Thursday, April 22, 2010

The thing about a crossing

I'm done I'm done! I never thought the day would come but we finally turned in our last paper on Monday. Whew - what a term. I've been able to celebrate and relax the last few days with friends and especially roomies. This has been a particularly difficult week because at the end of April (i.e. while I'm gone to North Carolina this coming week), Glory is moving out of the house to take a teaching job in Korea. This signifies the beginning of the end of the House of Love and we've all had a really tough time acknowledging this ending. We had a beautiful celebration, however, on Monday with cocktails, dinner, and a special time at home that really allowed us to share in our gratitude for the support that we have been for each other throughout this mutually difficult year. What a beautiful experience it has been to live and share life with these four women.

So, I have been reminded of a passage from one of my most recent favorite books, A Million Miles in a Thousand Years by Donald Miller. Thanks to Rachel Rose (!), who sent me off to Seattle with this excerpt to read on the plane, I have read and reread these beautiful words. The imagery has been particularly significant to me throughout the year as they have sat by my my bedside and have frequented my thoughts as I drift off to sleep. So I wanted to share these words with you, no matter where you are in your story, as a way to share how I am processing this next phase of life. Without further ado...

...

It’s like this when you live a story: The first part happens fast. You throw yourself into the narrative and you’re finally out in the water; the shore is pushing off behind you and the trees are getting smaller. The distant shore doesn’t seem so far, and you can feel the resolution coming, the feeling of getting out of your boat and walking the distant beach. You think the thing is going to happen fast, that you’ll paddle for a bit and arrive on the other side by lunch. But the truth is it isn’t going to be over soon.

The reward you get from a story is always less than you thought it would be, and the work is harder than you imagined. The point of a story is never about the ending, remember, it’s about your character getting molded in the hard work of the middle. At some point the shore behind you stops getting smaller, and you paddle and wonder why the same strokes that used to move you now only rock the boat. You got the wife, but you don’t know if you like her anymore and you’ve only been married five years. You want to wake up and walk into the living room in your underwear and watch football and let your daughters play with the dog because the far shore doesn’t get closer no matter how hard you paddle.

The shore you left is just as distant and there is no going back; there is only the decision to paddle in place or stop, slide out of the hatch, and sink into the sea. Maybe there’s another story at the bottom of the sea? Maybe you don’t have to be in this story anymore.

It’s been like this with all my crossings. I have a couple of boats and every couple years I take them to Orcas Island and make the crossing from Orcas to Sucia, and it’s always the same about leaving the shore so fast and getting to the middle and paddling in place for hours.

I knew it would be like that when we crossed the country on bikes too. I sent in my paperwork and did my miles in the mountains here in Oregon and showed up in Los Angeles, knowing we would start fast, that the Pacific would fade behind us and we’d be in Phoenix by sunset and then we’d spend the life of Moses crossing Texas and the Delta, and it happened just like I thought it would. We grew into the roads, and the roads are where we lived. We slept in rock quarries and on the doorsteps of churches. I slept on the floor of a convenience store just of the caprock in Texas. I put my head by the beer case to get some cold air and it didn’t matter that I had a condo back home or a bed, because you become the character in the story you are living and whatever you were is gone. None of us thought the bike trip would end. We never felt like we were getting closer to the Atlantic Ocean. Even in Virginia, we felt as far as Louisiana.

The night we left Bob’s deck, I didn’t want to paddle trough the night or across the wide inlet. We didn’t have his dock till after midnight, and we had to paddle for hours through the pitch black, and in the middle the inlet was so large and the dark was so dark we couldn’t make out either shore. We had to guide ourselves by stars, each boat gliding close to another, just the sound of our oars coming in and out of the water to keep us close.

I think this is when most people give up on their stories. They come out of college wanting to change the world, wanting to get married, wanting to have kids and change the way people buy office supplies. But they get into the middle and discover it was harder than they thought. They can’t see the distant shore anymore, and they wonder if their paddling is moving them forward. None of the trees behind them are getting smaller and none of the trees ahead are getting bigger. They take it out on their spouse, and they go looking for an easier story.

Robert McKee put down his coffee cup and leaned onto the podium. He put his hand on this forehead and wiped back his gray hair. He said, “You have to go there. You have to take your character to the place where he just can’t take it anymore.” He looked at us with a tenderness we hadn’t seen in him before. You’ve been there, haven’t you? You’ve been out on the ledge. The marriage is over now; the dream is over now; nothing good can come from this.”

He got louder. “Writing a story isn’t about making your peaceful fantasies come true. The whole point of the story is the character arc. You didn’t think joy could change a person, did you? Jo is what you feel when the conflict is over. But it’s conflict that changes a person.”

His voice was like thunder now. “You put you characters through hell. You put them through hell. That’s the only way we change.”

If it weren’t for the other guys in the kayak, I would have quit that night. We’d gotten up before sunrise, spent the day at Bob’s, and were paddling now nearly twenty-four hours later. If it weren’t for the other guys I would have lay down in my hatch and slept and drifted out with the tide. But hours after I thought we’d arrive, I made out the gray wall of the cliff face on my right. We were close to it before we saw it, and it was like the walls of an ancient cathedral; our sounds were coming back at us off the rock. We had to follow the cliff to another, smaller crossing where there was a beach we’d made camp at on the way to the back of the inlet.

The one of he guides pointed out bioluminescence was happening. He dropped his paddle into the water and what looked like sparks splashed and some of them floated like embers on top of the water. We all looked at our paddles and stirred them around in the water and there in the darkness the ocean glowed. The further we paddled into the opening, the darker the water and the brighter the bioluminescence became. We could see each other now because there were comet trails behind our boats, and there were sparks flying off our bows and onto our spray skirts, so bright you thought you needed to wipe them for fear they would burn the fabric.

It was four in the morning but we were energized by the ocean. As we got closer to the other shore, there were a million fish swimming beneath our boats, each leaving a trail, and the ocean was flashing from beneath us as though fireworks were going off in the water. “I’ve never seen it like this,” one of our guides said. He said he’d seen the ocean glow when you splashed your paddle, but he’s never seen the fish light up the water from underneath. When we were a hundred yards from shore and paddling into the lagoon, the whole ocean glowed like a swimming pool. None of us wanted to get out of our boats. I paddled around in circles in the lagoon, watching the fish streak beneath me like a meteor shower.

It’s like this with every crossing, and with nearly every story too. You paddle until you no longer believe you can go any further. And then suddenly, well after you thought it would happen, the other shore starts to grow, and it grows fast. The trees get taller and you make out the crags in the cliffs and then the shore reaches out to you to welcoming you home, almost pulling your boat onto the sand.



(C) Tamara Jacobi


Saturday, April 10, 2010

"Wild Geese"

You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting--
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things.

© Mary Oliver

Friday, April 9, 2010

A good reminder

This video was one of my first encounters with Mars Hill Graduate School. If I haven't shown it to you already, I'd love for you to take 5 minutes and watch it. Entering into the last week of this term, that has been both grueling and life-giving, it's good to think about how far I've come since October 2009 when I first saw this and knew I needed to find this place.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Obsessed much?

Happy April fools! I can't freakin believe that it's April already.

So, I've got to have something to keep my sanity around here. I mean, I just turned in two papers and now have to start on the two that are due this coming week.

My most recent obsessions have been these design blogs that I've come across; so I continue to dream of the day that we'll have a house of our own and can do whatever we want to it. Because, you know, in this field I'll definitely be making 6 figs.

I thought I'd share them in case it wets your whistle a bit and maybe gets your creative juices flowing. Maybe I can live vicariously through you since you may have more time to take on some of these fun projects - and then I'll curse the day I decided to enroll in grad school.




In case you didn't notice...I'm procrastinating...

Can you blame me?