ALL HALLOW

It’s the end of the month I turned 73, and we were busy with cleaning and walking; I’m running a mile at a time on the flat and writing and reading. There’s more. The basalt shore is stirred up along the edges and we’re finding things.

I think about and intend to show a day’s collection during every walk, day after day. Here, finally, is one day’s “catch.” At left a very large “ugly clam” that looks like nothing special on the other side, but the inside is beautiful mother-of-pearl nacre. Then three striped limpets, the most common kind, and four white ones with the one at left showing damage from worms and the one at right nearly perfect. Just left of that and above another ugly clam is my favorite and rarest type of limpets with vertical grooves and a hole shaped like a droplet, pointed at one end and rounded at the other. The green seaglass is the second glass this week, what I’d call “medium size,” and that find is recorded in my daily record as “1glass” and will join other glass in a glass jar. Recent tides have been washing up into the rocks and exposing treasures and trash buried the basalt, including several bits of pumice from the blowing of Mt St Helens in 1980 in the past week but none this day. The feather is what I call a “two-spot feather” which may have a single spot across the central vein, one spot on one side, or a distinct spot on each side, hence the name. If anyone can help identify the species of bird that molts these feathers, I would love to hear about it!
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PERFECT GIRLS

I watched a TED talk that insists women could be better. They should be more like men. We’re raising our girls to be perfect, and we’re raising our boys to be brave, says Reshma Saujani, the founder of Girls Who Code. Girls need to be more like boys, she suggests. They need to take more risks and demand jobs they are unqualified for. It works for the boys.

I appreciate Ms. Saujani for urging girls to be brave, for encouraging women to enter STEM fields. Too right. That should happen.

It’s a worthy goal to identify what holds girls and women back and to offer encouragement. Surely we underestimate the potential of girls and women in our culture. We actively stifle their potential. We should identify changes in their behavior and in our system that hold them back.

But. I am also tired of people urging women to behave more like men at their worst. Saujani describes how, in an experiment, 5th grade girls, especially the smarter ones, give up on “an assignment that was too hard for them.” I’d argue it’s a waste of time struggling against something they can’t do, an assignment specifically designed to be impossible for them. Recognizing that might even be termed smart because that’s not “giving up,” that’s sensible. Just as it’s possible to be persistent without being foolish, it’s possible to be sensible without being a coward.

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YOU’RE SWEET ENOUGH

I enjoy reels of people on their weight-loss journeys. I read one yesterday morning: “Eat less sugar, you’re already sweet enough.”

The best part of this organic gluten-free, nut-free vegan chocolate cake was baking it for someone I love. It tasted great—don’t get me wrong—but making it was the greater fun for me. (It’s only 6 inches across with vegan “buttercream,” fresh blackberries, and sliced figs for decoration with blackberry jam between the layers.) I do love chocolate, but my mom always made me a lemon meringue pie for my birthday because I like pie better than cake. I often do that even now, though lately I make myself a lemon angel pie—whipped Chantilly cream over lemon curd, in a meringue shell. It’s worth the trouble.

Fat doesn’t need much in the way of calories to sustain itself—it’s a storehouse, not active tissue. Muscle, organs, and fluids in your body do need energy to survive. A person fifty pounds overweight can eat exactly what another person with the same body but fifty pounds lighter eats and neither will drop an ounce. They are both eating for the same core. It’s why an overweight person can eat a perfectly reasonable diet but not lose a pound.

Taking that weight off is really, really hard for most people. There’s a good reason for that.

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IMPOSTOR

I was already intimate with self-doubt by the time I read about the “impostor syndrome” where people (most often women) believe that they are not all that, the success and admiration—whatever that might be—they enjoy is because they have fooled others into believing in them. Men often over-estimate their appeal, their skill, their accomplishments, and their abilities. Women tend to underestimate themselves.

Yeah, I get that.

My own self-regard tends to fluctuate. It’s low at the moment.

A recent writing workshop raised the common wish to be popular. I don’t recall ever aspiring so high. I wanted to have a “best friend.” Of course I was jealous of kids who were popular—they had so many people to call friends, multiple people who would rather spend time with them. I wanted one.

Briefly, over the summer before 3rd grade I had two friends: Stefanie and Denise. Our mothers made us matching dresses for the first day of school. On that day, I discovered I was in Miss Wara’s room and my friends had been placed together in the other 3rd grade classroom. [I would discover decades later that my sense that Miss Wara disliked me was not entirely my imagination, which I believed at the time. My mother mentioned casually that parents had multiple conferences with her because they recognized the teacher disliked me.] It was a hard year for other reasons. The boy I had a crush on ridiculed me in front of the class and my friend Don punched me in the stomach, though I’d probably done something to deserve that. In 4th grade we began SRA (a timed reading program), which I loved and it was the year my dad began reteaching history to me, which was a good thing. In 5th grade, we were introduced to a brand new (to the US) system of numbers with rods of different lengths. I loved that too, but as I remember it, I wet my pants nearly every day that year. Sixth grade was wonderful. Mr. Finley taught us math and science and the other fifth grade teacher taught us history and English. I learned to do math in base 5, began pre-algebra, and devised an experiment to determine whether white cloud mountain fish could distinguish colors. [Probably not.] In 7th grade at Cordell Hull Junior High School, I had art every day, which was wonderful. The reading teacher needed a note before I was allowed to read The Once and Future King by T.H. White, because the copy I had was a paperback and she assumed all paperbacks were trashy books. I had the highest grades in class, which surprised everyone, including me when it was announced in Homeroom. We read Johnny Tremain, and I wrote the only piece of fiction before the age of 38 in that class. It was about Marie Antoinette struggling to face her coming execution. Denise and I were friends. But in 8th grade, Denise announced that she couldn’t afford to be seen talking to me anymore at school. Toni Burton moved into the district and became and remains a friend. I was part of a clique that year, the only period of my life where I had multiple good friends as a group. [In EdPsych I learned that cliquishness is typical of that age. “They should all be sent to an island until they become 9th graders,” was what the prof told us.]

In high school I mostly lost sight of Toni but was close to Rin. After high school, I drifted away from both of them, but made friends through the School of Art at the University of Washington. Sam Scott and Linda Beaumont in Fire Arts and Pamela Harlow and Kris Williams in the Metals wing. I reconnected with Madora Lawson whom I’d always admired from my Honors World History class in high school. She was doing Interior Design. Gary performed the legal wedding between Madora and Steve the night before the public one. I was a bridesmaid.

In the mean time, beginning the summer before my high school senior year, I met Gary in 1969 and found the one best friend who has lasted throughout all the years since.

ANTHROPOMORPHICATION

Years ago, a visitor in our home was sitting in the purple chair, petting our cat. Zora. The cat lashed her tail. I had to caution our friend that a cat lashed her tail when she was irritated, not like a dog would because she was happy.

The brown pelicans are still offshore, the nearest black oystercatcher pair had one baby this year, and there seem to be fewer juvenile seagulls this year. I admire them on the shore.

Every time I see someone on Facebook coo over a baby animal, “Oh I want one of those!” I cringe. We are a peculiar species, it’s true, fawning over the babies of other species and then eating them.

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CULT OR CIVILIZATION?

Civilizations rise and fall. A goal of the current administration is to eliminate support for most individuals, particularly those who require food and other support, to lean in to the rich, and deny rights to anyone unable to pay for them. The rationale seems to be that if a person cannot be rich, they don’t deserve assistance.

Yesterday, well before dawn because Gary has trained me to rise early, we stood at the front window and admired the moon. It was blood-red. My camera could not capture that light so my photo only shows a bit of the red reflected path and turned the moon pale gold. What we saw in life was far more glorious. That’s usually true.
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ONE THING AT A TIME

My husband was trying to get my brother to respond to me. I’d been trying since he stopped talking to me in 2002. Gary asked a friend with a pickup to help move Mom into assisted living (the first time), and my brother went with them, but didn’t help carry anything. Earlier that day, Gary suggested to my brother that he and I could work things out. “One thing at a time,” my brother said.

That’s the way I make a quilt.

This is the quilt I am making in process. Nothing is sewn yet, I move bits around every time I look at it. All but a quarter-yard piece is from my stash of handmade batik fabrics. The off-gold background fabric (ten or twenty years old?) is in squares and will be cut to insert the narrow strips, which will become half the width once they are sewn in place. The frame and border at left will have line stripes too, but I will wait to complete the center panel first.

My imagination has to work hard to imagine what this chaos will become. The fabric has been laid out on a section of floor so that I can stare at it, which I’ve done for over three weeks so far. I can almost see where it means to go. I have not begun sewing. I must have the entire quilt clear in my head before I begin that next step. And even then, it will change as I work. Writing is like this for me.
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