Courtesy and Grief

I apologize for two blog posts in one week. It’s not my intention to hog emails or feeds. But sometimes emotions flow over into words.

Those of you who have been through cancer treatments understand what fatigue means.

For those who haven’t, it’s not that you’re tired. Or even exhausted. It’s a bone-deep sense of collapse. You can’t stand. You struggle to draw in breath. It’s also soul-deep grief.

What doctors don’t tell you is that the grief part rarely goes away. It’s always there, and bubbles up at odd times. I call them ‘blue days’. It doesn’t mean the world is awful or life is terrible, or you’re depressed, or something bad has happened. It’s just there, and you have a day of being teary and keeping it to yourself because there’s no explanation that anyone will understand.

Because there is no explanation.

So over the days and months and years, you learn what helps.

Oddly enough, for me, it’s a hot tub I swore I would never use when my husband bought it. After all, isn’t it the same as a bathtub? Was I ever wrong.

When I have those blue days, or long days at work, or stress, or the right words won’t come in the current story, out I go. Black night. Sometimes bright stars, sometimes rain pattering on the water or snow falling. Hot water in a dark tub. You float, and it becomes womb-like. Everything seeps away and you just be. You can breathe. Tears go back where they came from. You leave able to function and be happy and see the joy in the world and push those awful blue gremlins away.

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I’m not the only one who enjoys the hot tub

We lived a long time with no neighbors. Now we have one, but it’s been okay because he only comes up a few weekends out of the year. This was one. And when he left, he’d installed a bright yard light.

It’s on all night. We don’t have to turn on a light if we get up in the middle of the night.

And when I sit in the hot tub I’m in a spot light.

Yes, I’m going to contact him and ask if he can put the light on a motion sensor.

But here’s the thing. Don’t people have compassion, or empathy, or consideration anymore? I see this type of thing more and more. What would it have cost him to come over and let us know what he was planning and ask our opinion? Not that he needs our permission, obviously.

When we moved in I planted two Japanese maple trees in our front yard. Because that bed bordered the neighbor’s property line, I asked him if he minded. Told him what size the trees would get, where roots might go. Made sure he was okay with the planting. Common courtesy. This is the same neighbor.

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I’m not sure what we’ll do if he doesn’t change the light. Most likely I’ll ask my husband to research fence permits to see about building our fence higher. That would block the light.

It would also block the mountains and the stars.

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The logical side of me knows there are far more terrible things in the world, and worse problems we could have, and it’s silly to get upset over a just a light. But that little blue gremlin inside is wide awake.

And there’s no womb to push it away.

Tomorrow I’ll be fine.

Actually, tomorrow I’ll probably be pissed and looking into county codes and restrictions on light pollution and drafting polite, but firm, nasty letters in my brain.

Roses in Winter

Last week at a local business, I noticed that the wild roses in their landscaping still had rose hips. I asked if I could steal a few and the woman said ‘oh, making tea!’. Most hips were gone (I suspect a certain employee) but I came away with a few.

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I have one rose that leaves behind a lovely sized hip after the roses are done, but right now they are still green. A couple years ago we ordered roses and received a free one as a gift. The free one is four times the size of the ones we bought, starts blooming first and stops last, and gives those wonderful rose hips. I imagine it’s so prolific because it’s apologizing for being the freebie no one wanted. We love it.

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Did you know roses are related to apples? Not only in the same family, but think about a rose hip – don’t they look like little apples?

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See the hip forming at the base of that bud?

Rose hips are extremely high in vitamin C. During World War II, oranges couldn’t be exported to Britain so people dried rose hips and made a National Rose Hip Syrup for all the children to keep them healthy.

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You can’t eat the seeds within the hip, but the hip itself can be eaten straight off the bush, or dried. Just make sure you slice the hip and de-seed it. I’m in the process of drying the few I picked last week.

They’re easy to pick. Just give them a gentle twist off the branch. This leaves a little hole at the top and you can see the seeds inside. The hole will help them dry nicely. The ones I just picked came with a tiny little spider. I had to find a safe place to put it because our kitten was very interested.

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A nice, healthy tea in the winter when all your friends are spreading cold germs your way is to mix dried rose petals, hips, and mint. I wonder what chamomile would be like added to that? Maybe a little honey, or passion flower. Or lemon balm. My lemon balm plant is huge and prolific.

And I read about a rose hip jam you can make, if you have enough hips. Once they are dry and de-seeded, grind them in a coffee grinder. Mix that powder with apple cider or apple juice to make a jam-consistency paste and use it like you would any jam. Sounds like some people also add spices like cinnamon or vanilla, and one place I saw said to try mixing the powder with raspberry juice.

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All of this makes me think ahead to summer. I’m going to try drying rose petals. And in the fall I’m going to go back to that local business before the employee gets out there. And I’ll watch for wild roses like we used to have at our previous home.

Now that I think about it, a good friend of mine planted rugosa roses a few years ago to make a hedge. Might have to visit her next fall.

On this dreary rain-and-snow-mixed day, it’s nice to sip rose and mint tea and think about the flowers to come.

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Dance Wherever You May Be

Do you ever look back at your life and think, if I’d gone in that direction, where would I be now?

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I can see one such fork in the path in my past. My best friend asked me to move in with her and share an apartment in the city. At the time I didn’t think I made enough money so I said no. If I had moved in to that apartment, I wouldn’t have ended up in the mountains. So very many things would have turned out different. I also wonder how many things would have turned out different for her, if I’d said yes.

Recently I was encouraging my son to look at different job options. He’s been applying all over for work but not having much luck. The words that left my mouth were along the lines of ‘stop-gap’ jobs, some money is better than none, you have bills to pay. Of course all those words were related to just one word – responsibility.

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And of course they were words he already knew.

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He told me later that he was going to have to quit school. He didn’t want to take on student debt, but he couldn’t afford the university, plus save for overseas trips he was going to have to take as a result of his courses, plus pay his bills. I told him we’d talk more when we met for lunch.

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A few hours later, it hit me.

In 1977 I was looking at what elective classes I had to take in my senior year. I wanted to take creative writing. I dreamed of being a writer. Not just a writer, but published. Only a few people at that time knew I wrote secretly. Voraciously. My mother talked me into taking a beauty school class.

Her arguments were persuasive. A job as soon as I graduated. A job I could ‘always fall back on’. A job that ‘would hold me over’. Plus I’d save the family money because they wouldn’t have to pay to get haircuts. And if I ever married or had kids, we’d save money there, too.

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I took the expected path. And wrote secretly for another twenty years.

Everything I’d just said to my son was a repeat of history – pushing him down the path of responsibility. Pushing him away from his dreams.

Shouldn’t we be able to dream until we learn the reality on our own?

Shouldn’t we be able to hold on to those dreams as long as possible?

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The problem has always been balancing the dreams with the responsibilities of life.

The problem is when there’s two paths to take, that middle ground is open territory with no trail. You’re bushwhacking with no compass. So most of us stick to the path, whichever it is and wherever it takes us.

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I want my son to pay his bills, to have benefits, to have financial security.

But the thing is, I want him to follow his dreams, too.

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All those paths before us. Do you remember when the roads forked before you? Can you pinpoint a time when you went in one direction, and what happened because of that choice?

I don’t regret where life landed me because of the path I took.

But I regret those twenty years.

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