Meredith

I can no other answer make, but, thanks, and thanks.

~William Shakespeare

So, yeah, I’m not doing very well.  I think I am officially going to take a blog hiatus and just allow myself to grieve and process and all that stuff.

Last week, just after the funeral, I was convinced that the best thing for me would be to dive right back into “normal” life and keep myself busy.  But I see now that’s just not going to work.  I need space, and stillness, time in the garden and time within the covers of my trusty notebook, time with F. and time with family and friends and, yes, time alone.  Solitude, especially in Nature, has always been essential to my optimum health.

So I’m going to take that time and make that space.  I’m sure y’all will understand.

I have managed to answer very few of the lovely comments since just before I got the call about Granddaddy being in the hospital.  As late as last night, I was feeling very guilty about that, and I did try to catch up, starting about four posts back.  Mostly because I’ve so appreciated your kind and supportive words, and I want to let you know, individually, how much.  But when I woke up this morning, I realized I could let you all know here how much it’s meant to me, how touched I am that you care.

Thank you, my virtual friends.

If you want to see me online, I may well be Twittering.  Although I am considering taking a hiatus there, too, for now this format seems more doable to me because it requires less effort and involvement on my part.  Even so, part of me is campaigning for a full release from online activity, and if I become convinced that this is the correct path for me, my Twitter feed may go dormant for a time, too.

Should you really need an Enchanted Earth fix, don’t forget to stroll through the archives and to enjoy some Soul Food in the sidebar.  (Of course, this won’t work for you old-timers who’ve been with me since the beginning.  You’ll just have to be patient, I guess.)

I also plan to stop by your blogs and enjoy your words and pictures.  It may be a more irregular thing than before, but I’ll still try to keep in touch.

Nonetheless, I am sure that I will miss you all, and I look forward to the day I can get back to my regularly scheduled life.  For now, this is my life, and I accept the full and awesome range of it, its beauty and sadness, confusion and splendor, grace and loss, laughter and wonder and pain.  I am grateful for each and every milestone in my path, whether joyful or sorrowful — or a complicated mix of both.

Namasté, y’all.

A view through thyme.

One must learn a different… sense of time, one that depends more on small amounts than big ones.

~Sister Mary Paul

Let children walk with Nature, let them see the beautiful blendings and communions of death and life, their joyous inseparable unity, as taught in woods and meadows, plains and mountains and streams of our blessed star, and they will learn that death is stingless indeed, and as beautiful as life.

~ John Muir

Bee on cosmos.

Somehow this bee seemed the right photo for this post.  I’ve been spending some time in a similar posture, feeling this grief deep in my gut, curled over upon myself.

Too, I feel like bowing in gratitude for the gift of my grandfather’s long life and his powerful, joyful, meaningful presence in my own.  I’m so grateful that I got to be there with him even at the end.  I like to think his peaceful passing was in part due to the room being filled up with his children, grandchildren, and friends.

So much love in one room.

Grief, too, of course.

What a strange water I navigate across now!  I almost wish our culture still mandated mourning clothes, still recognized a proscribed dress code, so that when I am a little odd, when my social mask goes missing, when I cannot do the polite public face at all, cannot pull it out of me for even two minutes’ interaction with a stranger, people would say to themselves, “Oh, well, it’s normal, she’s in mourning,” instead of maybe questioning what else might be wrong, whether I’m a cuckoo anti-social walking around their town, or whether they, themselves, have made a misstep.

So far, it’s peaks and valleys, like everything else.  My Uncle Michael nodded sagely and whispered that in my ear yesterday, when I tried to describe for him how I was “holding up” through the process.  I guess I’m not surprised.  The very structure of the universe seems to be these waves, and here I am experiencing them again.

Sometimes I even forget for a moment.  The night before the funeral, I cut my right thumb and palm, badly, on broken glass (yet another reason blog posts may be scarce for a bit).  I’ve avoided touching the wound as much as I possibly can — but then I’ll just forget, and do something to make myself cry out from the pain.  This morning I grabbed the broom to sweep the kitchen floor, a perfectly normal activity, and nearly bit through my own lip on the first stroke, as the deep cut reopened itself from the pressure.

I think it’s something like that.  It’s just normal to forget.  It seems Granddaddy must still be here because, well, my definition of “world” includes him in it, and so that is the default setting I revert to.

And then I remember.

I’ve been putting off writing this post partly because it makes it seem so real to put it here, in black and white — and partly because I really don’t know what to say yet.  Sometimes it feels like I’m floating, or in a dream, moments from awakening.  How could I possibly write a coherent post from within this strange, otherworldly place?  (I’m most likely not.  Oh, well.)

Yet surely I must share the news properly, not just as a small update within the last post.  That note doesn’t show up in RSS feeds or Google Reader, and I’ve gotten several e-mails now, wondering what happened, asking how I am.

Well, this is what happened:  Granddaddy passed away on Sunday night.  I think his death was as “stingless” as a human death may be.

As to how I am, just typing that last sentence makes me go all hollow inside.  (Maybe the stinger got lodged in my heart instead?)

Nature and the garden, as always, are solace.  The tough part is that the last communication my grandfather and I had together was about my garden, and so much of our time together over the years revolved around our mutual love of Nature, of growing things, revolved around our joy in helping to birth food from the Earth — and all the attendant trials of the process.  He used to say, with his characteristic, barely-there, mischievous wisp of a smile, that it was a relief at least one of his grandchildren was a farmer by nature.  I was so glad — and so fortunate — to be that one.

So my great solace also now contains a thousand references to my great sorrow.

The plants now hold flowers, fruit… and memories.

Namasté, y’all.


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