TALKING OUT OF TURN

 

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I lost my temper the other day. I used a couple of bad words in public. I have apologized, but the incident has troubled me since.

In the past, I have managed to keep my cool under extremely trying circumstances, and to make reasoned responses to completely unreasonable, even deeply offensive people. Once in a while I lose it and say something I should not. It is not that my opinion is wrong—at least not always—but that my approach, my words are wrong.

There really is not excuse for that.

This morning on the beach, I shared my distress with a neighbor and she was quick to offer me excuses, mostly having to do with stress. “We are all so stressed,” she said.

Yes, I would agree with that.

One of the essays I used to share with my students concerned civility. The author contrasts the offenses upon civility as noted by the right, and then a slightly different list of offenses identified by the left. All concerned offenses on common courtesy and decency. In the middle of the essay, the author asks of himself: “What do I think?” He thinks they are both absolutely correct, but then he goes on to identify his own take on civility.

Civility is more than words and one-on-one actions. Civility is how we regard others as individual members of the greater community. Is crude language offensive? Is bragging about casual sex offensive? Both likely are to most. What about lies and exploitation, taking over a business only to dismantle it and putting people out of work in the process? How about ridiculing a person with a health problem? What about the family of a soldier? The soldier? People struggling to make ends meet? Saying whatever will draw cheers at a rally, even to the point of advocating violence?

There was a time when a decent member of either party would have found all those behaviors deplorable.

What happened?

Why am I losing sleep over an f-bomb spoken in the heat of the moment, when our leader with speech-writers at his disposal chooses to speak as if he were leading a Klan rally instead of my country?

Does anyone believe that man ever loses sleep over anything but his personal bank account?

Well, maybe that is unfair.

This morning I saw a tiny shrew, dead on the sand a hundred yards out from the shore. Poor little thing. It knows to eat insects. It knows to hide from predators. It was completely unmarked.

Four raven fed on the most recently dead seal. The other day the body—now more gone than remaining to be eaten—had been dragged a few feet across the sand. No human or dog footprints. I suggested maybe an eagle had tried to lift it.

“It’s too heavy for an eagle to lift.”

“Exactly.”

MY WRITING LIFE

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I began writing fiction in 1990 when I was hired to teach English at Seaside High School. I believed myself wholly unqualified to teach English (and others have agreed), but I had taught art in an elite prep school for three years, picked up a Social Studies endorsement through exam, and substituted in the Seaside District for eleven years. I had 20 undergraduate English credits. I had never considered teaching English. Nevertheless, the Chair of the English Department at that time knew me well as a substitute teacher and argued that I was better read than she was and urged me to apply.

My hiring was contingent upon gaining a certification in English. I took another test and began taking graduate classes that summer. In the fall, I was teaching English. Among my advantages were an excellent public school education and substantial experience as an essayist.

My first novel was written over the summer of 1995, working with a student who also wrote a (better) novel. Both were read my the editor of a major publishing house. My student’s manuscript received the better response.

My second novel, Clean Away, was written from multiple points of view, nine women representing several generations of a family over many decades. Certain experiences seem to repeat themselves through the generations. I began that in 1999 and it was funny.

My third novel, A Single Fact written in 2002, was the very rough draft I later rewrote in 2017. The main character of this novel is a teenager who is having a rotten senior year and afraid the only thing worse than high school might be that nothing better will come next. The title story was published by CALYX in 2006 as “A Single Fact Can Spoil a Good Argument.”

All this time I was working 60-80 hours a week teaching English and advising the yearbook. When I crawled out from under the yearbook in 2002, I found I could not slow down. I wrote more.

In 2007, while completing my MFA, I compiled Blonde Indian, later retitled Living in Snake Land. These linked stories about a poor white boy are set in 1961 in Phoenix, Arizona. That novel-in-stories is number four.

In 2007 I completed an MFA in fiction from Pacific University. Three of my dearest friends came to my graduation—two of them from Seattle. It was a great day, and Gary preserved that for me by not telling my that my mom had been back in the hospital until all my obligations in defending my thesis, a public reading and craft talk, were complete. She died a week later.

I dropped 40 pounds in the next few months. I stopped writing. I struggled to regain optimism, to regain my stride, whatever that might be.

Revision happens in people’s lives, too. I retired from teaching full time in 2015 after nearly 40 years of teaching art and English in private and public high schools. I think I am, I was good at my job. My greatest joy is hearing from former students who discover I taught them something useful. I think most of us hope to be useful.

In November of 2016, I  took the 4k short story, “The Promised Hour,” that I wrote to apply for my MFA and wrote from there. I had rewritten that story dozens of times (literally) and submitted it dozens of times but it couldn’t find a home. I hoped that maybe what it needed was to become a novel. National Novel Writing Month (NaNoWriMo) offered me an opportunity to race through a much longer version of that story.

Since then, I revised the novel going-on eight times. I originally hoped for 60k but did better than that, ending the month with over 75,000 words. By it’s 8th draft, it was retitled Escape My Heart of Sorrows. By the eleventh draft it had seen several new names, the best of which was suggested by a former student who got it from her husband, Painting Over. I am working on draft 14 now and still dithering about the title. Maybe Everybody’s Mother Dies. This is novel number five and it is not finished.

My work has earned many awards including an Oregon Literary Arts Fellowship, Arts & Letters fellowship, Soapstone residency, Pushcart nomination, and publication in the Brevity blog (several times), The MacGuffin, CALYX, Work Magazine, Raven Chronicles, Ink Filled Page, The Humanist, North American Review, and anthologies about running and race. There is a list of all my publications, or most of them, under “Publications” on this site. There are links to all the works available online.

I thought my second NaNo year in 2017 was time for something completely different, stories or fantasy, but I changed my mind at the last minute. Instead of a new piece, I returned to an earlier effort, the novel from 2002. I altered verb tense, added and changed characters, and introduced the crime I originally intended to provide more tension. So those were the differences. A familiar first person voice but an entirely new book. I hoped to complete 80k and I got 75k. I was okay with that, but since then I have completely lost track of that novel and begun working in a new direction.

Last year I surprised myself by writing a fantasy story, “If It Were True Owls Dream,” which will be published in August in Liminal Stories. (When that goes live, I will provide a link.)

In April 2018, I wrote 15k of a science fiction novelette. Writing science fiction is new for me though I have been a fan for many years. In the fall I intend to add 50k to an existing short manuscript. But I might be still busy rewriting novel number five, the one that began as “The Promised Hour”:

The way back from loss may seem unimaginable, but people do it all the time. Thena Justice was building a new life near Seattle after the death of her mother and breakup of a terrible marriage when her former husband murders the babysitter and their daughter before committing suicide. Lost in grief and guilt, Thena first hides in a friend’s converted garage, then in a tiny cottage on the Pacific coast, thrashing her way through anguish, apathy, anger, and routine. Instead of returning to Puget Sound, she moves to Portland, Oregon, the city where she was born, takes the bus to a retail job each day, and keeps her head down until a child crying in the night wakens her sense of agency and hope.

It sounds a sad book, I know, but it is all about survival, about hope. My interest is in how we regain an active role after a calamity and that is the focus of this story. Would you read it?

For several years I blogged at Quiet Minds, which is now renamed and active here on WordPress as Imperfect Patience. I send work out. I am still teaching college writing in Winter and Spring Term, at least I hope I am.

I walk the beach. I weave. I write. I am mostly retired, but I am not done.

 

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“Hillbilly”

Last fall, I read the memoir Hillbilly Elegy and I struggled with its view of poverty. The man suffered, but suffering does not necessarily make us wise. I both recognized that he was reporting his personal experience, and felt concerned that his view of his own life was limited by his selfish political point of view. This morning, an essay by Chris Offut, “I Will Always Write About Appalachia” helped me understand why.

“The most recent addition to these false accounts of Appalachian life is the widely read book Hillbilly Elegy, the author of which grew up in the decaying Rust Belt town of Middletown, Ohio. Nevertheless, he blames his personal difficulties on the culture of Appalachia.”

The writing in Vance’s memoir isn’t anything special, but the story is emotionally compelling. Vance grew up in a violent, loud, drug-afflicted, under-educated, and sometimes poor household, but he had people who genuinely loved him and cared for him, even if those people had their flaws and were not necessarily his parents. I love the quote from a teacher at his former high school: “They want us to be shepherds to these kids. But no one wants to talk about the fact that many of them are raised by wolves.” And then . . .

I began to consider stories I knew best from my own family and from teaching in public schools. I don’t know much about Appalachia, but I do know something about poverty and disadvantage. “Hillbilly” and “white trash” are filthy words in my home.

For one, I know it’s no shame to be poor is immediately followed in my head by “It’s no great honor either” from Fiddler on the Roof. Tevye was not a sinful man, but a good, honest, hardworking father and husband. “Economically disadvantaged” is a euphemism I find personally offensive because it suggest there is something shameful about poverty. Being rich is not supposed to give anyone special rights or privileges, and I have been thinking a lot about that lately. I know being poor is not a sin or a failure.

My husband was raised poor in a family that did not take charity. His family bought “day old” bread from an outlet when he was little, and he picked the mold off his lunch, trying not to be seen doing it. He sat on the porch waiting for his dad to get home on payday because there was no food in the house beyond scraped jars of condiments. His experience of poverty was not unique, and it didn’t happen in Kentucky, but in Arizona, but it was hard. One side of his family was Ballard Swedes from Seattle, Washington and the other was Dust Bowl Scots-Irish share croppers from Oklahoma, orphaned when their mother died and Pappie gave them away.

No one in his family intervened or encouraged him to make something of himself. Vietnam was raging and his hair was long. In the years between high school and college, he had three pieces of luck. He was granted a draft deferment based on his eyesight that eventually became permanent, he began working at the University Book Store where he was exposed to new people and ideas, and he met me. When I graduated from high school the next year, he went to college because I was going to college. My husband graduated from high school with a C average but he was Phi Beta Kappa when he graduated from the University of Washington four years later. Like Vance, he saw no point in pajamas and is still in a perpetual state of what others term catastrophizing. Christmas was fraught when I met him but has become a good holiday through decades of determined effort on my part. He loves his cotton jersey pajamas.

Vance would like to give himself all the credit. He would blame achievement or lack of it on people rather than circumstance, but like my husband, he had some luck.

From the LA Times: “As Vance puts it at the beginning of this American dream memoir, he has done nothing ‘extraordinary.’ So what’s wrong with all those other hillbillies? In suggesting that his own success in Silicon Valley was a matter of refusing cinnamon rolls, Vance is giving us a basis in feeling for the devastating policy Ben Carson wants to enact. People are poor because they deserve to be. And there it is: Trump-era elitism defined.”

Some people abuse the system, and some people are too proud to accept help, even for their children. When my husband was given a sweater by his pastor because his second-hand store clothing was too poor for church and too sad for the pastor to ignore, it was only because his mother won the argument with his father that he was allowed to keep it. It was the nicest item of clothing he ever owned as a child. “White trash” is a filthy expression in my home. “Red neck” was the term I was taught as a child. I would not use it today. Change is not easy.

In my forty-year experience working with students, I witnessed most parents doing the absolute best they knew how. Neglectful poor parents do not necessarily love their children any less than neglectful affluent parents do, but the results tend to be more public among the poor. They are less skillful at concealing problems because they do not have the money to hide behind. Some parents work too many jobs just to get by. I think of a single parent who could not ensure his child did his homework because he got off work in the middle of the night find his teenager drinking soda and playing video games instead of sleeping.

Affluent families have their own troubles involving drugs and mental health, abuse and time. Even in my poor, rural community, some entitled parents send their children to elite private schools. They can afford private lessons and vacations their peers cannot even imagine. Their students drive cars worth more than the average local yearly income. Affluent parents may not need to work two or three jobs to pay rent, but sometimes they work long hours or ignore their children because they choose to do so. The results are similar.

Things go horribly wrong for children, dreadful things happen to them, but in my experience, not always, but often when things go wrong with children—pregnancy, drinking, drugs, crime, dropping out—the causes are not simple genetics, politics, poverty, public education, or an unwillingness to work hard. Something is wrong in the home. Too many children from “nice homes” have revealed the truth of their lives to me. Wealthy or impoverished, when kids’ lives go very wrong, there is nearly always something very wrong in their lives. It is not a character flaw, but reaction to something they cannot control. And there is bad luck again.

Unintended teenage pregnancy caused moves and marriages and monstrous errors beginning with his Mamaw when she was too young to drive. It seems to me to be the particular curse of Vance’s family is early pregnancy. Yet he reflects on this only in passing, perhaps because as a boy it did not hit him personally.

Vance works hard not to blame the people he loved, even the people who damaged his life, but he is also specific and detailed in itemizing the chaos, abuses, insults, and injuries inflicted upon himself and he repeats the lists every few chapters to ensure readers do not miss the hardships he suffered. Still, this book is lived truth, and if Vance fails to recognize the irony of complaining that a single call to child services fails to net any interference in a neighbor’s neglect of her children and then complaining a handful of pages later about child services “prying” into his own messy family . . . well, I guess he’s what one of my young students once called “a guy”.

There is no easy answer to the problems we face in America, but I think it is fair to suggest that we could do better as a nation for our children, regardless of who is at fault for their troubles. An equitable public education, a reliable health care, a decent diet, and a nation caring enough to inconvenience itself would go a long way toward making the lives of all American children better. It would give us all a better future.

Vance was lucky in more ways that he credits.

His Mamaw was tough-talking and violent, but she used her threats to keep him off drugs and she assured him that golf was a rich boy’s game and education was his best hope for a decent future. In other words, he was pushed—hard!—to do what every person ambitious for monetary success does. Vance had support.

In addition to choosing to reject the dysfunctional walk he witnessed all around him and gaining the stability and peace of his Mamaw’s house, Vance claims he “found a couple of teachers who inspired [him] to love learning”, but it’s likely he didn’t find them; those teachers found him. No member of his family killed him though several seem to have tried, and he found a family and practical education in the Marines, without seeing action in Iraq. That’s another piece of luck. The Marines taught him to give more than he thought he had, and they took less than they have required from many others.

Vance would like to blame people on assistance for their trouble, but he had plenty of assistance himself.

Vance was lucky. He had strong people who loved him unconditionally. He found friends and mentors along the way. It was luck and generous people who saved him. He knows that. Or at least he should.

APOLOGY

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Koi. Just because they are big fish and pretty.

My husband and I were talking about apologies last evening. We had been discussing boorish behavior revealed by the MeToo movement as contrasted by the genuinely criminal behavior of Bill Cosby and Harvey Weinstein.

I can forgive the guy who makes a stupid joke or a failed pass. But what about the cases of men who double down on a stupid move by harassing and threatening the careers of women? How bad before borderline become brutality? How bad does it have to be before action pass into unforgivable?

At what point does a mistake become abuse? Is the line so very hard to see? I don’t think it’s all that difficult to define where a mistake becomes a failure to offer basic respect. You make a modest error, and instead of threatening to damage a woman’s career, you apologize. You don’t wait years, you don’t pretend it didn’t happen, you don’t blame her for anything, and you don’t apologize to one woman while ignoring the other two or six or sixteen you abused. You recognize you have been a jerk and say, Sorry! right off. Then you do not do it again.

If, let’s say, you accuse someone of having a bad temper while standing over them and yelling, and while the person you are yelling at is worried because her husband has gone to the doctor and been taken to the ER; or you have yelled at a teacher and called her “vindictive” because she asked your son to rewrite an essay that failed to follow directions, after several papers where the same student didn’t follow directions. It is not enough to stop. “Sorry” is the missing word.

Sucking up to someone later to avoid admitting you have been a jerk is not the same as apologizing. “Being nice” or claiming: “I didn’t intend for your feelings to be hurt” is not the same as apologizing.

An apology begins with “I’m sorry” and moves on from there.

Some people seem to have trouble with those words. Some women have trouble saying they are sorry, too, but mostly it seems to be men. Last night, I said I was glad both our sons and my husband were able to do that.

“Well,” my husband offered mildly, “it’s different for a man to apologize.”

I thought: male ego? Cultural demands for masculine behavior? “Is it?” I said.

“No,” Gary said.

I laughed.

Gary said, “If you’re an asshole you’re an asshole and you should apologize.”

Well, you see why I married him 44 years ago, right? Our sons take after their dad. I am proud that they consider the consequences of their actions. They care about justice. They care about what is right. They aren’t perfect people. Who is?

Gary ordered six CDs today. “I got carried away.” I don’t mind. He loves music the way I love yarn. He’s entitled. (And he’s not sorry.)

On the other hand, we all make mistakes sometimes. We lose our temper or say something we wish we hadn’t. We do or say things we are sorry for.

When that happens, we should just say it: I’m sorry.

We should mean it.

 

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HABIT

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Taken on a winter day, the tide was out far enough this morning that I could walk well out on the sand beyond that triangular seasick I think of as a seal sticking his head up out of the sand.

Clouds like cobblestones drift over the eastern horizon. Light seams their edges. Birds join the morning music.

We might miss a half dozen days out of the year, but my husband and I try to walk each morning. We go out as soon as there is light or whenever I can get my behind in gear. Two cups of coffee, checking my email, and this time of year, it is light at 4 but even so we are usually not before 6am.

We are rarely first.

This morning was perfect, sun already over the coast range, reaching across the sand. Low clouds sliding down along the cape to the south and mist rising up off the ocean. A roll of fog out on the horizon, blue sky overhead. We walked south, Gary with the trash bag, mw filling my pockets with little stone, as is our habit. Sometimes we walked together, more often we wove away and back across sand and the rock edging the beach, looking for trash, agates, and glass. The tide was sweeping in, but there was a broad expanse of sand and last night’s high tide had left a stretch of dry sand along most of our shore.

We headed north, waving at locals as we went. I thought about going past the northern point, the first long distance of the year. Drift logs pile up in that little cove north, the way they once did all along Arch Cape beach. My mother used to play a game with her sister where they pretended the sand was poison and they walked drift logs all the way south to the big creek. I might have played that same game in my own childhood, but now locals cut up the logs and tourists place them whole across beach fires and walk off.

A group of campers were just waking up on the sand just south of the falls at Hug Point State Park. It can be a risky place to camp. When the tide comes in high in the dark, it strikes the cliff face and the only escape is pretty much straight up.

By the time I got to Hug Point, a hundred-year-old roadway carved into the rock, waves were already lapping around at the base of the rock. I went up anyway. This was part of my favorite run. No wind. No chance of drizzle. A bright blue, misty day cool enough that I would not be overheated. I ran this path for twenty years. This morning, I would have run all the way to Arcadia, if I had been running and not walking.

It was a good and healthy habit, my running days. Giving it up was one of the hardest things I have ever done. Ask anyone. Ask anyone who used to smoke. Kicking a habit is hard.

I never smoked, and experimented with drugs only briefly. When I was caring for my mother I drank too much, too much for me. Three glasses of wine and I am wasted, and I did that once or twice a week during those five terrible years. I gained weight, but kept running, which certainly shortened my running days. One bad habit destroying a good one.

I am trying to find better habits of eating and drinking, walking and work. I track everything and already, after almost four weeks of keeping track, I am doing better—drowning the bad habits with the good one.

It seems to me that there is too much talk these days about addiction and lifestyle. I was not addicted to running and I was not addicted to eating too much or drinking or writing. These were habits. That is not meant to minimize their power; I mean to acknowledge the power of habit.

When I stopped running I thrashed around, seeking some way to move. I swam when my boys were little, but chlorine and I are not friends and the pool is my only option. I tried bellydance for a while, but now I am a walker, which seems to suit me best.

We were out for two hours this morning, four mile as the crows flies, longer as a real crow might fly and as I walked up and down, up and down, my eyes examining thousands of square feet of rocky shore and sand.

We brought home a sheet of polystyrene foam the size of a lounge chair, a bag of trash, a pocketful of agates, two limpets, and ten sand-washed bits of glass.

Then I went out into the yard and picked the first salal berries from our hedge to make muffins. That is a habit too. At the peak of season, I could make muffins most very day from the berries in our yard. I will save the pickings from three or four days and make jam next month.

I have only worked on my loom for a short time this morning. A bit over four inches are done so far today, and I want twenty.

Some will call this a lifestyle. It’s just life.

FAIR TRADE

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My husband and I pick up trash along the shore, and in some magical-superstitious way, I believe removing plastic pays for my pleasure on our daily walks.

Yesterday morning there was a seal resting onshore. She was alive but unwell, sick or injured. She would either live or die and nothing I could do would aid her survival. We gave her a wide berth during our walk so as not to unduly hasten her death. She was our second beached seal already this season. The body of another seal rots higher up the beach.

More often we see sea lions swimming in surf or basking just beyond the surf line. But we have found them dead onshore with a bullet wound in their face. You will have to take my word for that. I do not take photographs of everything.

Years ago at a writing retreat, a woman described how she became a writer. It began with a solo vacation on the western edge of the Olympic Peninsula. “I found an abandoned baby seal,” she began. And I sat upright in the audience, waiting for her understanding. But no, she “rescued” that baby marine mammal. She took it from the beach, put it in the back of her car, and drove it to Seattle. I waited for her to admit her terrible error. She never did.

At best, she stole a baby from its mother. Signs at many beach access locations warn against interfering with marine mammal, particularly baby seals, which have been left by their mothers while the parents fish.

At best, that baby and mother were separated for all time, a shelter was able to get the baby to feed, and perhaps release it later. I do not know that this ever happens. The more likely outcome would be that the baby sickens and dies or lives and spends the remainder of its life in a compound or cage.

Sea mammals are beautiful and smart, and most of us would not be willing to eat one. They have appealing faces and large eyes that seem too human. We cry at the thought of clubbing baby seals. Charities garner funding with photos and videos of bloody beaches.

The Marine Mammal Act levies heavy fines for interfering with sea mammals or allowing them to be interfered with—think people wanting to touch the animal or “help” the weak animal back into the ocean, consider loose dogs on the beach.

Three women hovered near the seal this morning. One of them had, thankfully, leashed her dog, a dog which has in the past harassed a baby seal, driving it into the surf. I approached one woman, who stood too close.

“We don’t know who to call,” she said.

“It will live or or it will die, and there is nothing you can do to help.”

“Won’t they come and put it back in the water?”

I shook my head. “They might stake out the seal with signs warning people to keep their distance. You need to stay back and give it space. The seal needs to rest, and she will live or die.” We have been through this before.

“Thank you,” she said. “Thank you.”

What for? I wondered. The seal was dying. I did not tell her the truth, what I did not want to know. The seal was dead by afternoon.

In our hubris, our self-importance, our presumed human power to damage and destroy and build and create, we want to believe we can control everything. We want to believe that we or some expert can fix everything.

It is wise to accept that much of the world spins on without our help and often without even our notice. It is wise to place our humanity a little off from the center of the universe.

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EAGLE & ALBATROSS

IMG_2994The other day we saw five eagles all at once. Three were on the beach near the dead seal just up the beach, which has since then begun stinking. The seal. The other two eagles were in a snag about fifty yards back from the beach. I didn’t have my camera with me, so Gary and I just stood and stared for a long time from a respectful distance.

Not all surprises are so delightful.

A story I’ve sent out too many times has just been rejected again. Some of the best literary journals in the country have rejected it. Sometimes they send me a note about how they almost took it or they liked it and were sorry. Today a journal that I submitted to last year (344 days ago) rejected it with only a form rejection. It is a great journal I have subscribed to and they receive thousands of submissions. But after keeping a story for a few days shy of a year, I really think they could have coughed up something better than “Thank you for your patience.”

I am not patient. Another story was rejected recently with the note: “Our staff especially admired the sisters’ personalities. We suggest slowing the pace of the story and really taking time to develop the many themes in the story.” I had recently spent a lot of time carving that story back in order to speed the pace up.

Maybe a form rejection is better?

Nope.

There were no bald eagles in Arch Cape when we moved into my great grand aunts’ home. At least there were none that we noticed.

IMG_2982This morning, an eagle stood near a dead albatross. It’s the second dead albatross we have seen on our shore since 1979. Our biologist neighbor didn’t believe we’d found that first bird until Gary took him out and showed him the body on the sand. “That’s a black-footed albatross,” he said then. If John was right, we found a rare bird. Dead, though.

Alive, a black-footed albatross has a wingspan of 6-7 feet. The eagle we saw this morning was full grown, but the other day when we saw five, at least one was a “baby”—full size, but still in juvenile plumage.

A friend suggested that I consider writing nonfiction.

I thought I was already doing that.

I don’t know why that drift log has red paint.

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BETTER

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We were up on the balcony at the Schnitz in Portland the other evening. A woman sitting behind us dropped her cane and it hit my husband right on the top of his head.

“Oh! I am sorry!”

“It’s okay.”

“No, really, I am so sorry.”

“It’s fine.”

“But are you sure you’re okay? I can’t believe I did that!” She could not stop apologizing.

My husband turned full around. “Hello, I’m Gary.” He grinned.

Soon they knew one another’s history and we all chatted away.

There is some empirical evidence that talking to others, particularly the habit of reaching out to people we meet casually—the person waiting in line in front of us, the man watering his lawn, the woman having coffee at the next table—is a reliable predictor of longevity. It’s certainly no cure for what ails us, but it focuses us away from our pain in the same way the I was taught to focus away from labor pains.

Talking to other people is a challenge during depression, but if we already have the habit and refuse to let go, such casual conversation can be a distraction from our sadness.

Depression IS sadness, but on a level and for a length of time that there is no end in sight. This belief that depression is not often caused by circumstances flies in the face of all evidence. It is not a literal “epidemic” but a failure of our culture to provide meaning and purpose. We fail to eat, sleep, communicate, work, and live meaningful lives and then we wonder . . .

Undoubtedly, suicide is sometimes the result of illness. It is always the result of unbearable circumstances, it is always the result of overwhelming sadness. Like the current “epidemic” of opioid abuse, suicide is about loss.

Sometimes the loss is entirely personal and unknowable. Increasingly, the loss is widespread and a failure of our culture to sustain the human soul.

For most of human history, human interaction was primarily cooperative.

For most of human history, communication was between people, not machines.

For most of human history, people ate what they could find or grow themselves.

For most of human history, we slept more than we do today.

For most of human history, we sat quietly for regularly periods of time. We attended to the seasons, to the darkness and light, to shifts of other living things because this attention was necessary to survival.

Despite growing awareness of the dangers of depression, acknowledgement of suicide, and drug and talk therapy, suicide rates continue to grow.

I have heard depression compared to diabetes, in that we would not expect a person ill with diabetes to thrive only on good intentions. A symptom of diabetes is increased thirst. A glass of water addresses their immediate need but not the problem. The “epidemic” of depression and suicide will not be cured with anti-depressants or even with talk therapy. It will only be repaired by addressing the cause, which is the result of a failed culture, not broken brains.

Wiser people than me have insisted that suicide is not a cry for help. But maybe it is a cry for help in the way we live. Maybe it is a symptom of illness not of the person but of an increasingly unsatisfying, unsustainable, and unbearable way of life.

Maybe I can’t do a thing about any of that. But I can greet others. I can trade stories. As long as I can participate, I will.

Hello! My name is Jan, and you are . . .

 

 

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