Tag Archives: earth energy

Sebastopol 1 + Rambling

21 Sep

Friends, I don’t even know where to start. I’m a bit behind on writing about my travels; definitely been focusing more on the singing, dancing, drifting and loving intentions of my current life than the intention of writing about it for at least a few weeks now. I had a ten day stint with PMS after I posted my last two entries. It was especially moody, broody, self-doubt and anxiety laden. I also had a mild stomach virus during that time, and just generally didn’t feel up to expressing myself publicly in any way whatsoever. When I have super bad PMS, my head and heart basically look like this:

As soon as that PMS ended, I went straight into a brunch date that ended up lasting two days, then turned into two weeks of dates, with seeing friends and being laid up with a cold for a few days in between. I left the Bay Area a few days ago pretty much feeling like this:

I’m now back in the trees of Humboldt County and have the time and head space to catch up.

So let’s try to refocus and write about Sebastopol and the Bay Area a bit, shall we?

We shall. We shall try.

After I dropped Kirsten off in Napa and arrived at my mom, Barbara’s house in Sebastopol, CA. I decompressed, did laundry and started making plans to see friends in the Bay Area later that week. My license plate had bugs from all over the country splattered on it.

I hadn’t yet been to Barbara and her husband, David’s new house, and it is spectacular. You enter under a towering canopy of eucalyptus trees and ease up their gated driveway, golden hills and Tibetan prayer flags on either side of you, Turkey vultures always circling silently above.

(Vertical strings of Tibetan prayer flags have since been added to several of the fence posts on either side of the driveway-this picture was taken in June. I can’t believe it’s already September. I can’t believe I’ve really been transient for almost four months. I’m exhilarated and exhausted at once, all the time. But I don’t want to stop).

The house itself has a wrap around deck with an outdoor fireplace, hot tub, and beautifully landscaped levels of flower beds.

There is a tea house nestled in with the flower beds behind the house, and if you walk past that, through a gate, there’s a great rock for sitting and drinking coffee and admiring the hills and the trees in the morning; David’s Rock.

There are sheep, and a llama. When I’m sitting on the bed in the guest room on the bottom floor of the house, I’ll look out the window and the llama will be staring right at me.

I think the llama’s got a line on some primo liquid eyeliner.

There is a vegetable garden and raspberry bushes that Barbara and I go out and pick from and make fresh salads and stir fried zucchini for dinner. I didn’t take pictures of every aspect of the property, and in an earlier post, I called it an estate, but really, aside from being my family’s home, it is a Buddhist retreat center. Mutti (Barbara) is in the middle of holding her first week-long 20 attendee retreat at her aptly named Open Sky Retreat Space.

The shrine building.

Inside.

Dinner on the deck of the shrine building.

The outdoor meditation/performance/kitchen/outdoor sinks space.

As you can see, this space is currently under construction, but when it’s done, that stage will have an outdoor sink and also be wired with a sound system with speakers all around the mulched courtyard in front of it. Beyond the teak doors to the right, is the aforementioned vegetable garden and a space where more outdoor sinks for retreat attendees to wash up.

Barbara and David have worked really hard for many years and have been pretty successful. To see Barbara share that success in a way that is deeply meaningful to her-creating a beautiful, serene retreat space for people to explore themselves and grow spiritually makes me feel just so incredibly proud of her. You can feel the care and intention that accompanies every aesthetic and functional decision in creating the space, a solid reflection of my mother’s love for others.

It is not possible for me to explain with words how much the sun means to me lately. I love the dry, bright, every day until October California sun. It permeates my skin, puts me at ease, and works its way directly into my heart. I spend a lot of time just smiling dumbly at how much I love the sun. And the fields. And the flowers. And the rocks. And the trees. And the mountains. And the day and night skies. I love being alive. I feel kind of like this guy much of the time.

Wherever I go on this trip, I try to sit outside by myself and spend a few minutes with the night sky. Especially in rural areas, where the sky opens up and I can see all the stars. It reminds me of my purpose and place in the order of the Universe and fills me with energy and gratitude for being alive. I agree with Steve that fields of cows are beautiful. I agree that EVERYONE is who you cannot hug when you are dead, so why not drift around and hug as many people as possible now.

When I’m in a city, I’ll take a few minutes in a dance club to just let the feeling of being reflected and seen and surrounded by magical queers to sink in. Oh, how I missed this. I missed this for so many years. To come back out and do this again when I’m pushing forty, to not take it for granted and do it responsibly has been incredibly healing for me.

I still get updates from sites like LinkedIn and it’s almost funny to me. That kind of information feels so irrelevant to my life right now. Careers feel like abstract ideas of no importance next to walking in the trees or by the ocean. I feel like how can I possibly care about career networking when standing with the ocean and communing with the trees and being surrounded by filthy queers in dark, sweaty dance clubs is so much more important. I can’t imagine wanting to sit at a desk. Did I ever?

It’s pretty safe to say I’ve settled in to this pace of life for now, which is part of why I haven’t felt as inspired to write this blog lately. My emotions are pretty steady these days. I sleep. My anxiety has calmed, my broken heart mostly mended, many of the questions I set out to find answers to with this journey have been answered or have changed into new questions. Right now, I’m mainly researching energy work, looking into Wicca, Reiki and psychic stuff. I want to find a language to explain all this energy I carry inside me and a discipline to learn to use it productively.

I’m not really traveling to new places these days, mostly bouncing back and forth between Eureka, Sebastopol, and the Bay Area. In a few weeks, I’ll be camping off the grid for a month or two or three. Then I want to travel again. I want to go to the northwest again and drive up the Olympic Peninsula and camp for a night or two. I want to go back to the southwest and visit my mom, Beth, and spend a few weeks at Iron Knot Ranch. I want to visit friends in New Orleans and Austin and check out IDA and Dollywood in Tennessee. I want to see my family in New England. I want to visit my friend Shei in Bangkok.

Part of me also wants to just resettle in Oakland after camping, and getting text pictures like this from my mom who is watching my cat, certainly feed that desire.

Oh God I miss my baby.

I feel like now is the time to stay free as long as I can. I know how hard it can be to take road trips and trips to Thailand and work in visits with family when there is limited vacation time. Vacation time I would likely have to build up and earn over a year or two. It is also hard to do these things and live well and save money on the salary I generally make, which is enough, for sure, but I usually don’t have a lot to put aside for travel. Right now, I am just trying to keep my life as simple and open as possible and that is working well for me. I feel comfortable in my skin pretty much all the time, regardless of moods and changes in my external environment. I’m taking things as they come and appreciating uncertainty. Now is not a time for fixed ideas or serious planning.

I remind myself I planned to drift for up to a year, and even though I feel so at home in the Bay Area, and am tempted to just settle down there now, get a job and some health insurance-I am only four months into this. There’s more to see, more to learn, more questions to formulate and answer. I get so boring and habit based when I’m settled down. I do the same things at the same time every day; I want things to feel fixed and secure. This time I’ve given myself to wake up every day and choose what I want to do and where I want to go has been the greatest gift ever and at the risk of sounding redundant, I’ll say again that I intend to keep unwrapping it for a while.

My mom, Barbara says her favorite thing about seeing me on this journey is watching me get younger as I age. ‘You were like a retired person when you lived in Rhode Island,’ she says. And it’s true.

I really was.

Emotional Honesty + Rambling, part 2

21 Aug

Heading for Seattle, I left Eureka at 8am on a Friday morning, driving through the redwoods, along the foggy coastline, past all the Redwood Highway antique stores and  tourist attractions.

It felt great to be in the car again. I had PMS and was feeling particularly emotional, but in a good way. I was thinking about how much I love feeling alone out here in the world, while at the same time, feeling so connected to the earth and to everyone I love and who has visited with me. I started to reflect on the kindness of my friends, old and new, and how I feel like I’m moving through the world surrounded by a circle of light created by that kindness.

As I was driving up, the same feeling of complete freedom I’d had when driving across the country took over, minus some of the honeymoony bravado I had before, replaced with clarity and deep commitment. I was excited to see every mountain, tree, river, coastline, and wildflower-the majesty of the landscape made me wonder once more what the pioneers thought when they made it up here. It’s so huge and open and wild. Golden, green and stunning. Really Universe? Thank you.

If you can see that little white speck on the rock, that is a mountain goat, my friends.

I got misty as I drove, thinking about every couch and guest bed lovingly made up for me to sleep on, every piece of fried chicken, buffalo wing and sugar-free rubbed barbeque rib waiting for me, the radicchio thoughtfully picked out of my salad greens before I left the east coast, every catching up or getting-to-know-you story shared, relaxing walks, keys entrusted to my open hand, pet love shared, coffee made, gay nude beach relaxed upon, leftover bottle of vetiver oil gifted, every home I’ve been welcomed into, hot haircut I’m given for free, arcades and dance clubs I’m taken to, mountain trails hiked, art made for me, cuddly hammock hang outs and couch naps, secret river spots sun bathed on, driving tours of Los Angeles, advice given, sweet morning runs taken with friends in mountains and in beautiful city parks, every taco, tapa and brunch I’m treated to.

Geez, everybody, you’re really hurting my feelings with all this kindness. I feel tender and open and grateful for all of you. I’m completely in love with this life where I get to drive around and visit with you. I’ve said ‘best life ever’ before, but that is usually when I was in love with someone outside myself, and while those were the best lives ever at that point, this is different.

This is dependent only on my willingness to stay open and curious and keep doing what I said I was going to do, even when it’s scary or uncomfortable. When I stay with it, I am always rewarded with deep revelations, healings I didn’t even know I needed, new friends, and knowledge I’d never have without challenging myself this way.

But it doesn’t hurt to feel surrounded by love every step of the way. Thank you.

Something about that incubatory period in Eureka feeling anxiety and ennui, and through it reminding myself to just relax and sink in, over and over again until I really started to. My heart moved into a different stage of healing during those weeks, to the point where somewhere in the middle of my trip up north, at some point in Olympia, I think, the switch flipped. And thank the Goddess, too, heartbreak and bruised ego were getting old.

I didn’t even realize it fully until yesterday as I started my drive back to Eureka. I am not heartbroken anymore. I am so in love with my life I can’t see any reason to choose to continue to feel badly about losing that life. The people who love me the most always seem to be able to see what I really want more clearly than I can, until I do. Okay, fine. I want this life. Thank you, sweetest friend.

As I drive back, I am singing songs at the top of my lungs that I couldn’t even listen to a few weeks ago. Songs I love and have missed, but that hurt too much to hear. And while I still feel like I need more time before I could look for something new, my heart is getting there. It’s taken longer than I’d like it to, but is actually healing much more quickly than I thought it would. Does that make sense?

For a while in Eureka, I thought it was necessary to examine what might be wrong with my choices, but I only came to the conclusion that just because things don’t always work out the way I’d like, I love everyone I’ve ever dated, think they are wonderful people, and if I was in the same situation again, even knowing what I know now, my heart would likely make the same choices. Especially the ones you’re so deeply connected to it doesn’t feel like a choice, it feels like fate, and maybe it is for a time. And then it’s not anymore, and no matter how painful and disappointing that can be, it has to be okay.

There’s nothing wrong with my picker. I am not an emotional masochist. I do not have TO MUCH faith in people. Love is inherently messy, there’s no way around that if you’re going to be involved. I just want to try to be as honest as I possibly can, starting with myself.

So after examining what might be wrong with me-basically the same stuff that’s always been wrong with me. Or as my therapist and I used to say, ‘opportunities for self work.’ That’s a nicer way to say it, really, and why not be gentle? I started reflecting on what kind of love I think I deserve (to give and receive). Acts of nature notwithstanding, I think we only pursue and work to keep that which we truly believe we deserve, good, bad and otherwise. It’s a good thing to get clear about before opening back up to those kinds of possibilities.

What kind of love do you deserve?

It would still do me good to learn to be less selfish, to have more and less patience, to try not to shut down when I have anxiety. I could continue learning to have clearer boundaries and to maintain my self care at all times in relationships. I could be better about not only seeing what I want to see, or just focusing on the parts that feel good. No matter how well I think I know someone, they always know themselves better, and if they tell me point blank that they will hurt me (as several of the people I’ve dated in my life have), I should listen to that instead of passing it off as dramatical self loathing that won’t win out over the good stuff. More often than not, it will win. But these are things that I can only work on in the context of a relationship with a willing and able partner, so I don’t need to worry about them right now.

I feel more breezy about what I might be open to when I’m ready. I’m not fixated on finding an LTR. A partner might be nice someday, but right now, this trip is my lover-it holds me close to it’s side and demands commitment, and every day I am happier to give myself over to it.

I know I keep calling this a trip when really it’s my life. The more I’m sinking in to it, the more I’m able to see that this isn’t a break from my ‘real life,’ this is my real life now.

If my trip/life and I could sing a duet, we would sing this.

New Mexico 3

25 Jul

WARNING: This one is pretty long.

There’s a reason the southwest is the environment most associated with vision quests. The sun is so hot, and the sky is so big, and the ground is so desolate, you can’t help but feel exposed. I felt like the sun was beaming through a magnifying glass, directly at my heart. On retreat land where there are few distractions, this feeling was magnified even more. It did not feel good.

I hadn’t come to the ranch for a vision quest or for retreat. I wanted to work and to see if I still felt as strong of a connection to the land and the Lama as I’d felt when I first visited earlier this year. I wanted to see if this was a place I’d want to spend a few months living and working this coming winter. I wanted to see if I still felt like Lama S was a teacher I could work with in developing more discipline in Buddhist practice, admittedly still contemplating if I even really want to develop more discipline.

I spent much of my time on the ranch feeling restless and uncomfortable, feeling like I wanted to leave and run for the cover of Redwood trees, shun the sun, but I didn’t. I would hope that the fact that there is no geographical cure for ME is something I can just know at this point in my life and not have to re-learn it over and over. Bailing might have given me more distraction, but it wouldn’t make the feelings go away, and I said I was doing this, so I stayed.

I settled into a routine of laying awake most of the night, often crying a lot and/or having psychotic thoughts. I had one of the worst bouts with PMS I’ve ever had, and would have to get up to pee three or four times in the night, despite not consuming any liquid for hours before I went to bed.

Every time I fell asleep, I’d be wakened within an hour with nightmares. The same nightmare, over and over again. The same nightmare I’ve had since April 9th. I saw something that day that made the nightmares start, and they haven’t stopped since, although sometimes there’s a few weeks break between occurrences. On the ranch though, the only time I didn’t have nightmares, was when I was awake.

The first morning there, I got up, went to the kitchen building, made some coffee and started slicing peppers. I listened to ‘Drift’ by Rachel Maddow and sliced peppers for the better part of a day and a half.

Everyone communicates by walkie-talkie on the ranch, and sometime mid-day, Lama walkied down that she wanted to meet with me, so after cry o’ clock in my casita, I put on my sunblock, sun hat, sunglasses, and long-sleeved, collared white shirt for the walk up the hill. I would put these on every time I left any building, even just to go to the composting toilet. It was over 100 degrees in the shade every day.

It was great to see her and catch up. She was feeling low energy, suffering from extreme adrenal fatigue, so she had been taking it easy, not traveling as much, and spending time going through her files from two decades of working in the domestic violence movement before becoming a Lama, deciding what to donate to the archives at Smith College and what to toss. She asked if I would work with her while I was there, a few hours a day, re-organizing and indexing her files, retreat notebooks and prayer books so that she could find things easily, as there were several piles on her desk and other things out of place. Her house had AC and I have a degree in organizing information, so I said I’d love to.

So I’d get out of bed around 4:30am and head over to the kitchen building, feeling like a shell of a zombie with DTs. I’d make coffee and eat a little yogurt, take my vitamins and then M, another woman visiting the ranch, would meet me and we’d walk over to headquarters. The ranch folks are slowly building an addition on the HQ building, and we were going to grout the space between these large iron beams and the concrete/styrofoam blocks each morning until the sun got too hot to work outside, between 8-9am.

We mixed grout, troubleshooting until we found the right water-to-powder ratio for a still wet, but putty-like consistency. We wore gloves at all times and masks when we were mixing, since the grout would burn your skin or lungs upon contact or inhale. The mixture would dry up and harden within about twenty minutes, so we’d make sure our ladders were positioned in the right section of beam before mixing it and then carefully ascend the ladders. With trowels and fingers, we’d each push grout under our side of the beam until what we’d pushed in was solidly meeting in the middle.

We talked about Buddhism and the ranch and relationships. M had lived on the ranch for several years a few years back, and had a couple of relationships in that context. Her two ex-girlfriends from the ranch were actually dating each other now, which she seemed fine with. Relieved, even. She was pointing out date spots to me from our vantage point on top of the unfinished building. It hadn’t occurred to me that the ranch could be such a romantic place. I don’t know why, I just didn’t think about it that way. I liked hearing her perspective on it.

Puffy eyes for dayz.

We talked about Chogyam Trungpa, attachment, Minneapolis (where M is from), music and trans-politics. Once the sun got too hot, we would use up whatever grout was in our buckets and then rinse everything off with a hose. We’d head back to the kitchen and make breakfast, sometimes making our own thing and sometimes making something to share. Then M would head up to the shrine building where she was working with Sam, another ranch resident. They were drawing up designs for finishing the ceiling of the shrine building with panels painted gold.

Ranch butterfly.

I would walkie up to Lama and see when was a good time to come up, then go to my casita and lay down and/or cry for a few minutes. Then I’d pull it together, put on all my sun armor and head for the shower building, brush my teeth and wash my face and continue on up the hill to Lama’s house. As I walked, I kept my eyes on the ground not only to prevent tripping on the uneven terrain, but also to see the beautiful geodes and quartz crystals littering the ground everywhere I walked.

I would put my hands on the ground, trying to feel whatever energy was in there, but I was unable to feel any the whole time I was on the ranch. My heart ached for the soft, Spring reborn green trees and moss of New England. Without any sleep, I felt needy for energy and I wasn’t finding any in that dry dirt, but I’d collect crystals and put them on a flat rock in front of my casita anyway, knowing there was energy in them, but I was just too unfamiliar or too tired and hormonally/emotionally jacked-up to feel it.

Visitors are asked not to take any of the crystals from the ranch, as they believe it weakens the earth spirits of the land. When the spirits are depleted, they don’t bring the rains. I didn’t know this when I’d visited in January, so I’d taken a few crystals home to Rhode Island and put them on my nightstand. Luckily, upon learning this, I remembered that I’d brought all my little nightstand stones and trinkets on this trip, along with a few other decorations. I went back to my casita, found the crystals and returned them to the land. I did find a rusty horseshoe that I kept, however.

I’d arrive at Lama’s house sweaty and short of breath, my lungs still adjusting to the altitude. I think it’s something like 3000 feet. Maybe higher. I’d knock on the door and step into her cool, quiet house. I’d take off all my sun armor, shoes and socks and we’d sit in her living room, talking politics. Everyone on the ranch is pretty unplugged from the outside world, so she liked that I was up to date with political banter. She’d asked if I had any spiritual questions my first day visiting her, and I said I’d think about it and if I came up with any, ask her tomorrow.

I asked her about attachment and letting go, but mainly we talked about my journey and navigating the uncertainty of it. I expressed my mixed feelings of interest and ambivalence at getting more deeply involved in Buddhism, cultivating a disciplined practice, joining a sangha. I love the basic concepts of Buddhism and have been reading about them, contemplating them and integrating them into my life for about fifteen years, but ‘I’m just not much of a joiner,’ I said, ‘I am wary of organized anything.’

I can get down with mindfulness and equanimity and tonglen prayer and all that, but when it starts to get into karma and dedicating virtue and the four winds of this and the eight mountains of that, it starts to feel more complicated and abstract than the spirituality I feel in my heart. I get skeptical and defensive. As someone raised in western culture, even raised atheist/Buddhist, I don’t know if I can genuinely not feel like a douche using Tibetan terms and chants. It feels culty to me the same way AA mantras feel culty. While many of the mantras of AA and Buddhism ring true to me, I am still leery of chanting them in a group of people. I’m guessing this would have to be a ‘fake it til’ you make it’ situation for me if I was to dedicate energy to developing discipline.

Lama said, ‘well, there are thousands of ways you can walk the path of Buddhism, if you feel it’s for you. First, though, you have to decide what the purpose of your life is. If you feel the purpose of your life is working to reduce the suffering of all beings and attain enlightenment, then you decide how fast you want to reach that goal. You can sit for few minutes every day in your nine-to-five life, that requires the least amount of compromise, or you can go live on a Buddhist retreat and practice twenty-four hours a day. If you practice with pure motivation, you may reach your goal a lot faster this way, but you’ll likely endure more concentrated discomfort and compromise. Of course there is the whole range of paths in between those extremes as well.’

Well that’s not heavy or anything. I mean, of course I want all beings to be happy and free of suffering, but do I want to form discipline around it? Doesn’t it make more sense to volunteer at a soup kitchen or animal rescue than to sit on a cushion dedicating the virtue you’ve gained from sitting there out into space? (I know many people do both). The spirituality I’ve felt in my heart since I was a child is very simple. There is energy that runs through the Universe and everything and everyone in it and we are all connected by it. If I hurt you, I hurt myself and so on. Buddhism speaks to this and then it gets complicated. I don’t want to prostrate and pray in a foreign language, it feels contrived to me. Lama reminded me that the Buddha laid out something like 39,000 paths to enlightenment and that one can only walk the Buddhist path in their own way. I hear that.

Honestly, I’m not sure if I want to attain enlightenment or even try. How many westerners actually pull it off? I figure that unless I die at an unexpectedly young age, I’m already 30-50% of my way through this life, and I’m doing alright. Do I want to put the energy into forming discipline? How much good can we really do others with prayer and dedication of virtue and merit when peak oil, global warming, pollution, political and economic corruption, and water scarcity are real? I mean, aren’t we pretty much going down anyway? Isn’t it human nature to kill and destroy as well as to love unconditionally? Even if we could somehow tip the balance of what’s affecting the world more to the love side, haven’t we already done enough irreversible damage to the Earth’s ability to sustain life? Am I just lazy and selfish and looking for a pass? Am I just over-thinking this as I do everything? Probably.

You know what helps with over-thinking? Meditation. Goddamn me.

After we had our talk, we were indexing her retreat notebooks together when this fell out of one of them.

Lama laughed and remarked on the auspiciousness of this falling out of a notebook she’d not touched in years, right after she told me I need to decide what the purpose of my life is. She gave it to me and reiterated that this journey I’ve chosen is perfect for contemplating this question if I choose to do so.

After working with Lama each day, I’d go back to the kitchen building for lunch, which ranch residents were taking turns cooking each day since the kitchen manager was away. I cooked lunch for everyone one day. I stepped in for the kitchen manager somewhat and did a lot of the kitchen cleaning each day. That felt good.

Then I’d head back to my casita and lay down. The work day is pretty much done by 2pm when you start at 5am and didn’t sleep. I’d lay there sweating, watching episodes of the Sarah Silverman Program that I’d downloaded years ago until my computer battery was low. I didn’t feel capable of reading or writing or sleeping or practicing or doing anything otherwise productive. I’d head back to the kitchen around dinnertime and eat something.

Each evening after the sun started to go down, JT and I would take a walk down to this well half way down the ranch’s mile long driveway. Near the well, there was a big tub the cows that roamed around the ranch (owned by a neighbor) would drink out of, and when they keep the tub full, the cows and other animals tend to stay down there instead of coming up, so we’d walk down there and fill the tub each evening, freeing any mice that had been captured in the store-room, sitting on an old rusty cart, checking cel phones and shooting the shit while the water pumped through the hose into the tub. It took about twenty minutes to fill.

Instagrammed well cows.

M joined us one evening and on the walk back, JT and M started talking about spiders in their beds and Black Widows in their casitas. I hadn’t seen any Black Widows yet, or had any spiders in my bed, and I jokingly told them that after this conversation, I bet I’d see them everywhere. I was right. I went to take a shower when we got back and there was a huge Black Widow in the middle of its web, partially strung to the pump gallons of shampoo and conditioner we all used. I didn’t use them that day and took my future showers during the day when the Black Widows stay hidden. I went to the sinks outside the shower building after my shower to discover Black Widows chilling under each sink.

I headed back to my casita and as I was reaching to slide open the screen door, felt spider web stick to my face. I looked up. Two Black Widows, directly above the only entrance to my casita. Every night. Waking from nightmares to pee at least three times every night, I’d lay there, stuck in the nightmare and anxious about walking under the spiders, but I’d get up and do it eventually, squatting under the bright moon.

Once I entered my casita, I saw a brown spider on my bed. I kept trying to capture it, but it was too fast, so I just wrapped up the whole blanket, walked it outside under the Black Widows, and shook it out. If anyone could have seen this panicked scene and decision-making process, I imagine I would have looked like someone who has to pee really badly and is slightly bent over, knees together, shuffling from foot to foot. I decided that I’d have to try to make peace with my fear of spiders for the remainder of my time there. I’d have to pretend I was still blissfully ignorant of the fact that I was surrounded by Black Widows and other spiders. Also scorpions, wolves, and rattlesnakes. I didn’t see any of these other creatures on this visit, which was fine with me.

A few days before I left, K the kitchen manager returned and asked me at dinner that night if she could ride to Northern California with me. I said sure, but I am stopping in LA for a few days and she said that worked for her. She’d go to San Diego and spend Father’s Day with her dad. Great! As much as I love driving alone, the company and help driving was a welcome change at that point. With two of us, we’d be able to cross Arizona at night, which would be safer and more comfortable than trying to do it during the day with no AC.

People spend a lot of time in silence on the ranch. Residents who leave the ranch spend the entire day after they return in silence. Sometimes they wear little signs around their necks that say ‘please respect my silence’ and sometimes they just write on the dry erase board in the kitchen that they are in silence. Some people do functional silence, which means you can talk to them about work, but nothing else. JT was in functional silence every day until noon. The first day I didn’t notice the sign on her neck and said good morning or hi and when she didn’t respond, I remembered about the silence. I must have tried to talk to K at least three times when she was in silence because I kept forgetting. Doh! I felt like a jackass, but everyone was nice about it. ‘You just got here,’ they said.

Lama and I were able to organize everything she’d wanted to by my last day there, which felt great. I was so happy to have been able to help with a project that seemed so daunting to her and so simple to me. I’d gotten to spend a lot more time with her than most people get to, and she is very wise, indeed, but also fun and funny. I showed her how to use Google maps and she helped me map out my route across Arizona and convinced me to do it at night. She gave me her numbers and asked me to call and let her know when we’d made it safely to Los Angeles. I walked back down the hill to the kitchen and saw JT. I told her I’d be leaving later that day and she said ‘well we gotta hang out then.’

We hadn’t gotten to hang much during the time I was there with us both working a lot and neither of us sleeping much. She was suffering severe adrenal fatigue like Lama was, had been for several months, and was pretty clearly running on fumes. I’d had adrenal fatigue for a while last Fall and completely understood. I took expensive supplements for it and it cleared up, but JT doesn’t have any money for supplements, so she avoids foods that make it worse and tries to get as much rest as she can, but the adrenal fatigue makes it hard to sleep. You just lay there wanting to. I can relate to that too. We went and sat in front of the fan in her casita and bonded for a couple of hours before K and I got a ride to my car in Duncan.

We talked about the ranch, our childhoods, relationships, Buddhism, ranch lesbians, filthy queers, Michfest and San Francisco, where we’ve both lived in the past. Although we’ve been acquaintances for a couple of years, I really only started being friends with JT a year ago, and although we get along pretty well, I don’t actually know much about her, so it was nice to learn more, clarify and deepen the friendship.

Seeing Lama and JT run down from working so hard at the ranch plus having such a hard time emotionally while I was there had me thinking I probably didn’t want to come back in the winter. By the day I left though, the same day I got my period, I realized I’d unintentionally felt the emotional discomfort people often feel when they are intentionally on retreat, intensified by hormone fluctuation and still feeling heartbroken.

I decided I’d have good boundaries around work if I decided to come back for a few weeks or months later, no one else on the ranch had adrenal fatigue, and some of them had lived there for years. They just don’t work as hard as these two women and I wouldn’t either. I’d figured out that while I want to maintain a relationship with the ranch, I still don’t really want to delve more deeply into Buddhism as a practice, even though I’ve found a teacher with whom there are mutual feelings of connection. I said goodbye for now to the ranch and C, the office/administrative person on the ranch, gave K and I a ride into town.

Super sweet ranch dogs, Sonam and Samo.

Here Goes

3 Jun

I start my adventure for reals today. I have known I was going and have been very excited about going, but until I woke up this morning, it still kind of felt like I was just up visiting my family for a long weekend. I’m just here for the Bar Mitzvah and quality family time and R & R. I’m just here to soak up the ridiculous amounts of energy vibrating off all the freshly blooming and newly alive blankets and mountains of bright, soft green that cover everything here. Walking in the woods, or even through a field of wild flowers, especially in Spring, my hands start to heat up and buzz with energy. Breathing in the scent of the grass and the trees sends a shiver of energy right up my spine, and my whole body hums with it.

I can remember this happening all the way back to when I was a young child. I’m drawn to moss patches, especially the thick, dark ones. Even if I’m not feeling the energy from all directions, I can find a deeply verdant patch of moss and lay my hands on it. I close my eyes, and I feel the current of universe earth energy just right there. I soak up as much as I can handle into my hands, feel it tingle all the way up my arms to the crown of my skull and into my heart. I do this if I’m feeling like I need some healing, grounding, or just be reminded of my place in the universe. When I lay my hands under the tree in the night stage bowl on the land at Michfest, I can feel the blood and the power of every woman who has walked on that land. It’s like taking a blast. There’s an immediate rush of high through my whole body, buzzing, dizzy, trying to catch my breath. It’s amazing.

Sometimes, I soak up energy from the ground and lay my hands on someone close to me, transferring the energy to them. This is the absolute loudest and clearest way I can tell someone I love them. For that moment, if they are open, they can feel everything in my heart, everything there are no words for. There are very few people I know that are open in this way and that I feel comfortable sharing this with, but it’s so validating when I do and they feel that jolt of energy; they understand. Sometimes I generate so much of this energy inside me, it’s overwhelming, and I need to lay my hands on the ground and transfer it into the earth. And so it goes back and forth, like energetic give a penny take a penny.

There is a reason why I know exactly where the pain is when I rub the feet, hands, or back of friends, family or lovers. I have decided that part of this journey I’m about to embark on has to include finally learning how to develop this ability, get into some form of energy work. I have a feeling I will find a teacher in California. I think it will be someone I’ve never met before, probably referred or met through friends who are empaths. I am not super psychic, but I have some ability, and could develop more, and I have a feeling I will find a person or people who will help me understand and develop this and the energy stuff in the redwoods. It’s just a hunch for now, and I’ll be curious to see if I’m right.

Soooooo that brings me back to the fact that I’m leaving today. I had dinner with my moms Barbara, Beth and Priscilla the other night. Priscilla is my biological mom and I suspect I inherited some of this energy stuff from her, but most of it is all me. She called on her way home from dinner and said, ‘promise me you won’t go back to Providence. I know you have a very strong pull to go back there, and I need you to promise me you will take this time and this journey for yourself.’

‘I’m not going back to Providence,’ I said. ‘I do feel a very strong pull to be there right now, but I’m not going back either ever, or unless the end of this journey leads there someday. I know I need to take this time to follow the other things in my heart, and I’m seeing this through. I promise.’

I mean really I could go and walk right back into my amazing job. They haven’t even started interviewing for it yet. My boss says she’s in denial that I’ve left. She’s pretending I’m at Michigan and will be back in a month. My roommate/landlady said I was a perfect roommate and that I was welcome back anytime if she has an open room, and I really liked living in that house and the people and dogs there. In the weeks before I left, my best friend and dearest heart came back into my life, a powerful reconnection that made it both easier and more difficult to leave. But I left Providence a week ago and today I’m leaving my family and Vermont.

No more free meals and feeling surrounded by the love of my family and friends. Just me and the car and the ipod.

I am so ready for this.