In the barn,
Four horses stand --
Heads down, lips nibbling,
Consuming this day's portion of grain --
Their coats dull and matted,
Hip bones protruding,
Ribs exposed,
Tails chewed off.
They stand new to this barn,
This ranch.
Seized last week --
Brought here in rescue.
On the TV, politicians argue
While mothers weep.
A nation demands answers;
Our children need rescue.
Over the Internet, a young girl
Posts her private drama,
And publicly weeps.
Surely she, too, needs rescue.
Rescue siezes, storms;
Preaches, pontificates.
Points fingers;
Issues mandates.
Rescue is a knight in
Shining armor --
Sword drawn, trumpet blaring;
Heroic, but so damn shiny.
In the barn, horses eat.
A nation mourns;
A daughter cries.
Now the real work begins.
Healing feeds, refreshes.
Prays, hopes, and waits.
Brushes cockleburs from matted hair;
Dries tears from swollen faces.
Healing is an old, wrinkly woman,
Murmuring comfort,
Wise with knowing,
Smiling in her silvery glow.
Rescue sees the damage,
Fears the pain,
Feeds on the drama --
Judging, self-righteous.
Healing sees the life left,
Supports the helpers,
Rejoices in small victories --
Guarding, hopeful.
In the corral, horses drink:
Afraid to separate,
The four move together --
Survivors.
A nation screams;
Solutions shriek.
But healing whispers --
A smile, a soft song.
Kindnesses replace suspicion;
Connection pusehs away fear;
A daughter plays in the snow;
Her eyes brighten.
Healing's path winds
Backwards and forwards.
More shots ring out;
Dark days descend.
Horses recover slowly --
Weeks, months, years - sometimes never.
Broken teeth and hooves repaired;
More pain in order to heal.
Today, release for the gelding:
Turned into pasture with healthy horses --
He lingers at the gate, nickering;
Then wheels, runs free and safe.
Rescue asks why.
Seeks to save, to stem the hurt.
Healing asks how.
Seeks to change, to build the good.
Rescue is the sun;
Healing the moon.
Rescue is for now;
Healing for always.
In the barn, a new day.
Three horses stand,
Heads down, lips nibbling;
Slowly returning to life.
Friday, February 1, 2013
Thursday, November 22, 2012
Autumn 2011/Summer 2012
Parched earth, long neglected
By rain’s soft caress.
Grasses wait, tinder dry,
Longing.
Heavy gray clouds build,
Swollen with promised rain,
Then brush busily past,
To another place, another job
Behind they leave strikes of rejection,
Hot wind of loneliness,
Smoldering flame of doubt,
Reckless spark of anger.
Lightning bolts on wet ground
Die quickly.
Scorched earth carefully watched
Burns little.
But drought and storm,
Sadness and carelessness
Create an inferno that blackens
Blue skies of naiveté.
Blazes of hopelessness
Fanned by ego’s hot wind
Run along ridgetops
Out of control.
Orange flames jump
Treetop to treetop, haphazard,
Feeding hungrily on each mistake
Larger with every imperfection.
Deadfall of the past,
Left to litter the forest floor,
Now feeds the wildfire,
Creates a maelstrom of hurt and revenge.
Blame matters little
As the fire rages –
There is no control,
Only humble efforts to contain.
Time clocks, schedules,
Goals, plans, appointments –
The fire consumes the superfluous,
And burns down to the bones.
Those who battle the blaze
Lose themselves in the effort;
Surrendering ego,
They become heroic.
Fire kills -- cattle trapped in draws;
Wildlife choked by smoke;
A beloved daughter;
Innocent trust.
Also dead – pine-beetle infested forest;
Sagebrush choking out grass;
Beloved egos;
Carelessness.
Fire scars the land,
Blackens it beyond recognition;
Burns trees and buildings,
Until only sacred ground remains.
But land scarred by fire
Will resurrect:
Green meadows where once thick timber,
Simple joy where once resentment.
People threatened by flames
Breathe relief at rain’s soft kiss,
Receive each calf, each flower, each smile
Grateful for what remains.
Mineral-laden water in burning cottonwoods
Hardens to porous, gray rock.
Skin scarred by scrapes and cuts
Grows back stronger, more resilient.
Hearts scorched by fire
Emerge gray and sober;
Tested by the flames,
They grow resilient, then joyful.
In mountain forests consumed by flame,
Seeds of lodgepole pine rest in rich ground.
Exploded from cones during the inferno’s blaze,
They promise new life with the spring.
Thursday, May 31, 2012
For Laura
Today
I woke to rain and clouds, the air heavy with that damp feeling that comes
after a few days of slow drizzle; this is day three of this front, and it is
forecast to be set in for at least one more. This weekend our family will
celebrate our oldest daughter, Laura's, graduation. The rain, therefore, does
not seem a welcome thing. However, amidst all the bustle and activity, rain
feels grounding; in some ways, it's good to know that the Earth, that nature,
simply moves through its cycles despite the buzzing around that we humans do.
Family
is coming for Laura's graduation, beginning this evening and continuing through
tomorrow. And while we are glad to see them, there are undercurrents of tension
and unresolved conflict that shadow us. As I write, I worry -- will those
tensions threaten our celebration with a downpour of negativity? For Laura's
sake, I hope not. Both the experience of being the oldest of our children, and
of simply being an adult now, lend her a perception of those tensions that is
more nuanced than her siblings'; will she be worried, as well?
One
family member will not be here in body, although I know that he's always around
in that space just beyond my vision. Nineteen years ago this month, in May,
1993, my dad died of complications from emphysema. I was just three months' pregnant
with Laura. She never met him in person, though I've told all my children
enough stories of their Papa that they have some knowledge of what he is like. And
they all carry pieces of him with them, in their heritage and DNA: Laura particularly carries his intelligence
and his ability to detach from drama. I hope those gifts serve her well as she
moves into the rest of her life.
The
summer after my dad died, I attended a graduate school writing class at the
University of Montana. There, one of the projects I completed was a letter to
my unborn baby about my dad, a beginning of the stories I continued to tell
once Laura and her siblings entered our lives. Instead of saving the letter for her graduation, as intended, I gave it to her on her sixteenth birthday. While I feel bad about not saving that original letter, I also realize
that it isn't the letter I would choose to give to her now. That summer, Laura was
still unknown to me; this summer, her last with us, I know her in ways that
even she doesn't. I've spent over eighteen years watching her grow and change,
and eighteen years loving her even when she's been unloveable.
And
I have changed - immensely - in these last nineteen years as well. Parenting
changed me: both my successes and my
failures have been magnified by seeing their effects on my kids. Working in
different careers changed me: I have learned to adapt to more kinds of people
and more environments than I ever thought I would. Marriage changed me: living
with one person for over 20 years, even through the hard times, has both
humbled me and honored me. And simply growing older has changed me: just as Laura is not entirely the same person
at 18 that she was at 8, neither am I the same on the back side of 40 as I was
when I wrote the original letter at 23.
And
so, for the rest of this post, I am going to write to Laura. The original
letter was full of the same types of platitudes that she'll hear so much of
this weekend: "reach for your
goals;" "rely on your strength;" "never give up." And
while those are certainly lessons her Papa would have taught her, and lessons
that I want her to learn, there are other, simpler things he would have demonstrated
as well:
* Know what you love, and what brings you joy. Find some small way to include those things
in your life. Papa loved the land, and returned from his tour in the Korean
Conflict to work on his parents' farm; after their retirement, he worked it first
with his brother and then alone. He bought that farm, and sometimes it was
truly a monkey on his back. Particularly near the end of his life, the farm
finances were so dire that he perhaps wished it was not his responsibility. But
he still took joy from the small things the farm brought: the call of pheasants in the windbreak, the
sight of the setting sun, the seclusion of our home.
Papa also loved to travel, to
see new places. Ironic, then, that his chosen career and lifestyle kept him
married to one place. Trips were rare for our family, and never did we venture
out of state, unless for medical reasons. Still, he maintained his love of
travel and nurtured it by reading about foreign lands and peoples. It was a
small way to keep his passion alive, but I cannot picture my dad sitting down
to drink his coffee or take a breathing treatment without a book or magazine –
especially the National Geographic –
in front of him. Although he wasn’t able to actively pursue this love, he found
a way to include it; it is the same reason I garden, though I’m not a
horticulturist, or that your dad hunts, though he is not a wildlife manager.
Your music is such a passion for you now, and I hope it becomes your career;
but even if it doesn’t, remember Papa and his magazines – and don’t ever lose
that which makes you feel most alive.
* Choose your battles, but once you’ve chosen one, don’t be afraid to
fight. Papa was not a loud or boastful man, and he put up with a lot. To
some his quiet acceptance came across as weakness; however, I think he simply
knew that not every fight was worth fighting. He saw plenty of violence in
Korea; he had a reputation as a younger man for being “scrappy.” By the time he
was raising our family, he just didn’t waste his energy on conflicts that
didn’t matter. This detachment allowed him to rise above family drama, as well
as many disputes with neighbors. He didn’t have a need to be right about
everything, the way some people do. However, when a fight had meaning to him –
when his family or his land was threatened, for example –then he didn’t back
down. Whether fighting fire that threatened land and crops, or fighting the
emphysema that threatened his life, Papa didn’t give up on the important
battles.
* People are going to disappoint you; love them anyway. Because
Papa was not the oldest in his family, he was not expected to inherit the
family farm. However, his older brothers
did not want to farm; therefore, he and his younger brother first leased the
place from his parents; later, after Fritz moved away, Papa began the process
of buying the farm. Suddenly those brothers who had not wanted the farm wanted
their fair share of income from it. The situation was not fair, for multiple
reasons; still, Papa paid them what they asked, and continued to maintain a
place for them to visit and hunt when they wanted. He loved his brothers despite
what they’d done; there was no sense in holding grudges. When his dad – my
grandpa – died in 1980, after Grandma had been gone three years, the entire
family returned to our farm for the days surrounding the funeral. I remember
our house being filled with laughter and stories as Papa and his brothers
played cards until late into the evenings.
Had he held grudges – which might have been justified – Papa would have
missed out on the good times, the memories, the love of his brothers. In
forgiving them and moving on, he opened himself to the joy and healing that
occurred during that week.
* You are not perfect; nobody is. You therefore have an obligation to
be compassionate and grateful. Because of the hardships he’d faced and
surmounted, many people thought of your Papa as a hero. Particularly when he
died nineteen years ago, the stories told were of his bravery when he lost four
fingers from his right hand in a corn picker accident; his determination when
first buying the family farm and then facing the devastating farm credit crisis
of the 1980s; his quiet courage when he was diagnosed with emphysema. And it’s
true that he did possess those qualities. But he was also a man who was
addicted to tobacco, who sometimes lost his temper, who let work come before
family time. In short, he was human. One of Papa’s favorite songs was an old
gospel hymn, sung by Kris Kristofferson; although Papa was not as musical as
Grandma, he would sing along with the radio when this song came on:
“Why me, Lord? What have I ever done
To
deserve even one
Of
the treasures I’ve known?"
It was a song of great humility,
the confession of a sinner who knows that all he has is not deserved.
It was also, however, a song of
profound faith:
“Lord, help me, Jesus. I’ve wasted it,
So help me Jesus.
I know what I am.
And now that I
know,
That I’ve needed
you so, help me Jesus.
My soul’s in your
hands.
Jesus, my soul’s
in your hands.”
There is great freedom in realizing that one
does not need to be perfect to be loved; I hope you, too, find this freedom. I
think it was this knowledge that gave your Papa the strength to face the trials
in his life; he knew he wouldn’t handle things perfectly, so he just did the
best he could. This absence of ego allowed him to be heroic when it really
mattered.
* Don’t ever, ever cuss the rain. Sometimes rain comes as an easily
recognized blessing; sometimes it’s more difficult to be grateful for. Life’s
trials – the rainy periods – are usually like that last type of rain, the kind
that shows up when you have a graduation party planned, or when the hay crop is
already swathed, or when you’ve been trying for weeks to get muddy fields
seeded. The dark and stormy times of life don’t come conveniently, and they
don’t end when you think they should. But like the rain, they eventually spur
new growth. Growth is messy, painful, and even heart-breaking – but it is still
growth, and it is always a blessing. Papa didn’t know this phrase, but I bet he
would have liked it:
Life isn’t about waiting for the storm to
pass;
It’s about
learning to dance in the rain.
Dance in the rain, dear Laura.
You have a beautiful, strong, wise heritage; keep it close to you.
Friday, March 23, 2012
Reckless
This morning, running a bit later than usual, I didn't take my dogs on our typical walk out through the hay meadows; instead, we made a quick trip up to the mailbox at the highway, just far enough to let them run a bit and to get my blood flowing. As we neared the gate to the highway, our youngest dog, a puppy named Hoss, bolted ahead to sniff at something in the culvert. I panicked, yelling at him to come back, with little success. Our highway, even as far out in the country as we are, is a major commerce route between northeastern Wyoming and southern Montana. Semi-trucks, passenger vehicles, pickups pulling trailers of livestock or machinery -- all hurtle past our driveway at 70 mph any time of day. Had he run out in front of one of them, Hoss wouldn't have had a chance. I ran up to the highway, grabbed his collar, and dragged him back to the safety of the driveway. Of course I couldn't be angry at him: although it was reckless of him to run up to that culvert, it was more reckless of me to take him near the highway without a leash.
Both life on the ranch and life beyond 40 have been teaching me many lessons about recklessness these last months. One might believe that ranching is something of a reckless occupation, filled as it is with physical danger. The dictionary, however, tells us that to be reckless is not simply to engage in a dangerous activity; it is to engage in any activity without proper caution, to have no regard for consequences. Ranchers actually spend hours on precautions designed to minimize the danger of their job: sharp-shoeing horses to ride on wintry ice; moving cattle quietly and easily through rough hills and prairie dog towns; checking tack to ensure proper fit for the horses and safety for the rider; warming up a young colt on the ground before mounting. Failure to do these activities can result in consequences as fleeting as a good scare, or as final as death. Ranchers really cannot afford to be reckless.
Neither, it seems, can I. Though I've certainly suffered my share of setbacks and difficulties - as anyone does - mostly I've lived quite a charmed life. I have six children, none of whom suffers from a life-threatening illness or incapacitating disability. I've always had a roof over my head, even if I don't own it, and plenty of food in my cupboards. I do work I enjoy, for decent pay and benefits, with enough leisure time to pursue avocations that don't pay very well. All this good fortune, I'm afraid, led me to take most of my life for granted, and to even become critical and whiny about a life that many would envy. And with that discontent came a recklessness about appreciating the blessings I'd always taken for granted. However, life has knocked me on my ass a bit in the last six months: thankfully, none of the consequences of my recklessness have been final, but many of them have been ground-shaking enough to scare me, wake me up.
Recently, I've learned that, after a lifetime of envious health, I now have several diagnoses that will affect the way I eat and take care of my body for the rest of my life. The most significant of these is celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder that can only be managed if I don't consume the gluten found in wheat, rye or barley products. All my life, I've enjoyed a high metabolism and the ability to eat all types of food. Although I've mostly eaten healthfully because I have a family, I've also gone through days and even weeks recklessly consuming erratic meals comprised of junk food and caffeine. Even when my symptoms pointed to the need to make dietary changes, I chose to ignore the signs. Now, I am suddenly confronted with a choice: continue my lifelong habits and continue to be sick, or start planning meals and purchasing food with care and caution. Gluten is found not only in bread and cereal products, but also in many commercially prepared and processed foods. Avoiding it requires advance planning, careful hygiene, and iron discipline.
My personal health now requires a high level of discipline and care, but not as much as my personal relationships now do. During the last half year, I have discovered, to my anguish, how neglected and judged my family has felt. A drive to succeed, to measure up, in the outer world led me to become careless about the feelings of the people I love most; a compulsion to compare our life to others' led me to be critical and controlling of my family. As a result, my most important human relationship almost fell apart last fall. Going through that pain caused me to take a hard look at the person I was becoming; could I really afford to be so reckless with my language, my lifestyle, my love? Thankfully, my lack of caution about marriage and family life caused only a temporary scare, not permanent death.
Taking proper care and caution about family life requires even more diligence than properly caring for my body does. Conversations must be started - and finished - even when difficult and uncomfortable. Expectations must be evaluated based on fairness and overall good for our family, rather than on arbitrary standards that don't fit our unique life. Companionship and compassion must be valued before discipline and drive. Work obligations must take second place to family life, and pursuing my dreams must lead me back to a place where the people I love are waiting.
Oddly, this new emphasis on evaluating my lifestyle - both physical and spiritual - more carefully has led me to embrace a different kind of recklessness - one that stretches me, forces me to face my demons even if I am quaking inside. I know from living with and loving ranchers all my life that this kind of recklessness happens daily - a lack of concern for self in order to get a job done, to do the right thing. It's what keeps cowboys out in freezing weather to warm baby calves, or goads them to ride a flightly colt through its fears to a place where it has the potential to be a horse. It's what keeps farmers planting year after year, even when drought parches the earth and prices barely allow them to buy new seed. This kind of recklessness is actually an awareness that the job before us is exactly the one we are supposed to do - a faith that, when we leap, angel wings stretch out to catch us on our way down. It's the recklessness that has allowed me to finally speak of difficult subjects with the people I love, to tell the truth about myself and my feelings, without knowing how my words will be received. It's the recklessness that permits me to stand up for my family and my self, knowing that I may not be professionally or socially respected for it. It's the recklessness that prompts me to say "I love you," and "I miss you", even if those words won't be reciprocated. It's the recklessness that has allowed me to write the truth, even when tears blur my eyes and my fingers tremble at the keys. It's the recklessness that moves me to love, even if my love is not returned.
The thing about celiac disease that is somewhat sinister is its link to other illnesses; since it is really a form a malnutrition, deficiences slowly lead to disease. Even though I am now taking care of my health and eating to not aggravate my gluten allergy, I have no way of knowing if I will still succumb to osteoporosis, lymphoma, cancer. The damage may have already been done; I can only do the best I can with what I know now. Likewise, my personal life may not ever fully recover. I try now to show up in my life, pay attention to the people around me, speak my truth. Surrendering the results? I'm working on it, but I'm not there yet.
Shawn has a sign in our mud room that reads: "Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway." This morning he needed help to bring in about 300 pregnant mother cows, to be sorted and moved into calving pastures. I don't often help gather. In fact, in the nearly seven years we've lived on this ranch, I've only ridden on very small moves. The pastures here are huge, and the ground is deceptively treacherous; normally I am too scared of missing cows, making mistakes, causing a wreck. I stay home to avoid looking foolish and disappointing my husband. Today, though, I saddled up. There was a job to do, and even though I might have messed up, I was needed. All morning, through difficult creek crossings and slow-moving mama cows, I just focused on my job, and tried not to think about the impression I was making or the potential danger I was in. Although I didn't lope recklessly across prairie dog towns or attempt any cowgirl show-off tricks, I did keep the moving parts moving. Now, the cattle are in the corral being sorted, lunch has been served, and there is peace in our house.
The kids' bus has pulled into the yard. It's time to leave my personal pursuit - for now - and focus on them. Time to think about taking the dogs for a walk - with a leash! - or saddling up their ponies. Time to be their mom, and not worry about dirty dishes or unwashed laundry. Time to recklessly ignore the details that don't matter much, and pay reckless attention to the ones that do.
Both life on the ranch and life beyond 40 have been teaching me many lessons about recklessness these last months. One might believe that ranching is something of a reckless occupation, filled as it is with physical danger. The dictionary, however, tells us that to be reckless is not simply to engage in a dangerous activity; it is to engage in any activity without proper caution, to have no regard for consequences. Ranchers actually spend hours on precautions designed to minimize the danger of their job: sharp-shoeing horses to ride on wintry ice; moving cattle quietly and easily through rough hills and prairie dog towns; checking tack to ensure proper fit for the horses and safety for the rider; warming up a young colt on the ground before mounting. Failure to do these activities can result in consequences as fleeting as a good scare, or as final as death. Ranchers really cannot afford to be reckless.
Neither, it seems, can I. Though I've certainly suffered my share of setbacks and difficulties - as anyone does - mostly I've lived quite a charmed life. I have six children, none of whom suffers from a life-threatening illness or incapacitating disability. I've always had a roof over my head, even if I don't own it, and plenty of food in my cupboards. I do work I enjoy, for decent pay and benefits, with enough leisure time to pursue avocations that don't pay very well. All this good fortune, I'm afraid, led me to take most of my life for granted, and to even become critical and whiny about a life that many would envy. And with that discontent came a recklessness about appreciating the blessings I'd always taken for granted. However, life has knocked me on my ass a bit in the last six months: thankfully, none of the consequences of my recklessness have been final, but many of them have been ground-shaking enough to scare me, wake me up.
Recently, I've learned that, after a lifetime of envious health, I now have several diagnoses that will affect the way I eat and take care of my body for the rest of my life. The most significant of these is celiac disease, an autoimmune disorder that can only be managed if I don't consume the gluten found in wheat, rye or barley products. All my life, I've enjoyed a high metabolism and the ability to eat all types of food. Although I've mostly eaten healthfully because I have a family, I've also gone through days and even weeks recklessly consuming erratic meals comprised of junk food and caffeine. Even when my symptoms pointed to the need to make dietary changes, I chose to ignore the signs. Now, I am suddenly confronted with a choice: continue my lifelong habits and continue to be sick, or start planning meals and purchasing food with care and caution. Gluten is found not only in bread and cereal products, but also in many commercially prepared and processed foods. Avoiding it requires advance planning, careful hygiene, and iron discipline.
My personal health now requires a high level of discipline and care, but not as much as my personal relationships now do. During the last half year, I have discovered, to my anguish, how neglected and judged my family has felt. A drive to succeed, to measure up, in the outer world led me to become careless about the feelings of the people I love most; a compulsion to compare our life to others' led me to be critical and controlling of my family. As a result, my most important human relationship almost fell apart last fall. Going through that pain caused me to take a hard look at the person I was becoming; could I really afford to be so reckless with my language, my lifestyle, my love? Thankfully, my lack of caution about marriage and family life caused only a temporary scare, not permanent death.
Taking proper care and caution about family life requires even more diligence than properly caring for my body does. Conversations must be started - and finished - even when difficult and uncomfortable. Expectations must be evaluated based on fairness and overall good for our family, rather than on arbitrary standards that don't fit our unique life. Companionship and compassion must be valued before discipline and drive. Work obligations must take second place to family life, and pursuing my dreams must lead me back to a place where the people I love are waiting.
Oddly, this new emphasis on evaluating my lifestyle - both physical and spiritual - more carefully has led me to embrace a different kind of recklessness - one that stretches me, forces me to face my demons even if I am quaking inside. I know from living with and loving ranchers all my life that this kind of recklessness happens daily - a lack of concern for self in order to get a job done, to do the right thing. It's what keeps cowboys out in freezing weather to warm baby calves, or goads them to ride a flightly colt through its fears to a place where it has the potential to be a horse. It's what keeps farmers planting year after year, even when drought parches the earth and prices barely allow them to buy new seed. This kind of recklessness is actually an awareness that the job before us is exactly the one we are supposed to do - a faith that, when we leap, angel wings stretch out to catch us on our way down. It's the recklessness that has allowed me to finally speak of difficult subjects with the people I love, to tell the truth about myself and my feelings, without knowing how my words will be received. It's the recklessness that permits me to stand up for my family and my self, knowing that I may not be professionally or socially respected for it. It's the recklessness that prompts me to say "I love you," and "I miss you", even if those words won't be reciprocated. It's the recklessness that has allowed me to write the truth, even when tears blur my eyes and my fingers tremble at the keys. It's the recklessness that moves me to love, even if my love is not returned.
The thing about celiac disease that is somewhat sinister is its link to other illnesses; since it is really a form a malnutrition, deficiences slowly lead to disease. Even though I am now taking care of my health and eating to not aggravate my gluten allergy, I have no way of knowing if I will still succumb to osteoporosis, lymphoma, cancer. The damage may have already been done; I can only do the best I can with what I know now. Likewise, my personal life may not ever fully recover. I try now to show up in my life, pay attention to the people around me, speak my truth. Surrendering the results? I'm working on it, but I'm not there yet.
Shawn has a sign in our mud room that reads: "Courage is being scared to death but saddling up anyway." This morning he needed help to bring in about 300 pregnant mother cows, to be sorted and moved into calving pastures. I don't often help gather. In fact, in the nearly seven years we've lived on this ranch, I've only ridden on very small moves. The pastures here are huge, and the ground is deceptively treacherous; normally I am too scared of missing cows, making mistakes, causing a wreck. I stay home to avoid looking foolish and disappointing my husband. Today, though, I saddled up. There was a job to do, and even though I might have messed up, I was needed. All morning, through difficult creek crossings and slow-moving mama cows, I just focused on my job, and tried not to think about the impression I was making or the potential danger I was in. Although I didn't lope recklessly across prairie dog towns or attempt any cowgirl show-off tricks, I did keep the moving parts moving. Now, the cattle are in the corral being sorted, lunch has been served, and there is peace in our house.
The kids' bus has pulled into the yard. It's time to leave my personal pursuit - for now - and focus on them. Time to think about taking the dogs for a walk - with a leash! - or saddling up their ponies. Time to be their mom, and not worry about dirty dishes or unwashed laundry. Time to recklessly ignore the details that don't matter much, and pay reckless attention to the ones that do.
Monday, June 20, 2011
Milly
Yesterday I spent an entire day on the ranch -- a rarity for me, particularly because I didn't have company or crews here with me. It was Father's Day, Shawn's day to decide how we would pass the time. No surprises, then, that he just wanted to relax. Our spring has been nothing but a frenzy of activity: since late March, we've flung ourselves from calving, to track meets, to school projects, to concerts, to graduations, to family visits, to work conferences, to school tours, to summer reading preparations, to brandings, to birthday parties . . . Between the two of us, we've put over five thousand miles on our vehicles in the last two months. I shudder to think how many miles we've put on our psyches, living under this constant strain.
The ranch shows the strain, too: despite a monumental effort to clean and straighten before last week's three-day branding event, there are jobs that we just haven't been able to accomplish. My garden has yet to be seeded; the rains this spring, plus our crazy life, have prevented me from even turning the ground over. Saturday I planted potatoes and pumpkins -- on the day before Father's Day! I must be hoping for an extended Indian summer this year. In addition, there are flower beds to weed, spring cleaning projects to finish, paperwork to complete and file.
And so, when Shawn wanted to spend the day at home yesterday, my inherent guilt over all these projects prompted me to tackle the to-do list instead of enjoying the day. I started off productively enough, making a big Father's Day breakfast and then watching all three young kids on their ponies in the round pen while I planned the grocery list for the week. After lunch, I cleaned up the deck, picking up the picnic tables from branding crew lunches and toys from Katie's 7th birthday party. Intending to put away some rope and turn out the horses, I headed over to the barn. As I unhaltered the fourth horse, my mare, Milly, stood quietly in the corral, twitching her tail against the flies.
I approached and put my arms around her neck, surprised that she even let me: Milly is notoriously difficult to catch. There was an opportunity there, and for once, I took it: I slipped the halter I had been carrying over her head, and led her into the barn.
No, I'm not going to write that I saddled her and spend the rest of the afternoon joyously horseback, riding through river pastures and cottonwood trees. I'm going to write instead that I gave my twenty-year-old engagement gift a scoop of oats, and spent the next forty-five minutes working massive tangles out of her red-gold mane. Nothing special, nothing exciting. She ate; I combed; she stomped when I pulled too much; I sang country songs with the radio to soothe her. My old dog, Max, lay at the foot of the stall, watching us. It was easily the most perfect, and least productive, hour I spent yesterday -- or for many days.
Most of my writing about Milly has centered on the ways she's cared for me, carrying me through miles of trails, past fears and doubts that were so deeply rooted that I was paralyzed by them. Yesterday, for a little while, I had a chance to ask nothing of this mare, but to simply care for her. She ended the day with a tangle-free mane; a girl wants to look good no matter how old she is getting, you know. I ended the day with most of my list undone -- but with a precious memory that will live way beyond my crazy spring. That, above all, is why Milly remains one of the best gifts this life has given me.
The ranch shows the strain, too: despite a monumental effort to clean and straighten before last week's three-day branding event, there are jobs that we just haven't been able to accomplish. My garden has yet to be seeded; the rains this spring, plus our crazy life, have prevented me from even turning the ground over. Saturday I planted potatoes and pumpkins -- on the day before Father's Day! I must be hoping for an extended Indian summer this year. In addition, there are flower beds to weed, spring cleaning projects to finish, paperwork to complete and file.
And so, when Shawn wanted to spend the day at home yesterday, my inherent guilt over all these projects prompted me to tackle the to-do list instead of enjoying the day. I started off productively enough, making a big Father's Day breakfast and then watching all three young kids on their ponies in the round pen while I planned the grocery list for the week. After lunch, I cleaned up the deck, picking up the picnic tables from branding crew lunches and toys from Katie's 7th birthday party. Intending to put away some rope and turn out the horses, I headed over to the barn. As I unhaltered the fourth horse, my mare, Milly, stood quietly in the corral, twitching her tail against the flies.
I approached and put my arms around her neck, surprised that she even let me: Milly is notoriously difficult to catch. There was an opportunity there, and for once, I took it: I slipped the halter I had been carrying over her head, and led her into the barn.
No, I'm not going to write that I saddled her and spend the rest of the afternoon joyously horseback, riding through river pastures and cottonwood trees. I'm going to write instead that I gave my twenty-year-old engagement gift a scoop of oats, and spent the next forty-five minutes working massive tangles out of her red-gold mane. Nothing special, nothing exciting. She ate; I combed; she stomped when I pulled too much; I sang country songs with the radio to soothe her. My old dog, Max, lay at the foot of the stall, watching us. It was easily the most perfect, and least productive, hour I spent yesterday -- or for many days.
Most of my writing about Milly has centered on the ways she's cared for me, carrying me through miles of trails, past fears and doubts that were so deeply rooted that I was paralyzed by them. Yesterday, for a little while, I had a chance to ask nothing of this mare, but to simply care for her. She ended the day with a tangle-free mane; a girl wants to look good no matter how old she is getting, you know. I ended the day with most of my list undone -- but with a precious memory that will live way beyond my crazy spring. That, above all, is why Milly remains one of the best gifts this life has given me.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Stinky Spring
Although the first official day of spring is still a few days away, at least according to the calendar, we've been privileged to have a break from winter weather this weekend. Today, the high temperature reached the mid-50's, and a 60 degree reading is predicted for Wednesday. Ahh, spring. Breathe deeply of the clean, fresh air . . . . or not.
Here at the ranch, the smell of early spring -- before the grass really grows and the lilacs finally bloom -- cannot be described as pleasant or refreshing. Rather, early spring around here stinks. Literally. We winter weaned calves in the meadows just north of our house, keep steers and horses in the corrals south of the barn, feed weanling foals in the lot on the hill. And all those animals poop -- all winter long. A person doesn't notice the smell when the turds remain hard and frozen . . . but when the air temperature warms enough for them to thaw, well, you might want to take your deep breaths inside the house.
In addition to some rather strong smells, early spring at the ranch also features slick, snot-like mud and flooded meadows. I can only walk the dogs along the dike, a raised ridge of earth remaining from a time when this ranch was irrigated. Shawn has fewer options each day for feeding his calves, as so much of the meadows are under water. Today, he buried his pickup truck up to the frame in mud; he'd been attempting to cake his cows early, before the frost thawed, but got just a little late and got stuck attempting to cross the river. He used his suspenders to tie two pieces of driftwood together to help him stay afloat as he swam across, because the spring current threatened to take even him, a rather large, strong man, downstream.
Does it sound like I'm complaining? I'm not, actually . . . just listing the realities of ranch life, realities that don't often appear in magazine photo spreads or on country-living blogs. Each season of ranch living brings its challenges, its problems to surmount, its dangers . . . and each season, just as much, brings its joys. The geese are nesting in meadows, getting ready to hatch their young; it's just as well that I can't walk across those areas with the dogs, because I wouldn't want to disturb them. The green grass is beginning to come up, and the ice is thawing in front of the barn. We have a new puppy and a new foal, and soon the heifers will be in the arena, and Shawn will calve out next year's crop of babies. The place will really smell then!
And that's one of my favorite lessons from ranch life: that from bad comes good, from inconvenience comes resourcefulness, from discomfort and danger comes strength and ingenuity. It's not a deep metaphor, nor an original one. It's just the one Mother Nature keeps replaying for us, year after year. Thawing manure brings green grass; flooded meadows grow tons of hay; muddy corrals bring deep, rich soil. On the ranch, and probably in all of life, sooner or later stink brings sweet.
Here at the ranch, the smell of early spring -- before the grass really grows and the lilacs finally bloom -- cannot be described as pleasant or refreshing. Rather, early spring around here stinks. Literally. We winter weaned calves in the meadows just north of our house, keep steers and horses in the corrals south of the barn, feed weanling foals in the lot on the hill. And all those animals poop -- all winter long. A person doesn't notice the smell when the turds remain hard and frozen . . . but when the air temperature warms enough for them to thaw, well, you might want to take your deep breaths inside the house.
In addition to some rather strong smells, early spring at the ranch also features slick, snot-like mud and flooded meadows. I can only walk the dogs along the dike, a raised ridge of earth remaining from a time when this ranch was irrigated. Shawn has fewer options each day for feeding his calves, as so much of the meadows are under water. Today, he buried his pickup truck up to the frame in mud; he'd been attempting to cake his cows early, before the frost thawed, but got just a little late and got stuck attempting to cross the river. He used his suspenders to tie two pieces of driftwood together to help him stay afloat as he swam across, because the spring current threatened to take even him, a rather large, strong man, downstream.
Does it sound like I'm complaining? I'm not, actually . . . just listing the realities of ranch life, realities that don't often appear in magazine photo spreads or on country-living blogs. Each season of ranch living brings its challenges, its problems to surmount, its dangers . . . and each season, just as much, brings its joys. The geese are nesting in meadows, getting ready to hatch their young; it's just as well that I can't walk across those areas with the dogs, because I wouldn't want to disturb them. The green grass is beginning to come up, and the ice is thawing in front of the barn. We have a new puppy and a new foal, and soon the heifers will be in the arena, and Shawn will calve out next year's crop of babies. The place will really smell then!
And that's one of my favorite lessons from ranch life: that from bad comes good, from inconvenience comes resourcefulness, from discomfort and danger comes strength and ingenuity. It's not a deep metaphor, nor an original one. It's just the one Mother Nature keeps replaying for us, year after year. Thawing manure brings green grass; flooded meadows grow tons of hay; muddy corrals bring deep, rich soil. On the ranch, and probably in all of life, sooner or later stink brings sweet.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Skater-Kids
Years ago, when my family lived in a different community, my older girls received ice skates for a Christmas gift. At that time, Maria was barely walking; her skates were so tiny that I was sure they'd been specially ordered. We had a small pond near our house -- really just a low spot where water drained. Shawn and I swept off the snow and attempted to teach Laura, Carmen and Maria to ice-skate. They learned in fits and starts; after a few winters we began taking them to the small community ice rink in town. Shawn and I even purchased skates of our own, a bargain at a second-hand store that allowed us to fall on our rumps as often as the girls did. Neither one of us ice -skated while growing up, although we knew the basics just from having roller-skated as kids. Although it wasn't the girls' favorite winter activity and none of them became that proficient at it, the three of them learned enough to be able to manage when they were invited to skating parties.
Now, raising our "second set" of kids, we live on a different ranch, and lead a much busier lifestyle. Teaching Cody, Emily and Katie to ice-skate has not been a priority; our leisure time in winter is so limited that we usually just take them sledding on the hills near our house or have a quick snowball fight. Time to really teach -- time for them to really learn -- a new skill seems eaten up by work and school obligations, older sisters' activities, community involvements.
Yesterday, determined to not let February slip by without at least getting my younger three on the ice, I took them into the basement to fit them with ice skates from the assortment we'd accumulated over the years. Most of the skates that Carmen and Maria grew through are now too small for Emily and Katie's feet. Cody ended up wearing an old pair of mine, too snug for me and a bit too loose for him; Emily and Katie had to share one pair that was somewhere between their sizes. Already feeling frustrated, I got them suited up in the requisite winter gear, grabbed a couple sleds and set off across corral lots and pastures towards the nearest reservoir. Of course, in my hurry to get out the door, I forgot a shovel or broom to clear the ice. Once we stumbled upon the reservoir, we had to use our feet and the edge of the sleds to clear the snow off. The water/ice level was very low: during this long winter of freeze and thaw cycles, a small hole in the dam -- probably a muskrat burrow -- had caved in, and most of the reservoir water had flooded down to the river. What remained was frozen, but only a few inches deep. Nonetheless, we cleared a very small space, probably no bigger than my dining room floor, and I helped each child out onto the ice.
I've probably given more successful ice-skating lessons. Cody got bored immediately: the space I'd cleared was so small, and my old skates so dull, that he couldn't get enough speed or thrill to keep his 9-year-old attention. Emily, on the other hand, was scared to death, and never stood fully straight the entire time: she bent double, clutching at my hands, convinced that her feet would splay out and break her legs. Only Katie really enjoyed the skating, moving up from holding both of my hands, to just one, to finally skating a few strides by herself. She fell, but mastered the art of standing back up on ice skates quickly.
We stayed there for nearly two hours: because the water level was so low, we were surrounded by the dam edges, out of the wind and warmed by the February sun. Cody left to explore the animal tracks around, sure that he would spot a bobcat or coyote. Emily, a rather courageous sledder, slid down the reservoir slopes out onto the ice. Katie and I played around on our tiny, makeshift rink; our five dogs spread out around the area, sunning themselves or following Cody. Our trip home included a stop to pet Cody's horse; later, I made the trek back out to the reservoir alone, to retrieve Cody's coat and gloves left behind.
If my kids lived in town, they could go to the local ice rink every weekend, even take lessons from a real teacher. They would probably own skates that fit, and that were sharpened properly. I'm not going to win mother of the year for my little venture to the reservoir with them yesterday; many kids would call our trip boring. Certainly the skater kids that I often see at my work would scoff at my kids' third- or fourth-hand skates, the tiny, bumpy rink, the snowy, un-Zambooni'd ice.
But just like the tiny muskrat burrow that became a gaping hole, I hope my tiny effort yesterday becomes a lesson for my kids. It probably won't be remembered as a lesson about how to ice-skate! Hopefully, though, it will be remembered as a lesson in making do with what you have; in making one's own recreation; and in enjoying the gifts life offers, even if they are simple gifts like nice weather, family, and pets. I'm not sure you'll ever see my kids on the hockey team or in figure-skating competitions; but hopefully, you will see my kids trying their best, teaching themselves, and doing whatever they love to do.
Now, raising our "second set" of kids, we live on a different ranch, and lead a much busier lifestyle. Teaching Cody, Emily and Katie to ice-skate has not been a priority; our leisure time in winter is so limited that we usually just take them sledding on the hills near our house or have a quick snowball fight. Time to really teach -- time for them to really learn -- a new skill seems eaten up by work and school obligations, older sisters' activities, community involvements.
Yesterday, determined to not let February slip by without at least getting my younger three on the ice, I took them into the basement to fit them with ice skates from the assortment we'd accumulated over the years. Most of the skates that Carmen and Maria grew through are now too small for Emily and Katie's feet. Cody ended up wearing an old pair of mine, too snug for me and a bit too loose for him; Emily and Katie had to share one pair that was somewhere between their sizes. Already feeling frustrated, I got them suited up in the requisite winter gear, grabbed a couple sleds and set off across corral lots and pastures towards the nearest reservoir. Of course, in my hurry to get out the door, I forgot a shovel or broom to clear the ice. Once we stumbled upon the reservoir, we had to use our feet and the edge of the sleds to clear the snow off. The water/ice level was very low: during this long winter of freeze and thaw cycles, a small hole in the dam -- probably a muskrat burrow -- had caved in, and most of the reservoir water had flooded down to the river. What remained was frozen, but only a few inches deep. Nonetheless, we cleared a very small space, probably no bigger than my dining room floor, and I helped each child out onto the ice.
I've probably given more successful ice-skating lessons. Cody got bored immediately: the space I'd cleared was so small, and my old skates so dull, that he couldn't get enough speed or thrill to keep his 9-year-old attention. Emily, on the other hand, was scared to death, and never stood fully straight the entire time: she bent double, clutching at my hands, convinced that her feet would splay out and break her legs. Only Katie really enjoyed the skating, moving up from holding both of my hands, to just one, to finally skating a few strides by herself. She fell, but mastered the art of standing back up on ice skates quickly.
We stayed there for nearly two hours: because the water level was so low, we were surrounded by the dam edges, out of the wind and warmed by the February sun. Cody left to explore the animal tracks around, sure that he would spot a bobcat or coyote. Emily, a rather courageous sledder, slid down the reservoir slopes out onto the ice. Katie and I played around on our tiny, makeshift rink; our five dogs spread out around the area, sunning themselves or following Cody. Our trip home included a stop to pet Cody's horse; later, I made the trek back out to the reservoir alone, to retrieve Cody's coat and gloves left behind.
If my kids lived in town, they could go to the local ice rink every weekend, even take lessons from a real teacher. They would probably own skates that fit, and that were sharpened properly. I'm not going to win mother of the year for my little venture to the reservoir with them yesterday; many kids would call our trip boring. Certainly the skater kids that I often see at my work would scoff at my kids' third- or fourth-hand skates, the tiny, bumpy rink, the snowy, un-Zambooni'd ice.
But just like the tiny muskrat burrow that became a gaping hole, I hope my tiny effort yesterday becomes a lesson for my kids. It probably won't be remembered as a lesson about how to ice-skate! Hopefully, though, it will be remembered as a lesson in making do with what you have; in making one's own recreation; and in enjoying the gifts life offers, even if they are simple gifts like nice weather, family, and pets. I'm not sure you'll ever see my kids on the hockey team or in figure-skating competitions; but hopefully, you will see my kids trying their best, teaching themselves, and doing whatever they love to do.
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