“If I know a song of Africa, of the giraffe and the African new moon lying on her back, of the plows in the fields and the sweaty faces of the coffee pickers, does Africa know a song of me? Will the air over the plain quiver with a color that I have had on, or the children invent a game in which my name is, or the full moon throw a shadow over the gravel of the drive that was like me, or will the eagles of the Ngong Hills look out for me?”
― Isak Dinesen, Out of AfricaI often wonder in similar tones, if who I am makes any difference in the world. Is there lastingness to my daily efforts in living, sharing, being?
I’ve always found this quote a haunting query of the value of a life. I think, perhaps, she asks the wrong question, but I’m not certain what the correct question is.
Author Archives: Kami
My All Time Favorite Quote From a Book or Movie
Inadequate Gratitude
It’s Gratituesday! Today I am grateful for people who are willing and able to do things I cannot or would not do. I’m not a brave or daring type of person. I am continually amazed by people who are willing to go into dangerous situations and risk their lives, or their personal health and well-being, for something outside of themselves.
How does someone willingly put their life out there as a potential, highly likely, sacrifice. In a war zone, in a militarized zone, in a combat area, in a hostile environment, all those euphemisms for extremely dangerous, life-threatening places scare me beyond reason. And yet, military personnel daily place themselves in these situations.
They defend freedom, they protect the innocent, they help support a fragile peace, they keep anarchy at bay, they stand between madness and hell, they offer a sense of stability in the most unstable of situations.
The amazing thing to me is that they do this willingly. They volunteer!
They leave family and sanity, they leave friends and safety, they leave predictability and order, and they go and do whatever the situation requires.
I am so thankful someone has the discipline and the courage to do such things. Grateful that they have faced such difficulties in the past, I stand in awe of these stalwart men and women.
How do I repay these heroes? How do I honor the things they place on the altar? How do I remember and reverence such acts as these perform?
This kind of debt seems unfathomable.
My gratitude seems miniscule and minor and wholly inadequate.
Why My Cupboards Are Haunted
Not long ago I trekked to my favorite grocery store, this time without a curler in my hair. (That’s another story.) I had put it off for a while, because I don’t really like the task. I do like to eat, however, and my family seems determined to have food on a regular basis, so it’s unavoidable.
I went the first thing in the morning, so I could avoid crowds, get the groceries put away and get to work on time.
Because I had put off going shopping, my list was long. You know those odd items you run out of, the condiments, spices, a certain kind of bottled pepper for that one recipe? This list was full of stuff like that. Up one aisle and down the next I went, slowly filling the cart with my procrastinated needs. I stuck to the list too, none of those impulse purchases. Pencil in hand, I crossed off all those items. Focused and determined to get done and get back home, I didn’t dawdle.
Finally I crossed off the last item. I chose the self-checkout line. I’d gotten hooked on these a few years back. I know, it’s slower if you have more than ten items, but I like the sense of independence, of being able to fill the grocery bags the way I want. I like that I have some of the produce codes memorized. Pretty sure I secretly dreamed of cashiering when I was a kid.
I scanned all my items, efficiently and quickly. I was a shopper in the zone. No coupons. I put in my frequent buyer number to get the store discounts. Swiped my payment card.
Rejected.
What?
Hmmm. I reswiped the card. Entered my pin number. Not approved.
I looked at the card to make sure I’m using the correct pin number with the correct card. Yes. I swiped the card again, selecting the credit option. Still rejected.
I reached for my other debit card, the one from the bank, not the credit union. Not there. Must have given it to one of the kids to put gas in the car. I have a twenty. The machine asks for a cartload of money. Dang.
Now what?
MSH was asleep after working late, so a call to his turned off cell phone wouldn’t have helped. By the time I could drive home and drive back I’d have eaten into my small window of time before work. I wouldn’t have time to put things away. I’d be late for everything the rest of the day.
The clerk who oversees the self-checkout menagerie came over to help. I explained my dilemma, apologized, stood there feeling stupid. She says, no worries, they have people who can put it all back.
Defeated.
I walk out of the store empty-handed. Not a single bag of groceries. What an odd feeling.
Resisting the temptation to give into tears in the car, I tried to think through the day ahead, put the embarrassment and frustration behind me.
I never made it back to the grocery store that week. Sent hubby on a milk run. Had my son pick up a couple of items once or twice.
It’d be nice to carry enough “just in case” cash, but that kind of money doesn’t float around my house too much. And I’d be tempted to spend it somewhere else, here and there. Does anyone even take checks anymore? I just want efficient and easy. And reliable.
Turns out a bank error occurred while processing a direct deposit. Who’d have known? I guess I would have if I checked my account online before heading out to spend money. Lesson learned, sort of.
Technology is great, except when it isn’t.
Here’s the weirdest outcome. All those crossed off items from my failed grocery acquisition got crossed off in my head too. I’d go to the pantry to pull out the spice I had put in my cart and it wouldn’t be there. Oh yeah, I’d remember, not paid for. I’d reach into the fridge for cilantro I’d just almost bought, and nothing. That balsamic vinegar I had planned to use later in the week? Missing, no wait, never purchased. Salt to refill the shaker? Nada. Oh yeah, debit card downer.
For weeks afterwards my cupboards and pantry and fridge felt haunted.
Even to this day, months afterwards, I still find myself reaching for an item my head tells me I bought. It went in the cart, it went through the scanner, it went into the grocery bag, and it went into my brain. It just never went into my cupboards.
Wish I could tap into that “rememberability” with things that are really important.
The Fluff and Fill of Life
The late afternoon sun hangs just above the tops of the trees as I sit on the front porch. Pots and hanging baskets filled with Impatiens and petunias need watering, but I’m ignoring that for now. The air is just beginning to cool from the warmth of the afternoon. A short break, sitting quietly out on the porch, is just what I need before the evening chores, kid’s baths and bedtime rituals begin.
I close my eyes and let my head lie back against the chair. A few stolen moments of deep breathing will be as good or better than a nap. I can feel the buzz of the day’s busy-ness still in my head, a kind of hum of steady movement through a list too long. The sound of children playing far in the distance lends itself to a slowly spreading sense of calm. A car drives past on the next street over. Birds question each other with chirps and tweets. The neighbor’s dog tosses out a bark. I can feel myself slipping toward sleep. No worries if I do, it won’t last long.
“Mom?”
I can hear the call inside the house somewhere, probably in a back bedroom. I keep my eyes closed, keep my breathing quiet and steady. Maybe the sound will find a different outlet. I inhale deeper, let the breath out slowly.
Even though I can hear laughter, it seems as if it’s simply part of a semi-waking, half-dozing dream. When the screen door beside me protests with its squeaking and rattling, I open my eyes just slightly. I do not, however, turn my head, or speak, or move.
My two little girls stand in the doorway, the tallest of the two holding the door open. They look at each other and cover their mouths to stifle their giggles. They whisper something back and forth to each other. The screen door creaks slowly shut, the latch just catching.
I wonder sleepily what the giggling means, and peer carefully through my lashes.
My two girls hunch down at the sidewalk beside the mailbox picking dandelions from the lawn. I could expect to find a bouquet in my lap any minute now. My youngest stands with her small scrunched cluster of yellow flowers and white puff-balls. She puts her face into the bouquet, but instead of inhaling their muzzley smell, she puffs her cheeks out and blows. She watches as her little handful of treasures explodes into small white umbrellas, tiny seed pod passengers dangling below.
My older daughter quickly follows with a breath of air and a sort of magic wand wave of the bundle of white and yellow. White wisps float away. They both laugh and each quickly gathers another handful, this time ignoring the plain yellow dandelions. They snap only the stems of white fluff. Instead of blowing on the whole handful at once, they each take a turn blowing the seed pods free from one stem at a time. From a distance a passerby would think they were blowing bubbles from a plastic jar of soapy solution.
Empty stems fall on the sidewalk as they stoop to pick more. One sends her flower heads skyward while the other chases, jumping and flailing. Their laughter bubbles over, a refreshing sound to my ears, a nice respite from their usual bickering.
Time seems to slow to a stand-still, yet the sun drops lower in the western sky, now filtering through the topmost branches of distant trees. The angle of light at this time of day brightens colors, exaggerates whites, shows off every dust mote and hovering insect.
I watch my daughters as they do a sort of slow motion ballet. The two young girls gather more handfuls of glorious white weeds and send them heavenward. They create a blizzard of fluff filled with the sound of their delight. Surely they’ll tire of this game soon, I think to myself as I observe their leaps and laughter. Instead, they take a cluster in each hand and spin in a circle, creating a swirling breeze that catches and carries the ephemeral seeds in loops and eddies.
Sunlight wafts through the scene like an added sound of joy on the breeze. Each poof of white shimmers and dances. The halo of curly blond hair on my youngest daughter glows silver as she spins and dances and smiles. My older daughter’s long brown locks capture the light and create a golden aura as she twirls and leaps and laughs.
Peace settles like shimmering star-dust on my shoulders. The music of the moment fills the air and swirls through me as these two small angels dance in a fleeting vision.
It comes to me, clearer than any revelation. Heaven is here. Heaven is now.
Not So Serious Quotes and Things to Smile About
I suppose this sign doesn’t apply to you folks in Colorado or Washington State anymore…
1. Have you ever noticed that anybody driving slower than you is an idiot, and anyone going faster than you is a maniac? -George Carlin –
2. “Everything that irritates us about others can lead us to an understanding of ourselves.” – Carl Jung
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3. When my boss asked me who is the stupid one, me or him? I told him everyone knows he doesn’t hire stupid people. -Anonymous
4. “I used to be indecisive. Now I’m not sure.” – Anonymous
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5. “What do you call a chicken crossing the road?”
“Poultry in motion.” – Laffy Taffy
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6. “Life is hard. After all, it kills you.” – Katherine Hepburn
7. “There are good days and there are bad days, and this is one of them.” – Lawrence Welk
8. “He’s all Kumbaya…”- Leanne Tilby
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9. “Have fun storming the castle.” – The Princess Bride
10. “I really can’t think about kissing when I’ve got a rebellion to incite,” – Katniss Everdeen, The Hunger Games
Tripping All Over Myself
Do you ever get in your own way?
Or does everyone else get in your way?
A little of both, maybe?
Recently I had some plans, kind of long-term stuff I’d been working on, working toward. Then a few things started to hinder those plans. Scheduling conflicts, the pending holidays, sleep, laundry, work, life.
Then, in the midst of all these interruptions in making my plans happen, MSH had some ideas he’d been thinking about that would involve me and my time. I’m not talking an afternoon or an evening. We’re talking big plans that would use a significant amount of time and effort.
Sure, I could see the wisdom in his plan. I could admit that it wouldn’t be a waste of time to commit to doing this work he was proposing. But where would the time and energy to do this come from? When you add one thing to the calendar then something has to come off the calendar or get moved to another spot.
Surprise!
Surprisingly, writing in one more item on the TO-DO list does not create the extra time it will take.
My gut reaction was that my project, my plans and my life would suffer because of this new extra-large to-do item on my unending list.
The next morning, I whined and complained to my walking partner, logically expecting sympathy. Her response was not what I had anticipated. She asked if I had any fears associated with my own plans.
Whoa.
Fears?
Hmmmmm…
Fear of failure, fear of being laughed at, fear of looking silly or stupid, fear of hurting someone, fear of saying or doing the wrong thing, fear of falling on my face.
Yeah, you could say I have a few fears about my plans.
While we walked she suggested gently, with kindness, that perhaps, there is a possibility, just maybe, I could consider the idea that, I was sabotaging myself.
A Shocking Thought
This wise woman posited not that MSH is trying to get in my way, or hinder me, but that I’m using his idea, turning it and tweaking it, until it becomes my excuse for not proceeding with my own plans, not succeeding, not facing my fears.
Ouch.
The truth can sting a little. And this one did.
Now, what am I going to do about it?
Related articles
- Sabotage (seayoga.wordpress.com)
What Not to Say: Six Useless Phrases
Stress does something to the words that sometimes escape through our lips. One of the most stressful experiences I’ve ever encountered is parenting, from both sides of the aisle. You gotta admit, parents say some ridiculous things at times. In the interest of full disclosure, I’m pretty sure I’ve said most of these things at least once if not more.
“Don’t make me pull this car over!”
To a kid fully embroiled in “he touched me” argument strapped into the back seat of the car, this statement is just so much flotsam whizzing past the window. What the parent really means to say is, “If I hear the two of you whine or argue one more word I’m going to lose my mind.” A threat to stop the car feels more powerful, but is really a losing proposition. You can’t really leave the kids on the side of the road, as tempting as it sound. And pulling over is only helpful if you can stomp into the woods alone, let loose a few guttural primal screams, kick some really big trees and hurl some large boulders down the side of a cliff. Then you’d be able to return to the car and continue to your destination safely and with less insanity boiling over.
“This is going to hurt me more than it hurts you.”
Actually this one has some truth to it if the punishment is grounding. Taking away a child’s ability to leave the house, or do regular activities, leaves the parent still dealing with the kid days or weeks or months after the infraction. For some parents, enforcing rules is a painful process as it ruins their popularity standing with their kids. Who wants the moniker of the no-fun parent? You do, if you want to emerge from the parenting experience with your sanity intact. Repeat after me: Parenting is not a popularity contest.
“I’ll give you something to cry about!”
Crying is not an inappropriate behavior. It’s a weird form of communication that very few people have been able to translate correctly. Sure crying is annoying sometimes, and can interrupt your day, and might even go on for hours. Getting angry about it, threatening more reasons for tears is really counter productive. You might want to reconsider before letting this one slip through your lips. I know, I know, it’s an instinctive reaction based on years and years of hearing your own parents say those exact same words. Fight the urge, be creative, invent a new phrase your children can mock you with in thirty years.
“If your friends jumped off a cliff would you jump too?”
Most kids would answer with a resounding “Oh, yeah, baby!” Whatever their friends are doing is always more fun than anything else you could dangle in front of them. Even if it’s taking out the garbage at their friend’s house. The point is to be with the friend, always, forever, no matter what.
“What were you thinking?”
They weren’t thinking. They were rolling on pure emotion, acting on impulse, going with the flow, riding the wave of adrenaline, sucked into the vortex of peer pressure, rocketing through the wormhole of hormones. (See cliff jumping above.) Logic doesn’t really enter into the equation. Actually, there really isn’t an equation other than the following: “I want it = I get it.”
“What am I going to do with you?”
“Take me out for ice cream, drive me and my friends to the mall, do my chores for me.” I’m certain most children have plenty of ready answers to that question. I have heard of the exceptional child with the ability to think up appropriate consequences for an inappropriate behavior, but that is a rare and gifted child with blessed parents. The whole balancing act of crime and punishment is resting squarely on the shoulders of the grownup. Sorry to be the one to break that to you.
Brave Souls, Intrepid Warriors
It’s a brave soul who takes on parenting. No owner’s manual, no instruction booklet, lots of well-meaning and misguided advice dispensed freely. Here’s my “two cents worth.”
Hang in there. Laugh as much as possible. Hug that kid every chance you get. And never, never, ever give up.
Dew Drop In
Dew is on the grass today.
“Yeah, so what?” you might say.
But in a desert climate, dew is a glorious thing. It means visible water. Dew means moisture in the air. Dew is life-giving around this part of the country.
At a sharp, early angle, the morning sunlight on the dew gives it a frost like glow of whiteness. A kid on his way to the bus stop short cuts through the park and leaves a dark trail of footsteps through the dew, clearer than a path through snow. His shoes will be sodden through most of the morning.
The sun rises higher, the shadows shorten, the dew begins to evaporate.
Am I silly to wax poetic about droplets of water on grass? Maybe. Yet there is nothing so miraculous as those tiny drops of hydrogen and oxygen molecules in that perfect recipe. In one drop an entire rainbow resides.
A smattering of water from the sky, at just the right season of the year, can prompt thousands of smaller-than-a-dime frogs to emerge from their yearlong underground slumber. A miniature migration of froglets push their way from one puddle to another puddle for reasons unknown to us mere mortals. And then, the rain subsides, and the little hoppers migrate underground again. All that from a bit of rain.
The desert literally blossoms after a rain. Cacti drink deeply and plump up., agave plants send growths skyward, blooms appear on spiny plants, flowers pop up out of cracks and crevices and bare patches. It’s the desert giving out a visual sigh.
The part of the desert I live in has been temporarily reclaimed from the typical scrub and scrap and dust by canals, irrigation, concrete, electricity, pavement, and row upon row of almost identical houses. If the water went away, so would the people, like so many flowers after the desert rain.
I suppose that’s true of any area of civilization. Water is the one critical ingredient for success. Just those two simple hydrogen molecules combined with an oxygen molecule are all that keep it together for us.
My wonder and awe at the dew on the grass doesn’t seem so odd I think. Perhaps the dew deserves an homage, a song in its honor, a statue in some park, at the very least a day on the calendar to celebrate its immense power.
Imagine that. We’d all go around saying, “Happy Dew Day! or “Happy Water Day!“ Then we’d all drink a glass of water in honor of the lowly, mighty water droplet. Just briefly, once a year, we’d recognize how our life teeters on the rim of a cup, acknowledge out reliance on water and honor the idea that we thrive in its presence.
I hope you notice and enjoy the water in your life today.
Raise a glass, and then drink up.
Related articles you might also like to check out:
- Amazing Photographs of Water Droplets Colliding! (truthaholics.wordpress.com)
- Silence in the Desert. (thefrugaltrekker.wordpress.com)
- Cyanobacteria, the desert soil, and you (freethoughtblogs.com)
- desert :: life (anankeandeos.wordpress.com)
Up in the Air
It’s Gratituesday! Today I am feeling an excitement I can’t quite name. There’s an exhilaration and vibrancy in the air. Can you feel it too? Or is it simply me?
This is like that churning sensation, antsy feet, jumping about while waiting in line for a roller coaster you’ve never ridden feeling. An electrical charge seems to pulse all around you. Something like that zings through the air today.
A job interview after ages of waiting, stomach flipping with nervous energy, feels this way. Today my stomach is an Olympic gymnast and I am mid-flight in a backflip waiting to stick the landing, arms held aloft and confident.
The first day back at school after summer break, new kids, new teacher, new hopes, a thrill of the unknown, the possibilities hovering on the edge. I look over the precipice with wonder today.
A box wrapped in shiny foil paper, bound with a glittering ribbon, knotted with a flourish and a bow, awaits opening. Soon now, very soon, the gift will be unwrapped and we will all see what’s inside.
I am grateful for the anticipation of the gift, the possibilities of a new school year, the promise in a job interview, the potential energy of a carnival ride.
I am grateful for this singular day of each voice joining in the song of America. I sit on the edge of my seat, listening, waiting, wondering.
The Solace and Balm of Nature’s Arms
I awoke with the words of Wordsworth in my head. That doesn’t normally happen to me. Must have something to do with the lovely way I spent my weekend. Must also be connected to the sad fact of returning to reality.
A few hours northeast of Phoenix is what’s known as the High Country or the Mogollon Rim (pronounced muggy own). Here are a few photographic attempts at capturing the stunning art that is the natural world.
The lines of Wordsworth’s poem accompany the photos. Granted his poem is about the sea, but the sentiment, “the world is too much with us” fits the reason behind why I go to the mountain, why I seek out the natural world, why I feel whole after a walk among growing things. Think of his words as background music.
The world is too much with us; late and soon,
Getting and spending, we lay waste our powers;
Little we see in Nature that is ours;
We have given our hearts away, a sordid boon! This Sea that bares her bosom to the moon,
The winds that will be howling at all hours, And are up-gathered now like sleeping flowers,
For this, for everything, we are out of tune; It moves us not.
–Great God! I’d rather be A Pagan suckled in a creed outworn;
So might I, standing on this pleasant lea, Have glimpses that would make me less forlorn;
Have sight of Proteus rising from the sea; Or hear old Triton blow his wreathèd horn.
-Wordsworth











