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Sunday, December 31, 2023

Hesitant Light/Hesitancy; Scenes from the Journey, vol. 20, no. 53

This Scene completes Volume 20 of Scenes from the Journey, which means I have been sending an essay or a poem to you every week for the past twenty years. I have always enjoyed it (don't know whether you have), but it is time for a change.I will continue to write and send Scenes, but not on a weekly basis. You may see one every other week, or once a month, or even occasionally two in a row. Who knows? Who can predict how firmly I will be clasped by the Muse of Spontaneity? It will be a surprise event for me as well as you. As usual, I welcome your responses. 

 

Hesitant Light

 

May the light shine boldly.

Let's have nothing hesitant about our light.

We slow our step, our sight, our very minds,

allowing the best and most of light

to enliven us with its glow.

The glow, the shine, the brilliant sparks

will open into our dark places

and by penetrating the penumbra

lead us to a new level of understanding

that goes beyond the mind and

instead

incorporates the slow body.

We need that light to show us slow.

 

Hesitancy 

Having evoked the idea of hesitation, I feel compelled to channel my father, Myron Johnson, whose advice to us was succinct, if ambiguous: Look before you leap, for he who hesitates is lost. This was a typically Myron evasion of the serious, but also a cunning reminder that every folk saying has its opposite. Therefore, don't believe any of them. And on that note, we say farewell to 2023. See you in the funny papers.

 

 

 

Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com

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Sunday, December 24, 2023

Words to Live By?

One day I sat on the subway (many thanks for that last open seat I found) and I thought. I believe I've been asking, listening, and reading too much, for my mind is full of strictures. Do this. Do that. Spine straight (or as much as it can be in a subway seat), chin lowered to raise the crown of the head and lengthen the spine. Tongue gently resting behind the teeth on the soft palate. Breathe—but not partially. Breathe all the way. Let the diaphragm move. Expand your lungs, your belly. Keep all this in mind.

 

Think violet. Did you dot your crown, your third eye, and your heart with that mixture of cedarwood, frankincense, and rose, as was suggested? No, you forgot. Pity. Maybe you can do it later.

 

Drop your shoulders. In Therapeutic Touch they call them "should-ers" because they reflect the tension in our body as we "should" our way through our lives.

 

Each day is a new life, I read somewhere. I like that idea of starting anew every morning. And I'm still greeting that day with "ole" instead of "ohm", though I follow the first with the second immediately. The "ole" wakes me up enough to think, "Oh yes. I'm supposed to (i.e., I should) start the day with an ohm."

 

Last week I heard a quotation that began, "There is no path." I forgot to copy the second line to it, so rather than search it out I made up my own: "There is only an endless series of choices." And there you are: life in a nutshell.

 

In my spirit of striving (oh, stop striving!) to live consciously, I remind myself about joy and the appearance of joy; I remember that it takes more muscles to frown than to smile. Sure enough, it's useful to bring a thoughtful joy to the table when you can. Duh. Words to live by, maybe, but hardly original. Nonetheless, these are what I will keep in mind today: first, life is an endless series of choices, and second, bring a thoughtful joy to the table.

 

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, December 17, 2023

Urban Scene

As I was on a southbound streetcar at 10:30 one morning

the sun crept over the high-rise obstacles

and illuminated every tree in every block

turning black branches to radiance

each twig dipped in diamond dust for the day or,

if diamonds are too extravagant,

dunked into a vat of powdered Swarowsky crystals.

The trees shone, clear and brilliant

for us drab and dreary streetcar passengers

heading to Queen Street West

with its grey skies, grey pavements,

grey passers-by in worn black coats

but how lucky we were

those of us who saw the gleaming trees

to counter the grey

with that bright memory.

 

 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, December 10, 2023

Irreverence

Who knows where I read it. One spiritual self-help book or another. They pass through the house in a stream of ruffling paper. At any rate, here's what I read, more or less: begin each day, just as you awaken, with an "ohm." Then, as your feet touch the floor, intend that they will guide you into/toward the beauty of the day.

 

At least I think those are the two things I was told. But no matter what I was told, here's how it has played out in my mornings. Obviously I felt a need to respond to the suggestion to take an active role in directing my day. So the very first day—and every day since—I have awakened and the first sound that has come to my mind is "Ole!" I'm pretty quick to notice that that's probably not the right "o" word, and "ohm" follows right on its heels. But still, "Ole" is apparently how I want to greet the day.

 

And as my feet hit the floor (as my feet step gingerly onto my bedside rug) I say, sincerely, "Follow the Yellow Brick Road."

 

Again, obviously, the wrong thought. Am I incurably trivial? Eternally frivolous? Unable to be reverent about anything, even in the almost-unconscious state of half-asleep?

 

Irreverence is not a fault, I try to tell myself. I recently read a blurb for Anne Lamott's latest book praising her for being both irreverent and reverent. And when I read that I recognized once again that Anne Lamott is my role model.

 

But I worry that though I have the irreverent part down cold, the reverent part is lagging behind. Try as I might, the Ultimate Seriousness of Life escapes me. So far, anyway. Some people have it in spades and don't need to wait for the vicissitudes of age to drag seriousness up from the depths. (Of course, also, some people are too serious.)

 

All I strive for nowadays is acceptance of my self: this is how I am.

 

Ole.

 

 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, December 3, 2023

For the Duration

Once upon a time, "for the duration" meant short-term. Now, I find that the duration is long and hard. Endless, even. Enduring from now until the end is something entirely different.

 

The names of things are like tracings in the sand that dissolve with the tide. Nouns are sometimes available, but synonyms are gone forever, as if I'm being told I can have one noun for each thought, each feeling, each sense. Apparently, to ask for more than one is greedy; I must leave some words for others. I've had my turn to play with language and now must give way, contenting myself, for the duration, with one word per idea.

 
 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, November 26, 2023

Sink Deeper

Sink deeper.

Go long.

Imperatives, imperatives.

How they distress me.

Stop telling me what to do.

And so what happens if I allow myself

to go beyond this flash reaction?

What happens if I simply respond

instead of reacting?

Well, I'm not going to go long,

since I couldn't catch a football

even in my prime.

But will I sink deeper?

Plumb the depths?

I won't deny it's my desire.

You can tell that

by observing just how many barriers,

hurdles, traps, and thorny thickets

I set in place to keep me safe

from sinking deeper.

 

Sink deeper.

What is it that's actually down there?

What lies beneath the heap of discarded views?

Well, if I knew

I wouldn't feel compelled to sink to find out.

It's the unknown that I seek

and fear of the unknown is what holds me back.

There are those who insist

we already know,

in some part of our unconscious,

the unknown,

which then becomes the known unknown.

 

Nothing to fear there at all, at all.

 

 

Ann Tudor
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Sunday, November 19, 2023

Crows and Butterflies

Don't get me started on the sound of crows. Oh, I know many people hate crows and their sound, seeing them as evil, seed-eating, eyeball-plucking vermin with wings. That may well be true, but those aren't MY crows. Mine filled my life until some 15 or 20 years ago. Every time I left the house they'd greet me from Nancy's tall maple across the street, a whole murder of them cawing to me and I'd always greet them: Hi, guys! And thank them for being there. Since the epidemic that wiped them out in the neighbourhood I've not seen any crows—not in High Park, not around the house, not in my dreams. But even in their absence they are my crows.

 

And now, manifesting what I want to talk about here, I will move on. Because what I need to talk about is the butterfly mind. We've all seen the flight of butterflies. Not the flight of the bumblebee, busy-busy and moving directly from A to B. But that of the butterfy, which is a marvel of inefficiency. In fact, the marvel is that a butterfly ever gets from A to B at all. I picture those clouds of monarchs flitting thousands of miles to over-winter in Mexico (in Mariposa, or did I make that up?). The distance, were a crow to fly it, may be thousands of miles, but as the butterfly flies it, the distance is doubled or tripled.

 

The connection here, of course, is how the workings of my brain, which was once as focused as the flight of the bumblebee, has become pure butterfly. Three wing-beats up, then four off to the right, then a straight drop down but then immediately back up to where I was at the beginning. Imagine trying to track a butterfly's trip and you'll see the kind of trip I'm on.

 

A thought arrives. I begin to explore it, either aloud or internally, and then my eye alights on a dust mote, say, and I see it dance in a sunbeam and my thought veers, pivots, goes off in another direction entirely. I could live with this, just barely, except that with the pivot the original thought disappears.

 

I might be discussing something important with DinoVino and he interrupts me, innocently, to clarify a point, and with that interruption my thought is gone. I can confidently say that almost all my thoughts disappear, sooner rather than later.

 

I used to say (I was 70 when I said this) that the mice were eating holes in my brain and were thus responsible for my loss of words. Now I would replace "mice" with something like nematodes, if that's who I'm thinking of: teeny, very slender worms. They've infested my brain by the hundreds and each one slowly eats a very skinny tunnel through the tissue, disrupting previous neural pathways and changing how my brain works, forever. Forever, in this case, is a very scary word.

 

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, November 12, 2023

Small Gods

For fifty years and more

I refrained from using that word

(with or without an upper-case G).

For me it evoked a childhood

of propaganda and rote prayers.

And now, aware of Spirit and the Universe

and the comforting, hovering ancestors,

I still find other words.

Not that words are needed, of course.

 

We pray without words

when we attend to moments, to trees,

to others, to our own awareness.

We pray, in short, as we live our lives

and know that we are here on this beautiful Earth.

We pray in the spirit of the rock,

the woven fabric, the spun yarn,

the kiln-baked brick, the brick-baked bread.

 
 
 
Copyright © Ann Tudor
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Sunday, November 5, 2023

Cards Pulled from the Crone's Support Deck

What's Left Behind. If you pulled this image from the deck of Crone Cards, you may find yourself overwhelmed. What's left behind? Well, everything, actually. Depending on your particular circumstances you may have jettisoned the belongings of a lifetime in order to shoehorn yourself into a space so small it fits you like a glove.

 

You may have done this willingly. Or it may have happened to you as part of an inexorable push toward your next phase.

 

In either case you need to decide how you feel about what was left behind. The emotions of your life are as vivid as the physical items, as vivid also as the people who have played large or small roles in your life. And all of these have been left behind.

 

But in another way they are still with you. Not in actual memory, perhaps, but in your body's memory of what it has lived through. Let the physical things of your past go without a thought, but treasure what remains in your body and soul.

 

Patience. If there was ever a time for patience, this is it, for these are your years of expectation and waiting. These are the slow years. Perhaps you can welcome the slowness instead of railing against it. Your daily walk is not as brisk as it used to be? You find yourself overtaken and passed by every other walker in the park? Do you really care? The former you—the one you once were--cared. But competitiveness will get you exactly nowhere now, so you might as well take in the sights as you amble along your path.

 

What are you waiting for? Once that was a rallying cry: get on with it! Get moving! But we can also see it as an actual question and try to answer it: what are you waiting for? What do you think will happen while you are waiting? Are you an active waiter or a passive one? Your new times welcome both these conditions.

 

Loneliness. Oh, my dear. Loneliness. We can be so lonely in the midst of a living space of 200 other people. We can be lonely sitting at the dining table with three other people we know only superficially.

 

We are lonely when there is no one around who knows us. If you are a California hippie who traveled across the continent on your motorcycle and who was into woo-woo before the term even existed, then it is hard for your new neighbours to see you. You are a mystery to them, which is to say they simply see you as being the same as them—which is to say they don't see you at all—which is to say you are lonely.

 

Any remedy for this must come from within. Will it help to drop all expectation of being known in your present circumstances?

 

 

Bursting. Bursting with energy! Bursting with joy! Bursting with anticipation.

 

A literal bursting is not what we want here. But the fizz and sizzle within us that feels as if we're ready to burst? That's something to reassure. When you were five years old this was probably a familiar feeling. Why is it we lose that fizz as we grow older? But now, free from the daily obligations that beset us before we were crone-aged, we can return to fizzing. I fizz quietly when in the embrace of a new, good book. I fizz more energetically when I see each day a new blue flower, three inches in diameter and unfurled like an umbrella from its bud, on my single miraculous morning glory plant. I planted three seeds at the beginning of the summer, but then the pot fell from a height during a wind-storm and I salvaged only one of the little plants. It twined and vined healthily to a pretty length, but without flowers. Then the lower leaves dried up and fell off. And then, on Labour Day, the first blossom appeared, a blossom of surpassing beauty, as blue as the sky. Since that time there has been a blossom a day, ephemeral but even more welcome for that.

 

If I count the buds there are still a dozen potential flowers, a dozen days of dazzle, to come from that fragile vine, leafless for a third of its length. Nature's ways are mysterious.

 

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, October 29, 2023

The Way Things Go

Pema Chodron has said (and I paraphrase) that things don't get solved. They come together and they fall apart, and then again, and then again. The healing comes from being ready for all of this to happen.

 

Well, thank you, Pema. You've pretty good at coming up with the right words when they're needed. So instead of thinking that I am lost because my thread broke, I can reframe it this way: things fall apart, after which according to you they will come together again. And then the whole thing all over again and the thread is still there. Unbroken. Just like the circle.

 

As I lay awake recently in mid-night, I hoped to find a thread of thought to write about the next day. But as I investigated I found that each thought was only one sentence deep. Maybe two.

 

Nothing that passed through my head from 3:40 to 6 a.m. was worth a second look. Well, wrong phrase. Many of them did want a second look. They'd come charging back into my consciousness but with the same lack of depth they had shown the first time.

 

I walked longer than usual yesterday, from my hairdresser's new and very far away salon to my son's house where I could see two of the grandchildren. Google Maps showed me the route (I printed it out) and told me it would take 45 minutes. Well, Google hasn't walked a mile in my shoes. Boots.

 

In boots, my normal healthy stride is more like a trudge. The map was probably fine but I couldn't read it without my glasses, which were buried in my purse, so I missed a turn-off and traveled diagonally a lot farther south than I should have. Additional trudge, trudge.

 

It was a good walk. Not too cold. No ice. But the unspoken comment my mind kept throwing at me was "Oof!"

 

Oof? What happened to "whee!"? Or if not that, then "Ohm"? Or even Ole? What happened to the possibility of joy (see "whee!" above)? Or of being conscious (see "Ohm"). But no, the only sound in my head was Oof!

 

I thought I had exorcized Eeyore for good. I thought that recognizing his longstanding role in my life had enabled me to move beyond Eeyore and into—if not Tigger than at least Owl. Again Pema has nailed it. Eeyore disappears, gone for a while, when things came together, and then when they fall apart again, here's Eeyore, alas-ing his way through my life.

 

Maybe tomorrow will be different. Maybe Eeyore will recede and I will move from "oof!" to "whee!"

 

 
Ann Tudor
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Sunday, October 22, 2023

It Can Be Lost

That scarlet tulip ready to pop?

            It can be lost.

The swift joy of meeting a friend unexpectedly?

            It can be lost

The welcome warmth of April's elusive sun?

            It can be lost.

You see the pattern:

Joy comes, the good times they do roll,

the smiles of a summer night fill the air

and they can all be lost.

More honestly, they will be lost.

 

I'd counsel you to grab what you can while you can,

but that's too greedy.

Instead I'll say something like this:

Gather ye rosebuds while ye may!

Or Carpe diem!

Or just be awake to every passing beauty

because, like life's ills,

our days of wine and roses will eventually

inevitably

be lost.

 
 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, October 15, 2023

Ties

Oh, they bind, they bind. Around the neck, they bind. Twist them and they fasten the neck of your plastic bag. Twist more tightly and they become the mandatory Sunday lunch at Grandmother's house, reinforcing those old family ties. Spell it another way and you get a tasty restaurant, House of Thai, that will serve you noodles laced with sugar and salt and oil and chiles.

 

Ties bind. Take off your tie and stay awhile, honey. We'll use that tie to bind us—if you're into that sort of thing.

 

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
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Sunday, October 8, 2023

The Giant Question Mark

I've had it with giant question marks.

I know you think we are defined

by the eternal questioning, the questing.

But there are other ways to live,

some of which involve acceptance

rather than subjecting everything

to the giant question mark.

 

Easy for some,

this business of acceptance.

Easy when life is mild and the outside world

is free of random explosions.

I guess we live where we live,

take what comes,

and carry gratitude with us

in our everyday backpack of burdens.

 

I will reserve for another time,

another life,

the giant question mark.

 

 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, October 1, 2023

Undoing the Day

Like Penelope unweaving at her loom every night

(though not for the same reason)

I practice undoing.

 

I do all day what is to be done

and when the sun sets

and darkness covers the land,

I begin the work of undoing.

 

These days

there's too much doing!

Random and frantic activities

fill my known world,

to no great effect.

 

It's time to think before I speak,

time to breathe before I plunge my poor body

once more into the pit.

 

If I sit for a while with my feet up

and my mind idle,

then perhaps at night there will be less to undo.

Perhaps sleep will be sweeter,

deeper,

when I don't have to undo the day's doing.

 

 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, September 24, 2023

Writing Practice

My pen hesitates longly before it can engage with the blank, white page. Sometimes it's enough just to imagine writing. To let the thoughts, the rhymed and rhythmic sentences, reverberate within the skull's walls.

 

But the point of writing group is full participation, so pen hits page and words tumble as I let the somethings fall as they may (pieces? That's too mundane to have become a saying. Oh yes: Chips! Let them fall, those bits of the old block—old blockhead—fall as they may, scattering like a bride's rose petals onto the lines of my white page.)

 

Sometimes it's enough to wander without focus because sometimes that's all there is.

 

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, September 17, 2023

What It's Like in Words

I'm ready now to give up on words.

For years I've been telling anyone who would listen

what it's like.

I've been using words for that because they were handy,

available, popping to the fore as needed.

 

And then the words began their disappearing act,

which started slow and seemed innocuous

until it snowballed down the path of my life

taking no prisoners

and leaving me a pauper for words.

 

I know what it has been like in words.

Now what will replace them?

This is a time of change:

I gave up the piano, I can give up words

(hardly a choice, since they are the rats

leaving this sinking ship).

What will remain when I can no longer say

what it's like in words?

What it's like in fabric?

What it's like in paper and paint?

In quiet introspection and observation?

 

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, September 10, 2023

Sadness

A whole poem on sadness?

Pictures of sadness are plastered

on the insides of my eyelids,

daring me to close my eyes in search of sleep.

 

I don't need or want a sadness poem.

Sadness I can do quite well all by myself,

thank you,

with no help from a poem.

 

So what else is in the quiver?

Pull out an arrow of attention

or one of calm acceptance.

Is there an arrow of compassion?

Empathy?

 

How about the standard Cupid's arrow?

A dart of love to prick the thickest skin.

Tipped with healing herbs from the garden,

this dart can change us all.

At the very least

the shock of its sting

will eclipse sadness.

 

 

Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com

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Sunday, September 3, 2023

A Round of Applause

 

A round of applause for each of us—

the just and the unjust,

the deserving and the . . . no, wait!

The point is that we are all deserving,

whether or not we believe it.

Wouldn't it be welcome,

that sound of a pair of hands coming together

at day's end

to recognize your accomplishments--

no matter how mundane they are

(wake up, brush your teeth, wash your face,

feed the cat, walk the dog)?

We don't even have to go beyond

the everyday

to be worthy of applause.

 

Though we could.

We could go beyond.

We could juxtapose the heavy spring snow

with the still upstanding tulips, for example,

and let that scene echo in the mind's eye.

 

 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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Sunday, August 27, 2023

The Final Version

The final version of myself,

not yet achieved,

will be the finest version.

Or so I hope.

The optimist in me,

newly arrived,

projects progress into these late years,

even as I bring to bear on life's vicissitudes

a previously rare courage,

a compassion hitherto reluctant

to show itself.

With courage and compassion my companions,

the faithful dog and pony accompanying my road show,

I will attain the finest final version

within my capacity.

Finally.

 

 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
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Sunday, August 20, 2023

Being Idle and Blessed; Scenes from the Journey, vol. 20, no. 34

 

Being Idle and Blessed

 

It has taken me lo! these many years

to learn to be idle.

And now, in the blessed life

that idleness gives me—

cradled in the humid warmth of this

     ceaseless summer—

I adjust myself to the peace of idleness.

 

Sometimes I forget.

If I find calendar squares marked

with Things To Do

I apply my energies to winnowing

those people to see, places to go,

erstwhile delights

that I now grudgingly incorporate

into my life of idleness.

I live a delicate balance

of putting nose to rose

while soaking in the heat of the week.

And still I must admit a pride of accomplishment

when I mend with embroidery the hole in the left knee

of my thirty-year-old blue jeans.

To do.

Not to do.

 
 
Copyright © 2023 Ann Tudor
Musings blog: http://www.scenesfromthejourney.blogspot.com
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