distracted by sparkly things since 1969

Tag — souren

Magpie Girl’s Guide to College

The 19yo is talking about college. Of course, when I overheard him say, “I was reading this college catalog…” I stopped dead in my tracks. After several years of unschooling and some pretty serious slacker practice before that, I wasn’t even pretending that college was in his future—at least not right away. So this news that he’d already assessed and discarded one community college option and was considering another was a surprise to me.

As I listened from a vaguely discreet distance, there was a tone in his voice and a certain lean to his body that I recognized. This particular combo is what he uses when he’s trying to convince someone that he’s doing what they want him to do. But it’s a little tricky because it’s also the tone and posture he uses when he’s trying something on for size—sort of sussing out if he really believes what he’s saying, seeing if what he’s thinking of is really a good fit for him. I like it when he does this. I think it’s really wise. It makes me proud.

Later he and I were able to talk this college thing out a bit over breakfast. (These things always go better over a breakfast burrito.) It became clear that while he’s aware that most of the parental-types in his life would like to see him in college at some point, he wasn’t just blowing smoke at us when he mentioned the college catalogs. He really is interested in the possibility of taking some course — he’s just not sure how to do college his own unconventional way. He doesn’t want to get trapped on some horrid jump-through-the-hoops, school-debt, hamster wheel from hell. In short, he’s trying to figure out how to make college work for him, instead of the other way around.

See, I told you he was smart.

This got me to thinking about all the courses I slogged through and hated, and all the books I bought and never used. It was a lot of waste. So here, in retrospect are my Magpie Girl’s Tips for College Courses. [Read more →]

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Sacred Life Sunday: Light Keeping

Click to play this Smilebox slideshow: Light Keepers
 Polyphonic Spree, Light and Day

I struggle to live in the moment. So often I am casting my gaze back in regret and longing, or throwing myself forward in to future worries. I know it’s healthiest for me to live mostly in the Now. But to the Now I feel foreign born, and like an adopted child returning to the place of her birth, I must work a little harder to feel at home on what is truly my native land.

I notice this most when Summer fades to Fall, and the days begin to shorten. I start missing the Light even before she is gone. Start longing for her while she is yet by my side. And in doing so I waste the last long rays of her presence.

This then is my attempt to stay with her, to stay present as long as she is still here.  To remain alert to her companionship. To “…follow the day and reach for the sun.”Later when she is gone, these images may hold her near to me a little longer yet, until she gently moves my hand from her hers, pats my shoulder, and tells me to lean into the next season until she returns.  

 How do you stay present to the edge of this season? What will you need to transition into the next?

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favorite things: child of my heart

favortiesrennecklace

He comes to me in my dreams, this child of my heart, separated now seas and ages.

Sometimes the dreams are all absurdity. Last night in my somnolence he came to me with a new love. I asked after her:  what captivated? what called? His serious reply: “She taught me the word “Huntington’s.” Ah, what meaning in that then? Pizza for dinner, perhaps.

Othertimes they are wrought with meaning — Jungian symbols all in a row.  He is lost in the woods. And what are these clamps there on his shoulders, at his gut? What is written on this new scroll?  Are we falling or flying?

When he feels far from me, this child of choice, I wear this ’round my neck. A charm passed to me from my soulsister, long ago when I was the age he is now. Touch it with one finger there at the hollow of my throat. For safety. For comfort. For joy. Hoping to only connect.

A talisman then, swinging there over my heart.

 

6a00d8341c103953ef01156f73008a970c-800wiIn this photo post: Favorite things, culled from a vagabond’s backpack while on furlough from Denmark in the States, and posed on a swing which has held three generations. 

Would you like to Unravel? Sign up for Susannah Conway’sphotography and journaling ecourse.

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April Dreamboard: Only Connect

april-dreamboard-small

Tuesday night the 19yo haunted my dreams, flitting in and out of whatever story was going on. We call this my “Spidey-sense” and when it happens, no matter how long he’s been incommunicado, I have to track him down and find out what’s what. 

Wednesday night the full moon glowed yellow and welcoming in my Copenhagen sky. I’m not usually very connected to the moon, but last night its glow, it felt important…powerful. So I sat down and made a quick-and-dirty dreamboard with the few supplies I had on hand,  uttering once again what my dear friend Dwight practically has tattooed on his forehead:

ONLY CONNECT.

By Friday we were back in touch and the emails went back and forth with tidbits and updates.

Oh, that Sister Moon, I love her so……

 

P.s. If Souren actually read my blog, I’m sure he’d be THRILLED with this photo. Sorry bruddah, if you sent me more pics, you’d get better airtime. :-)

For more about Dreamboard visit Jamie at Starshyne Productions, or read my interview with her sister Suzie of Chez Suzie here. What will you dream of this month?

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The Blessings


i promised to stop adopting teenagers, but they keep slipping into my heart…

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I love these young ones so much it’s ridiculous. Each one has crawled into my soul in a different way, and while at times this process splits me open, I wouldn’t have it any other way.

There’s a scene in the Princess Bride where a funny old crone makes a pill for new life, and she paints something on it croaking: “The coating makes it go down easier.” I want to wrap my arms around each of these precious ones and let my heart for them coat them like chocolate –one long-lasting dose of mama-love to help the new life of adulthood go down a little more smoothly.

I want wrap them up with affection. With warmth. With stability. With all the elements of unconditional love you can think to put on a menu. And then, when they are all warm and cozy, I want to drop integrity into the center of their chests, like a silver quarter slipping into a coin slot.

If they have integrity then all thier live-long days they will be the stellar creatures they are already becoming. Not integrity to the rules, but the kind of integrity that allows you to acknowledge who you truly are, and stand in that truth. The kind of integrity that is not beholden to outside rules, or your peer’s opinons, or because of ‘the way it’s done’– but because of a solid internal compass that will not steer you wrong if you listen. The kind of integrity that lets you live a life on the outside that is true to the life you hold in your heart. If they have that, well, they will have everything they need.

So that is what I bless them with, in my dreaming, in my words, in my living. And the old Christian mystic who married that witchy little crone in my soul says, “Amen, may it be so.”

“Be bold and mighty forces will come to your aid”
-Basil King

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Permission to Mourn, Granted

Have you noticed that your children leave you at every age and stage? When they stop nursing. When they can crawl into the next room while you are folding laundry. That first bright, merciful day of Kindergarten. The night they’d rather read Harry Potter by themselves than have you read it out loud because they can read it faster. When they hit the age where they can make thier own toast and eat breakfast on their own. …. I thought the leaving thing only knocked the wind out of you when reached the infamous “empty nest” stage. But really, it happens all along the way. I didn’t realize there would be so many passages that leave you breathless, trying to mourn and celebrate in one burning moment.

…….

Leaving Souren has been a little bit like a death. I hate to be so melodramatic, given that there are so many things going on in the world that are ever-so-much harder and more devastating. Leaving your semi-adopted teenager in the States in order to go gallivanting around Europe with your two adorable blood children and a handsome husband—this barely makes a mark on the ‘hardships’ meter. Still, it’s hard, to take a child into your heart and then to say goodbye.

I know, of course, that there is the telephone and internet, and even old fashioned snail mail. But if you’ve ever known, or met, or even grazed shoulders with a teenage boy, you should realize that communication is not, generally speaking, their strong suite.

I knew, when we left, that most communication with Souren would be over. And I’m trying to not put my happiness under his text messaging thumbs. You simply cannot let a teenager take the wheel of your happiness. That’s even more daft than letting them drive your car on prom night.

But at night, when those nasty little buggers come to get me, I am mournful, and I re-think the wisdom of being so nonchalant about grafting a child who is not my own, so firmly onto my family tree. In those dark moments, I write maudlin poetry on the pages of my notebook. (The emotions of my days and nights are so different, sometimes I am left wondering, which is more me?) Though the pain in these overwrought words are real, I have to ask myself, would I hesitate to love this way again…to love this way still? When we are paying attention to the true and the questions, these are the things that come up. These are the ponderings that make up the reality of whom we are and who we are to be. So of course, the answer must always be, ‘amen.’

——

loss is a wolf at the throat,
there, at the front of the neck
where all you cannot swallow
lies exposed and unprotected

the ache and the tear of it,
the way you bleed unchecked

this is what it is
to take another’s child,
graft him deep into your veins.

i cannot recommend it,
this unchecked rushing of the blood
when the graft does not take,
when the bloodline is severed.

even birthing blood ceases with the hours,
after the placenta tears.

but what of that wound
of which nature has no counterpart?
does this blood then run without clot,
without ebbing,
leaving in its wake
more than the womb as hollow?

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eighteen

“Here there be monsters.”

There is fierceness to your love as a parent, a primordial viciousness that cannot quite be captured by pen or by page. The heat of it feeds you, moves you to the force of living that must be done to rear a child, to create a life.

But it tears at you too, this animal of passion, and the thing that tears deepest is that the one you love so fiercely–this child of womb or of heart–cannot understand this beast, cannot capture it in their reality, or even in their imagination. And you know, in spite of this longing to make sure they know, that they aren’t meant to, aren’t intended to. This kind of knowing is not expected of them.

So this tears then too, this absolute inability to communicate the sheer volume of heartache held for them, the rawness of the love which bears them into existence.

And when the child is not your own and you must live into a place that is not-parent, but rather mentor, or friend, or some indefinable something else–where then does this animal go to dwell? And where does the fierce protectionism burn when the child grows older, finds wings on which to lift away? Where does that energy live, when the cage you’ve built in your heart is no longer large enough to contain its nervous pacing, when there is not enough flesh to keep it fed?

Should there not be a guide book for this wild adventure? A star chart or a river guide? Should there not be an ancient map, a gilt compass, moss on the north of the tree? How do you find your footing when you dwell on the edge of love’s fierce map?

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Raising Souren

souren-hat.jpg

This is my neighbor, Souren, who accidentally became a part of our family nearly three years ago. We met when I was sitting on the little strip of lawn that seeps out from under the chain link fence surrounding their house. The big yellow school bus stopped there each day at 3, and we would chat over the fence while I waited for my children to get home from school. I think it took me three days to learn how to pronounce his name – forever marking me as a lazy tongued American, compared to his tri-lingual boy genius. After a week I stopped bringing my waiting-for-the-bus book, since I knew he would come out, sandwich in hand, for our afternoon chat. By the time I met his mother Helene, he and I were already fast friends. When Helene left the country on a six week business trip a month later, Souren started his life in our home.

Souren is entrenched in our world now, coming with us to extend family barbeques, writing me mother’s day cards, and having a room of his own in our home as well as in his mother’s duplex four houses up. Lately, I’ve been trying to write about our strange relationship – this family of two and my family of four, now an odd assorted family of six. I want to write about parenthood and ownership; gratitude and jealousy; satisfaction and yearning; pride and disappointment; joy and heartache. But it’s hard, to be honest in a relationship this complex – when my nurturing instincts sometimes conflict with his mom’s; when my kids don’t share his mother the way he shares theirs; when I am so grateful to have this young blood in our lives, and simultaneously terrified that he will soon disappear into adulthood.

Can you ever write with complete honesty about your children – those of your genetic descant and those you chose of your heart? Once they’ve learned their alphabet and how to use a mouse, how can you lay bare the stories you carry about them and for them and of them? Where do you put the wonder and the terror, the laughter and the follies? How can you capture the complexity and wonder without, basically, EMBARRASSING THEM TO DEATH?

Alas, I have no answer.

This summer Souren has gone to lay his foot once again on German soil, his birthplace and homeland until he was nearly a teen. After being virtually attached by an IV to our wireless for the past two years, he has suddenly forgotten how to log onto a computer and has to be cajoled into writing even the briefest of five-line emails with nary a compound thought enclosed. Still, reading carefully between the lines, and remembering what it was once to be young, what little I’ve heard of his time there indicates it has been rife with rites of passage – what with being legally of age in Europe for booze and clubs, and with a girl at his side – not to mention the father he hadn’t seen since before puberty and the attic full of childhood memories waiting for him to sort out.

It’s just….I remember the summer of my 17 year – all the heat and pheromones, all the freedom and romance– and I know that what comes speeding after it is so much more growing up, so much differentiating from home and hearth and parenting. Those ties between him and me, between him and us, are already much thinner than a lifetime of family-ness could have brought. What will happen to them as they are stretched by the final years of high school, by this incredibly heady summer?

Who can say and who can tell and who can know? It is utterly unknown territory and I, in some part of my soul, am both terrified and—truthfully—a little in awe. We do this, we humans? This growing up thing? What a wonder.

“Wait!” my heart moans, “I didn’t get enough time. You can’t be moving through these rites yet! You only just came to me! I didn’t get the early years!” Yet at the same time I know that this one’s long history of growing up is not within my rights to hold. What I get access to is this little part- time window between the first day of high school and the last–that’s all. I want to guard that time, press out the minutes like the edges of a toothpaste tube, make sure I don’t miss any thing I’m entitled to.

But the reality is I’m entitled to nothing. Every bit of this childhood is a bonus gift. And with this thought I realize in spite of my disquietness, there’s really no other option, is there? I wouldn’t want to miss this stretching, tearing thing – watching the wolfpup in growup, thrashing out his way in a world that will, all to soon, be his for the taking.

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