Friday, September 26, 2014

Esta como Elena.

Well.

I quit my job.

I went home to Montana.

If you asked me why, I am not sure that I could put all of it into words. If 15 different people asked me why, I would likely give them all very different reasons--and I think they would all be true. My last day was bittersweet. I had hated night shift. It made me crazy and lonely. I was always switching from nights to mornings and back again. But I loved the community that was morning shift, even though I was the only white woman and I usually had very little idea what was going on. I had chosen to love the people there even though I knew I would leave quite soon. I invested a lot. Actually, I invested a lot more than I realized. I cannot think of a word to describe how I feel in thinking about the way they took care of me other than "blessed".

Elaine is a difficult name to pronounce in Spanish. It has too many vowels. But when I told my Hispanic co-workers that it is "como Elena", it stuck. After 4+ years of Spanish class, if you call me by my Spanish equivalent, there is 90% chance that I will answer in Spanish. My confused 3 year old efforts in their language pleased them and I learned a new kind of humility. I lived on heavy servings of their grace and patience.

Sharing that vulnerability only made me feel that much closer to people with whom I could only talk with about my family, food, t-shirts and boxes, and (if my vocabulary held out) maybe a sentence or two about what I did on the weekends. On the days that were very Spanish heavy and I was overly tired, I would come home unable to sort the languages because, in the warehouse, I did not have to. We made our own language based around what they knew in English and what I knew in Spanish and how available one of the bilingual people would be. I did not always transition out of that so easily. But I am not Elena anymore. 6:00am does not bring me Spanish love ballads and it has been a full week since I have been greeted in Spanish. Leaving was quite possibly the hardest decision that I have ever made. Not the hardest thing I have ever endured or survived, but the most difficult act I have ever committed independent of provocation.

I hope it was the right thing. I hope it was, at least, a good or healthful thing.

I realize now, that I have left behind my main community and support. As frustrating as it was to be unable to communicate so much of what was important to me, these were the people who gave me their time. They taught me Spanish and spoke with their hands and their eyes. And they kept talking slower and slower the more exhausted I was until I finally got whatever obvious thing I was overlooking. And if I had asked for anything, they would have given it. With joy.

I would like to think that that is true of all of my spheres of community past and present, but I am not convinced. So often, people are busy and distracted and they act like you are going to break through their thick wall of self-sufficiency and scheduling in order to tell them that you are vulnerable and needy. As if you have that kind of energy by the time you are damaged and drained. They act like you are going to chase them down to ask them to take care of you. Because that feels healthy and not at all codependent...right. And dignified. Turns out, human beings cling to a sense of human dignity long after the size of their need tells them it is not the most efficient way of filling needs. At the core of being human is a profound lack of efficiency that makes me wonder a little.

Anyway, I am going to miss that community. It would have been soooo much easier to let go if I knew at all what was coming next. If I had somewhere to go after I left. But I do not. I mean, I am here in Montana, but that is to stave off the loneliness...not to actually choose a direction. Unless I come back here permanently. That is an option I guess. Everything is an option and I am as of yet committed to no thing and no place.

All I know is that Elena is no more and that carries a heavy sense of loss. I will miss that community, but I have no words to tell them why or how much. Just as I had no words to answer the constant porque Elena? Porque?

I come back to my Israelite metaphor that I began living in after I got fired from HAI. I am still in the desert. At different times in the last couple of months, I have thought that I had left the desert. Every time I was surprised to learn that I was truly in the desert with a God that I am well aware could, and possibly should, abandon me here forever. He already got me out of Egypt and I have been so ungrateful. Besides, the Angel of Death leaves a particular impression on a person. And the desert. It just keeps going. The topography is always vaguely familiar and vaguely foreign.

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Just a preview. And a warning.
Warning: musings about home and community ahead. Not guaranteed to make sense or to have tact. Product may contain unprocessed honesty and raw confusion.

Sunday, September 14, 2014


wildflowers
Cassiopeia 







These plants have been my project for the summer. It's funny. I didn't plant tomatoes, but they grew. Seriously. I didn't plant tomatoes. I planted strawberry plants and chilis. The chilis were eaten by slugs and the strawberries survived. ...then the tomato plants sprouted up from the ground like a time capsule left to me by the last tenant. One of the tomato plants gives me softball sized fruit and has a trunk thicker than my wrist. They have a will to live that is admirable. So I have agreed to take care of them. Besides my most faithful bamboo plant, I also have a eucalyptus bush, a citrus mint plant, a lenten rose named Alexandria, and two pots of flowers that live outside next to the wildflowers. The potted plants are named Cassiopeia and Molari. There are about 5 homeless bees that sleep in my flowers. And I have a mouse that lives in my tomatoes and strawberries that I have named Demeter. This is my house. These are my favorite facts of life that stand between me and the loneliness. 

I had a lonely day last week though. So I went and I took these photos where the sidewalk ends
:







Monday, September 1, 2014

Montana.


 I wish I could say that I took these photos. I did not; my boyfriend took them on my camera. But I like sharing.


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