I get that, I really do. I even have tried that response on for size a time or two in the processing of this event. But I would encourage us to not stand inside of that perspective for long. And here is why: this woman profiled a young (queer) adult, she took advantage of her older (white Christian) lady privilege, and she violated an individual’s personal autonomy. A lot of assumptions were made, and my guess is that they all lived inside of this person’s, as well as the culture’s, subconscious to such a degree that to call them out is making all of us uncomfortable right now. But can you see it? Why had she “noticed” Maple? The green hair? The Doc Martins? I mean, really? Why would she approach her, and then proceed to touch her, if she were not occupying a belief that she is somehow Maple’s superior whether by age, or by faith, or heteronormative identity; it doesn’t matter, pick one. If someone of almost any other demographic had reached out and touched my kid and asked their name, it would have been pretty near to the neighborhood of assault, would just not? So call it privilege, call it bias, call it whatever you like: my kid felt the same either way… the only difference being that she had to grapple with whether or not she was expected to simply take it because of the demographic. That is absurd and also, frankly, obscene. Not to mention the enormity of the contradiction that is the Christian Assumption. To which we all defer.

It rattled Maple. A lot. It is hard to know if it would have been so upsetting if it had not been on the heels of several days spent navigating the complexities of her relationship with her primary elder, but honestly, I am not sure that matters all that much. There is an effect here that I think is important to pay attention to. And listen, I do not want to come off as anti-christian, by no means. I love faith and I love prayer and I love all of the ways in which we each connect to our own sense of wonder to the great unknown as it moves through our lives. I am here for it. I am into it. What I am not into is in making any assumptions about what any person’s relationship to faith may or may not be, and certainly, I am not into superimposing mine onto another because of my belief in its rightness. No thank you. And that is what I see the Christian Culture doing time and time again. Whether it is in child-rearing, professional lives, education, local politics, or whatever. This is how it plays out with the rest of us entirely complicit by virtue of our deference to the Christian Belief Structure. Some of you may remember an article I wrote years ago about this contradiction in the home-education sphere that I had submitted for publication in a Secular Homeschooling rag. It was never published (and instead lives somewhere on this blog) because the magazine was nervous that it might be offensive to some. And yet! Don’t worry about offending the rest of us by assuming that we believe what you do, or even worse: disregarding anything we might believe as real or true in light of your own certainty.

A long time ago my big kids decided that they would always refer to themselves as Atheists instead of Agnostics so as to firmly keep the door shut tight against anyone who might perceive the inclusivity of one term as an invitation to convincing or converting. My kids are so smart like that. I keep holding out in my own referencing around self-proclaimed Spiritualism: I do really believe in the whole big interconnectedness of things. But never at the cost of anyone else. That doesn’t add up to a whole, does it?

This may actually be the easier piece to grapple with. Many of us have probably been doing it for years. But what about the automatic deference to our elders, or our belief (hope) that somehow elder is synonymous with wise? It’s not the case really though is it? Or we would have never had to remind ourselves to question authority. Be it the kind that comes with religion, or with whiteness, or with age. And listen I don’t really know anything at all except that I do hold out the belief that Black Elders know a thing or two more than any of the rest of us and I admit to feeling more deference and respect to an elder Black person than I do toward most White ones. This may be a can of worms that I am not very equipped to open and by all means correct my missteps and help me learn and become better. What I really want to say is that with age, discernment is a necessity. It cannot just be that because you are older you are wiser. I know I don’t need to tell you that but maybe if you are older and reaching out to someone younger you want to pause and give yourself an extra moment to consider where that might be coming from and what you hope to serve by doing so. That’s all.

So, today, I don’t know. In the last few months I have been admitting a few more difficult truths to myself, casting off my own internal expectations. And this presses near to that, ya know? I think that sometimes we do in fact make a big deal out of nothing, I know that I do. But I also think that when there is real upset or real dis-ease it is important to look to the roots of why we are feeling the way we feel. Is there some internal struggle with how we think we should be versus the truth of what we know is right? Is it possible to stay in the lane of doing no harm and also be honest? Or what sort of harm is ok within the context of growing our humanity? Truly, I do not have the answers. But I have some clues per the upset. I bet you do too.

sheep stuff

First to say, I have not lost the thread of the dream of raising sheep. It still lives in me. But unlike a lot of other manifestations, it feels unrushed and easy and I will let it unfold in its own time. We have a few other large projects around here that take precedence, hello sauna, and a little cabin for moo. Our aspirations for building a Vermont Family Compound are pressing in and near and while this may not be the land that it all unfolds on, there is plenty to do here and now. Five years is at once nothing and also a lifetime so making things work as best they can for who we are today and who we are leaning toward tomorrow is our very best vision. And so.

In the meantime, it is extra cool and interesting to make a study of sheep and wool and the people and places that tend them. And truly, most shepherds think that their sheep are the very best kind of sheep which may possibly be true but is also 100% impossible to sort through. I have narrowed things down a bit and am now clear on the farms I want to visit and the wool I want to hold. Also, I am now able to have more cognizant conversations around it, like I am standing on my own two feet inside the dialogue. Even though a shepherdess did recently tell me that I am a red flag in one breath and that she is a vegetarian life coach and that her animals are her therapy in the other. Ahem. I digress.

For me, dual purpose is important. Sheep for wool and lamb for meat. It seems like not only the most responsible but also the most rewarding way to go. And I like for our family to be up close to life cycles and animal husbandry continues to be one of the most daily/functional ways to be there. Plus, lamb is delicious. And fiber is variable and wonderful for all sorts of different things. But I want to spin it into yarn that I can make things with and so wool suited for insulation or rugs is probably not my best bet. However, I do not love slippery overly soft yarn very much at all. I like crimp and catch, and in recent years: the woolier the better.

So the first breed of sheep that set this more earnest investigation into motion is, interestingly enough, included in one of the three that I have narrowed my list down to in the last year or so. Last fall a sheepy friend of mine back in Viroqua shared a post about a fellow local to me here - yes the world is small and weird and forever more interconnected than I can ever understand- who was looking to pass a flock of Icelandic Sheep on to their next shepherd. This breed, if not this particular flock, was already on my radar because they are well-suited to cold, northern climes. Not to mention that they are absolutely gorgeous with so much variation and uniqueness in their appearance. They also appear to be a little trendy right now with cute spotted flocks popping up here and there. There is a really incredible shepherdess that I follow back in WI who is raising stunning animals and I kinda drool over what she is doing. Also, near to me here- on the farm that I got a tattoo at last spring: Vermont is funny and strange, did I mention?- they are raising some very beautiful and robust Icelandics. I would love to visit that farm again this fall or spring, along with the others that I will mention in a bit, and get a better feel for the care and keeping of these animals. Plus, of the three on my list, this is the only breed that I have not yet held a skein of their yarn in my hands yet. I anticipate that it will be extra wooly and maybe best blended with something softer, and this is the piece that gives me some pause with the breed. I do not mind wool blends, but I would also love the option of making a high-performing breed-specific yarn. Ya know, goals.

Alrighty, moving on. When we were down at Vermont Sheep and Wool a couple of weekends ago I met one of the owners of Junction Fiber Mill, who happens to also be a midwesterner. Bless. She is raising Corriedale sheep on her farm, and what is very cool about her is that she is super friendly and helpful and would make an excellent resource for me. It is kind of a neat connection with her being a midwestern transplant too, plus our local yarn shop back in Mount Horeb was co-owned by a woman raising Corriedale. It’s all connected. So, it is familiar in a pretty cozy way. I haven’t visited her farm or the mill yet, but hope to sometime this fall, maybe when we are down there for a swim meet. What I like about Peggy is that she is pretty smart about the whole thing in terms of business and economy. She is raising dual-purpose animals and the breed she has chosen produces a huge amount of wool, like 11 pounds per animal per shearing. To put that into a functional perspective, her mill’s minimum for processing a farm’s fiber is 13 lbs. So just two animals would do it. I am planning on beginning with more like 4- 5 animals and maintaining at hopefully under 10, but that is a huge amount of wool at that size which is great. And the carcass size for lambs is significant as well. Clearly, she divulged the most info on this with me out of everyone I have chatted with so far. She was practical and accessible in a way that I really appreciate, without dumbing it down or being judgey at all. Odd I know but yes a thing. In all domains, it would appear. The only thing that I am not certain of is how much I love the wool. I need to make something with it before I can know for true. It is their mill’s house yarn so that part will be easy. It has a nice feel, soft and easy, without being too floppy, but maybe not quite rough enough for what I am hoping. I gotta see.

This brings me to breed number 3, Cheviots. This is the one I am probably most interested in and also perhaps know the least about. Junction Mill has a farmer that has her cheviot wool milled with them so I did get to see and hold some while we were at Sheep and Wool. I liked it. It is sturdy and wooly in a way that I enjoy, but again, I probably need to see it knit up. This flock lives in Northern New Hampshire and making a visit to her farm should be relatively easy. And I can grab some skeins when we are down near the mill for the aforementioned swim meet. I really like the size of this breed and they have such a cool history. Also, one of my old Driftless buds EVL raises these animals and she is smart and practical and my most reliable mentor on the topic. They are dual-purpose, like the other two, and well suited to the cold and rugged north. Ahem. They are similar to the sheep living on islands off the coast of Maine;

worth an investigation for sure.

I think that is what I’ve got for now friends. Maybe a little bit more of my checklist might be useful to share so I’ll wrap this up with that. Here we go. Breed size is important, I want to be able to handle them with relative ease myself. So, while larger is cool in terms of production, I also do not want to gas myself by not being able to tend and move animals around mostly, if not entirely, on my own. A consideration. Also, for a hot second I was looking at Finn Sheep, popular in this area as well. But they are known for many lambs, like 3-4 per ewe and no thank you very much to that. One or two is great, ok? I fully anticipate that I may not even want to breed every ewe anyway. Keep my pace steady and my size smallish. Wool is key, as I have mentioned, but also I want animals that are robust and as EVL says: not too fussy. I do not want anyone who is parasite prone or has soft hooves here. A lot, if not all, of sheep management, and herd health, has to do with the land they are on and so that is really our starting place in terms of moving in the direction of the vision. I want shelter, water, electricity would be ideal, and several permanent paddocks to rotate them through. I have done moveable netting before when we had goats and honestly, I rather not. And because I want this level of infrastructure- rare for me, I know- we are taking our time and being methodical and clear. Maybe we have sheep in the next 2 years, or maybe it is more like 5. I am ok with that. It is nice to have a dream with a steady and solid pulse, and this feels like that.

That’s it for now. Hope it was interesting!

xxx,m

poop owie

found photo. by freddy.

So much has elapsed since I last had a stretch of moments to sit down and try to piece everything together in a way worth sharing here. It is hard to know where, or even how, to begin. What to omit and what to include. Sometimes the map of things makes all the sense in the world, and other times I am lost inside of the jumble of unresolved threads that tangle up my mind space. So it goes. I actually feel a bit in a jumble right now, but I have the time this morning so I will see how patient and thorough I can be with the untangling.

We are just on the other side of the crashing wave that is back-to-school energy and we are beginning to settle into the new shape of things. Even as homeschoolers this was always a time of transitions as activities and sports started up their schedules again. But this year, with Eider in school full time for the first time in his life, the shift into this season has felt even more immense. And I know that I should know this already, especially when it comes to parenting, that most things never go as planned, and the way I imagine what will unfold is often just a flimsy hologram distorting reality. Oh well. I am a slow learner to be sure.

There were a few threads of our intended trajectory, back in the mid-summer, that I could see or was beginning to notice were a little rough or loose or poorly placed. I knew that the changes ahead for Eider were going to be big and unpredictable and honestly I spent quite a bit of time fretting over that to varying degrees. That is a bit of an unfortunate habit of mine I think, especially when it comes to Bear. Three years of not really catching any breaks has me ready for some working wins for that kid, and well, I worry. I also knew in the early summer that Maple has some pre-work for an AP class that was looming large. As for Wilfred, who was enrolled to begin Forest Preschool this fall, I was aware that even as he began to really potty train - a requirement for FP- that he was also beginning to resist and hold his poops. Ouch and Owie. In fact, his chant of “I have a poop owie” became a constant for much of the summer, so much so that we began to incorporate it into our family vernacular. Each of us was working through our own metaphoric poop owies, some bigger and more uncomfortable than others.

My own Poop Owie of the summer came in the form of my continued feeling of displacement as a yoga teacher in Northern Vermont. I just couldn’t land anywhere that felt right or true. The new local studio in town that I had begun teaching at in the early spring began to show immediate signs of inconsistency and questionable management. But desperate to teach, I pushed through my doubt and overrode my instincts time and time again. In retrospect, I am a little sad and disappointed that I didn’t heed the truth that lives inside of my own first impressions. It took showing up to teach and interfacing with the studio owner and realizing that she was completely hammered, for the lights to turn on in my own awareness. I was giving a person and a situation the benefit of a doubt that I had transformed into believing was simply me being an asshole and in so doing had become dull to all of the warnings written all over the walls. And seriously no shade ever in a million years for anyone struggling with addiction, which she clearly is. However, I will remove myself from the equation and will not consider return until radical honesty is restored and recovery is engaged. At the very minimum. I know enough about the 12-steps to know she is nowhere in the ballpark of any of it, and so, teaching there is not for me.

I began to explore other options for places to teach this coming fall and started to think that doing things independently was perhaps a little more my style- big surprise. There was a beautiful space in Hardwick that was run as an incubator space for teachers and I respect and admire the woman who conducts that effort. She is clear and conscientious and connected to and passionate about her local community. It seemed like a perfect fit and I was getting excited about teaching there and within that particular format. However, when I visited to get a run-through of using the space, I realized that the studio had been moved from the beautiful third-story light-filled historic building to a dark basement off of the main street. Ughhhh no. I have been teaching and practicing in a basement for three years and it has been killing my soul. I cannot get it together to leave my house and my family for an evening away in another dreary basement. I cannot. Poop owie.

So I paused my efforts to find a local yoga home and moped. Redirecting my attention back to online teaching and summer teaching in Maine and putting a few events together down the road. Blergh what a bummer. I have a bit of distance from the ordeal now, and it doesn’t feel quite so tender, and I have a few other irons in the fire so my disappointment is muted now. I have hope. And in my transparency about the whole shit show of teaching yoga in Northern Vermont, I have begun forging a few friendships of my own that are indeed the silver lining that was previously absent. Plus, I have other shit to think about. Literally.

I reflected in an earlier post about noticing and sorting through thoughts living inside my head that were not necessarily my own. And while it was kind of jokey and just about swimsuits and what I tell myself I can or cannot do, there are far more insidious beasts up in there. At least through my lens. As a home educator, there is a big muscle that I worked hard to build around sorting what is real and what is just the constructed narrative created by the compulsory education paradigm. If you have educated at home, you know what I am talking about. There is a detoxing and a deconditioning that has to happen in order to teach and respond to the child in front of you, versus shaping them into the form of some messaging implicit in the culture of education as it exists in current time. There is lots of deconstructing around concepts such as “ready for” or “falling behind” or “delayed” or “age appropriate”. Each of which are fashioned after a child that never existed to begin with and are pressed forward into reality by the sheer will and autopilot unchecked belief structures of many parents and educators. I want to say all here, but I will say many out of respect for people who I am sure were more self-aware than me when they got going parenting and/or educating.

In specific, I had been functioning within a belief structure that my child was ready to go to preschool because he was three and because he loves to be social and play and engage with other kids. And I was ignoring this very big owie that was building inside of him. He was constructing this wall of resistance that became the obstacle between him and gaining entrance into preschool. I was also beginning to believe that the time I was longing for for myself could only be granted through his entry into nursery school. Yes, I understand that is somewhat ridiculous for a person who has been home-educating children for almost a decade. But when Maple and Eider were little, we had family nearby who gave me a few hours every week to myself. And some incredible in-home care providers who filled in any gaps. None of our life is set up for that now, and I was looking for conventional solutions. Of course.

dinner by the garden. and a fire.

However, Wilfred was not able to start Forest Preschool this week. He still has a poop owie. We are working on it with each other and with the support of our family md. The Nature Center where he is enrolled has offered to hold his place for him for a period of time which is wonderful. But after a week at home together I am remembering a number of things: the first and most obvious being that there is no time frame for resolving a poop owie, at least not in a peaceful and sustainable and growth-oriented way. Secondly, and even more profoundly, I remembered how very much I love to spend my days with a three-year-old. It is just us most of the time and in the absence of my guilt and stress over not being able to give my attention to educating a middle grader, we are free to do whatever we like most of the time. Yes, we are still driving the bigs around, a lot, which sometimes he likes and sometimes he hates, we are also making playdates, visiting playgrounds, heading to storytime, going on walks, crafting, and playing and playing and playing some more. We ar also resting together each day which is the very sweetest part of my day and one I am in zero hurry to give up. Basically, it is the best and in my remembering, something around the “should” of things is untangling in my heart and mind and I am able to more and more be with this little amazing nugget in front of me. Which of course, is just enough of a drop in tension for the poop owie to be easing.

So, no real time frame. I am not going to hold a spot for him in Forest Preschool. I will check in with them in the new year and hope to enroll him again for a couple of days next fall. In the meantime, we will greet what is and practice having fun and discovering our surroundings and our communities and one another. As for Maple’s poop owie, she didn’t get that AP prep work done. But she landed herself in another AP science class which is probably a far better fit for her anyway. Atta kid. I freaking love her. She’s already busy making costumes for the fall musical, and co-running the fiber arts and GSA clubs that she started last year. What a badass, that one.

Eid has had an amazing first week at yurt school and in the re-commencement of activities: mountain biking club, fall lacrosse, and orchestra. Watching him this week has been such a massive joy for me, it’s like getting to see him be a full-on kid for the first time in years. What comes after eighth grade still feels like a big unknown, but I think I am interested in yoking some of my energy and efforts to help this little independent school of his find the funding and resources to anchor themselves into the framework of Vermont Independent Schools. And who knows? Maybe that will help it expand into high school in time to serve Eider. TBD.

maybe the last swim? hope not. image through moo’s eyes.

My own owies are slowly resolving as well. I am appreciating my capacity to say no to what isn’t a good fit for me, versus shaping myself into something else. There are some exciting things ahead, even as simple as finding a weekly class for myself to enjoy attending and integrating myself into the yoga framework that functions right now. As ever, this practice feels relational and I am in the phase of building some compelling relationships and that is wonderful. I know that I am an endlessly broken record in this space when it comes to identity and perception of self and roles and all the rest of the internal matrix, but I am seeing myself as of late simultaneously in high relief and from a bit of a distance. Two images of me as who I am and how I feel in and for myself, but also a bit as how my kids might see and experience me: which is as their mother, no doubt; but also as a woman of my own. Funny and fun, stern sometimes, gentle mostly, quirky and independent, forever nostalgic, and honest to a fault to be sure. Who knows really? It feels like a bit of a moving target, but in their differentiation from me, this new aspect is being revealed and I think I like what I see so far.

Ok! This was a long one so thanks for reading so far if ya made it through. I am really hoping to find a couple of hours to gift myself with time to write every week. I am not sure when that is just yet but the intention is clear and the desire is certainly big enough. Writing is like an itch that needs to be scratched and such a central part of my own self-care. I want to show up for it. Even if that means part of a morning spent with Freddy watching Cars and me hammering it out with a Lightening McQueen soundtrack in the background. More soon lovies. Take good care. (And don’t believe everything your mind tells you. Sorting. Sorting.)



snake skin

I decided this morning, or really last night, that I am not going to offer a weekend yoga retreat in Stowe this fall. And as with most decisions, arriving there was not without substantial difficulty, and being here is no big whoop and also a massive relief. It was extra tempting, ya know? But I think that is due almost entirely to the offer presenting itself right in the midst of the most regular and rewarding in-person teaching I have done in years. I got caught up in all of those good feelings and just really wanted to keep it all rolling.

Teaching on Islesford this summer; more than I thought I would by popular request; was such a treat to my whole system.  A buried part of me got excavated and dragged back up to the light and I feel myself in, at once, a new and wholly familiar way. I think it was kinda like that for folks that came to class too. So many people shared such similar feelings to me along the lines of: “oh my god it’s been forever since I’ve done any yoga” or “I have only been practicing by myself, alone and at home, in virtual classes” and “I just feel so much better in so many ways after class with you and everyone” and “I am moving and breathing and thinking and inhabiting my whole self with so much more connection and ease.” I mean, it was all the way wow. And I could sip on sentiments like that: and those kinds of affirmations and encouragements, all the live long day.

I got carried away. And why shouldn’t I?

But something I also know is that the time spent planning and prepping and filling a retreat in Costa Rica this past year took up so much of my bandwidth, mentally and emotionally, and the cumulative anxiety that I experienced putting the retreat together was nearly debilitating at times. It was a lot. And it didn’t leave much left for anything else. So, in a complete turn of events, I am choosing less for myself as a way of choosing more.

That is hard for me y’all! With Eider going to school this fall, and Wilfred in nursery school twice a week, I feel giddy and overeager at the possibility of what I can accomplish with some unfettered, untethered, undetermined time on my hands. And yet, also I think I am making some efforts to numb my feelings around this whole change. That may very well be real too. This will be the first time in 8 years that I haven’t been homeschooling, and while I plan to homeschool Wilfred, the reality of that is still a ways off in terms of how I approach things. Anything other than place-based play before age seven or so isn’t of incredible use in my experience and opinion; other than addressing any literacy challenges that are presenting themselves. But that seems like another post for another day… So, I am loose right now in a way haven’t been in what feels like an entire lifetime. And in that looseness, I am releasing and shedding a skin that I no longer need to wear, that no longer fits as well as it once did. I am churning inside the story of my own becoming; my own evolution. I am as ever, my own agent of change. 

But do not doubt that in my quiet moments I completely circle the drain regarding our decision for Eid to head to school. I am so nervous. I want it to be amazing, or at the very least: great enough. I especially want his love of learning, which was the entire point and purpose of homeschooling, to begin with, to remain intact. It must. It has to. Right? But I am still nervous about the shift. He will be primarily in the hands of educators other than myself. And yet, what I have known to be true for a long time and continues to be true for the duration of my children’s education, is that the people most accountable and responsible for our kids’ learning are always going to be Chris and me. Most other educators and mentors will come and go, but god willing, the two of us hold the space and provide the ground upon which it all takes shape, develops, and thrives, throughout. This revelation landed us in home education to begin with. Not without some struggle and resistance: it is not what we are taught to believe about school and learning. And yet, to believe or trust in anything else is in my mind another version of magical thinking.

And boy do I know a thing or two about magical thinking! And it seems to be all for the most part pretty well documented throughout the seven-and-a-half-year life span of this blog! Part of that thinking is even just the sometimes thought that maybe I am passed it and am now inexplicably firmly rooted in the reality of being in the here and now. As it is. Secure in my truth. Alas, I continue to be a permeable blob of easily influenced cells and sentiments. I hope to at least believe that I am becoming more aware of the times when something other than my own voice begins to infiltrate my thoughts. I have an example, and it is my hope that it serves to highlight something under the service for perhaps more folks than just myself.

Here it is: early in the summer I spent a lot of time taking Freddy to the beach to meet up with other moms and kiddos. And listen, I love heat, I love water, I love skimpy swimwear. Over the last few years, however, I have been making sure I have a few more modest suits so as to “protect other people’s feelings” or some such shit. So in one of these instances, I was standing on the beach and found myself deep in thought regarding whether or not I should just get some sort of black swim dress for these mom and kid beach outings. I traveled down the path of this idea for quite a while before I grabbed hold of some stronger aspect of myself and was like: who the fuck’s thought was that inside my head anyway??? It certainly was not my own.

After that initial noticing, I stuck with it, paying attention in that way. When I can, as I am able. What thoughts am I thinking that may not belong to me? What are the things that I am telling myself that really do not originate with me, but with someone, or something else? What are the ways that various aspects of the dominant culture have seeped into the space between my ears and then parrot themselves via my internal dialogue are external speech? It probably comes as no real surprise, but the list is endless. The swimsuit example is of course beside the point, however, it has served as a catalyst of sorts for beginning to travel this particular path of self-inquiry that I find myself on now. Because, obviously, it doesn’t end there. Especially as it has to do with self-image, self-worth, and self-respect.

In an effort to hopefully circle back to the beginning of this post, I think that this is one of the places in my life that I am interested in cultivating a little bit more slowness and space around. Doing less as a way of seeing and sensing more. I am especially interested in feeling into the parts of myself that are populated with the belief that I am a fake or a phony or who do I think I even am anyway, etcetera times infinity. I am curious to see what happens when I do not just auto-pilot fill all of the space in my days up and instead take a little more time sitting with what is and looking for the source that lives inside of what I think and how I feel and maybe even who I am.

In terms of teaching, which is something that supports me in feeling very much like me, beginning in September I will offer one in-person class a week at Open Space in Hardwick (up above Front Seat, so cute!) on Wednesday evenings from 5:45 to 7 pm. I am also running a virtual class series again beginning Tuesday, August 30th, and running for 5 weeks. Those classes are 45-minutes each and feel just right in terms of time spent in screen-based yoga as well as my continued desire for community touchstones with everyone who lives away.

So that is it for now. Kinda fluid, kinda curious, and as ever working on feeling ok in my own humanity and cultivating ease of mind and heart. How we do. Love you. m

ps a quick note on this image: I LOVE it. I see me like how I feel me right now in this image. It is in support of the whole of me. And I am certainly feeling myself right now. Beyond any one part: not just mom, not just meg, not just teacher, not just friend; but Meg on the whole. Integrated in a way that has felt distant for some years. Like I am both domesticated and feral and it feels like the truest paradoxical truth of me. Islesford gave me a lot this summer and this is the very heart of it. Both/And as it lives in my very marrow.

to rest/not rest: a savasana post

Tell me that it wasn’t savasana that ignited your initial love affair with yoga asana… I mean, you can try. Or, it is ok if you say no, that wasn’t it and I will put some effort toward believing you. As someone who has always loved, but mostly hated, being high, savasana after the first class I ever took catapulted me into a state of being that I had no sense that I could really access without some plant or chemical assistance. I mean, it is this amazing thing that we just never do. Or, I had never done. Structured rest. Communal, quiet, nothingness. Conscious letting go. Every altered state that I had ever found myself in up to that point was like a random crap shoot. Even now, when I experiment with that just right amount of edibles looking for a relaxation that doesn’t tip over into stoned, I am far too uncomfortable with the unpredictability of it. I mean, yes please but probably, no thank you.

It is profoundly organized in its simplicity. If you can stay and be still and relax your control: body, mind, breath; then right around the 6 or 7-minute mark, the nervous system switches from sympathetic to parasympathetic and the deep rest, reset, renew, takes over. It is so good. Clear and crisp yet also diffuse enough to get a true sense of the expansiveness, or emptiness, of consciousness.

And yet. How many times when I am practicing on my own do I skip this opportunity for a deep reset? (ahem, most, cough, cough). Or how many times, in the more modern shorty-short classes do we get completely short-changed on savasana? I think again, the answer is most. Ok yeah unless the class is something like “yin” or “slow flow” but maybe not even. And, it probably goes without saying, but the draw for me to an “easy” practice is not very strong. I need my body-mind to be throttled a little bit in order to deactivate the constant thrum of noise between my ears. I like to work my body hard so that my mind gets too tired and has to shut the fuck up for a bit. And please don’t come at me about it. I know it is good to rest. But sometimes rest without any inherent expenditure of physical effort looks a lot like me spinning my wheels and building anxiety where I had hoped to build ease. It took a really long time for me to understand- in fact, it really took watching my own family and their tendencies for the past 17 years- that I am the sort of person who could work my body hard for 2+ hours every day and be better for it. I have never really been one to go after extreme athleticism; like really, at all; but I have it in me I think. Not speed and power perse, but a whole lot of endurance and strength.

Also, can we talk for a minute about the actual name of the pose to begin with? It is The Corpse, after all. The only moment ever where we are invited to invoke the practice of death and decay. Of retreating back into the earth and into the all that is. Beyond the body, beyond the mind. That seems maybe like it is the heart of practice, doesn’t it? As in, the part of practice that I will carry with me for as long as I carry anything at all. To the very end, whatever that is. And isn’t rest always better and deeper and more profound when we are tired and worn out? I hope to be tired and worn out at the end of my life like I left nothing on the table and played all I had with my whole heart and my whole mind, and my whole body. For as long as any of it lasts.

None of this is to say that I am not interested in practices like Yoga Nidra. I definitely am, I just don’t have the surplus of available time or wherewithal to prioritize such practices at this moment in my life. I gotta worked first I guess. That sounds funny and maybe came out wrong but I think you get the gist. I’m just trying to get myself to meditate 10-20 minutes a day, and after that, I need to move. And breath. And hopefully sweat some too, ya know? BUT! I am committed to securing time and space at the end of my asana practices for a decent savasana, and at the close of my classes as well. Enough time to go there if you can. To practice dying, or at the very least to practice resting.

In the very early days of my indoctrination to practice, I was living in Prescott Arizona and working at the Coffee Roasters for Christina and Kelly, and practicing and dipping my toes into teaching at Prescott Yoga. On Sundays for some period of months in there, I would hop on my bike, cruise across town and up a massive hill to Casa de Sell, and Christina and I would practice for roughly 4 or 5 hours. We would do all the poses. But at the end, we always did this super-supported savasana. Christina called it “a Cadilac savasana” and we’d be there for at least 20 minutes, astral projecting and having Shaktipat visions and revelations. It was its own sort of training and edification. The whole thing was a whole lot of wow. My boyfriend at the time (hi James!) was totally grossed out that I wanted to practice for such a long stretch of time. Like, why? Bahahahaha.

Fast forward to about a year of the pandemic and once again practicing with Christina (via the zooms of course: love em/hate em) for hours upon hours every week. It was both incredible after 20 years to still share this connection with her as well as profoundly unsustainable. It was an era too it turns out. But I love to work hard like that. To travel out onto the skinny branches of some curiosity or fixation for a period of time. Besides, I am old enough to know well enough that nothing lasts forever and it is extra fun and maybe extraordinarily necessary to get it while the getting is good. Make hay while the sun shines. And so on. For me, movement is the prerequisite to every creative act, mandatory or otherwise. I try to, at least for some moments of every day, give thanks for this body that breathes and moves and for the most part feels good. It is a wonder and it is a gift and may I never take any of it for granted.

I think this entire savasana riff is really born out of the stirring of this kind of focused attention to fitness or physical pursuits beginning to roil inside of me again. Maybe because of the shift in our home rhythm coming this fall, like what do I want to do with all of the time that I won’t be spending being solely responsible for my 13-year-olds education? I’m gonna move my body, is one thing. In some big ways, I think. And write. I’m gonna write. And hopefully, I am going to work so well and so hard at all of it that I am gonna rest. Real deep.

a new note

In the spirit of taking note… I am feeling happier than I can remember in a long time. I think ok-ness has been my own baseline/status quo for forever, all that I can remember. Whether it is due to worry over the world or worry over my children, I have hovered for so long in a persistent state of good enough is good enough and so long as the steady thrum of anxiety doesn’t tip into full panic, then I am winning. Of course! I mean that is a win, right? But these past couple of weeks I have eased my way into something different but familiar, like a well-worn and beloved pair of pants that finally emerged from the pile of cast-offs they were buried under for so long. A refreshing find. Bright and in good repair and made just right for me. It is hard to let myself say that I have felt something close to happy these past few weeks, it feels tone deaf to the very real shit storm blasting the larger national and global reality right now, and yet… I think I am. 

It is a huge relief to have a plan for each of the kids this coming year that feels solid and right. The enormity of the burden of trying to sort that out these past few years has been so much to bear. And yeah this next version of us will have its hiccups or not wind up being the right fit but for the moment we are right and good with what is coming. What a relief. Also, a plan for them opens up the possibility of a plan for me too and I am enjoying the growing idea of my own time and space opening up and unfolding into something this fall. I like making a plan to do more of my own work in some larger, uninterrupted, and focused stretches. I am setting a few things in motion for teaching and mentoring and my own study that is exciting as well as measured and reasonable and all of that is something I look forward to. 

It is also an immense relief to be on Islesford this summer and in full enjoyment of everything that it is to get to spend time here. Days are full of deck hangs with either a book or knitting or bubbles in hand, blueberry picking and bike rides, chats with friends in the middle of the road and on the beach, looking for lucky rocks and rowing out to the Sea Sauna with friends, delicious naps and afternoon yoga on the deck. Plus, I am so thrilled to be teaching yoga on the island again this summer for the first time in 4 years. It feels like such a reunion: with all these folks who have taken classes with me for years as well as me to teaching here and in general. The same and yet also older and wiser in this really excellent way. I have been teaching gentler/softer more than I ever have in my life and it really feels like the just right offering for people right now- at least the ones that I am finding in front of me. We are all worked, for obvious reasons, and seem to each be ready for the reminder to lean in the direction of greater ease and compassion. I have always had an identity around being a difficult yoga teacher and it feels good to shake that off a bit and teach to what is. Not to say I do not have it in me for challenging practice and helping people grow their yoga in that way too- I just think that maybe I am becoming more adept at not superimposing my agenda over anyone else’s. 

Another excellent lived reality of the Islesford summer experience this year is having an almost three-year-old with me. Last summer’s adventures were difficult with a fresh two-year-old. Managing the sleep changes he was going through was difficult away from home and he wasn’t quite so ready for adventure last summer in the way that he is this one. I have been remembering all of the play and adventure we had with Maple and Eider on the island before they were old enough to explore independently. Bike rides and picnics and tide pools and beach afternoons and games and all the rest. Somewhere between 5 and 8, they start taking off on their own and in a place like Islesford, you often don’t see them again til meal time or when someone needs to go poo. So getting to play here with a little one who is discovering all of the magic of this place with his big beautiful fresh eyes and heart I think may be what this place is actually all about. It is the mood of everything here. The adults who live here for all or part of the summers are all crafting activities and projects and days to touch again and enjoy the wonder that is being a child on an island off the coast of Maine during the summertime. It is the central tone of everything we do here. Children and adults alike. I love that so much and I really love being back in the very center of the magic of this place with my own little one and with a deeper and more embodied understanding of the what and the why of it. 

Anyhow, that’s it. I’m feeling good and also feeling good about feeling good. That’s all. That’s enough.

always more blood



Order of operations. Things land in a particular sequence. Then they process. Then they integrate. And then maybe they even process some more. The first sort of circling stage is around my own particular nihilism about what the point of another personal telling could possibly be. But because I have staked so much of my meaning making in the dirt and muck of belief that the personal is what makes the universal, I know that to undervalue the purpose of my story too much is to undervalue it all. 

So there have been waves. Clear waves, murky waves, roiling waves, and so much endless churning as the SCOTUS override of Roe V Wade lands more deeply inside my body and my mind. And honestly, I don’t want to write about any of it. I have spilled so many words about abortion and miscarriage and bodies and blood and I am so tired. And the nihilist in me, which seems to be growing bigger and more keen every day, wonders what the point of any of that writing, spilling, rehashing, sharing, imploring, would serve anyway. 

Here is the wave sequence. I will do my best to keep it all as personal as possible. Why wouldn’t I? First, shock and numbness, obviously. And then the near simultaneous recognition by both my husband and my daughter that I too would be a dead mother had I not been able to receive emergency medical care in the form of the abortion procedure referred to as D&C, Dilation and Curettage, when I hemorrhaged from an incomplete miscarriage. That was the first real pain thought. Of which there have been many more and within which that particular one remains a constant. I would have died. 

And then I reflected on the D&C that I received the summer before my miscarriage and how if I hadn’t been able to get that care and had instead had a child, now a seven year old, I would most likely be more or less fine; I would in all likelihood be alive. However, my family as it exists today very well may not have made it. My marriage might well have buckled were we left with no choice to have another kid back then, my children would have lived different childhoods because of it, and on and on. A different world would certainly exist for us and I cannot really say if it would be better or worse than the one that we live in now with one another. But I would be alive.

Without the second D&C, I would not. And that is when my mind sprints in the direction of all of the bodies of people who will lose their lives, one way or another, without essential medical care. 

I consider (constantly) my homosexual daughter and her life. I consider all of my queer family and friends and their lives and families. And then all queer people. And then all people who have in any way had to fight for their rights one day or today and still. And basically then I remember that I do not want to write any of this or think any of this because the central unifying truth is that there is not one human being living in America who will not be adversely affected by this new dystopia. Beginning with the poorest of brown and black people and then spreading out and up from there like a contagion. And we know contagion now, don’t we?

This is a moment in time where the constant is this small and infinite truth: we will all lose. And well before our time. 

Yesterday morning as Maple and Wilfred and I rode the Mailboat from Islesford to Northeast for one last attempt to load my kid up with as many groceries as possible before leaving her on her own for a few weeks, we found ourselves on a boat surrounded by women. All different ages and from varying backgrounds and geographies. Within only a few minutes of being gathered up in this haphazard, random, and ever awkward way; talk turned to the shock, the pain, the grief, of a right now stripped that many of these women remembered securing in the first place. They were aghast. Stunned angry. Full of sorrow for all of the bodies set to lose this new Post Roe America. 

They all said the same thing: what can we do? Vote. Yes vote. Help other people vote. Yes that too. Please. And yet in a country where the clear majority is pro-choice, pro-womens health, pro-marriage equality, and all of the rest of what sanity, empathy, positive regard, concern and compassion, should make us pro for, it is clear that that is not the whole picture. It is the few that have the power, not the majority, and we need to wake up to it with a ferocity we haven’t quite yet fully embodied. Now is the time for the rage that drives the action. Our dissent must go all the way down to the very origin of us and not let up until we have secured the rights and freedoms that we have all, always, been worthy of.

So yes, vote. Yes, donate. Yes, call your reps. Yes, be as verbal within your spheres of influence as is right and appropriate to your wellbeing for you to be. It is all of this and something more. 

One last thing for now: I never want to in any way diminish the complexity of an issue such as Choice. I know that even with clarity and conviction, much often remains almost too difficult to bear at times. Choosing to have an abortion sucked for me. Needing to have one also sucked. A lot. But being able to get them and receive love and care and compassion within a structure of support, that is something I want for every single one of us. Now and always. 


chick a little

Everyone in the household is at varying degrees of under the weather, including myself. It makes sense I suppose as a natural response to the school year suddenly slamming to a halt. I mean it wasn’t a surprise and yet we certainly weren’t prepared for it, ya know? All three kids are upstairs sleeping right now. So strange. I got up after falling asleep with Wilfred for a bit, and took a rapid test, and made a cup of tea. Then feeling at a total loss for what to do with myself if I am not to be driving them around to their typical afternoon activities, did what I do best when I am either flailing or avoiding and got on my mat. I remember yeeeeeears ago Christina saying something along the lines of a little movement and breath when you are under the weather seems like maybe more use than just laying still. I stick to that mostly. And maybe it is just that sitting still continues to be the most difficult posture of all. 

Unless it is sitting and staring at the baby chicks, of course, which I have been doing ohhhh so much this week. I keep reflecting on why I am so very enamored with these little home hatches, more so than our mail order freshies. I mean, I always love them all. This is just a bit different somehow. I keep looking out into the hen yard and wondering if any of those hens know that they are mommies? I mean, do they? It seems both ridiculous and somehow important. 

The chicks themselves are so hardy and hale. Like the degree to which they are from this little stamp of land stretches so far past their hatch and their 21 day incubation and into the two years that their mama hens and papa rooster have scratched and foraged across it.

These little chicklets are clarifying for me what it is I will and will not do with chicks in the future: I won’t order and rather do these hatches for fun and then fill in with breed specific pullets as needed. That is somehow a very relaxing clarification for me. And I think I am learning from this distinction in a few other ways as well. I tend toward such all or nothing thinking and then behaviors especially when it comes to homesteading and home-educating and home life in general that these specifications and differentiations, however slight, feel deeply liberating. Like some > none (or all, maybe even especially some > all) really does apply to most things for me. 

Anyhow, Wilfred is up now and practice is over and as ever I am uncertain whether I made the most of my time to myself or not. I don’t feel very well after all and maybe I just got my period to boot. So we will eat popsicles on the porch and play with race cars for a bit and I will try to ease my mind and my body toward the next thing without too much worry or overcomplication. At least I will attempt that. It is imperfect which feels like the on-going reckoning of me with myself.

watching

Last night Wilfred didn’t want any stories read to him. He wanted to nurse briefly, then drink a little more milk with Chris, snuggle and get into his bed. I wasn’t surprised. It had been a difficult day for him and I am learning so much about the particular ways in which he processes difficulty. I also wasn’t at all surprised when he woke up at one am asking for “Dada to please rock him for a bit”.

Yesterday had been the last day of the Robin’s Nest playgroup at the North Branch Nature Center. We have been trying to be regular there to prepare Wilfred for 2 days of Forest Preschool this coming fall. He loves it. The mud kitchen, the chalk rocks, the stacking stumps, pebble beach and the bridge over the river; and especially the wheelbarrows. As far as he is concerned, the two that live in the playscape belong to Freddy.

And yet, of course, they do not. They live at the playscape for all of the children to use. And sometimes the kids will tolerate Wilfred taking a wheelbarrow out of their hands, especially when someone near points out that the second one is available. This was not however the case when he took it out of a little one’s hands yesterday. This child was all the way upset, yelling and sobbing and all the rest. Freddy meanwhile pretending that he could not hear or see any of it as he slowly attempts to disappear with his prize into some nearby tree cover. The little boy, after a time seemingly somewhat calmer, wandered over and wrapped his arms around Freddy’s whole body. It seemed like a hug. They got very still and it was not until a few moments passed that we understood that the little boy had sunk his teeth deep into Freddy’s cheek.

Wilfie howled. Not initially but he got there. And I swooped in and other mom swooped in and did all of the things that the mother of the kid from my last post did not: looked me in the eyes and apologized, comforted her kid who was obviously super upset and she also neither condoned his behavior or forced an arbitrary and irrelevant apology out of him. All in all, to her response, I say good job mom. She modeled all of the behavior that it is so important for our little ones to learn.

In a lot of ways, the “incident”, is less where my attention is in this instance. it is Rather it is on witnessing and understanding Wilfred’s response, what it may indicate or mean about his internal processing and what lessons he may be wiring for himself around trauma and embodiment. I am watching my son. And here is what I am noticing: in both of these events, Wilfred gets very still, he almost freezes, and then he takes it. He does eventually begin to cry, but not immediately, and he at no point ever tries to fight back or get away. He stays in place and absorbs what is happening. Y’all, it is intense to witness. Like time has slowed down and everything gets first very obscure, followed shortly by extra hi-def. And I do wonder if he is learning to leave his body, or if he is able to stay. It is hard to tell.

This time, even though he was clearly in a lot of pain, he stopped crying relatively quickly. I held him and hugged him and cooed in his ear for as long as he would let me. But he became extra remote and withdrawn, like he was burrowing deeper inside of himself somewhere, or perhaps leaving. He still held on to the stolen wheelbarrow, and we still walked down to the river, but he couldn’t quite meet it and I did end up carrying him the whole long way back to our parked car.

Eider had gone down with us so we could check out yet another school option for the next year, so he helped me manage all of the things and did his very best to help me cheer his little bro up. We stopped and took a dip in the swimming hole for the first time this year (success!), we stopped for ice cream (not so successful). And then it was a long nap and an afternoon of snuggles and now the subsequent tenderness that has followed. He is doing great, and still not entirely himself yet. I am trying to learn from this as best I can and connect some dots across time and space into and from my understanding of my two older children and all of the ways that they process and hold and dissociate and come back and release.

Which makes this perhaps the perfect moment to switch this telling from Wilfred to Eider, who in current time is the child that I lie in bed thinking about last thing at night, and wake up worried over again in the morning. He, right now, is the riddle for whom I continue to find no viable solution. I am constantly looking for the path forward and coming up empty handed time and time again. You may recall that a few months ago we were all getting very jazzed about the prospect of sending Eider to “yurt school” for eighth grade in the coming year. It is a local independent place-based school with a big ‘ol emphasis on child-led learning and time outside. I think it is an ideal fit for him at this particular stage in his education. It is not nearly so big as a “regular” school but with enough other kids to form relationships without getting cliquey, and it is not dependent on me to motivate and drive his learning on my own; a task that has become incredibly grueling over the past couple of years. Anyhow, I had been under the impression that yurt school takes the tuition voucher from our town which is what would make it a viable option for us. They do not.

It is a lengthy process to become an approved independent school (versus a registered one) in the state of Vermont. There are far more hoops to jump through and information to provide and prove and it has to be done every 5 years to maintain status. It’s a lot. And yet, as far as I can tell this area desperately needs an alternative 7-12 grade option. Especially with a local town that has no public option after sixth grade. And to be able to receive tax money for tuition opens up so much more opportunity for kids who want an alternate schooling option and/or are really not going to be well served in the public school setting, regardless of family income.

To be clear, I think that Eid would be ok in public school. Ok, not great. He would certainly need the support of an IEP or a 504 plan or both. And he would need constant advocacy so that he doesn’t either shut down from the difficulty or fall through the obvious and plentiful cracks. The reason Maple is thriving as a neurodivergent learner in a public school setting is because she a special type of unicorn that refuses to take any shit from her peers or her teachers. She is constantly advocating for herself and her particular learning style. She fights for her education every day. Not everyone is like that! Eid certainly isn’t. He is a peacekeeper not a justice seeker. Both are great. One has significantly better odds of making it in a mainstream system than the other. And like I said, maybe he’d be ok. But in my heart it feels like gambling on that is a near neighbor to sacrificing my kid. Which it feels like most of us are doing enough of one way or another every god damn day already.

As caregivers we are always the watcher of our kids, the collector of clues, a decoder of what they are saying as it relates to what they are longing for. I am studying them now. Trying to find the appropriate pathways in for each of them. It is tense. And it is far from easy. And as much as I wish I were better at putting it down it is my preoccupation as well as my occupation. I have built a life around equipping them with the tools they need to find as much connection and fulfillment as they are capable of. I want them to hold the maps to their own wellbeing and know all the ways in which to orient them.

So I study the ways in which they shut down, shut out, lash out, disengage, alienate, and isolate. It is fucking heartbreaking and it is incredibly real. All while keeping the small hand of little meg in my heart’s hand so that I can continue to provide her with the compassion she needs from her own childhood trauma while at the same time not mistaking mine for my kid’s.

This weekend, I posted briefly on the socials about the image versus the reality, the picture I paint as opposed to how we perhaps more truly are, how we feel instead of how we appear. I try to be as transparent as I can with all of that. While at the same time constantly reorienting myself toward joy and gratitude and abundance that is neither toxic and false, or delusional and irrelevant. I want to keep pointing myself in the direction of whole-heartedness, and my family too. So I seek out images and feelings that reflect that. But I want to be sure I also relay the truth of what an asshole my kid is being lately, or how fucking scared I am for them in every other breath. It’s real y’all. And it is messy. As all get out. But it is also so fucking beautiful that it almost breaks me, I mean, maybe I am actually all the way broken already. So, I cannot sacrifice them. Or myself. Or any of us really. There need to be better options, for my kids but really for all of our kids. Cuz that is what they really are, ya know? All of our beautiful, perfect, horrible, cruel, transcendent, wise, innocent, children. All of ours.

this week some.

The Hermit Thrushes are out en force on our hillside these days. They have come to embody the fullness of the Green Season in Vermont as well as in Maine. I love their etheric song. If home were a sound to me, it might be that. I am listening to them right now, in the woods that surround the clearing that our house sits on, and looking out at the pink-blue-purple-orange of another gorgeous late spring sunset. I can also see from this spot the new big cedar fence posts that Chris put in today framing out the new, much larger, and thankfully contained from the chickens, garden plot. It is something that we have been talking about for awhile but for me it has felt so theoretical that it wasn’t really until today, with the posts in and four yards of compost delivered, that I am beginning to feel some confidence that a space for me to plant and putz and dream and grow is actually about to emerge. It has me a bit giddy at the prospect. Like a door in my heart that I wasn’t quite sure could unstick itself open again is beginning to relax and release and finally, finally! letting a little light in.

Earlier in the week Wilfred had his six month evaluation with his speech and language providers through our school district. It was great in many regards: he is making headway. And yet what I have been digesting all week are terms and phrases such as 25%+ delay, and IEP, and disability. I do not experience him through the lens of terms and diagnostic verbage at all, and yet I understand it’s function and purpose and I do support it. But I am also concerned and pausing a little bit in my consideration of what it means for him within the wider scope of his life. I worry a bit, ya know?

He is so excellent, really. He just recently got his balance bike and is an absolute wiz on it just like Maple and Eider both were. Bold and little reckless and extra enthusiastic. Chris has been taking him some nights to the pump track out in Hyde Park and Freddy rides around and around and around for miles. It is incredible and he is beyond exhausted while at the same time never ready to quit. He was extra tired like that yesterday morning when I brought him to the weekly playgroup out in Johnson. He loves it there, and anywhere really where there are kids to play with and things to climb on. That seems to be a pretty reliable formula for Freddy Joy.

Yesterday there was a little bit of an older kid that we haven’t met before at the group. Maybe six or so years old. And right away he honed in on Freddy, grabbing things out of his hands, blocking him, pushing him. I just kept my eye on it. Wilfred is so cheerful and bright that he did a sweet job of shaking it off for the most part. Until of course he couldn’t. As I was beginning to gather our things up to head out I looked over and saw about 4 or 5 kids sardined into this little wooden train car and this kid just wailing on him. Punching and punching his chest while Freddy sat there, receiving each blow and crying. I ran over, called for the adults: Hey, its getting a little punchy over here! And his mom came over and grabbed him- I am holding wilfs at this point who is still sobbing, he sobbed the whole half hour drive home. And instead of looking at my kid, checking in with him and me to see if he is ok, apologizing for her kids behavior she instead tries to extract an apology from her son to Wilfred, which in my opinion is the exact fucking wrong thing to do. Totally useless and reinforces his shit behavior. And is such a perfect example of our aversion to connecting to one another’s humanity or taking any ownership of action. It is of far greater effect for her to reach out with actual empathy and concern for my kid, and in doing so model to her own what behavior is appropriate and necessary. She never even made eye contact with me. And her kid never really got to experience what it is to have genuine regard for someone else’s feelings and wellbeing.

It pissed me off. And I was already tender and part numb, as I am sure most of us are this week. Probably, maybe, this other mother too. Freddy cried the whole way home and I did too, for my own kid who maybe was picked on because he is such a cutie bright light or maybe because he can’t really talk in a way that other kids can understand. But I also cried, and keep on crying for all of my kids and all of the kids and all of us really who are on our own in a world that doesn’t give a fuck about our health or our wellbeing or our safety.

I know it is about guns this week. Just like every other week. I think that I am finally really beginning to understand the degree to which it is all the same thing: all of these problems, regular ‘ol atrocities that we co-exist with on the daily, are the same. At least the root cause is. Power over versus power with or power of or power for. Anti-abortion legislation, corrupt gun laws riddled with loopholes, pervasive cultural misogyny, racism, anti-trans bills, growing anti-asian and anti-semitic sentiment. The patriarchy depends on the clear and concise delineation of this versus that. They need the binary: of gender, of race, of class. It is an implicit necessity for the power over dynamic to function. It is not about regard or concern for anything other than that which lines their pockets and ensures the perpetuation of the machine that is Modern America. We have a standard to uphold, after all.

I am gutted this week. I think we all are. Jesus I fucking hope we all are.

Every time Maple hopped in the car this week, she’d flip the radio off first thing. Insulating herself from it a little bit I guess… It is so regular, you know? Just what happens in America. And we are so accustomed that even our trauma response is recognizable. We feel hopeless and overwhelmed, we feel pissed and ambitious, we feel numb. Rinse and repeat indefinitely with each passing news cycle. We know what we have to bear. She said that none of her teachers really even mentioned the shooting in Uvalde this week. I guess I understand that. How do you talk to kids about something that you cannot protect them from? They know better. No one has their backs after all. They were never promised to be kept safe in this system, only taught how to hide in classrooms and construct barricades with school supplies. So I get why this one wasn’t processed and instead is left to fester and corrode any of their hope that may, by some impossible grace, remain.

It seems that the only real space to occupy in this landscape is one of post-hope. As though that were a mood that applied to a different world entirely, one made up of summer gardens and easy afternoons on the lake, or, at other times of year, perhaps a casual winter ski. But hope is not something that can be left to apply to having a home, having a body, having a life that is ever ours to simply live. As though that might in and of itself be enough. Amid the grief of this post-hope apocalypse I am endeavoring to work a bit with following my feelings down into their dark origins and balancing that with some clear action items. Here is some of what I have so far:

Donate to Mom’s Demand Action and text ACT to 64433 to get set up with your local chapter.

Donate to the City of Uvalde’s fund for the victim’s families.

Contact your legislators to demand common sense gun reform.

Talk openly with your friends and family: if they or you have firearms at home, are they securely kept in locked and restricted access safes?

Attend your local school board meetings and make your voice heard regarding every single issue that effects the safety and wellbeing of all of our children.

Self-care in not selfish and everyone needs an ally. Motherwort tincture is an excellent plant friend for attending the particular anxiety that lives inside of grief. I find these strategies immensely important when the overwhelm and hopelessness creeps in. (and yes 100% cbd+thc and R E S T)



Do not shy away from your pain my dears. Let it stir the action that lives inside of your rage and heartbreak.

So, in an effort to not let the cultural numbing agents drip their soporific forgetfulness into my heart and soul, I am working to stay up close to our collective pain. The art and poetry coming out of this time are helpful to me in that effort. One of my best poetry buds shared the following poem this week. It hits hard and right and true.

By Katie Bogue
”It's going to be within, like 40 minutes or something, (within) an hour"

Go to the hospital when contractions are 5 minutes apart

labor for 390 minutes

push for 120 minutes

the nurses say the baby will want to feed every 60 minutes
(it feels like he’s feeding every 11 minutes)

you sleep for about 240 minutes every night, never in a row

the pediatrician tells you screen time is 20 minutes, max—but you maybe push it to 30 (or 50)

if their morning snack gets pushed back by 23 minutes they won’t take their nap (you need them to take their nap) and it throws off their whole day

it takes them 17 minutes to tie their shoes, 9 minutes to ask a question, 13 minutes to drive with you to school, 4 seconds to say “I love you.”

So, officer are you saying they were in terror for 40 minutes or 1 hour?

were they huddled together in classrooms for 47 minutes or 56?

were they bleeding their precious lives on to the sticky floor for 35 minutes or was it 37?

how do you leave a single minute vaguely addressed when we’ve accounted for every second of their lives