Three Strands of Pearls and a Point of Light

My maternal grandmother died when I was 10. My younger brother, in his grief and also wishing to comfort my mother, stayed home from school. Not I. Perfect attendance was held in high esteem in our family. Remembering that Grandma had a custom of awarding a dollar to each of us with perfect attendance, I boarded the school bus and soldiered on.

Today is a day of mourning. Government facilities are closed. That being the case, seven of my eight stores are closed. I will be working – in my jeans and three strands of pearls – paltry though they be.

Both mourning and celebration of life well-lived are remembrance. I will hoist the flag. I will lower it to half-mast. I will remember. I will wear pearls. I will be a point of light.

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Art is Where You Find It

I left Page before noon yesterday to drive two and a half hours for a symphony concert. Why? Because Flagstaff is the closest place I could find the preforming art I was craving. If you are going to take care of yourself, love yourself , date yourself: you need to do it right – you know – the way you want to be loved and cared for. So I booked a room. Next time I’ll court myself better and cater to my taste. A bit more luxury for a few more dollars would be well spent. I took myself out to dinner before the ballet. The dining room was full. Being single – I was seated at the full service bar. I chose the salmon. It was worth it. I was worth it. So I ordered desert as well. Seated right next to me was a handsome friendly couple who engaged me in conversation. He is a metal artist originally from the east coast. She originated in San Francisco. They’ve been involved in the Sedona art scene for more than two decades. He had a show in this very bar and grill not too many months ago. Art is where you find it – serendipitously. I put several miles on my feet yesterday walking around and acquainting myself with Flagstaff and the NAU campus. I prefer wilderness miles to concrete miles, but sometimes we have to make a compromise to enjoy a bit of Tchaikovsky. Hoping for a closer view of the art of nature in the great outdoors today. Maybe some hiking boot miles.

Art is where you find it. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Most recently I stepped into the women’s restroom at work and noticed a bit of art in progress. An antique safe – now surrounded by the modern fixtures of a code-worthy washroom – is currently housing archived paperwork. One of our employees has been stripping the many layers of paint from the vault door resulting in a beautiful backdrop. Art is where you find it.

I really bring out the silver tones in this old safe
I really bring out the silver tones in this old safe

Poverty and Lies and My Crusty Solution to World Hunger

Poverty and lies, I am not a stranger to either. They seem to go hand in hand. I hate them both. Yes, the poor we will always have with us – and apparently the lies.

“I just need a little gas money.”

“They could help themselves if they would”

“Can you give me some money for a burger?”

“He is only asking for money to spend on alcohol”

“They just need to stop begging and get a job.”

When I lived in Texas, I was no stranger to poverty myself. I was not homeless, I did have a roof over my head, but for an extended period of years, there was no money for food, no money to pay bills. When headed across the parking lot in the course of my weekly venture to downtown Dallas, I was often met with an appeal for money, “please, can you spare some change so I can eat?” In those days, it was no lie for me to respond, “I am sorry, I have nothing.” The part about being sorry was just as true as the part about having no money. I am a fixer. I am a caretaker. I wanted a solution to world hunger – mine and theirs. From my meager food supply, I began to carry cans of food in the car so I could share with others in need. The first time I handed out a can, the man cursed me, “I asked for money,” he spat, “what am I going to do with this?”

Over the intervening decades, some panhandlers have grown more honest.

There was the placard of an intersection beggar in Denver, “I won’t lie, I need a beer” And spoken requests, “do you have a nickel or two? I need a drink.”

I too, have grown. I am more self-sufficient, financially stable. I still want to fix and care and solve. But more importantly, I can no longer look the other way. I can no longer say, “I have no money.” If I am to remain honest, I must look them in the eye and either give or refuse. No lies. No excuses.

I have moved on from carrying canned goods in the car. Rarely, rarely will I give cash or coin. Usually my help consists of an apple or banana from groceries just purchased, a cold bottle of water on an extreme temperature day.

Since moving to Northern Arizona, I have experienced yet another type of panhandler. While traveling through Kayenta, I have had jewelry vendors wedge themselves between me and the gas pump trying to sell me a necklace. Another, refusing to take my first no for money, thrust his head in the car door with mine when I leaned in to get an apple and continued with a fabricated story about being hungry because his friends left him in the desert without a ride. Exasperated I said, “You need to get yourself some new friends.” I handed him the apple. I don’t stop for gas in Kayenta anymore.

The same role that supports me and makes me financially stable, also requires that I be able to say no on a regular basis. I am the buyer of merchandise for eight stores, each with a specific theme. I must be friendly and firm. “Nice product, but it does not meet our interpretive needs.” “Creative book title, I can tell you have put in many hours. This will not pass the approval process.” “Thank you for your time today, but, no, I do not want to buy your product.”

As much as is in me, I want to be honest. And I expect, in return, honesty from my vendors. When you find a large, nationally known company has misrepresented and played you false, you simply cease to do business with them. The same goes for local artists. A sad story may hit a soft spot with me individually, but it must not make me waver with company money. It will do a vendor no good to pressure me, “you said you would buy from me this time.” No. I did not. The approval process is still the approval process and you have just proved yourself a liar. Once, I heard this plaintive request, “Can’t you just buy something? We would like to go out to dinner before we go home!” So would I, jewelry vendor, so would I.

Have I grown crusty? Last Tuesday midmorning I ran an errand to Walmart for store supplies. As I stowed the bags in the back seat, I was approached by a clean-cut man in neat T-shirt, jeans and sneakers. “Please ma’am,” he began, “can you help us out with a little money? My wife and I, we’d like to have a bite to eat at Jack in the Box before we head out of town.”

“How are you getting back home?”

“Hitch hiking.” Fair enough. We are right on the highway.

“I see. Why Jack in the Box? It’s across the highway. MacDonald’s is right there, at the edge of the parking lot.”

“Tell you what,” I continued, “I’ll drive over to MacDonald’s and get you a burger and bring it to you at the edge of the parking lot.”

“Okay,” he said, “I’ll watch for your car.”

I ordered two quarter pounders and a tall cup of water. I paid at the first window. I picked up at the second window. I handed the bag and the water out the window 20 feet later where the couple stood waiting for my curbside service. I returned to the office, to my work of selling and buying.

Three hours later a jewelry vendor entered the store asking for me, “You said to come back this week.” What I actually said was I was not making appointments until this week. Nevertheless, I arranged to see her wares immediately. There was nothing of design or quality I needed and I told her so as courteously as possible. She countered with, “That woman who was here before you used to buy from me.” I still said no.

At least she could not opine, “But we are hungry, can’t you just buy something?” It was the woman of the same couple I had fed a few hours earlier.

When Sunday restores the soul

Do you take a regular day off each week? One out of seven? Two out of seven? What do you do with that day off, totally off?

I grew up in a home that went beyond luxuriating in Sunday as a day of relaxation. My family of origin enforced Sunday as a day of rest. No sports. No games. No reading of secular material. Just attendance at Sunday School and Church, preparation and cleanup of a large family meal. Yes, Sunday was an enforced day of rest and as such, a day marked by ennui, often headachy, making me squirm with a longing to get something done.

These days I am still prone to that extreme of getting something done. There are always things that somebody has got to do. If I don’t do them, who will? I am guilty of checking things off the list at the expense of not taking a day – not even one of seven – for rest. My soul shrivels. My vision is constricted.

My spirits were on the brink of shriveling when I woke in a motel room, 200 miles from home, having successfully completed a vendor fair the evening before. Nothing to do? No excuse for not taking a day of rest.

Posey Lake is 18 miles up the Hell’s Backbone Road from Escalante. It was mid-September and the colors, oh the colors, were glorious!

IMG_2379poseylakeOnce I got to the lake, I sat on the boat dock for some minutes, just wasting time. Then, I did the logical thing and took a hike all the way around the lake, startling myself and cattle along the way. Once on the other side, I noticed a trail leading to a lookout. However steep, who can resist a trail? A trail leading to a CCC built fire lookout in Dixie National Forest? Even more delectable.

At first, I took only pictures. The aspens and the conifers were ravishingly colorful.

IMG_2384tallredaspenThen, a few more paces along the trail and I began to shed the layers of photographer, writer, or analytical business woman. With wild abandon, I went on a tree-hugging spree. I sniffed out a Ponderosa (searching for that faint vanilla). I hugged the ponderosa. Then I hugged an aspen. Then a very young blue spruce. And finally I ended up in the arms of an Englemann.

And, at the top, at the lookout, I found an entire colorful panorama stretching for hundreds of miles.

It was Sunday. I had a day off. A day to relax. A day for spiritual renewal. I went further up the mountain.

And my soul, o my soul, was refreshed

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Backpacking across airports

Preparing to travel for work is a lot like planning to hike in the early morning. I skipped my morning walk in order to make my flight. But I didn’t miss out on exercise, no. I packed my carryon and personal items carefully so as to have everything necessary at hand. Just like a planned hike, I charted my course the night before, discarding what I didn’t need for this trip and adding items unique to planned activities. No camp stove. No fuel. Yes to the layers. Yes to only one laptop. With not so much as a lipstick duplicated, I traveled without excess baggage.

I strapped on my hiking sandals in preparation for a fast walk between terminals.

My electronics and usual purse contents were stowed in my laptop backpack. Clothes and toiletries in my carefully, linear measured roller bag. No checked baggage for me. I knew I would have to make a run for it in Phoenix to catch the direct connection to Orlando.

But pockets! Where are the pockets? Why does business casual dress code translate to no pockets for a woman? No pockets in my short pencil skirts and no pockets in skinny dress pants and no pockets in collared and scarved suitable tops. If this was truly a hiking trip, there would be pockets. A deep pocket for my cellphone / camera. A pocket for my keys. A zippered pocket for my credit card. A hidden pocket for my ID. What distresses me is, I didn’t notice this lack of pockets until after I parked my car at the airport and felt for somewhere to stow the keys, cell phone and boarding pass. If this really was a hiking trip, there would be bandanas – several bandanas. With bandanas I could be innovative. If this were a real hiking trip I would know that my snack food was in the upper pouch of my backpack and my emergency provisions were deep in the bag. Furthermore, I wouldn’t have to pull out my shampoo and other toiletries and food at every checkpoint. I wouldn’t have to take off my shoes and go barefoot through security.

Still thinking myself a savvy traveler despite the omission of pockets, I strode confidently forward.

At least I am wearing my hiking sandals – the ones I normally slosh right on through shallow washes and creeks in, and they come quickly off at each checkpoint.

In Phoenix all my well-laid plans and preparation were foiled. The airline changed the boarding gate on me, thus nullifying my pre-boarding pass and my pre-screening security pass and entailing another 3 quarters of a mile hike and yet another pass through high security – and yes, for some reason I was also treated to the wand and a pat down, which further delayed. By the time I reached the gate that bird had flown.

I put a lot of miles on my feet that day, but when I arrived in Philadelphia at 9:00 pm – which was plan “C” or “D,” or maybe even “E,” I arrived without baggage. Does that ever happen on an outdoor hiking trip? Oh, you may lay your bag at the side of the trail when you walk off to water a tree, but you pick it back up when you find the trail. Or if you forget, you notice quite soon and trudge back for it (I once hiked an extra mile each way for a camera that slipped out – but that is another story). Some of you will chide that I should never let it leave my hand. But in Phoenix, as I boarded a full plane for Philadelphia where I had never planned to go – with the eighth group – all our roller bags were taken from us – mandatory – and checked on through to our final destination. Sometimes you really can’t take it with you.

But I did have a coat – backpacking has taught me something. Even though I was booked directly to Florida, I had stuff-sacked my down jacket into the last remaining space beside my MacAir. For that, I was thankful at 4:00 am the next morning. The lack of toothbrush, I could circumvent, but what to do with the contacts during a needed sleep? If I had my hiking daypack, I would have my contact lens case. It fits right in there with the extra pair of dry socks and the matches. Once again, preparation for a fourteener differs from airport backpacking. My contact lens case had checked on through to Florida with my shampoo and all my clothes and underwear.

If you must know, I slept in a hotel towel. I rose the next morning and popped my contacts back in, moistened only by water. I arrived back at the airport at 5:00 am – 2:00 am back home. I successfully landed in Florida and arrived at the hotel precisely 24 hours later than planned. My bag, with all the pocketless business casual items arrived an additional 24 hours later. But it did arrive! And I did make it home five days later without a hiccup. I even successfully caught my first Uber to the airport and gate checked my roller bag for the final leg in order to bring home freebies from the gathering to the waiting office staff.

But what do I prefer? I prefer the 11- mile hikes into red sandstone or cool lakes and conifers. I think I’ll keep my feet on the ground for awhile.

The headwaters of the Everglades? That will do for a morning walk
The headwaters of the Everglades? That will do for a morning walk.

I almost forgot to walk

Loosing one’s memory is a possibility we approach with trepidation. We want to keep our memories – the good ones, anyway – as long as possible. Proper exercise, we are told, is one of the actions we can take to combat the onslaught of loosing as we age. Besides the practical advantages of exercise; I love a hike in the great outdoors. Nothing restores me better.

I was traveling for work again. Calling on the far flung stores. Face to facing with staff. Hearing their needs and concerns. Delivering new interpretive merchandise.

It is monsoon season, so I was taking the long way around. Part of the road on my favorite commute has washed out, but a good portion of the long route lies up Scenic Highway 12, so there is no lack of beauty.

As I neared the trailhead for Mossy Cave, I slowed, noted the full parking lot, checked my watch and hurried forward to Cannonville and Escalante. I did take time to fill the gasoline tank in Tropic and to take an arpeggiatic run on the piano in front of Clark’s – but I did this standing up – without alighting on the piano stool.

By lunchtime I was finished with Cannonville. A couple hours spent at Escalante and I was on the return road by 3:30 pm my time (4:30 local). “How excellent,” I thought, “I will make it home before dark.”

It pains me that I almost forgot to stop. A wakeup call. I frequently drive two hours on a weekend just to get to cooler temperatures and beautiful hiking places. Yet, I almost maintained speed right by one of the most beautiful sections in the state of Utah – in order to make it home before dark. Stress, you know. The to-do list instead of the HooDoo list. Workaholism at its most insidious. Could it be that I am now immune to the magnetism of National Parks?

Just in time I reminded myself that I am not domiciled in Page AZ simply because there is mound after mound of office work to be done. One can find mounds of office work anywhere. I am here specifically for working closely with National Parks and reveling 24 X 7 in beautiful places.

I stopped. I hiked. I was refreshed. My mission is renewed.

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Deliberate Fun

Deliberate Fun

Does that sound like an oxymoron? Kind of like enforced holiday?

Let me ask another question. Are you an inspired and spontaneous creative? Or are you a plodder? Or, maybe like me, a balanced combination of both – until you lose that ever so finely tuned balance. Some unexpected event drains you dry, saps your adrenaline, spins you off the wagon and back into workaholism. You keep putting one foot in front of the other, you consistently work late to get things done, but you are no longer finding joy in it

I have a boss who encourages, “Do whatever you need to do to take care of yourself.” He is far from laissez faire when he says this. What he is doing is giving each of us on the administrative team responsibility for our own health; our mental, emotional and physical wellbeing.

Sometimes working late IS self-care. I may need to complete a project so it doesn’t keep me awake at night. Perhaps I need to stay and make extra preparation ahead so that I don’t go into a special event rattled at the onset.

Other times, I have to insist of myself that I go home on time; that I recreate, that I pursue a change of pace. It was one of those weekends.

My regular five workdays included a 12-hour delivery day calling on far-flung stores. The previous week encompassed six days on and only Sunday off. I was beginning to feel the weariness. The joy and energy were wearing thin. So, like it or not; projects waiting or not, it was high time for a change of pace.

When I insist on deliberate fun, I am often reminded of a scene in “The Grapes of Wrath” and the uncle who took his drunk deliberately – like a medicine – without any enjoyment – just because it had to be done.

The thing is, deliberate doesn’t feel like fun at first. I didn’t feel like packing the car for an overnight trip. I didn’t feel like making a two-hour drive. I was fearful of getting out of signal range. What if someone called? What if I got an important email? What if someone needed me? What if the world came to an end and I wasn’t there to, to, to, to what?

I packed the car. I drove. I found a campsite. I walked in the forest. I cooked on my pocket stove. I hiked to the top of a mountain.

And then, wonder of wonders, deliberate fun turned into relaxation, peace, a new mindset, a fresh perspective.

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Mountains, Music and Motorcycles

More often than not, the novels I write contain three spices added to the plot: mountains, a motorcycle and music. I muse on that now, in early August.

I am heartily tired of motorcycles this morning. More than enough of them passed me unsafely on the highway yesterday. Harleys all, with on-coming traffic, encroaching on the beginnings of no-passing zones, sharing my lane because they are skinny and I have moved over, catching up with their buddies oblivious to numerous approaching semis and king cabs – all vehicles traveling 10 mph over the speed limit. Men, have you forgotten how fragile your bones really are?

As for music, I will never quit on my music. I am married to my music. How do I know? – I am much too busy to spend more than an hour each evening with my Music. After all, I gave at the office. Oh, I do still take Music out for special occasions. And I never, never would quit on my music.

But the mountains, ah, the mountains. Sigh. I could have chosen a route straight up Highway 191 and never left the desert. It was hot and smoky in Page and it will be hot and smoky in Grand Junction. With little change in the scenery but in the names of the stratigraphic layers of sandstone, I could have made my journey in about 6 and a half hours. But no, I had to alter my route, break my travel at 8,000 feet. In the San Juan Forest. In the mountains. In the conifers. In a cabin. By a bubbling creek.

About ten miles north of Cortez the mountains reached out and stole my heart – again. I was sick with love. My heart yearned for the hundreds of acres and beautiful homes I passed-many with for sale signs. I rued the fact that I don’t make enough to purchase – not even a little postage stamp – in such a beautiful place.

And then I arrived at my destination and my heart was stilled. A cabin. A gurgling river. Englemanns and Spruce and Ponderosa and Pine. Firewood chopped and waiting. A fire ring. But do I remember how to relax? We shall soon find out. A trail awaits tomorrow.

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Nature Brings Me Flowers

You don’t bring me flowers;

You don’t sing me love songs; . . .

You don’t bring me flowers anymore. (Diamond/Bergman)

Wild flower season at Cedar Breaks National Monument
Wild flower season at Cedar Breaks National Monument

I love to get outside in Nature. I don’t know if there is anything I love better than a long hike in a beautiful place. Let me name a few: Crag Crest, O Be Joyful, Bear Creek, Hanging Lake, Angel’s Landing; the list is long.

On the day these photos were taken, it was Ramparts Overlook in Cedar Breaks. I love Nature because Nature loves me back. Nature is harsh, you will say. Nature is cruel. In fact, Nature can kill you. I will not deny it. But, think about it for a moment, Love – or rather what you did for love or what you would do for love- is sometimes harsh and Love is sometimes cruel, but Love is the solid bedrock of everything we hold dear as a society – and my love affair with Nature is a foundation that keeps me healthy physically as well as emotionally, mentally and spiritually.

Let me ask you, would you rather die outside in a beautiful place by the hand of Nature or in a heap of twisted metal in the city? What are the odds? I’ll stack the odds in favor of Nature. I’ll keep getting out there. Nature, rather than commerce and metro traffic, shall decide when it is my time to go.

Would you rather be in a sterile gray hospital room when they pull the plug and you breathe your last, or would you rather be struck by lightning on a green, rocky, stairway to heaven? I’ll choose lightning.

I was made from dust and to dust I shall return. Ashes to ashes, dust to dust. I’ll trust Nature. Nature loves me back. Nature brings me flowers.

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There is a marmot in the tree
There is a marmot in the tree

Too Hot To Hike

“It’s so beautiful,” They told me before I moved here. “Think of the lake and the red rocks!” Yes. The desert has its own kind of beauty even to one accustomed to pine trees and aspens. Undeniably such a large volume of water right in the midst of the desert is a thing of wonder. It is beautiful. But it is hot. So hot that a coveted morning hike turns into merely a walk that must be taken before 6:00 am. So rocky and barren I must drive an hour or two to find a shady canyon in which to stretch my legs on the weekend.

What do you do to pick yourself up when you are down? When you are blue, how do you make yourself feel better? If you are agitated, how do you calm yourself? How do you engage in self care – manage your mental and emotional health?

Making ourselves feel better is how we cope. What is your coping mechanism? Do you gravitate toward a crowd? Have a cigarette? Music? Sex? What makes you feel all better? How we cope can become an addition. Who doesn’t want to feel better all the time? I do. So when I feel myself ready to drop into that downward spiral, I walk. I run out the door and hit the trail. But it is hot. Too hot to hike.

Having once discovered the piñon-pine forests of Navajo National Monument (established 1909), I returned again to hike all the short trails and snap more photos. The most popular of the short trails will take you to an overlook from which you can see Betakin in the distance. A second trail descends down the side of an inverted mountain. Beginning at 7,000 feet, the inverted mountain goes down, down to where the canyon floor hosts similar flora to that normally found high up a mountainside – an aspen forest and conifer trees. It was cooler here and with a more regular source of moisture. It has to be to grow aspen trees. This type of canyon is situated such that parts of it never see the sun. So narrow one of the sides is always in the shade. The snow is slow to melt.

And suddenly, I knew the answer to the oft asked question as to why the Anasazi were cliff dwellers rather than living up top where it appears life would have been easier-less precipitous. And now, I understand why certain folks mourn the loss of Glen Canyon as was, and want to drain Lake Powell.

It is too hot to hike – except in lush, deep, narrow canyons.

Betakin at Navajo National Monument
Betakin at Navajo National Monument
Inverted mountain
Inverted mountain

Putting One Foot in Front of the Other, Hiking for Life!