Steam ON!

Last night, I went to a gathering of nine wise women.

The night before, I went to a reading by four rebel femme poets. The opening sentence in The Stranger’s review of the reading read (say that five times fast) “This is the most Fuck Trump reading I can possibly imagine.” (Check out the work of Annah Antipalindrome, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha’s, Imani Sims and Amber Dawn. All amazing.)

Last night I heard those four women read and sing and declare what it’s like to be a woman, now and now and now, even before Trump won, when femme women artists were committing suicide – four last year in Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha’s poem, which brought me to tears. And what it’s like to be femme, even in a queer art community… to be criticized for wearing makeup and for not wearing it, to be proudly feminine and called names and to lose your home and lose people you love. Imani Sims declared herself a queer femme witch and read her wild poems but first she told us that we weren’t allowed to sit quietly and smile, we had to make noise. And Annah Antipalindrome clicked cheap whiskey bottles together and created a loop of layered words and percussion and sang over it “Who do you think you are in those human clothes? You are a fox.”  They were bold and sexy and profane and profound and said so many unsayable things and all of it made me feel how lonely and painful it is to be a woman now and how much better it is to not be silent, not be alone, even with all the voices that whisper:

Be quiet and pretty and we won’t hurt you. 

But there is no use even pretending that that’s true anymore – and I know that it’s only an adherence to fear and the lucky accident of my birth that I’ve been able to pretend in so many ways for so long.

I can’t go on pretending anymore.

I am afraid, now. I am afraid of having my pussy grabbed. I am afraid of getting pregnant after great sex with my boyfriend and not being able to say I can’t afford to be a mother again. (I recently said to him, “Honey, if Trump’s supreme court overturns Roe v Wade, you are going to have to get a vasectomy.”)

I am afraid of speaking about sex and freedom and misogyny and what real happiness looks like for me and being silenced or punished for it, when I am already on the edge.

But I just can’t pretend anymore.

This came up at the gathering of the wise women. We were reading tarot cards, each of us drawing cards: one for now, one for the challenge, one for the outcome. Three cards before each seeker and the other eight of us leaning over the table to see. We saw for each other and it seemed to me that as each women opened and spoke and heard that there was a hum there, more than us, like maybe our ancestors sat on our shoulders and possibly even sang a little bit.

It was them or Steven Tyler, who I know is not dead, but perhaps the undead nature of classic rock gives him special dispensation? Something happened when it came my turn.

I was asking about freeing my voice. I haven’t been able to write. Or rather, I’ve been writing, but stopping short of speaking, of sharing, of being heard. Of the courage I saw last night.

I was asking about freeing my voice and when I touched the deck that feeling came, the one that sometimes takes me, like my hands know the truth. I cut the deck in three places, my fingers sliding between the cards, warm knives through butter.

Three cards. Now is the Queen of Swords. “I always get this card,” I say. But this is not my deck, it belongs to Kristina and this queen is different than mine. This queen stands with one breast bared and swords in both hands, one sword raised straight up up, one firmly down. “She is the truth,” Kristina says.

Next to the queen lies The Challenge. It is the five of coins. The beggar, locked outside the church. She is limping, bandaged, alone. Kristina points to her, says “Fear that there isn’t enough, fear of being outcast. Fear of having to beg.”

I am laughing and shaking my head.

“What is it?” says someone across the table.

“That’s my fear of not paying my mortgage,” I say. “I’ve been shutting down my voice for years because of that.” I see a couple nods. Lisa chuckles quietly next to me. She knows this fear of mine, knows it has been gnawing my heart with frostbite teeth, a winter wolf. Two other women rise and come stand behind me. I am surrounded. All this strength in this room, but its not the strength of knowing it will be okay. We don’t know that. I feel that I’ve never been less sure of it. No, the strength of not pretending, here, all together. Of not keeping that silence.

“See? She is afraid, but she is surrounded by coins. Ella, it’s not real. It’s just a mud puddle. You can step out of it.” Kristina points to the third card, my outcome card, the seven of wands. Seven torches, but only one torch bearer. The rest of the torches are offerings to the one, held up by invisible bearers: Here, take this too, hold it high.

“This card is Victory,” Kristina says. “They are all trusting you with their fire.”

And that’s when the woman with the green scarf who has been sitting across from me all night looks at me. I don’t know her name. She doesn’t know mine either. “Ella?” she says. I nod. She nods back. “I don’t know you,” she says. “But I like the green streak in your hair and the green necklace and you said you are a writer. And you went to see poets last night?” She pins me with her eyes.  I nod again. “You are a writer,” she says. It bores into me. She goes on “And I agree with what you said earlier. We can’t not say things anymore. And I think that you should write. You should write.”

I am nodding back. I feel compressed and bright and separate and held in place. I feel the blockage in my chest that says Don’t speak. I feel the words that want out.

“Yes.” I say, but it doesn’t sound like I mean it, even to my own ears.

“You should write,” she says again.

“Yes,” I say again, and Lisa, and Kristina and Rhonda and Deb and Jan and this table full of women looks, waiting as I keep saying it, keep forcing it out until I finally just open my throat and let my voice out.

Aaaahhhh!” I say.

“Aaaahhhh!” one says back, and then another. They are letting their voices out too, even as they are supporting mine…

And then something strange and wonderful happens, because then Kristina leans over and taps the Queen of Swords and says “Look at her!” Now her voice is bright and fierce. “That’s you!” She leans toward the circle and there is a light in her eyes. “And she is saying… she is saying…” Kristina hesitates and then the words burst out. “She is saying ‘Steam on! Steam on!’ ”

We are all looking at her. What?

“Steam on!” she says again.

All around the table, we are starting to laugh. We can’t help it. Steam on? But Kristina is shaking her long silver and gold hair, like it’s a thought she can’t get free of. “Isn’t there a superhero who says that? You have to just…” and she raises one hand to the sky and points the other down and suddenly she is the Queen of Swords. She is mighty and shakes her head again. “Steam On!” she cries.

“Steam On!” someone else cries and we begin to laugh, that kind of laughter that won’t stop, but builds when you look up and catch someone’s eye and start laughing even harder and it builds in waves, in fits. We are helpless with it, bent over and gasping. “Steam On!” we call out. And it feels like this is mine, yes, it is my battle cry, but it is also the cry of every one of these women, and the rebel femme poets last night and the women across the country who, like me, don’t know how to be safe anymore… all the women writers and singers and mothers and sisters and voices who won’t be cold and small anymore. “Steam ON!” we cry. And across the table, Rhonda says, “Isn’t that a song?” And then I know that we have crossed a border into a strange land and maybe the classic rock undead have indeed joined our circle because she starts singing “Steam on, Steam on, Steam on until our lives come true…” to the tune of Aerosmith’s Dream On. She doesn’t know that this is the song I learned to be bad to on the backroads of Arizona. She doesn’t know this is my soundtrack of breaking the rules. And Lisa and I chime in with the chorus “Steam ah-on! Steam ah-on! Steam ah-on! Steam ah-on!” We are all laughing and singing and someone calls for T-shirts with pictures of steaming irons on them and it feels so good that you just want to live in it and not fuck it up by saying the absolute wrong thing.

Which is when the first test comes. You want to free your voice? You want to say the unsayable? Okay, you got it.

Because it is at this moment that Lisa says “It’s interesting that it’s ‘Steam on’ since you write about sex so much.” And the woman with the green scarf and piercing eyes says “Oh, you write about sex?” with a big smile and there are laughs and these circles are coming together and Steven Tyler and the Queen of Swords are untying the knot in my chest and I just.. Well, I can’t help myself. It bursts out. I speak of the moment the night before when poet Amber Dawn called for us to have pride in being wild and sexual by taking back a word that has been used to keep us so quiet for so long. She was reading a poem about the names of groups – a murder of crows and so on — and she looked up and said to us “You know, I’ve been wondering for a long time, what should we call a group of sluts?” And the answer rose in me instantly. “A slick!” I said. And I was in the front row. “Did everyone hear that?” Amber said. “A slick of sluts! A slick! I love it,” she said.

So, I tell this story. I say the words “slut” and “slick” out loud in this nice living room.

Did I mention that I just met these nine women tonight?

As I say the word “slut,” I feel a little shock go through the circle. We don’t say that word to each other in polite circles. And inside me, I feel that old fear creep in: Why did you say that ?!? Shut up, Andrews!

You will be outcast. You will be alone.

No. That is just a mud puddle. It isn’t real.

I pick up the Queen of Swords and clutch it to my chest. I tuck it against my heart and they smile at me and laugh kindly and I try to breathe through the discomfort, and believe that it will be okay. Not because I am given permission by these women to say that bad, bad word ­– though I think I am. But because I didn’t let shame silence me this time.

Steam On.

This is not a time to pretend anymore. There are so many walls we have to crumble now. So many ways that we are being kept from our voices, our powers and choices, our ways back to love. And while we are on the subject of sex and silence, I just want to say that while sex isn’t the only way that women can be powerful, I do believe that women who are turned on are much harder to hold back. I do believe that the power to be feminine and alive and beautiful in our own eyes and to our own ears – however that looks and sounds, with makeup, without, sexy and wild and straight and queer and loud and steamy… This is a super power. It is an anthem that plays to the music that we know how to be wild to. We don’t necessarily have to bare one breast. But we could raise one hand to the sky for the sake of our own voices, and point the other at the ground for this place, this time, when there is no pretending anymore.

And say it. Out loud. “Steam ON!”

(And maybe we want to say “a slick of sluts” too. Try it. It really rolls off the tongue.)

 

 

 

 

 

Sovereign Solstice

What I have been told about sovereignty, about self possession, is a lie: I have been told that the key to sovereignty is to feel less: that this is what allows self possession. But really what I need is to feel all of it, to bumble around in it, on this solstice night, on every dark and moonlit night and rainy day.

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Building the Best Nest I Can

The bushtits have built a new nest in the Coastal Silk Tasselbush, and there are babies inside. But this is not their first nest. They fucked the first one up, built it too low. The neighbor’s cat got it. This is what parenting is like. Trial and error. You fuck it up, you repair it, you remind yourself of what your friend Colleen told you when you were in a moment of utter panic: “It’s not your job to be a perfect parent. It’s your job to keep your kid’s therapist employed.”

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Bumblebees and Jamie Fraser

Today the bumblebees filled the white flowers in my hedge and got all their expectations met. I’m guessing this, of course, by the happy wiggle of their fat, striped, pollen-coated bodies. I’m guessing, by virtue of the sheer number of bumblebees that I saw out of my kitchen window while gazing down the long, white, nectar-filled hall of flowers that is my hedge.

Also today, I made vegetable soup with the contents of my refrigerator drawers. Also, bean and rice and roasted portabella mushrooms. Also, I walked to the creek and played King of Tokyo and made a bearded lizard habitat.

Today, I mostly exceeded my own expectations.

I wish I didn’t have them, of course. I wish I were like the bumblebee, or like what I imagine the bumblebee to be: purely in pursuit of the present, purely here, in the flower, or there, in search of it, and knowing exactly what it is.

But I have to admit, there is one thing that was tricky. Expectations-wise, I mean. See, it came to me yesterday – in a flash of crystal clarity­– that I really do have to stop watching all TV until after California Witch Camp.

Even though I had just started my free seven-day trial of Starz, and I was going to try to watch the whole Outlander second season in seven days…

But I had received this email from two of my many amazing teachers, in this case, Ravyn Stanfield and Suzanne Sterling. I’d signed up for their sacred leadership program last year and it's midterms, and the email said something close to:

Our challenge to you is to pick five areas of your life that you will give your energy to for the next six months. And only five. And one of them must be self-care.

Go ahead. Try it. Just try! You see how easy it isn’t. But I knew when I read it that it was so necessary for me to tell myself the truth in this way, the truth of my own capacity, and my own not-a-bumblebee expectations.

So I did. And I got to tell you. When I made my list, Jamie Fraser of Outlander was not anywhere near it. And I've been reading those books for twenty years.

But it didn't matter!! I could see it. So clear, like I said. All the time I’d have. The way I’d reclaim my imagination and my calm. Yes!!

Then I was on the phone with my friend  Uncle Bear and told them this, how I was going to just Stop Watching TV and they were like "Just stop? That's like going from heavy cream to skim milk!”

"It's worse!!" I said. "It's like quitting dairy! And I've always said I wouldn't want to live if I had to quit dairy. I mean, I make hot fudge sundaes for myself at home."

“That’s why I love you,” Uncle Bear said. Bear is a profound and wise and thoroughly embracing-of-pleasure person, which is one of the reasons why I love them.  And another is that they get how humans work. As evinced by this comment: “Okay. So...Okay, maybe, you try it.... You do your best. And," Very gentle voice here. Uncle Bear, being so gentle. "Iif you fall off the wagon, you focus on harm reduction."

I started laughing so hard. Harm reduction! “And this is why I love you!” I said.  “Okay, what is harm reduction in this context?"

"No junk" Uncle Bear says. “Quality. Pay attention to what you watch.”

So now I have to ask: does Lost World: Jurassic Park II count as not junk? I sure as fuck hope so. Because that’s what I watched, like three hours later, when my son came home and we finished setting up the bearded lizard habitat and I remembered it was Friday night movie time.

Sigh.

Expectations. I know this doesn’t happen to bumblebees. Principally because they don’t have Netflix accounts.

But I will say this: there is a role for TV in mothering. Which is definitely one of my five areas! I didn’t used to think so, before I became a parent. But of course, I was perfectly certain of a lot of things having to do with child care before I became a parent, many of which were pure horseshit.

Yes, there is a role for TV there.

But tonight, after Forest had fallen asleep watching his new bearded dragon bask under the heat lamp, I did not turn on season two of Outlander, or the just released season two of Bloodline (!!),  even though both called to me like songs under my skin. Even though there is something so intoxicating about leaving my world for a place of nectar and certainty.

Instead, I turned down the lights and lit the candles and laid my body down on the rug and did little stretches until the animal nature of me, which has no desire to watch TV, until that part of me returned and filled me and settled me into my own skin. And then I rose, and carried my laptop to the couch, faced the candles, and the silence, and the perilous landscape of my own expectations and began to type: Today the bumblebees filled the white flowers in my hedge…

 

 

 

How Charlotte Flies

Today at the creek I saw something I have wanted to see since I was seven years old and saw the movie Charlotte’s Web.

I saw a baby spider fly.

I was standing at the top of the meadow. It is a steep grassy hill that leads down to my beloved Big Leaf Maple – the one with 23 trunks, which stands just above the path, which runs next to Longfellow Creek… At the time, I was actually watching the tree swallows, who have returned just in time to announce summer, as they do every year. They are arrows on the wind. You can tell by the way they bend their sharp wings how much they love speed. They are looking for every flying speck of protein, every body in the air.

I was standing, watching them orbit the 90 foot Cottonwood trees, which have finally finished their seedy snowing, and then somebody caught my sight, some body in the air. I looked right and I saw the tiniest green basket. It could've been one of the small tree flowers, blown loose from it’s cluster… but there was something about the way it rode heavily in the breeze that made me turn and follow it. It was falling, drifting ever closer to the grass, and I moved my hand under it and it landed in my palm and the tiny green spider that it was unfurled itself from its web balloon and ran across my hand and jumped off, flying down on the thread of its own making, which I attached to the tree branch in front of me just as it hit the ground again.

I don't know if I did it any good. I don't know if I did it any harm. I hope I didn't come between it and its fate, whatever large or small thing that is. I could only imagine the height that it launched from... the giant climb that its mother made, maybe to the top of one of those cottonwood trees, which are even now circled by the violent and hungry swallows. I turned to look up.

How tiring that must've been for that mama spider. How worthy of her life.

Last week my son turned eight years old.

I wasn't there. He was a on his first school camping trip. A two-night camping trip, I might add. I pride myself on being brave. Yes, pride. I know that is a dangerous word, that it goeth before the fall, blah, blah, blah. I think this is horseshit and that healthy pride is a human birthright and that we are told too often to be small, or not aspire to be large, or to stay closer to the ground and shut up about the thrill of the climb…

Anyway. I pride myself on being brave, or at least trying. 

But that morning as I said goodbye, I was struggling. Forest had never been apart from his dad and me for two nights, never in a strange place at all. And for fuck’s sake, not with 120 other kids in the dark woods surrounded by bears and cougars and... 

Well. You see how a mother’s mind can go on.  

But at the exact same time that I felt that frisson of fear crawl up the back of my neck, I was so sure he could do it, this boy of mine. He loves wild places, he is so full of electric life: Stories and lightning, roots and deep wells. I felt proud and terrified and sure of him all at the same time and so there, in the Earth Hall, as I watched him join the swarm of kids carrying their duffels and pillows and sleeping bags, as I watched him hand his booster seat to the dad driving him to Camp River Ranch, I tried to show him that face, the one that is brave and proud, even as I felt like in truth I was that mama spider, up at the top of a tree, panting with vertigo, blown by terror as I kissed his head and whispered to him on the inside, You can do it. You can fly.

Love in the Time of Mouth Breathing

So, it seems that one of the ways that I get to live this myth is by being in love.

I get to be in love with a mortal man who has an honorable heart and makes mistakes, and then says what do you want me to do? And actually listens.

This is profound. I’ve never had this before. I’ve never been able weather the storm, and then say the vulnerable thing that I need and actually get it.

This happens in the Legend of Rhiannon. Man, does Pwyll fuck things up. Over and over. I remember early in the year, hearing Gwydion say that this was one of the things that he loves about Pwyll. That Pwyll tries, and fails and says failure is not an option, and tries again.

I want to be in love with that mortal, and it seems like I am. And I want to also to be that mortal, and it seems like I am. I am the one who knows too little, who drinks too much at the wedding feast and forgets to follow Rhiannon’s advice and gets all full of myself, all magnanimous, waving my cup of mead around and bellowing, “Drinks for everyone on me! What? It’s an open bar? Well, then, boons for everyone! I love you guys! Anything you want...”

As soon as he says that, (now we are talking about Pwyll again) Rhiannon is like “Shut up! Shut up!”

But it’s too late. The other dude, the one she doesn’t want to marry, he's there...and he’s like “Well, as long as you mentioned anythingI’ll take Rhiannon.”

(Sucks to be a woman in a patriarchy sometimes.)

And Rhiannon says to Pwyll, “You are a fool. But now you have given your word.”

“I’m sorry,” says Pwyll.. “What can I do?”

“I can fix this,” says Rhiannon. Because she is not just beautiful, she is canny. “Listen…” She says, and tells him how.

And he listens.

One of the ways that I am living this story is by being a mortal in love, by being a woman who is both beautiful and canny and also honorable and imperfect.

One of the ways that I am living this story is being in love with a mortal, a man who is both handsome and smart and is also honorable and imperfect.

But in addition to having this listening thing I haven’t actually had before, which may also come from me listening in a way I haven’t done before, there is something else.

It was this bond… it was there from the very first night, strangely strong. It made me invite him to come to Karaoke with me on our first date, which was totally bizarre behavior on my part. I mean, that was my place, not for dudes. But something told me to make an exception and we sealed that date with the magic of singing… I know that sounds corny, but I feel I have to mention it because Rhiannon’s magic is in song. Just saying.

Anyway. I was talking about this bond, this love, which was there on the first night, though I couldn’t have said so at the time. We did say so three weeks later. But it wasn’t until a month and a half in that the something else happened... It was his birthday and I was a wreck. I had worked myself into a lather about the birthday being a test, that I had to have the right gift and the right experience and show that I knew him, because I did, and also totally didn’t. I mean, six weeks?

I was a total fucking mess.

And I couldn’t say why, or even ask for what I needed. I was just walking around and mouth-breathing and drinking too much at the wedding feast and finally the moment came when he looked at me and said “What’s going on?” And I said, practically panting like a dog, “I don’t know. I’m anxious. I don’t know. I need something. I don’t know what it is. I don’t know if it’s something I need from you or something I need from me.”

I felt like a total idiot. In the stories, its so easy. You ask for a spell or a sword or a boat ride to the island where the elders live... Maybe you can't have it. But at least you can ask. I didn’t even know what to ask for.

And this man, who I loved by then and knew it, he cast a spell. Not a spell of creation, but a spell of naming. 

He said “Listen. This thing that is between us, its so big and so deep. We can’t live in it every second…”

Well actually, first he asked a whole bunch of well-intentioned but completely unhelpful questions like “Why?” and “Are you on your period?”

Just kidding. About the period one.

But then he turned, on the inside, toward the invisible, toward the magic. And he said those words about the thing between us. And then he put his hand on my heart and said “But it’s right here, whenever you need it.”

He looked at me. “Summon it,” he said. “Now.”

And I did. And it bloomed under his hand, in my heart, warm and bright, and I could see him feeling it, see it blooming in him, too.

"See?" he said.

There is something in the heart of this story about the love between Rhiannon and Pwyll. I don’t know if I would have seen it before this, if, say, I’d read this story at another time in my life.

But I see it now. Between them, in spite of her flawed and human mortality and the otherworldliness he owns, or in spite of her fey magic and his earthly body…In spite of all of this, from the first moment there is between them a depth that anchors them. And they trust it. This is a story of love. It is the pact between this world and that. Between what is and what will be. It is the sacred union that is the meeting of trust and you and I and need and now.

I am seeing all of this because one of the ways that I am living this story is by being in love.

Rhiannon's Body

I am doing yoga again, for the first time in eighteen months.

This also, is part of re-entering the world.

You know, all this time, I’ve been going to witchcamp, been doing the personal work, been trying to face the shadow, be fearless, act “as-if”…

All this time, I’ve been hearing my teachers and my beloved friends, even, tell me to listen to what that body knows.

But I had lost mine, in a very real way.  Now I am found,again, found my way back -- out of pain, out ofthe simple back-injury fear of picking up a sock, of holding my kid’s hand and being tugged too hard… this sounds too melodramatic. I don’t even want to write this down.

But I am sitting down now, with my laptop on my lap and my body has the fluid, relaxed electricity that only yoga has ever brought me, and I remembered, as I worked my spine through cat-cow, as I pivoted my hips through downward dog, that the nagging feeling of instability that I’ve been feeling, even as so much has been going right, is that I haven’t had my body to depend on. I remember this, because I have it again. Now. Fluid and electric.

Last year, when I had the story of Baba Yaga to guide me through the work of living and writing my way out of shadow, I had an actual this-many-pages-written-down story. A clear and concise rendering of the myth by Clarissa Pinkola Estés, includingan interpretation of the themes at the end, from her wonderful archetypal tome, Women Who Run with the Wolves.

This time, with the Legend of Rhiannon, there is no such short work. There is The Mabinogian, which is far from clear, and The Mabinogian Tetralogy, beautiful but long…

I have been wading through this story this year, not flowing with a sense of the whole, but sticking to images in it, like boots in deep mud: the image of Rhiannon riding slowly and effortlessly, but uncatchable until her love Pwyll uses the power of the word. The image of Pwyll, meeting her before that, when she sits by the well, bathed in golden light, orbited by her three birds, and instills in him the hope he needs to navigate despair and prevail over the forces of darkness.

The image of her hands, smeared with puppy blood.

This is no easy story. It is asking such striving of me. So much more effort.

Why is this body such effort?

Why is this story so elusive and beautiful at the same time?

Only two days ago did I begin to get my hands on the larger themes that were handed to me with last year’s Baba Yaga myth. Only two days ago did I get that this story is about the choice to incarnate, and to take all that comes with being in a body, in this world, with all the suffering and limit and electric, distracting pleasure that it offers.

Now. As I am returning to my breath. To my spine. To the cat cow, the downward dog, the ritual of it all, candles lit, music without words, breath the connection between what was and what will be.

Rhiannon.

Come

Each of the seasons corresponds to an element. Spring is the season of air, and today at the creek I can see why: cottonwood seeds drift like snowflakes. A couple of days ago, my barista told me that his Mother’s Day picnic was ruined by drifts of the downy stuff. Today, my son said to me, “Mom, right now I am sneezing big sneezes.” Yes. Everywhere, the air is seething, is positively thick with sex. And it’s not all invisible. The baby spiders, who are some of the best flyers in the world, decorate the new leaves of the snowberries with long silver strands, like vernal tinsel. And the roses and the rhodies are blooming. The columbines are hurling their scents to the wind, calling out to any hummingbird in range: I have deep spurs, full of nectar, come.

 

Really, in spring, every message is some version of this: Come.

 

I am thinking of Rhiannon’s three birds now. She is the Welsh Faerie queen and she is attended by – inspired by, supported by, expressed by? – three birds, whose songs heal the wounded and revive the despondent and, some say, sing the dead back to life. They are black, and golden, and green. I imagine them as they would be here, in my bio-region: A crow, perhaps… and a goldfinch who has just shed winter’s brown for spring’s bright yellow, and an Anna’s hummingbird, beak still wet with nectar...

 

All full of song.

 

This morning, I was writing from the island, trying to make sense of these long weeks without writing. So much has happened. This story is working me, this myth of Rhiannon. I said yes to teaching it, which meant yes to living it on some level for this year, and this has also been a year of coming back to life. After my long time in the dark forest, in the world of Baba Yaga and the deep night, and being willing to go down until the mystery was done, after all this, I am incarnate again. Making a living, dating a man who is slowly weaving into my actual life, recovering the full function and pleasure of my body and the pleasure of effort.

 

I am in the world again.

 

This is also Rhiannon’s story. This is the story of her using her voice, of coming out of the world of faerie and choosing to be here, in this flawed world, and still sing. As I am trying to do… Don’t get me wrong. I don’t think I am the faerie queen. But I do think that it is easier to sing when the threads of this world aren’t pulling on you, when there is only the perfect twilight of being in between. I do think that the work of my life now, and of this time, is to sing even when the threads of this world would weave me fast, pull with the warp of air and the weft of earth and bind me down. To know that the same threads that seem so tight- my to do list, the needs of this body, the bills to pay – these are also the stuff of which magic is made. Which feed me and feed the three. The black, the gold and the green. The three birds of Rhiannon, in this, the season of air. 

Spring's Fervor

This morning there are Hawthorn petals and willow catkins all over my boulder. Spring's fervor gives way to the work of summer. The long slow pleasure of photosynthesis. Everything is covered with chlorophyll, everything is racing towards now . A Kingfisher calls overhead. I make a new friend. She just moved here from Cincinnati, her dog's name is Watson. She hasn't been through a summer here yet, she doesn't know how it stays light until almost 11, how the days step up like beautiful blue and green playing cards, one on top of another, a royal flush that goes on and on.

Silencing Pwyll

Last night I got home from a party full of friends and kids, the first outdoor bbq of the year. (It has been over 60 degrees out this week, and sunny. In April!! Which makes Seattleites lose our minds.) I got home, read “Where the Sidewalk Ends” with Forest and tucked him in and drew a bath. (Love that phrase. Where does it come from?) Drew a bath and lit the candles and turned out the lights and got in to the steaming water with my copy of The Mabinogian Tetralogy.

California Camp is drawing close and also, the things that are happening in my life are hard to write about now. I have amazing new work, wonderful love, and my practice of radical honesty in this blog feels complicated again. The stakes have gotten higher. I have scared myself silent. I make excuses for not telling my own story.

But myth always helps me to enter the truth I’m living. And I love this myth so much. Rhiannon feels like the woman I am trying to be, a woman who will be a voice for the goddess in a sometime crude and cruel world, and also bravely in love, even as she remains as sovereign and true to herself as she can.

Maybe that’s part of the power of these enduring stories, that we can all see ourselves in them…

But no. I think it really is all about me.

So I will tell a little of Her story, and a little of mine, and find my way through this.

Last night in the tub, I read the next bit. Our hero Pwyll has taken up the challenge offered by the corrupt druid, who I’d really like to call a priest, because he is part of a fucked up institution, not a tribe of tree mystics. Maybe I’ll call him the High Holy Druidtiff… He explains why he’s trying to get rid of the Goddess in the tradition. His underling asks “What is to come?” And he says,

“A day when men will fly higher than birds, when they will fare deeper undersea than the fish. When the lightning shall be shut in little boxes and serve them like a slave. And all these wonders will be worked by the hands and wits of men. Woman – she who only receives our seed and carries it while it shapes itself in her darkness – how can she then claim to be a creator? The fields we tread shall be ours as, as are the shoes that are also beneath our feet – no longer a holy trust, no longer Her holy flesh, the Breast of the Mother whose Milk is our Bread.

Creepy right? Add a dumptruck full of personal arrogance and take away the poetry and you’ve got Donald Trump.

The Druidtiff finishes his rant by saying “We rulers talk much of freedom, but in the name of freedom, we must destroy freedom. Questions can be more dangerous than swords.”

Tell the truth. Tell the truth. Rhiannon, help me tell the truth. 

Fairy Ferry

This morning the water is like old glass, wavy and glossy smooth.

This morning I got a voice message from my friend Jocey. I have figured out a new social media skill!! I am exchanging voice messages in FB messenger! Don’t laugh. It has taken me a few times to figure it out because you have to keep your finger on the the record button and you only get a minute and if you lift up your finger at all, it sends it automatically. The first time I did it I, sent three messages –5 seconds, 12 seconds and then 11 seconds – before I gave up and typed.

But now I am becoming the master of it! Mistress… Madam… Madam of FB voice messages…Okay, there’s room for improvement in that title… but I did it last night and this morning and today I told Jocey that I am living quite the ferry life and she sent back that she heard me saying I am living a fairy life, which could also be true. I am stepping in and out of the Bright World, where Rhiannon lives, where love changes time, where the wild rushes through me and also smoothes away my human edges and when I return, I shudder with whiplash. The transition away from the dream has been rough, gives me vertigo and attention deficit disorder.  I have felt like I am falling when I leave and rushing when I return.

Speaking of rushing, I ran two red lights last night, trying to catch the 8:10 after D&D.

Not like barreling through, crossing my fingers that I won’t T a semi. These downtown streets are dark, almost deserted. It is 8:08. I can see the ferry. I am a block away. Surely this red light is more of a…suggestion? Yes, I decide. It is. I look both ways, go through. Drive a half block. Another red light, which also seems very related to a stop sign. I go through again. I am stopped by a construction flagger. I can see the fucking driveway into the ferry terminal; it is just 20 feet away!! The next ferry isn’t until 9. It is 8:09, but still I am hopeful. The last three ferries I took ran late. For fuck’s sake, flagger man!! He waves me through. The ticket guy says “Maybe…” I pull up. The boat is right there, but the red gate flashes and I sit on the tarmac and watch as it pulls away.

Fuck me, ferry. Fuck me, fairy time, fairy confusion. Fairies are famous for fucking with practical reality. Theirs is the Rip Ran Winkle way. You lose track of time and forget to put away the milk. Fairies, some of my friends like to say, make you attend to the invisible. This looks a lot like being absent-minded to the uninitiated. This also looks a lot like the madness of love. Fairy tricks. Ferry tricks. Ferry pulling away, fairy life put off for another 50 minutes….

But then I get out of the car and walk to the water. And the night sky is purple with green around the stars and the lights like brush strokes on the water and lo: the portal to the fairy world is everywhere, anywhere, when I stop rushing and am full only of anticipation and delight.

A glass of wine wouldn’t hurt either.

I walk up the salt-crusted steps to the little half round glass and stainless steel Parisian-feeling bar. The syrah looks good. 20 minutes left until I have to load. I reach into my bag.

I left my wallet in the car. Fuck me, ferry fairy life.

What I Asked For

There is no green like this one. The first green, when all things are bright, the old dark is being left behind and nothing is armored yet. The trees next to the creek, everywhere, are that holding that golden green that Robert Frost named, that S.E. Hinton's Ponyboy loved in "The Outsiders." This green is all promise, all possibility. Here, walking next to the creek, blue sky, sweet air. On the path at my feet, a Cottonwood bud, broken off by some stray wind. I pick it up. It has fallen 90 feet to land here, five tender green tips extending from winter’s wood. It is so sticky and covered with sweetness that it looks like it has been dipped in honey. I am almost tempted to put it in my mouth.

I think I haven't slept more than six hours a single night this week. And the influx of new things into my life has taken away my naptime. That's okay. I am getting what I want, what I have asked for, for so long. And anyway, watching the Red Alder catkins fall into the water and float by on the current is almost as restful. I sit down and my shadow startles half a dozen salmon fingerlings from under the bank. On the other side, some tree or bush, the Dogwood maybe, has extended its roots into the water like a hundred pieces of red licorice, elegant and vermillion bright and I remember that day, five years ago, when I first saw the vermillion flycatcher. I remember waking up in Arizona in April, looking at his picture in my mother’s field guide, small and solid scarlet except for a cape of sooty wings and a black mask. He is a lipstick outlaw. He is only in Arizona for a short time. I surprise myself by saying it out loud: "I want to see a vermillion flycatcher today." 

And then my husband wakes up and we have another fight. It's hard to remember the details now, it was so long ago and we have papered over them with so much good work since then.  But I remember the misery after the fight and the helpless feeling that it would never get better. The same fights, again and again, the feeling that I had committed myself and happiness was lost to me. I remember walking out of my parents' house and sitting down on the curb, putting my face in my hands and crying and crying. I want out and I don’t want to quit. I want to be happy and I don’t want to be divorced, with its sentence of failure and also loneliness and also exile. I sit there, as I have so many times before, with misery in one hand and failure in the other, hating my choices. The Sonoran desert dust pools around my feet.  I can see only the white rocks, the beige sand, my tennis shoes. The curb is hard under my ass, my knees jut. Time slows and my world narrows to this tiny space between my feet, as it does in the moments that turn out to be a choosing time: All paths available here, all roads are mine to cross now. And I finally ask myself the question that I have never asked myself before: "What would it look like to be divorced and happy?”

 

And then I got out my journal, and I began to write down what a happy divorce would look like to me: The money that is mine, the childcare that is easy, the home that is a refuge. The authentic friendships, the pervasive peace, the love that I would have room for in my life again...And when I finished writing, I got up and went inside and took my son’s hand and together we walked to the nearby playground and he ran, and climbed and spun. I remember feeling like I had stepped into another world, and perhaps I had. I tried for another year. So did my ex-husband. I think now that the counseling that we did then didn’t save the marriage, but it did save our divorce. Yes, we both tried for almost another year. But that was the day that I knew another path was possible. I felt it in my shoulders as I gently pushed Forest in the swing. I felt it, in my feet planted firmly on the ground and in the muscles of my neck, which turned my head, just so, slightly to the left, to where the vermilion flycatcher was just then landing on the playground’s chainlink fence… Just then landing: Red body, charcoal wings, black mask. Beautiful outlaw. He lit, took off again, returned. He lingered and so did we as the desert sun faded, and the twilight wore on, and I watched him, bold and beautiful and a miracule. I let the feeling of asking for I want and actually getting it seep into my bones.

 

Temperance

Tonight I am thinking about temperance. In witchcraft it is the connecting point between passion and wisdom.* In smithcraft it is the strengthening of steel, by folding and heating and hammering and cooling in water and heating again.

In humans, well.. in this human anyway, it is happening in work. It is happening in love. It is happening in parenting.

I am always the blacksmith, I am always the steel.

I am not always the hammer… Sometimes I have guest hammers! Always at my invitation, though sometimes I do forget that.

Temperance. Trial and relief. Challenge and sanctuary.

I looked it up in the OED, of course. Here’s the oldest reference:

Venym he tok, and tempred hit wit wyn.

Don’t those old words look so beautiful?

I am translating that as: Venom he took, and tempered it with wine. This from sometime in the 12th century.

(OK it wasn't actually the oldest. There is a Latin reference from 1000. But clearly Latin doesn't count, because, and also round numbers are so much less poetic, don't you think?)

Temperance, which alters steel, but also wax, medicine, clay, musical instruments, and over and over, humans. 

Venym he tok, and tempred hit wit wyn.

Yup.I think I was looking for temperance on Friday night, but instead I took some tequila flavored venom and then tempered it with ¾ of a bottle of red wine.

This is not, by the way, Brigids idea of temperance… She’s the original blacksmith, mama swordmaker, goddess of smithcraft and poetry, who tries women's souls in hot forges and cold rivers, and amazing work and amazing love.

Which are, of course, both trial and refuge, both challenge and sanctuary.

I hope I don't sound like I'm complaining. I'm not. But I do have to figure out how to keep moving, without the tequila. Keep folding and exposing my new edges to these sometimes extreme sensations without giving in to the temptation to numb.

I do know how, when I remember what I know: to walk every day. Write every day. Sleep. Water…

(I drink less water when I am trying not to feel something. I drink more wine.) 

The next day, Saturday, was a horrible day. Toxic self-recrimination all day as that Sauza venom slowly left my veins.

Yesterday was much better. Today better still.

I remembered to know what I know for a little while, this morning, when my colleague needed me.

I remembered to know what I know for a little while, this afternoon, as I walked up the steep hill, heat rising from my skin as it began to rain.

I remembered to know what I know tonight, as my son made a short appearance as guest hammer... began his homework session with so much whining that I almost offered him some cheese to go with it, but instead I waited him out. I out-calmed him, did not give into brittleness, but became my own refuge and then watched as his bright mind and good nature returned and he came up with so very very many ways to measure his dinosaur.

 

*I believe credit for Temperance as the connector between Iron Pentacle's Passion and Pearl Pentacle's Wisdom goes to the amazing Dawn Isadora. 

Three White Candles

Tonight I picked up my drum for the first time in a month. This is a better way to find my roots than when I buy clothes, or shit for my house. The moon is out. The Asian pear tree has closed her petals for the night and here in my living room, the three white candles burn.  I play my drum, I write, I take a bath, I am alone in my house at night.

Water Commute

I have always wanted a water commute.

I’ve had one, from time to time. When I housesat for a friend of a friend on Vashon Island, two glorious weeks of living on an organic farm in an old cedar cabin. One room, heated by a woodstove. There was an old velvet couch and round table in one corner, by the window and close to the woodstove, and I sat there, late into those summer nights, feeding twigs into the fire and writing and writing and writing. There was a wall of windows where the back wall used to be, looking out into the ravine, and there was a tiny kitchen and there was a water commute, every morning, leaving the farm and crossing the water to downtown, to my job at Save Our Wild Salmon.  A day trying to figure out how to get Republicans to listen to the facts and Democrats to have a spine… disheartening many days. But then back over the water, and the water was magic. The 20 minutes of looking out at the pattern of light on wave, searching the surface for seals or cormorants, looking far out to the Olympic Mountains…

When I got home, the day – no matter how difficult – was gone. 

It was like those years when I lived in San Francisco, and rode my motorcycle to my bartending job, and rode home, and the wind over my body washed away every stupid drunk, every mad rush, every smell of gin and ice and disinfectant, so that when I got home, I was cleaned by air.

The elements, washing me clean.

Water. Air. Now, water again.

I am again having a bit of a water commute. The ferry is back in my life because my sweetheart lives on an island. I take a ferry to him. I stay the night. This water commute is the opposite of the last; I am not bookending my work with these trips. I am bookending the dream time of being with this man in separate private world. The island is mossier, more treed, less populated by time.  I am not shedding the worries of my day as I return home. I am shedding the penetrating hypnosis of this earth and water love, which sometimes takes away my words and my drive and replaces them with a slow and steady drift, a sinking, a resting in the deep of my heart and also the surface of my skin. I leave his house. I board the ferry and sit by the window. The water shines and undulates, echoing in my skin the long night behind me, and slowly, slowly, I shed the magic and return to the noise and tasks of the city. 

Rhiannon vs Donald Trump

Tonight I got the chills while I was reading Rhiannon’s story. It’s so old and so exactly how humans are, even now.

It goes like this: Pwyll, the King of Dyved, is back from saving the world, and the land is lush and the Dow is up and all is well for a few years, but then the weather goes wrong and the market crashes and all the ancient Welsh babies are dying and also the power is out and there’s a run on bottled water at the Safeway and everybody blames it on the King.

Like people do.

So then the priests see their moment and say “Dude. This is all your fault."

It’s actually the High Druid who says this. I had some trouble with this, with a Druid being a bad guy, because I think of Druids as the keepers of ancient tree magic and stuff… And you know how I feel about trees...But the author of this particular interpretation of this ancient Myth (Evangeline Walton) she is working in some legit history. The High Druid  –who here is making political hay while the sun don’t shine – he is of the New Tribes. They took the mantle from the druids of the Old Tribes when the New Tribes conquered. The Old Tribes respected and revered the land and the goddess mother. The New Tribes are out to stamp her out. It’s your typical religion-as-the-tool-of-the-conqueror story. The Bad Druid even says so. He talks about how the Old Tribes derived their strength from the Mother, the land. How the rulers were Queens. And the High Druid says of the old, land-respecting, traditions:

“It is…a blessing that that line of witches came to an end. To make men stronger and women weaker we druids devised the Bridal with the White Mare. In her name, we wield the Queens’ ancient power.”

You know what? I don't even want to get into what the Bridal with the White Mare is. Suffice to say that it is the Druids' super perverted way of getting Kings to dominate the land while appealing to the basest reality TV show impulses of the population. And they are pissed at Pwyll, because he refuses to do it. 

I am aware as I write this that there is a Republican debate that happened tonight, where Donald Trump and Ted Cruz were doing everything they could to appeal to the most ignorant racist religious assholes in the land…

This all feels so familiar.

Plus, the failing economy of Dyved, which supposed prove that Pwyll is a bad leader... it’s all a con! The Bad Druid says so! They did it, the bad druids made all the shit go down so that they could get the man of the people off the throne and replace him with their puppet. “Yet by our arts we spent old men have brought all these woes upon Dyved…”

Reminds me of Republican economic policies. Right?

But just wait. Rhiannon is just offstage. She is about to bring the magic and shut this shit down.  

Would it be nice to believe that was about to happen now? Wouldn't it be nice to live that story? Wait, are we?

Me and Pwyll, on the Front Lines

Some sleepless nights in a row, and a deadline, but still I got out Rhiannon’s story last night and read before bed. Pwyll is back from the land of the dead. With Rhiannon and Arawn’s help, he withstood the despair and darkness, and also resisted the darkness within himself, the urge to murder. He saved the world from the forces that would kill the sacred mother and turn men into soulless tools of violence…

Just to sum up.

Now, he’s back, and things go so well! Two calves to every cow!! Record crops!! Etc, etc.. You know the sort of thing. Plus he saved the world! Everyone loves him!

But then, a bad winter, a worse spring. Not just calves dying, but children too, and no crops for the coming winter at all.

Which chance the theocracy takes to try to perform a coup.

Man. It’s never enough, is it?

I mean, just last night, when Forest got home from his parent date with my wasband, he was so chipper and happy, and we talked about the weird beetle we’d seen that morning, which was actually some kind of ant fly, which disappeared, but then I found it later and took a picture…And then we were scientists! Naming new species!! And then “Mama, I love you.” He says it with a little sigh. And “You are the best mama in the whole world.”

But then this morning, before coffee mind you, he calls from the living room “I know what I want for my birthday!” This is usually a pretty safe conversation. It involves me writing down the number for a Lego set. So I break my usual rule of having coffee in my hands before I talk about anything weighty.

“Oh? What, honey?” I say.

“I want a pug,” he says. “ I really really really want a pug."

Dear gods. “No way,” I say, automatically and with force. Because I have not had coffee yet and can't break it to him gently.

And we plunge off the cliff. He must have a pug. He will die if he doesn’t have a pug..

Etc etc.

But instead of getting irritated, I just start laughing. And then I am laughing so hard I can’t stop. Now he is yelling that I am the worst mother ever and it’s not funny and I manage to gasp out “Oh yes, honey. Yes, it is,” before I start laughing again.

Wasn’t I the best mother, in the world,  just last night? Oh, how the mighty have fallen.

Man. I feel you, Pwyll. I mean, not that I’ve saved the world from war and despair lately, but Jeez. I took a picture of the ant fly. Doesn’t that count for anything?