Pentimento of a person

Mary Oliver’s words about writing poetry with a pencil – so you could see the words that underlay the final words – made me think about pentimento, and I’ve been musing about that word ever since.  I had my own experience of pentimento, sitting there in the Wellesley chapel, because sitting beside my mother and me was a woman who has known me since birth.  She is part of the extended family who was such an integral part of my childhood.  That woman, a beautiful, serene person who radiates calm, is woven tightly into the fabric of my childhood.

She’s known all of the Lindseys who came before the Lindsey I am now.

The toddler with a bowl cut, the short girl with messy red braids, the bossy high schooler who forced all the other children into performing Circle Game wearing all white, the fellow mourner at Susie’s funeral, the bride, the new mother, and on, and on.  She knows – as does my mother, of course, sitting right next to me – all of the faces that are layered underneath the face I have now.

We are all composites.  We are made of all that has happened to us and all we have made happen.  Of the people we have loved dearly, those we have lost painfully, those who still walk beside us.  Of all of our erased words, our painted-over images, the things we prize and the things we aim to hide.  This is what I loved most about Darin Strauss’s gorgeous memoir, Half a Life: the examination of the way that who we are is made up of what has happened in our lives.

I’ve written before about the mute indifference of space, about how baffling it is to me to be in physical places that hosted important moments, and to feel as though somehow the space is just blank, empty.  It seems as though the place should still hold a shadowy remnant of what happened there.  I know inside of me there are certain events and people who, though long gone, beat on, steady as a pulse.

Similarly, certain freeze frame memories of who we were at specific moments seem more vivid than others, their imprint more visible on the palimpsest of our souls.  I’ve had moments with friends I’ve known intimately for a long time where all of the people they’ve been to me flash across their face.  These experiences reinforce the depth of a many-year bond.  I wonder if, when we think back on the pentimento of our own spirits, the images that rise up are the same ones that those who have known us longest see?

What I know for sure is that the irrefutable beauty of a person is in this texture.  What fascinates me about people is the way that who we were peeks around the corners of who we are now, informing it in ways both visible and not, and that we are not, in fact, immutable, but always changing, buffeted and shaped by those people and events we draw into our lives.

I never thought I’d compare oxbow lakes to pentimento, bring geography and art history into close adjacency, but the echo seems impossible to ignore now.  As I wrote in January, “As moving water marks the earth, so does time mark our spirits. Minutes add up to months, and months add up to our lives. And as they do, they indelibly shape and mark us.”  And that passage is visible, if we look closely, underneath the surface of each of us.

Grandeur and terror

(the streak of an airplane in the gloaming, observed by Grace on our new tradition, the Noticing Things Evening Walk)

Yesterday morning I attended a talk by Jon and Myla Kabat-Zinn at Grace and Whit’s school.  Having read and enjoyed Jon and Myla’s book, Everyday Blessings, I was eager to hear them in person.

Jon and Myla spoke for about an hour about mindful parenting and led the group through some very short meditation exercises.  Much of what they talk about – engaging in this moment right now, the primacy of living in the life we already have, and honoring the everyday – is familiar to me.  Despite how intimately I know the importance of these practices and the value of this way of being in the world, I still find it very difficult.

At one point Jon asked us to close our eyes and turn our awareness to our bodies, to the feel of our physical selves in space, on our chairs, in this room.  I closed my eyes and felt my right hip aching, felt the slight tightness in my chest because my breath was not deep enough, felt the hairs on my arm as imperceptible currents moved through the room.

Jon went on, asking us to hear the silence, and Philip Larkin’s lines leapt to my mind: “And sense the solving emptiness/ that lies just under all we do.”  Couldn’t that emptiness also be read as the silence Jon urged us to listen to?  The silence that is there all the time, underneath, supporting all of the rest of our life’s chaos.  Beneath all of the frantic attempts to avoid the awareness, beneath the noisy thinking that distracts, beneath the shuttling between past and future to avoid staring into the sun of the present: silence.

It occurred to me, not for the first time, that awareness is not my problem – if anything I’m too aware, too porous, too open to all of the world’s input and stimulus.  What I’ve been wondering all day is if I developed my distracting monkey brain as a way of escaping the intensity of this awareness.  Is thinking, for me, a way of avoiding feeling?  I am instinctively, naturally aware – hyper, incredibly, viscerally aware.  Maybe my life has been a series of exercises to try to circumvent the sharpness that this awareness can bring.  Of course this awareness carries tremendous gifts, soaring joy and feeling so strong I feel I might burst.  But it also trails with it sadness, and loneliness, and the brutal, inescapable truth of impermanence.

I’m so fortunate to have thoughtful, engaged readers, and one of my favorite things is hearing from you.  At least ten times, and probably more, individual people have sent me (in comments and in personal emails) the same passage by T. S. Eliot.  The frequency with which I receive it cannot be dismissed as random coincidence.  It’s more like a chorus from the universe, and thank you to all of you who have participated in its chant.

The passage has long been one I’ve loved, too, but today I heard it a new way.  Once again, you all knew something before I did: my journey, chronicled here in such exhausting detail, is just back to where I started.  What I am doing is chronicling my slow, halting, back-and-forth circling back to the very place I came from.  It’s to learning to live with – even embrace – the grandeur and terror that comes of the sensitivity and awareness that is an essential part of who I have always been.

We shall not cease from exploration.
And the end of all our exploring.
Will be to arrive where we started.
And know the place for the first time.

(T.S. Eliot, Four Quartets)

Lighthouses

I have always loved lighthouses.  The lighthouse above, Bird Island Light, outside Marion harbor, is my favorite of all.

I can’t decide if lighthouses are adjunct to maps or their antithesis.  Either way, they help us navigate.  Lighthouses orient travelers as they make their way through parts unknown. Lighthouses often stand, alone and proud, on isolated points of land or islands.  They warn of treacherous rocks.  Lighthouses keep us safe, even in the storm.

Like the stars, they are still points of light in the otherwise impenetrable darkness.  Lights that tell us where we are.

I love what lighthouses represent: steadfastness, sureness, orientation, protection.  I was with some of my lighthouses this weekend. There are a few other people and places that have this effect on me, and I prize them all.

Who – and what – are your lighthouses?

What if my sensitivity is the road home?

I wanted her to see that the only life worth living is a life full of love; that loss is always part of the equation; that love and loss conjoined are the best opportunity we get to live fully, to be our strongest, our most compassionate, our most graceful selves.
-Pam Houston

I was thinking this weekend of the universality of sadness, of the inescapable fact that the sunshine of every life is mottled with shadow.  I think the thing that varies is our sensitivity to the shadow.  Some of us are just feel more keenly the loss that is always part of the deal.  Some of us are more prone to shadow than sun.  Some of us have a narrow but deep moat of loneliness around our hearts which is uncrossable by anyone else.

I love Pam Houston’s confident assertion that this awareness of loss lends itself to strength, compassion, and grace.  I spend a lot of time worrying about what I have bequeathed to my children, through example and heredity.  Pam Houston’s words offer a stunning change of perspective and I can imagine – momentarily – that this inheritance is a gift and not a burden.  What if, as Adrienne Rich said, “her wounds came from the same source as her power”?  What if what seems like great weakness is the source of great strength?

I fret about the message I’m sending my children by not hiding from them my occasional sweeping sorrow.  Sure, there are days I act happy when I feel blue.  And of course there are genuinely joyful days, many, many of them.  But there are also days where my eyes unexpectedly fill with tears and when they ask why I explain, quietly, that the world is making me sad.  I just re-read my words about a particularly sad weekend Grace had last winter and cried, again, struck by the fact that already, at seven, she has the self-awareness to say “I’m just sad, Mum.”  Actually it’s more than the awareness that strikes me: she has the propensity to be just sad in the first place, and this is clearly part of the legacy I leave her.  I often feel soggy with guilt about it.

Grace and Whit both witness and inherit my melancholy leanings, though so far Grace exhibits them much more frequently.  I have decided, personally, that to teach them to honor and accept all of their feelings, even the difficult ones, is more important than to put on a happy face all the time.  Of course, I am not sure I’d actually be able to fake it, so it might be convenient to call this a “decision.”  But I do believe that helping my children to recognize their strong emotions, even sadness and anger, is an important thing for me to do.  I also think there is great power in learning that one can be thoroughly tossed around in emotional whitewater and still come out the other side, spluttering, maybe, with sand in your pants, but still, standing.

In fact the words I wrote in July (in my musing on whitewater) seem to echo Pam Houston’s gorgeous lines (though less elegantly):

I know the terms I want to live my life by start with compassion and empathy and kindness, and that they include a deep need to honor the reality, savage and beautiful as it is, of my life.

It makes me sigh with comfort to weave together my own definition of what matters most and Pam Houston’s belief that awareness of loss can contribute to a fully-lived life.  It only comes in passing, this profoundly reassuring sense that my sensitivity, which marks how I approach everything, could be, in fact, my road home.  But in those moments I feel grateful and calm: maybe Grace and Whit can take what they learn from me and use it to be strong, and compassionate, and full of grace.

I do want my children to learn that the best lives are full of love, and that loss is part of the deal – I believe both of those things as firmly as I believe anything.  If I can do anything to help Grace and Whit believe this, through my example, my genetic material, or my direct teaching, then I will have done some good in the world.  Of that I am sure.

What you see is what you get

I’ve written often of the sometimes-stealthy ways that the universe communicates with me: words that rise, unbidden, into my head, songs that seem to always be on the radio, conversations with friends who speak to a certain thing I hadn’t even realized was concerning me.  Today I was looking through my bookcase in the living room, a room I seldom sit in.  I noticed a book on the bottom shelf, between Feminisms:An Anthology of Literary Theory and Criticism and Christiane Northrup’s Mother-Daughter Wisdom: The Art of the Personal Essay, selected and introduced by Phillip Lopate.  I have no memory of this book whatsoever.

I opened it to find that it was from my dear Jessica, for my 22nd birthday.  1996.  I had just graduated from college and was about to start my first job, in strategy consulting.  And her inscription read:

Happy 22nd birthday, Lindsey – and happy 10th year anniversary of friendship!  To read when you’re tired of all that consulting; a reminder of your true calling.  I love you.  xox Jess

Tears filled my eyes and a swell of gratitude tightened my chest.  Someone had known all along that this – whatever you call this, what I do here, what I do in Word, what I do in my head all the time – was my calling.  And someone whose opinion – and whose writing! – I esteem so incredibly highly, too.  One of my true kindred friends, a native speaker, a steady and solid part of my life.  I may have wandered for years – I’m still wandering – in another sphere of the world (business) but I’m not crazy to feel a tug back to writing.  This is not insane, and it is not new, and it is not fabricated out of thin air.  Someone who really knows me has always known this.

What a relief that was: seen, understood, known.  Thank you, Jess.

Then I opened the book, scanned the table of contents, and flipped quickly Annie Dillard’s essay Seeing.  The words are familiar, some of the images etched in my memory, ones I return to.  But somehow, despite knowing the piece, I had forgotten this line, which seemed to both emanate from and pierce some deep part of me:

What you see is what you get.

An adage that we repeat to our children, over and over, through gritted teeth, willing them not to have a tantrum of dissatisfaction.  But so much more, too.

What you see is what you get.

That’s what this is all about, isn’t it?  This blog, this writing … I return again and again to the effort to pay attention.  To the belief, faint or foolish hope, that by really seeing I can somehow better cope with time’s relentless passage.  I don’t think I’m trying to stop time, anymore, but maybe what I’m trying to do is to capture the intense vividness of some of the moments.  That in doing that I both experience them more fully and create a cache, a store, that I can return to (Wordsworth’s “life and food for future years”).

If we don’t see our lives, in all of their gore and grandeur, mundane moments and startles of joy, we don’t really have them.  We all know this, I suspect, and it’s just a question of how hard we find it to stare into the sun, how attuned to the loss that underlies every single moment on earth.

This has been a day of weird weather, restless winds, a big branch falling unexpectedly from the tree right outside my window. It’s definitely fall and the streets and spattered with wet orange leaves, but it’s hot, summer-humid.  We are caught on the fulcrum between the seasons.  The storm portended by the day’s meteorology echoes inside of me, and I feel gusty, blown off course.  The words of both my dear friend and Annie Dillard provide a still point, however fleeting, and a reminder of what it is I am doing here.