Monthly Archives: December 2024

With this Orange


Iowans love their trees, and in Autumn you can see why. Suddenly, every street is a Klimt painting, with glowing golden, amber, chartreuse and scarlet leaves trembling on slender branches, getting ready to let go and fall to earth.

Last week, I planted (with the help of a big strong man) a crab-apple tree in my front yard. Awash with plump red berries, it’s in front of the house to the right of the front door. I can see it from where I sit on the couch beside the fire, looking out the window, there she is. Torrey’s tree.

I dashed home from work when I learned the digging had begun, arriving just in time. As Denny filled the bucket with water, I carried out a quarter cup of my husband’s ashes to the edge of the hole in the earth. On my knees, I scattered the bits of bone in a perfect circle, ready to receive the roots.

I went inside to get my camera, returning to the front door to see that the tree was in place. Staked on the sides, trunk circled with a white plastic tube, a metal cage around it as well, it is protected for the coming months as it goes into dormancy. Then, in Spring, it will burst into white blossoms.

Love and Death. How close they are, intense, mysterious, inevitable. To die for love is the romantic’s dream come true. Death makes life and love sweeter. The fact that life ends gives us purpose, and the drive to grow our souls. Love, I now know, is sacrifice: joyous, willing sacrifice. Sacrifice that is an honor, a privilege, a gift of grace.

Human cremains have a strange, powerful energy. Whether they sit quietly in a cardboard box in a closet for decades, rest in an expensive urn on a mantel, are scattered to the winds or tossed into the sea, they are more than just a symbol of a soul. They are, in a very real way, the last of an individual’s physical essence in this world.

And now, back to trees. The Wedding Tree is a California scrub oak perched above a canyon, one of the many mini-ridges of land in Big Sur, stretching like a finger down towards the highway, the cliffs, and the waves.

A picture-perfect place for rustic and romantic weddings, we hosted several unforgettable nuptials beneath this oak. One involved the bride arriving on a bejeweled white horse. For another, we placed rows of hay bales for seating down the hillside and the tree was decorated in tiny bells and colorful streamers. All of these celebrations involved toasts, pledges, and heartfelt poetry.

It was on this mountain that Torrey and I said our private wedding vows one brisk and glorious Winter afternoon. It was a spontaneous, flirtation-turned-serious moment. In an instant, our guardian angels took charge and we began the next chapter of our great adventure.

“With this orange I thee wed.” I said, feeding him a section of mandarin orange from the citrus tree beside my bedroom door. He took the orange tenderly from my hand, peeled off another section and fed me a small piece of the delicious, tangy fruit.

“With this orange I thee wed,” he said.

Then, Torrey lifted up the orange to the heavens and said,

“With this orange, we are wed.”

Next, we looked out over the shining blue ocean and sighed together, a nice big exhale. The simplest possible wedding ceremony, and all of it just for us.

A wind line from Pfeiffer point several miles to the north divided the calm ocean waters from the darker, wilder open sea.  

On another afternoon we stood watching the sunset beneath this same scrub oak. The neighbor’s giant white Turkish sheepdog appeared at our side. Kash was a mystical creature, intuitive, protective and playful.

“These big dogs are so special, “Torrey said, and I replied,

“Yes, but they don’t live as long as the little ones.”

His eyes twinkled and his smile was wise and kind.

“Well, darlin’, we can’t have everything we want in this life, that’s not why we’re here.”

We laughed, but today I understand this moment better. When we are blessed with a great love later in life, we can’t expect it to last for decades.

Last August I made a return pilgrimage to the Wedding Tree. Alone, I buried a small amount of Torrey’s bones in the earth beneath the oak. The day was gray and overcast, the ocean invisible. The little tree had grown a size or two larger, and was garlanded with heavy ropes of Spanish moss, that brushed the grasses beneath it. The light all around was muted and soft. The land was quiet as I whispered my prayers to the earth and sky.

I placed the fine white powder into a depression in the soil, covered it with a round river stone I’d found, then brushed handfuls of oak leaves onto the tiny sacred site. The wind blew, I looked north into the fog, and wept.

Love and Death, entwined on a magical tree above the sea.

The End of AUD

When you throw parties, the fortune-teller told me with a smile, the dead come to enjoy the vibe. They love to celebrate Life with you and your friends. At the next gathering of my tribe I imagined indigenous people dancing and drumming in the meadow, while the previous owners of the land cracked open a bottle of champagne, pouring it into old-fashioned coupe glasses.

Always with gatherings, there would be libations. Adult beverages, as a friend of mine, a true wino, calls them. A true wino meaning someone who has an extensive wine cellar of fine vintages of the grape, who can hold forth in flowery language about “terroir” (the wine tastes like where it was grown) and “legs” (wine streaks on a glass, called tears) and flavors reminiscent of blueberries, figs, lemons, lapsang-souchong, black pepper with just a hint of raspberry. Whatever. A connoisseur, who basically likes to get drunk every night, ideally with like-minded bon-vivants.

In my previous life, there was never a gathering without wine, a good bottle or two or three or four. This definitely got the conversation and other juices flowing. My first husband was a sommelier (French for wine steward) as well as a gourmet chef, so not only did I not need to cook (and was, in fact, banned from the kitchen), I also got to get loaded with our guests at every gathering. Afternoons, evenings and weekends that were filled with storytelling, laughter, dancing, sunset-watching and star-gazing. I’m not complaining! As they say, the fun never stopped.

Until it got old.

Or was it that I did?

Coming home to a house full of unexpected guests, and putting on the “drink bag” (like a horse with a sack full of oats hanging from its ears) became less and less appealing.  Not to mention the flirtations that I witnessed when I was occasionally sober, my then-husband’s especially. No one realizes how transparent they become when they’re high. Why? Because they’re high! Really kind of a blessing.

We were always seeking our tribe, and finding it. Real community, yet so often we found ourselves celebrating in the bottom of a bottle.

One evening a dear friend, at the time a total lush, suggested I open something from the “cellar” the cellar being a stack of cardboard boxes filled with wine in the darkest corner of the closet, so I dove in. I thought the vintage said 1994. As I opened the bottle of Robert Mondavi Reserve Cabernet I looked more carefully at the label, Nineteen Seventy Four. Ooops.

Oh no, I yelped, and started to push the cork back in.

Well, that won’t work girlie, said my friend, laughing, and so I pulled the cork out all the way. We each had a couple of glasses as we sat on the Adirondack chairs and watched the sunset over the ocean. Not only was it deliciously forbidden wine, it was actually the best wine I’d ever had, before or since (with the exception of a lady winemaker friend’s Santa Maria Chardonnay that tasted like flowers, but that’s another story.)

I learned later that the Napa Valley Cabernets from the 1970’s weren’t as amped with alcohol: 11-12% instead of the 14 or 15% which is the norm today. A much smoother, gentler buzz, and no hangover.

Speaking of hangovers, I was the Hangover Queen. It seemed at every gathering I would draw the short straw and be the one with the vicious, killer hangover.

They came in all kinds: the creeping slow tide, when I would wake up and give thanks to God that I had dodged the bullet, only to have the classic splitting headache come on later and last for a few days. Or, the kind when I would feel so woozy I couldn’t eat breakfast, or even have a cup of coffee. Or, and this one happened to me a lot, the icepick through the eyeball variety, leaving me wondering for hours if I was on the verge of keeling over.

One night when Torrey was in the hospital at the University of Iowa, I forgot the damage two glasses of Sauvignon Blanc in a lonely hotel room can do. At the hospital pharmacy the next day I found myself eyeballing the Alka-seltzer packages. I asked a beautiful young woman, clearly a pharmacy student, if this kind of Alka-seltzer was, um, good for hangovers?

I even confessed that I had one, and needed relief.

You know, I said,  “Plop, plop –  fizz, fizz oh what a relief it is?” I didn’t expect she would get this. I showed her the 50-year old TV commercial on You-tube, which she appreciated.

She asked the senior pharmacist in the back, who also remembered the famous jingle.

Actually not this kind of Alka-seltzer, but Naproxen (aka Aleve) will help, she told me.

Oh, and the acetaminophen (Tylenol) I’d been taking for hangovers for years? It’s contraindicated for alcohol use. Who knew?

What a blessing it is to get older and finally give all that up. I miss the celebrations of course, but relish feeling better in the mornings, and all day long. I also confess to feeling a little smug. At last, I’m getting over this life-long case of AUD (Alcohol Use Disorder). Hallelujah!

I drank my last glass of wine when I met a friend for lunch the day before my husband, the one who had rescued me, passed away. Exhausted and agitated after six months of battle in the hospital wars, I had no understanding that he was going home, and so very soon.

The caregiver suggested I take a short break, and that shared bottle of wine was like a dose of Ativan. Later that afternoon Hospice arrived and Torrey set off on his voyage.  

The next day, as I pressed my body against his in our bed, his body cold, turning into sacred marble, mine still pumping blood, weak with grief, I felt the last little molecules of the grape leaving my system. For good. That craving is gone.

The following day I poured the last of the cheap red wine down the kitchen sink.

What is a soul family? Do we gather with them after we die? Torrey thought so. We were family to each other on this earthly plane, with a love both intimate and unconditional. Because of this, our souls grew deeper in unexpected ways. Such a blessing to have this, at least once in a lifetime.

It could be that we are all in the same tribe and can’t feel it, at least not yet. When I would sit in circles in retreats, I would say to myself, who are these people? I don’t think I have anything in common with them. Then we would start sharing our stories, and I would realize, without a doubt: we are the same, we are connected. Just variations on a theme.

But the soul family, these are the souls that follow each other from life to life, learning, loving, growing. This round the soul is my mother, later, my child. This life, my enemy, next life, my friend.  Who was I last time? Who will I be next time? Imponderable questions.

One thing I know for certain – there are people we are supposed to meet. When you see the light in the eyes of your beloved, you follow that person, through hell if necessary, and all the way up to the gates of heaven if you can.

.

Like a kid on a slide

Like a kid on a slide

Late in his medical journey, when they inserted an IV, or a tube, or put him through pain, he’d lost the masculine stoicism he’d carried proudly throughout his life. He would yelp in anguish, complain, push medical staff away, tell them, no, no, no.

Nephrostomy tube, catheter, stent, leadless pacemaker, IVs, PICC line, cardioversion, the works. He got it all in the battle, the fight to keep him alive, although in a diminished state. Ultimately, that was not his destiny. He knew it, and escaped.

A magical life has a magical end; on Lord Rama’s birthday, with thunder in the heavens, in his own bed, his wife and his dog beside him.

Going back to the hospital that last time, as we were urged to do to save his life, gives me the sense now that we were like veterans, compelled to return to war. We had to go back, it had become what we knew, and we were trying to get it right.

In some ways we did. Lovely young nurses sat with him because of his inclination to leave, partly dressed in his street clothes, or disrobed, yelling. Those were bad moments, but they were pure, the authentic rebellion of a freedom-loving soul.

I came into the room and a willowy young brunette was sitting beside his bed. “Linda, this is Abby,” he said, his voice rich with warmth, “and she wants to go to Italy, too!”

On an earlier hospital trip, I watched a girl with a crooked face bring him his meal. Suddenly she was smiling at him shyly. I turned to see him beaming at her. Our nurse friend laughed when I told her of this moment, “Coping mechanisms,” she commented.

During our last hospitalization he was surrounded by caring and kind people, from the wonderfully present doctors to the male student nurse who watched women’s basketball games with us. Everyone who had the time was interested in him. He recited scraps of Hafez to the palliative care staff, “No one does not lift a great pack.”

Such grief, now.

And yet. He had to go on. I know he waits for me, just around the corner of the river, basking in the sea of consciousness and bliss.

Today, the leaves of the silver maple trees dance gently in the summer breeze. Sparrows, robins and catbirds sing in the garden. The magenta spirea bush waits patiently for me to take it out of its black plastic pot and place it in the dark, worm-filled Iowa dirt.

The futon and cushions rest on the deck, a copy of Emerson’s Essays sits on the patio table. Like so many of Tor’s books these days, it fell off the shelf, metaphorically. At last, I can really see these intensely intellectual books, and open them to find the perfect wisdom for this moment.

Perhaps Tor takes me seriously, still, when we laughed about his vast library. “You’re going to have to figure out what to do with all these damn books,” he laughed. And I replied, “I’m going to read EVERY word.” To which he said, “You’re just like me.”

We were alike: in our rebellion, our tenderness, our life-long taste for adventure, our spendthrift tendencies, our love of learning and our love of Love. Seekers forever!

Sex is the seed, love is the flower, compassion is the fragrance, Tor taught me this, quoting his one-time guru, Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh.

When he returned to Minneapolis for a while in the 80’s, his carpenter buddies teased him, calling him The Bag Waag.

What is it like to meet your death with a library full of books on death and dying, global teachings on the afterlife and ancient religious practices, and not be able to read them? I suppose you rely on the accumulated wisdom of your soul’s lifetimes, reinforced by the volumes you’ve ingested over the years, in whatever way you can.

This life is but one day in the life of the soul. Tor taught me this too, and it gives me great comfort. It’s what I told the caregivers when I shared that he hadn’t eaten in a few days, not really at the end of our hospital stay and not when we came home, either. That’s when they said it was time for hospice to assess him…

He grabbed that opportunity. As pneumonia came on and his breathing became labored, he swallowed the morphine and passed into the afterlife, whoosh! Like a kid on a slide.

Photo by Caitlin Reclusado, recklessarts.com