In a world of both deprivation and excess, this is an attempt to figure out just what, exactly, is "enough".
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Sunday, November 24, 2013
Giving Thanks
Thanksgiving is about gratitude for all the wonderful things in our lives -- family, friends, food. It is so wonderful to have enough of these things to be able to celebrate, to hold a feast, a potlatch, a ceremony of eating and drinking, and enjoy this abundance. At this time of year many of us also donate food to others whose feast tables may not be quite as full. I know I never give enough, but what enough would be, I never know. I can only hope that everyone will have a full belly at the end of a day spent with people they love. If you don't, email me, and we will try to find you a space at our table.
This year, we will have my mother and three friends over for the big meal. I am so excited to be able to host it in my own home. That doesn't happen very often, and there is something so satisfying about cooking for hours and having people over to enjoy it, especially on Thanksgiving. This is a day when I, at least, am overwhelmed with gratitude for the abundance in my life (so much so, that I usually end up eating about three times more than my stomach can hold, and then lying around groaning for the next few hours, until enough space opens up to start picking at the leftovers.)
As always, enough is too much, or at least too much for my little brain to handle. Stop eating when you're full. Duh. Nope, not smart enough to do that. At least, as a non-sugar-eater I get some break from dessert -- but no, wait, there's my wonderful no-sugar apple pie*. I think I will still be lying on the couch for a while.
Just before Thanksgiving this year, I turned 46. This occurred after having been 45 for what felt like 10 years. That was one long year. I am grateful, though, to have had these years, and all the ones before, with all of my parts still working. Even if my hair no longer produces color without liberal application of L'Oreal Preference and even if my joints are all silted up, I am here. The world from my window is white with snow. I went sledding with two wonderful children today. We screamed as we flew down the hill, faces being slammed with frozen powder as we went. It was awesome. I am thankful for snow and for sledding and for 10-year-olds who carry their own sleds back up the hill. I am grateful for the fuzzy grey cat stretched out in a half-moon on the floor in front of me. I am grateful that my drive to Burlington in the soggy snow last night did not end up with our car on its side in the ditch, and I offer my best wishes to those whose did.
I am grateful for my "precious human birth", as Pema Chodron calls it, and for the preciousness of the humans around me this year -- Cedar, Bruce, my mom, my good friends. I am so blessed; the turkey should be just an afterthought... but it won't be! I wait all year for this meal! It will be good, and with any luck, it will be enough.
*Whenever I've written anything about one of my recipes, people always want it, so here is the very scientific one for no-sugar apple pie. Make a double crust, with butter, not that scary Crisco stuff. Fill a large bowl with peeled, cored and sliced Cortland apples (they make the best pies). Throw in some cinnamon, a hint of nutmeg, some lemon juice, some butter, and some flour. Mix it all up and pack it into the shell, making sure it mounds up high. Put on the top crust, pinch it on well, cut a few slits to let the steam out and bake it around 400 for as long as it takes to start bubbling out the slits. Pretty easy, and especially yummy with plain whipped cream (just put in a dash of vanilla).
Monday, November 18, 2013
Steamroller Blues
Sunday, November 10, 2013
A Clover and a Bee
To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee,
One clover, and a bee.
And revery.
The revery alone will do,
If bees are few.
The Soul selects her own Society —
Then — shuts the Door —
To her divine Majority —
Present no more —
Unmoved — she notes the Chariots — pausing —
At her low Gate —
Unmoved — an Emperor be kneeling
Upon her Mat —
I've known her — from an ample nation —
Choose One —
Then — close the Valves of her attention —
Like Stone —
It’s not just Dickinson. All poetry is about enough, really, because the poem stops when the writer feels he or she has said enough. Still, a small aspect of enough in poetry comes from small poems about small things.
This is Just to Say
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
One clover, and a bee.
And revery.
The revery alone will do,
If bees are few.
Emily
Dickinson is the poet of enough. Dwelling in “possibility”,
“a fairer house than prose”, she knows we don’t need the whole prairie to be
happy. Consider this:
The Soul selects her own Society —
Then — shuts the Door —
To her divine Majority —
Present no more —
Unmoved — she notes the Chariots — pausing —
At her low Gate —
Unmoved — an Emperor be kneeling
Upon her Mat —
I've known her — from an ample nation —
Choose One —
Then — close the Valves of her attention —
Like Stone —
How
many friends does a person need? If you have a good one, or two, can you close
the valves of your attention? What else can the soul select and then stop,
satisfied? If I could do that with everything – with food, work, stuff – then to
be alive truly would be “Power… Omnipotence --Enough.”
It’s not just Dickinson. All poetry is about enough, really, because the poem stops when the writer feels he or she has said enough. Still, a small aspect of enough in poetry comes from small poems about small things.
This is Just to Say
I have eaten
the plums
that were in
the icebox
and which
you were probably
saving for breakfast
Forgive me
they were delicious
so sweet
and so cold
We get
the taste and feel of the cold, juicy plums. We get the questions in our own
mind – should I really do this to my friend? Should I really take these plums?
And we get that feeling of guilty pleasure. That this is enough to make a poem
and that these plums were enough for the speaker is somehow both
incomprehensible and satisfying at the same time. It is the same with William
Carlos Williams’ other famous small poem about the wheelbarrow.
Is a wheelbarrow really enough for so much to depend on? Its mere existence in
the world, its redness, next to the white of the chickens, is somehow integral,
is enough to contemplate, to make a poem.
Sure,
there are more complicated poems. But even they end, and thus at some point the
writer said, “Enough. It’s done.”
But why
should we single out poetry as being sole representative of enough? Other works
of art – short stories, novels, paintings, essays (blog posts?) – also eventually
end, their creators saying, “Enough.” And what about us humans? Our lives begin
and end, and I don’t know if we have a creator per se, but eventually God or
our DNA or the Higgs Boson steps in and says, “Enough.” And then we die, but
was it enough, after all?
Would it have been
worth while,
|
After the sunsets and
the dooryards and the sprinkled streets,
|
After the novels, after
the teacups, after the skirts that trail along the floor—
|
And this, and so much
more?—
|
Maybe the
fact that so much depends upon a red wheelbarrow is a reminder that our lives,
too, are enough, that somewhere, somehow, something depends upon us, even if we
are completely isolated, even if our only companions are chickens.
The following picture comes from http://www.rogerebert.com/balder-and-dash/so-much-depends-upon-a-red-wheel-barrow, a collection of many permutations of this poem.
Sunday, October 27, 2013
Me and Fibber McGee
The other day Bruce said he was tired of living in a
warehouse. I replied that I would love to live in a warehouse; warehouses are
huge. Right now we are living in a closet.
It’s true that our house is small, but that is not the problem. The problem is all the stuff in it. After all, there are plenty of families larger than ours living in single trailers. And then there’s the “tiny house” movement, where people live in places that are only 100 square feet total. Actually, when I first met Bruce, he was living in just such a tiny house, aka a vacation cabin that had been converted to year-round rental use, long before tiny houses became fashionable. I don’t think the place was much more than 100 square feet, certainly no more than 150. And yet it was homey and neat, and he had somehow managed to shelve and hang everything he owned so that the place felt plenty big enough (until I tried to take a shower and kept banging my elbows on the walls). Ironically, now we live in a place about 10 times the size of that cabin, and it feels tiny and crowded.
It’s true that our house is small, but that is not the problem. The problem is all the stuff in it. After all, there are plenty of families larger than ours living in single trailers. And then there’s the “tiny house” movement, where people live in places that are only 100 square feet total. Actually, when I first met Bruce, he was living in just such a tiny house, aka a vacation cabin that had been converted to year-round rental use, long before tiny houses became fashionable. I don’t think the place was much more than 100 square feet, certainly no more than 150. And yet it was homey and neat, and he had somehow managed to shelve and hang everything he owned so that the place felt plenty big enough (until I tried to take a shower and kept banging my elbows on the walls). Ironically, now we live in a place about 10 times the size of that cabin, and it feels tiny and crowded.
Why? Well, from where I sit, I see an expensive doll that’s
been played with about five times in two years, a bottle of Rit dye with a
little left in it that “might come in handy”, two shelves of cookbooks of which
we generally use three or four and never crack the others, and a manila envelope
decorated by my sister, which used to house some photographs she sent. There
are antiques and quasi-antiques thrown up on walls and mantles (most not really
arranged, just put). In a corner is a brown pottery crock containing a rarely
used metal detector, an old-fashioned rolling mouse stick toy, a yard stick, a
couple of wooden “swords”, a “bow” made of a bent stick and string, with a pipe
insulation “arrow”, a stick horse, a baton, a feather duster, a watercolored
fabric flag on a stick, a long cat toy that’s like a feather duster, a small
broom, two walking sticks, a dowel, and a random piece of one-by-one wood. This
is just one crock in one corner of the house. Almost every
corner looks like this, and not just the corners. The cabinet under the TV is
stuffed with blankets and quilts, as is the hall closet. We wouldn’t even need
this many blankets if our house became a Red Cross shelter in the next ice
storm! (We should get rid of some, yet how do we pick which ones? They are all
cozy, and many were gifts; two were Cedar’s bed comforters as she’s grown up,
and how can we throw that part of her childhood away?)
Looking into the kitchen, I can see a teddy bear in a pirate
kerchief next to my daughter’s placemat on the table. This table gets cleared
off periodically, but within 24 hours is always re-covered with newspapers, mail,
papers brought home from school, wallets, keys, pocket change, to-do lists,
and, obviously, stuffed animals and other toys. Two of the five chairs are
generally un-sat-upon in our family of three. They are layered with sweaters,
coats, hats, snow pants (yes, already!), and bags. The stairs going up to our
bedroom are no better. They hold the newspaper box; brushes, combs, and potions
for Cedar’s wild hair; tissues; books to be returned to the library; the
pumpkins we painted for Halloween; anything needing to go upstairs; and all the
papers we’ve taken off the table to make room for eating.
I have just described maybe 10 percent of the stuff I can
see from where I’m sitting in the living room. Just think of the bedrooms; the
bathrooms overflowing with magazines (the New Yorker comes every week!), towels, gifts of soap and bath salts (not to mention
the litter box and all its accoutrements); and the back office in which we can
barely turn around, let alone stand up, because above us is a loft full of,
guess what, more STUFF!
We have gotten rid of many things, but still we are drowning
in them. Over the past couple of years we have given boxes and boxes of books
to the library sale, and recently we threw away crates of old music cassettes
and video tapes. These were emotional partings. Those tapes had held the music
of our teens and twenties, as well as mixes lovingly made for us by friends.
And it’s not that we don’t still own a cassette player, because we do, but we
never play tapes anymore, so it was logical to toss them. Unfortunately, logic
and emotion don’t mix well. It’s been months since the tapes went to the dump
and just last night Bruce was still lamenting their loss.
It’s amazing that we did let go of the tapes. Normally
around here, emotion wins. I have never been able to bring myself to throw away
my sister’s envelope because she spent so much time decorating it with magic
marker shapes. And then there is all my daughter’s art. I have trouble even
tossing coloring book pages that took no creativity whatsoever, let alone her actual
artwork. And then there are the toys. Even she
(a serious pack rat) is finally starting to feel weighed down by the amount of
stuff she has, so she proposed getting rid of a children’s Sudoku game. She
never plays it, but it has these beautiful little jewel-like animals to place
in the squares. She was willing to let it go, amazingly, but I wasn’t. I love those little animals!
Basically, our house is one loooooong paragraph in the story
of our life, full of words and sentences that have just enough meaning to
resist being tossed aside, but still overwhelming to both reader and writer
alike. Natalie Goldberg, in her wonderful book Writing Down the Bones, says that writers should be samurai,
cutting away all the fat from our work. I can generally do that with my
writing. After all, words come easily; I can always replace them. But how do I
replace the Guess Who game, made for
three-year-olds, that Cedar and her friend Reuben used to play for hours every
day? It has not come off the shelf in ages, except to afford access to
something underneath, and yet if it were gone, I think I would feel the hole in
my life forever.
I have a feeling we’ll be in this closet for a long time.
Sunday, October 20, 2013
I Want a Smartphone, but I Need a Yacht
I want a smartphone… but I don’t. It’s more like I feel like
I need one to continue living in this
world. It’s already a communication device; a computer; storage for music,
movies, photos, and podcasts; a checkbook; a credit card machine; a locator for
self, others, restaurants and constellations – but luckily there are still
other ways to perform these functions, so for the moment a smartphone is just a
want. Eventually, though, it will be
the only way to check out a library book (book!) or to travel; it will be our
social security card; passport; driver’s license; certificate of birth,
marriage, divorce, and/or death. Then, of course, it will be a need.
Wants vs. needs is at the heart of the question of what is
enough. I never took a psychology class (though growing up with two
psychologists should entitle me to at least a bachelor’s degree in the field!),
but I do know about Maslow’s hierarchy. At the bottom are the physiological
needs – food, water, air, excretion, etc., which, when unfulfilled, supposedly
make it impossible to do anything more in life than just try to survive. A
smartphone isn’t necessary for any of those, but the right app could help locate a food or water source
or a public bathroom. Still, when the future comes, and it is impossible to buy
anything without a smartphone, I will still easily (well, maybe with some
difficulty) be able to stay right on our land and live off our garden in the
summer and off deer and pine needles in the winter without any electronic devices.
And I will be able to use my own bathroom facilities, or the woods, as needed.
The second level of needs Maslow lists is safety. Here a
smartphone could be an asset or a liability. It is good to be able to call for
help when in trouble (to actually place a
call, unlike the two girls trapped
in an Australian sewer who simply updated their Facebook status), but I can
use my dumbphone for that just as easily. On the other hand, my dumbphone doesn’t
have GPS, so it should not lead the NSA to me, which may, in the end,
keep me safer. Not that I have anything to hide, of course, but given the amount
of “collateral damage” our military operations always generate, I’d rather err
on the side of caution.
So score one point for the smartphone on physiological needs
and zero on safety. The higher levels of need Maslow describes are social
connection, esteem, and self-actualization. We need to feel useful, to feel
like we belong, to be valued by ourselves and others, and to feel like we are
working to our potential. The traditional way to feel like we belong is to be
part of a tribe. We wear tattoos, dress a certain way, or root for a certain
team in order to show our affiliation. (My husband’s San Francisco Giants hat
is an icon of his tribe. Often someone will recognize the sign and speak to him
as one of the group. Here in the East, his tribe is not large, but apparently
it is sufficient.)
This tribal iconography must be why my community college
students, many of whom fail classes because they “can’t afford” the textbook,
almost all have smartphones. I’m not sure how they prioritize a $200 phone and
$100/month service over their degree, but I guess it’s that important to be
part of their peer group, the student tribe. And speaking of peer groups, in an
article
I’ve previously
mentioned from the Atlantic, the
multimillionaires interviewed almost all felt like they needed more money to have enough. Why? Because absolute wealth
doesn’t matter, only relative wealth within one’s group. If you don’t have as
nice a yacht as the guy next door, then you clearly need to trade up. Otherwise you’ll lose your spot in the good yacht
tribe. And then where will you be?
Personally, I tend to think of needs as only those things at the bottom of Maslow’s hierarchy:
food, water, air, shelter, love (maybe). There are people in refugee camps
living in tents. There are homeless in cardboard boxes on sidewalks, poor kids
in tin hovels between buildings in Brazil. They live. They make it from day to
day somehow. They definitely do not have what most Americans would consider to
be enough to meet their needs, but do they? Researchers
have found that in many people the needs for belonging, esteem and
self-actualization are prime motivators even when physiological and safety
needs are not completely met. Sometimes it’s more important to belong than to
eat.
So is more than enough to simply ensure physical survival a want or a need? If it is a want,
then my desire for a smartphone is as exorbitantly ridiculous as the rich guy’s
desire for a better yacht. But if cultural affiliation and belonging are truly needs, that sometimes even trump the
basics, then the smartphone is becoming more and more necessary as more and
more people get them and my tribe of holdouts grows ever smaller.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
The Icing on the Cake
One night, after a dinner that left me almost stuffed, after
a quarter of a mango, a frozen banana, and a few grapes, I casually went to the
kitchen for one pretzel rod. It was crunchy and salty and had that perfect
burnt-ish smooth pretzel skin under the salt. I ate it and continued reading my
email.
Then I went back to the kitchen and got another pretzel. It
was just as good as the first. I ate it slowly, biting a piece off gently and
chewing it carefully, softening the inside with saliva, then crunching the
outside. I went back for another one. By this time there was not even the slightest
thought of hunger, but still I was pulled back to the bucket to take another.
Finally I just stood at the counter in the kitchen and ate two more, not even
bothering to pretend I was going anywhere.
There’s a saying in Alcoholics Anonymous, “One drink is too
much, and a thousand is not enough.” After five pretzel rods, on top of
everything I had eaten earlier, I could feel chewed-up starch piled right up to
my breastbone. My esophagus was literally full. If I had eaten another pretzel,
it would not have had anywhere to go; it would have just sat in my throat. But
I still would have eaten another. And another, and another – if something hadn’t
called me to my senses and sent me off to bed.
The next morning I still felt that stuffedness, all the way
up my chest to the back of my throat. I felt a distaste for pretzels, yet I knew
that later, if I allowed myself to have one, I would do the exact same thing
and maybe not stop at five.
When I was around 14, every day after school I would bike
half a mile down the hill to the Grand Union and buy a can of vanilla frosting.
As I pedaled hard up the hill on the way home, I would imagine I was actually
burning off the calories of what I was about to do, earning the right to eat
that can of frosting. Which I would do, either in front of the TV or reading a
book, completely encasing myself in numb pleasure, my brain sated with
entertainment and my mouth sated with creamy sweetness. I was alone in a
delicious cocoon…
…until I started feeling sick, which was usually when there
were only a few spoonfuls left in the can. At that point I would throw the can
away, vowing never to buy another one. And then I’d eat a pickle or something “real”
to counteract the greasy sweetness of what was in my stomach (which was essentially
sweetened Crisco). The next morning, however, I would pick the can out of the
trash and finish it. For the rest of the day I’d want more and couldn’t wait
until I could bike back down the hill for more frosting.
With certain foods, and to some extent with all food, for me
“enough” has no inherent meaning. For years I’ve struggled to give it a meaning, but then there are
nights like the one with the pretzels when all meaning is gone. The only enough I know then is that there are not
enough pretzels in the world.
For me, that is a figurative dearth, but for so many people
there is literally not enough food to keep them alive and healthy. People are
starving, and I have so much food I have to practically tie myself down to keep
myself from eating too much of it. A thousand calories is the bare minimum for
a woman to survive on per day, but that 2000-calorie can of frosting was extra
for me, on top of all the healthy
food I ate. How can it be that people not having enough to eat can exist in the
same world where I could buy 2000 calories for a dollar-fifty or whatever it
was back then? How is it that the thought of these people is not enough to keep
me from going back for one more pretzel?
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