I am trying to hold in one steady glance all the parts of my life

Toward the Solstice, 1977

The thirtieth of November.
Snow is starting to fall.
A peculiar silence is spreading
Over the fields, the maple grove.
It is the thirtieth of May,
Rain pours on ancient bushes, runs
Down the youngest blade of grass.
I am trying to hold in one steady glance
All the parts of my life.
A spring torrent races
On this old slanting roof,
The slanted field below
Thickens with winter’s first whiteness.
Thistles dried to sticks in last year’s wind
Stand nakedly in the green,
Stand sullenly in the slowly whitening,
Field.
My brain glows
More violently, more avidly
The quieter, the thicker
The quilt of crystals settles,
The louder, more relentlessly
The torrent beats itself out
On the old boards and shingles.
It is the thirtieth of May,
The thirtieth of November,
A beginning or an end.
We are moving towards the solstice
And there is so much here
I still do not understand.
If I could make sense of how
My life is tangled
With dead weeds, thistles,
Enormous burdocks, burdens
Slowly shifting under
This first fall of snow,
Beaten by this early, racking rain
Calling all new life to declare itself strong
Or die,
If I could know
In what language to address
The spirits that claim a place
Beneath these low and simple ceilings,
Tenants that neither speak nor stir
Yet dwell in mute insistence
Till I can feel utterly ghosted in this house.
If history is a spider-thread
Spun over and over though brushed away
It seems I might some twilight
Or dawn in the hushed country light
Discern its greyness stretching
From molding or doorframe, out
Into the empty dooryard
And following it climb
The path into the pinewoods,
Tracing from tree to tree
In the falling light, in the slowly
Lucidifying day
Its constant, purposive trail,
Till I reach whatever cellar hole
Filling with snowflakes or lichen,
Whatever fallen shack
Or unremembered clearing
I am meant to have found
And there, under the first or last
Star, trusting to instinct
The words would come to mind
I have failed or forgotten to say
Year after year, winter
After summer, the right rune
To ease the hold of the past
Upon the rest of my life
And ease my hold on the past.
If some rite of separation
Is still unaccomplished,
Between myself and the long-gone
Tenants of this house,
Between myself and my childhood,
Between the childhood of my children,
It is I who have neglected
To perform the needed acts,
Set water in corners, light and eucalyptus
In front of mirrors,
Or merely pause and listen
To my own pulse vibrating
Lightly as falling snow,
Relentless as the rainstorm,
And hear what it has been saying.
It seems I am still waiting
For them to make some clear demand
Some articulate sound or gesture,
For release to come from anywhere
But from inside myself.
A decade of cutting away
Dead flesh, cauterizing
Old scars ripped open over and over
And still it is not enough.
A decade of performing
The loving humdrum acts
Of attention to this house
Transplanting lilac suckers,
Washing panes, scrubbing
Wood-smoke from splitting paint,
Sweeping stairs, brushing the thread
Of the spider aside,
And so much yet undone,
A woman’s work, the solstice nearing,
And my hand still suspended
As if above a letter
I long and dread to close.

(Adrienne Rich)

This is the eighth year I’ve honored this holiest of days with this poem that I love (this year, a day early)

(2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012)

2013: January, February, March

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Whit turned eight.  We celebrated with a small party: a trip to the batting cages, pizza, and Lego-shaped cupcakes.

I had a spinal tap.  I do not recommend.

Whit played with his hockey team on the ice during a Bruins game.  This was an enormous thrill for all.

We had a marvelous family trip to Washington DC.

It snowed.  A whole lot.

We celebrated Easter at a place that’s holy for our family: a deserted, wind-swept beach outside of Boston that we love best off-season and empty.

My favorite post from these months, about an evergreen theme, the endless, begin-again effort to be present in my own life: Tears at Hockey

My favorite quote from this season:

Every moment in life is absolutely itself. That’s all we have. There is nothing other than this present moment; there is no past, there is no future; there is nothing but this. So when we don’t pay attention to every little this, we miss the whole thing.

And the contents of this can be anything. This can be straightening our sitting mats, chopping an onion, talking to one we don’t want to talk to. It doesn’t matter what the contents of the moment are; each moment is absolute. That’s all there is, and all there ever will be.

~ Charlotte Joko Beck

More things I love lately

Do You See Me?  This post, just wow.  My friend Amanda writes powerfully about all that we don’t tend to document, about how the ugly and the broken are inextricably twined around the beautiful and the beloved, and about the sorrow and gratitude that fill her life right now.  I can’t stop thinking about it.

I just read Gilead by Marilynne Robinson for the third time.  This puts the book in very rare company (I’m not much of a re-reader, especially thrice).  But: wow.  I don’t have words powerful enough to describe this graceful, grave, astonishing book, but I know that it feels like reading an extended prayer, a glorious meditation on and evocation of the experience of life itself.

What I Gained by the Loss.  This remembrance of a high school English teacher, by Sarah Courchesne, gave me goosebumps.  In part because she met her mentor at the same school where I met mine (in fact she refers to Mr. Valhouli’s death in the first paragraph).  But even more because she evokes the life-changing power of a student-teacher relationship, and the ways in which the conversation between the two can continue, change, and echo through the seasons of a life.

I don’t like strong scents, but I love this candle, which I’m burning every moment that I am at home.

As usual at this time of year (and at others!) I have Christmas carols on repeat.  Mostly I’m listening to a CD of my favorites that has become the soundtrack of this month (I list the songs on it here).

What are you reading, thinking about, listening to, and loving right now?

I write these Things I Love posts approximately monthly.  The past ones are all archived here.

Tucked into the corners of the days

They went, I say, partly in search of the sublime, and they found it the only way it can be found, here or there – around the edges, tucked into the corners of the days.

– Annie Dillard, Teaching A Stone to Talk

Books: always the best gift

Books are always, without exception, my go-to gift.  Christmas is coming up, so I have some stacks downstairs, but I also turn to book for birthdays, hostess gifts, and sometimes for no reason at all.  Today on Great New Books I discuss my absolute favorite book of 2013, but I wanted to also share a more comprehensive list of books I love for gift-giving. Here are my thoughts, for young children, older children (a category I personally adore, so I think many of these work for adults, too), and for adults.

I would love to hear what books are on your lists and in your basements awaiting wrapping!

For Small Children:

Miss Rumphius by Barbara Cooney.  This may be my favorite children’s books of all time. We still read Miss Rumphius regularly, and it’s one of the few picture books that I have noticed remains in Grace’s bookshelf.  Almost every time, I’m reduced to tears by the  beautiful story and message that every person can find a way to leave the world more beautiful.

Roxaboxen by Alice McLerran and Barbara Cooney. This book is another one I dearly love.  It is less well-known than Miss Rumphius (and therefore, at least in my experience, often a great gift because people don’t have it).  This story is about the power of imagination and about the galloping adventure that is childhood.  Love.

Space Boy by Leo Landry.  This is another one of my most deeply-beloved books.  We also still read it.  The story, inspired by Where the Wild Things Are, tells of independence and exploration and home, of the way the bonds of love can stretch and snap back, of this great big world we live in.  I love it.

 Mole Music by David McPhail.  This is another book whose theme is the way that art (in this case music) can change the world, and it also reminds us that even acts invisible to others can have tremendous power.  The illustrations are beautiful too.

The Birds of Bethlehem by Tomie dePaola.  Last year I took a whole bunch of Christmas-themed picture books out of the library and we worked our way through them. This was easily our favorite.  The text is simple and charming, the illustrations gorgeous, and I love this book.

 For Bigger Children:

Wonder by RJ Palacio. I am giving this book, the first that Grace ever recommended to me, to a lot of children this year.  RJ Palacio’s story about acceptance and friendship and courage is one of the most powerful I have ever read.  Literally.  Told in alternating voices, with humor and honesty, this book made me cry a lot, but also reminded me of the fundamental goodness resident in most people.

The Fault in Our Stars by John Green.  As Grace recommended Wonder to me, so I recommended this to her.  Though the fundamental premise, a story about teenagers with cancer, is unavoidably sad, this is one of the most life-affirming and hopeful books I have ever read.  This is a book for everybody over 10 on your list, in my opinion: it is easily in my own list of top three books of 2013.  Alternately laugh-out-loud funny and heart-crackingly sad, this book is told by possibly my favorite narrator of all time.  Grace still refers to Hazel and Augustus all the time.  They have taken up residence in both of our heads and hearts, I suspect, permanently.

The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate.  Grace’s second recommendation to me (which Whit pushed too).  This is a book about animals in a mall zoo that somehow manages to be about the broad sweep of life’s grand pageant.  Honestly.  It made me laugh, cry, and think, and I could not put it down.  Highly, highly recommended.

 Weird But True by National Geographic.  My children, especially Whit, have a seemingly bottomless fascination with true, strange stories.  They love the Guiness Book of World Records, and have several versions of Weird But True.  I don’t necessarily understand the fixation, but I definitely subscribe to the any-reading-is-good-reading school of thought, so these will be under the tree for Whit and some other kids (especially boys) on my list.

 The Giver by Lois Lowry.  The Giver, and the other three books in the series (Gathering Blue, the Messenger, and Son) have deeply moved both Grace and me.  Grace has only read The Giver so far, but just this weekend she said to me, out of the blue, that she “keeps finding herself thinking about Gabriel.”  Oh, yes.  I know that feeling.  Spare, evocative, beautiful: I love these books.

For Adults:

Still Writing by Dani Shapiro.  While you might think this is a book about writing, I think it’s about the task of adulthood: taking where we came from and living with it, making the most of and paying attention to what is right in front of us, and the effort to live an engaged life.  I devoured this book, read it twice, and think it’s absolutely beautiful.

The Gift of an Ordinary Day by Katrina Kenison.  I think anyone with children in grade school or middle school needs to read this book immediately.  I’ve never given it to someone (and I’ve given it to a lot of people) without hearing later that it entirely changed how they think about this particular rich, exhausting, blessed season of life.  Every time I read Katrina’s writing I cry, which is how I know it touches something deep, essential, and inchoate inside of me.  I can’t recommend this book highly enough.

New and Selected Poems by Mary Oliver.  For anyone who is new to Oliver, enamored by the natural world, or just beginning to tiptoe into the world of poetry: this is the perfect gift.  I have given this book to countless people, and have always heard back from the recipient that Oliver’s work is both powerful and accessible: the combination that, for me, marks truly great poetry.

Crossing to Safety by Wallace Stegner.  My passion for this book is well-documented.  It’s among the very, very short list of books I’ve read three complete times (that list in its entirety: Harry Potter books 1-4, CTS, and, now, Gilead).  Stegner’s short, gorgeously-written book reveals something new to me each time I read it.  The most recent time I was struck by how it is a love letter to couple friends, to long marriage, to midlife, in all of its confounding complexity and breathtaking beauty.

When Women Were Birds: Fifty-Four Variations on Voice, by Terry Tempest Williams.  I found this book intoxicating, challenging and outrageously gorgeous in equal measure.  Williams’ work reads to me like prose poetry.  A book about being a woman in this world, about the natural terrain of the united states, and about what it means to find your voice.  Wonderful.

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