The Green Wave

July 25, 2010

Mothers & Thunder

Filed under: Celebration, Music, People, Storytelling — kate @ 12:21 pm

I got to play a concert up in Portland this week as part of Lynne Cullen’s Seanchai Nights series at Bull Feeney’s Pub.  I love that room with its round stage, tall windows, and Irish quotes painted high on the buttery yellow walls.  It seems like the people who come are always ready to sing and to laugh and to dive down into the stories with me.  I love them, and this time was no exception!  I met a great young family with three kids who looked like wizards (the youngest of them is building a harp and learning Gaelic), a bevy of storytellers, an old friend I hadn’t seen in at least 20 years, and a crowd of spirited party girls, among others.  One of my first employers (for baby-sitting, window-washing, and cocktail-party-tray-passing) was also present, and remembered that I used to sit on the hill behind her house and read poetry.

But this visit was made even more special by the appearance of a special guest and her entourage:  my mother and her friends.  They filled an entire long table, and they sang and smiled throughout, and warmed me to the core.  And to see my mother there among them, laughing at my antics and learning to sing those Irish words – well, that is a treasure to me.  This is a rare occurrence.  In fact, it has only happened once before when I hosted a party to celebrate the release of The Harp-Boat.  And yes, even at my age, it matters to me very much that my mother likes what I do, that she sees the value of what I offer.  And that night, she did.

Sometimes, everything goes right.

That blessed night, there was a strapping lad at the bar who gallantly carried the piano up those winding stairs.

The traffic cop softened and tore up the ticket he was writing for me.

The room filled up and every chair hosted someone lovable.

And just at the right moment in one story, just when I said, “She sat up in bed and said, ‘Lord, God, what is that noise?’” the thunder boomed over the sea behind me.  Thunder & lightning as collaborators = amazing!

And my mother came.  Did I mention my mother came?

A wonderful night.  Lucky, grateful, amazed, delighted, inspired me.

February 28, 2010

Mistakes

Filed under: Music, Poetry, Spirit, Storytelling, Writing — kate @ 2:43 pm

I woke up thinking about mistakes because – well, you guessed it – I’ve made a spate of ‘em recently.  At a concert on Friday night, I bungled some harp parts.  I tripped over a wire.  I forgot an important (and funny) detail in a story I told.

Was the performance ruined?  No, it wasn’t.  And did I do do other things well?  Yes, I did.  But what woke me up this morning?  The memory of my mistakes.

I make mistakes all the time, but only some of them rankle.  In my Irish classes, I regularly forget a word or mess up a spelling.  As a writer, I occasionally revisit my essays or poetry and find something that is over-written or factually wrong.  In my performing life, I miss notes, chords, words, and even whole verses from time to time.  But many of these mistakes are easy to laugh off, excuse, or forget.

So why do some mistakes feel so important?  Why do some of them char into memory and leave that awful burned smell in the mind?

I recognize the big-deal variety by the kinds of things I hear in my head:

  • I should be past that by now.
  • I should have known that.
  • I can’t believe I did that in front of her.
  • Now they’ll think they wasted their money.
  • Now they’ll know I’m nothing special.

The killer mistakes – or the ones we allow to turn into killers – are rooted in shame and vulnerability.  We feel we should have known that fact, or that we should be beyond getting so rattled by a funky microphone, or that a really good musician doesn’t make such slips.  From there, it’s only a short step to:  “I know less than I should know.  That means I only appear to be an authority.  That means I’m a fraud.  That means that I’m deceptive.  That means that I’m worthless.”

Ouch.

The other kind of mistake is more like a sneeze than a deadly virus.  I recognize them when I hear these things in my head:

  • Well!  That was silly!
  • Gracious, I’m just tired tonight.
  • Oh, well, I didn’t hear her right is all.
  • Oh!  Now I understand!  They wanted this and not that.  That’s easily fixed.
  • No biggie.  Anyone could forget a thing like that.

These mistakes seem unattached to me somehow.  They are simply a part of the weather – external, natural, changing, neutral.  I don’t take them to heart.  Yes, they are often smaller (like missing a single letter in an Irish word, as opposed to forgetting a pivotal concept), but they don’t touch my self-respect or my notion of myself as competent and worthy of people’s trust.

So the big difference between the ranklers and the non-ranklers is my own idea of who I am and who I should be.  Like so many things, this is a story I tell and a style I choose for telling it.

I could tell a new story about a woman with a huge thirst for life who takes on millions of creative, artistic, and scholarly projects.  I could say that this thirst for life is more important than being right all the time.  This desire to use all the gifts and try out the wings and test the skills necessarily means there will be some mistakes and failures.  I could gently pry away the shadow of shame by respecting the attempt more consciously.  I could re-imagine mastery as a fluid process, rather than as a static destination.  I could decide that mistakes are the buds that flower into something new.

Even as I sometime writhe over my mess-ups, I’ve always believed it important to live a life marked as much by mistakes, attempts, and experiments as by success, achievement, and mastery.  Otherwise, one’s tenancy on Planet Earth is rather dull and uneventful and we never even try to use all the fantastic equipment we came with.  Living that way is like falling out of an airplane and refusing to pull the parachute ripcord because it might not work.  There are many things worse than failing.

Not failing, it turns out, is one of them.

And since I’m in no danger of that, I’m a success!

February 21, 2010

Library Dreams

Filed under: Music, Pleasures, Poetry, Storytelling — kate @ 2:03 pm

Last Friday I had the wonderful chance to perform an hour of songs & stories at the West Springfield Public Library as part of their lunchtime concert series.  The people who came were delightful:  they munched their sandwiches and sipped their tea in between grinning and clapping, and occasionally, obliging me by trying to say or sing some Irish words.  It was a great pleasure to spend that time with them and also to find myself, once again, making music in a library.

I hadn’t realized how much that meant to me until then, nor how long this combination of libraries and performing has been in my dreams.  Like many things in life, you look back and all at once see the tracks leading to where you are now; you’ve been making them without fully understanding what you were doing.  But there they are!

These last two years I’ve gotten more and more chances to give concerts in libraries. I remember that my first library came close on the heels of a particularly disastrous attempt to play at a bar.  The place was altogether too cool for me, too laid back, too dark, and too distracted.  “Know thyself,” commands the ancient Greek Delphic oracle.  Well, OK, then.  I’m really not that cool and I rarely find myself in a bar, and I spent that evening battling upstream with a tea-spoon instead of a paddle.  I wasn’t at home.

In the library, on the other hand, I am happy in a familiar temple with its cherished holy items (books and maps) and its priests and priestesses (the librarians).  I’ve been a library-goer all my life, finding solace in their silences and dignified spaces, and finding delight and instruction in their books.  My life opens up as I scan shelves or pore over the card catalog (yes, I’m a fan of those old magic boxes – but I also love the new wizardry of keying in a search and receiving the instant rewards).  Libraries have always provided me with the particular shelter my soul most requires:  gentleness, learning, curiosity, and the understanding that the world is waiting to open its pages to us.  All we must do is ask.

When I was young, my mother and I used to attend concerts, plays, and poetry readings at our local libraries (the Dyer in Saco and the MacArthur in Biddeford).  Those nights glow in my memory.  Our libraries, usually quiet places, bloomed into life and merriment.  I can remember a night when the the MacArthur was so full of people that I sat on the floor to leave my seat for someone who needed it more.  This afforded me the thrilling advantage of being even closer to the performers – Northeast Winds that night, I think – and getting to watch their hands and even notice their set list, taped to the floor.  I watched them quietly negotiate changes to the list and share a private joke.  An inside view:  I loved that!

I think I loved it most of all because it brought together the things I loved best:  music, books, poetry, learning, art, kindness, and festivity.  These are still my favorite things (apart from moons and oceans and birches and apples which best fit in libraries in the pages of books).  Watching those concerts and plays and readings, I lived two lives:  in one, I just soaked up the beauty of what was offered.  In the other, I dreamed that I could be that person making music or reading poems there in that most perfect of concert halls:  the library.

And now in the beauty of life and all its winding and mysterious ways, I am.

Isn’t that rather wonderful?

The West Springfield Public Library

July 12, 2009

Hermits

Filed under: Pleasures, Storytelling — kate @ 1:48 pm

Today I need to remind myself of two things:

1.  Creativity is often helped by limits and structure.

2. You get to decide that everything will turn out fine.  You can write your own story and invite a stranger through the front door who reminds you about what matters most.

This little story came out of a challenge at Artella.com in which we were asked to write something containing the words:  hermits, sombrero, plastic, chime, sample, now.  I love doing things like this.  My mind instantly starts whirling!

Hope you enjoy it, and also that you unabashedly gorge on a plate of hermits – or whatever taste or sensation brings you to hope and freshness.

Hermits

“Nobody makes hermits any more,” she complained, biting into an oatmeal-raisin cookie and looking as though it were a slice of aspic or a mouthful of fire-ants.  “They’ve become quaint, like letter-writing.”  Like me, she thought.  “My mother,” she began, but a look from her friend quelled her.  “But really, where are the hermits?  Both kinds, I mean?  Does anybody wander around without a plan anymore?  And where are the old ladies baking hermits for picnics – back in the days before cookies grew to the size of hubcaps and sombreros?”  Their eyes swiveled to the plate, and without speaking they agreed that treats had expanded alarmingly.  She knew she was getting heated, but she couldn’t help thundering on.

“And is it any coincidence that everything seems to be made of plastic these days?  Even people?” she added, slam-dunking the cookie in her watery tea so that it slopped over the edges like a tiny, turbulent lake.  Her friend hustled away to the counter and grabbed a fistful of napkins, and she sat by the little mess and felt oddly homesick.

The door opened with its metallic chime and a man strode in, carrying a basket from which wafted an intoxicating fragrance.  “Ladies,” he said, approaching their table, “May I offer you a sample?”  With that, he peeled back the blue checkered cloth and revealed… a tray of freshly baked hermits.

“You can’t eat that!” protested the other woman.  “We don’t even know who this guy is, or where these things came from.  Don’t be stupid!”  She reached out to intercept the hermit but it was too late.  With an expression of almost worshipful concentration, her friend set to work on the cookie.

“Mmmm, raisins,” she said, nodding.  “And nutmeg, yes.  And very finely chopped walnuts.”  She smiled, her eyes shone, and the lines melted from her face.  “These are every bit as good as the ones my mother used to make.  And I don’t mind telling you,” she said, looking directly at her companion, “that my mother was a genius when it came to the good things in life.”

The man handed her another hermit and she accepted it gratefully while her friend looked on in confusion.  “This one,” she said munching, “is even nicer than the first.  It reminds me,” she brushed a crumb from her cheek into her hand and then ate it, “of my grandmother’s house at the lake somehow.  The fun we had there!”  As she spoke, her face softened even more so that she looked now some twenty years younger.

When the man handed her a third hermit, she reached out for it eagerly.  Her belly was nearly full but she felt that one more hermit could not hurt, after all those years without them and without so much else that she’d missed.  All of that seemed less painful now she thought, tasting this third and most delicious hermit.  “I now believe,” she said with a new steadiness in her voice, “that there is a time outside time where the best of the past and the best of the present and maybe even of the future exist together.”  She looked at the man, and he nodded.  By now she had regained the freshness of her girlhood and she seemed to glow as though she’d just come in from a walk in the wind.  “And I see, too, that we can go there if we have a key – like you’ve given me today.”

He nodded once more and handed her a piece of paper.  “And here is one more key for you, dear one,” and with that, he walked out the door.

She stared at the paper, noting the lovely old handwriting and the fine green ink.  “A Recipe for Hermits Eaten by the Lake with People You Love and Who Love You,” she read aloud.

And without looking back at her companion, she too sailed through the door and into a refreshed life in which she baked delicious and properly-sized hermits in a cottage by the lake, wrote unabashed letters in fine green ink, and offered a seat at her table to any hungry person who wandered the world without a plan.  In that time outside time, she lived and continues to live and indeed will always live, happily ever after.

March 22, 2009

Time with the Tribe

Filed under: Storytelling — Tags: , , — kate @ 12:46 pm

Yesterday I had the great honor of presenting a talk at Sharing the Fire, a storytelling conference hosted by the League for the Advancement of New England Storytelling (LANES, thank goodness). The day offered a bouquet of delights for me and for all who attended, I imagine – including some wonderful workshops, a bazaar full of tempting books and music and musical instruments, and an evening concert of mesmerizing stories.

It was also a chance to spend time with friends I cherish, and to make some new ones. Such people! Such brave lives, passionate lives, inspiring lives…

But, being the sensual creature I am, I must say it was also a chance to gawk! When storytellers dress up for an occasion, they pull out the stops. I marveled at purple velvet and painted silk. Turquoise clusters in silver. Blue platform boots. Dapper vests which, on closer inspection, revealed embroidered patterns in gold thread. Quilted jackets as respelendent as Joseph’s amazing technicolor dreamcoat! Everywhere I looked, I saw beauty, whimsy, thoughtful adornment, symbol, imagination, and the freedom to express aspects that sometimes remain obscured to the rest of the world.

It was, to be honest, like a trip to The Leaky Cauldron in Diagon Alley. And that makes sense, doesn’t it? Storytellers ARE magicians, illusionists, alchemists, hedge witches and conjurorors… They go quietly among the Muggles* but when the occasion presents itself, they burst out in glory, in wild and lovable quirkiness.

Today I am renewed and happy. No matter how many gray places I go, I can think of all the storytellers drinking a celebratory cocktail in the late afternoon sun, garbed in a rainbow of colors. I can revel in the memory of spending a day with my own loopy, creative, ingenious, brilliant tribe!

(* Just wanted to say that for me the concept of Mugglehood is open to debate. Is anyone a 100% Muggle? I don’t think so. Nevertheless, some people choose to live more as Muggles than as wizards. Should they choose to reverse that equation, a warm welcome awaits them at the Leaky Cauldron!).

November 30, 2008

A November Visit

Filed under: Pleasures, Storytelling — kate @ 3:25 pm

I almost didn’t open the letter, it was so forbidding – a dark brown envelope with even darker ink. Something in me knew it would be a summons, and so I laid it on the mantel and pretended it wasn’t there for the whole last week of October. Or tried to. But letters like that aren’t easily forgotten.

When at last I tore it open, I read these words:

Come to my house. You know when and where. I’ll expect you.

Oh, crumbs! I thought. I seized my trusty fountain pen and tried to compose a delicate rejection but the words dried up and the ink smudged the back of my hand. I would just have to go.

She would be dour, I thought, and so I have two choices as to dress: a bright smack of color or a neutral gloomy fog. Puckishly, I chose the former – a red flamenco skirt, turquoise jewelry dripping from my wrists, a pink camellia tucked behind my ear. On a whim I purchased a second flower to present to her. That would either tickle or enrage her, I knew, and I didn’t really mind which.

When she opened the door and looked into my face, I understood immediately just how foolish were all of my efforts, all of my flowers, all of my resistance. I was a bonfire that realizes suddenly it is a candle standing in a gale. Instantly, the wattage of my skirt and jewelry, of my gaudy bravado, dimmed. I handed her the camellia and she took it without a word, gesturing me into her dark house and further into her dark sitting room. You won’t be surprised to learn that she is one of those steely New Englanders who don’t turn on a light until they can’t rise without stumbling. Nor heat, either, until their fingers fumble in the cold.

I sat down on an ancient article of furniture and felt its springs grope upward like hard, questing fingers. I wriggled and offered a comment about the weather. Still she said nothing. I chirped a few syllables about a mutual acquaintance, but to no avail.

Time, as any child knows, can run or walk, depending on how you are spending it. I am inclined to be frivolous, a quality which those who love me call endearing, but which can irritate and vex those who don’t. I have many faults: I prattle, I fidget, I laugh over nothing. But I found I could do none of this in that dark room, with that silent hostess. There was not even a cup of tea to alleviate the austere quiet, and every comment I ventured sounded ridiculous to my ears as soon as it was uttered. I thought I would go quietly, coldly mad in that room!

We sat, and I listened to the clock tick. I heard a bird whistle, a plane rumble, my own heart thump. Eventually, I gave up the frantic search for something to say. From time to time, we looked at each other, and always those hooded eyes and that unsmiling mouth seemed to warn me not to disturb the quiet. I noted that her hair was pulled back so severely it made her head appear threadbare, like a worn cushion. Her clothes were as simple and unglamorous as a nun’s habit, but of such a curious color I found myself captivated by it: a combination of midnight blue, chocolate brown, and shoe-polish black that shifted as she moved (and I would hardly swear to it, but I thought I spied a hint of squid’s ink purple once when she went to the window to adjust the curtain). I studied the room and my eyes grew accustomed to the twilight. There were no pictures, no brick-a-brack or trimmings to mar the stern walls and the bare, dutiful floor. And still we sat without injuring the silence.

After a time, a curious thing occurred: I began to breathe the room. Or, perhaps I should say that the room began to breathe me. I sank into a slower pulse and felt my mind mimic it, and then join with it. The half-light seemed, for the first time, a gentle thing – a kind of mercy after so much glare. The cold made little blankets of halted time around everything, and suddenly there were avenues I hadn’t noticed before into the world of dreams. I could follow the scuttle of a dead oak leaf into a vision. I could trace one long brush of storm cloud into a fantasy. The long night was a sweeping black stairway into a hall filled with cherished and long-gone friends. I found myself at last comfortable in a place between sun and snow, between dusk and dawn, between this life and other lives. I sat on that ancient settee and pulled up a thick rug of turf over my ears and, like any bear at the mouth of winter, slept.

Without warning, she shook me and placed a dark glass into my hand. “Sherry,” she remarked. “Drink it through your teeth.”

I was still, at least on a spiritual level, wrapped in turf and fancies, and it took me a moment to grasp the glass and contemplate that last odd comment. But I suppose it is a mark of just how different I felt now than when I had first come in, that I obeyed her command without question. The sherry was good. No, it was excellent. By the third sip, I knew it was the best I’d ever tasted. By the time I’d drained my glass, I knew I’d been given a rare gift – and even more when I felt a pearl strike my teeth. I rinsed it carefully in my mouth and then admired it in my palm.

“For you,” she said, and the ghost of a smile crossed her features.

Just then the door opened and a smiling woman with silver hair and merry blue eyes came in carrying a candle. The room flared into being again in its light. And the woman herself seemed to shed silvery sparks as she moved. I looked the question at my hostess, still dazzled by the sherry and the pearl, but surprised and pleased to see that she had pinned the pink camellia to her blouse.

“My sister,” she said, pulling a chair into our orbit and gesturing to that lovely woman with the candle. “My sister, December.”

And so my visit with November turned out, after a very unpromising start, to be one of the strangest and most wonderful visits of my life so far – and one that I knew I would be glad to repeat every year in the late autumn until the end of my days.

Powered by WordPress