For poor lonely people

And today is my late mother’s birthday, a sadness in me tinged with a sense of how precious it is to be sober, and how thorny and enduring the bond between mothers and daughters. I have no photographs of my mother but as a child she resembled her aunt Sylvia. From the poet Sharon Olds:

Wonder as Wander

by Sharon Olds

At dusk, on those evenings she does not go out,   
my mother potters around her house.   
Her daily helpers are gone, there is no one   
there, no one to tell what to do,
she wanders, sometimes she talks to herself,   
fondly scolding, sometimes she suddenly   
throws out her arms and screams—high notes   
lying here and there on the carpets   
like bodies touched by a downed wire,
she journeys, she quests, she marco-polos through   
the gilded gleamy loot-rooms, who is she.   
I feel, now, that I do not know her,
and for all my staring, I have not seen her
—like the song she sang, when we were small,   
I wonder as I wander, out under the sky,   —on the slow evenings alone, when she delays   
how Jesus, the Savior, was born for to die,   
for poor lonely people, like you, and like I
and delays her supper, walking the familiar   
halls past the mirrors and night windows,   
I wonder if my mother is tasting a life   
beyond this life—not heaven, her late   
beloved is absent, her father absent,   
and her staff is absent, maybe this is earth   
alone, as she had not experienced it,   
as if she is one of the poor lonely people,   
as if she is born to die. I hold fast
to the thought of her, wandering in her house,   
a luna moth in a chambered cage.
Fifty years ago, I’d squat in her
garden, with her Red Queens, and try
to sense the flyways of the fairies as they kept
the pollen flowing on its local paths,
and our breaths on their course of puffs—they kept   
our eyes wide with seeing what we
could see, and not seeing what we could not see.

Time to sharpen the pencil and give the Muse a call

Many thanks for the lively and funny comments in emails and on Facebook, as well as here. And for commiserations on the tomatoes — I am going to plant some more cherry tomatoes that  with luck will become small bushes covered in tiny sweet juicy fruit. One-third for the sparrow and starlings, two-thirds for me, with the odd loss to snails or sneaky cut-worms.

Who else is doing Nanowrimo? If you want to link up as a writing buddy, please let me know. I am drafting out themes and character motivations and scenes with  much pleasure, having put aside the slow WIP for now. WIP means Work in Progress but it is not in progress, it is in stasis. So I am hoping that a new project might galvanise the fiction-writing impulses anew. I have done so much non-fiction this year that my imagination seems to have atrophied.

Here’s Nathan Bransford on Nano Boot Camp for budding writers:

Step 1: What does your protagonist want? It could be to save the world, it could be closure on an especially difficult issue, it could be romance, it could be to finally figure out who the Cylons are no seriously this time. But even better if your protagonist wants more than one thing, and these things could very well be at odds with each other at times. The ultimate, most important thing they want should be achieved (or not achieved) in the climax.

Step 2: What is standing in your protagonist’s way? Obstacles reveal the true personality of a character. Are they ingenious? Stubborn? Clever? The way someone deals with conflict and adversity shows a great deal about their true character. Placing roadblocks in front of your characters at (nearly) every opportunity will show you and the reader who they really are. The biggest obstacle in their way should be faced in the climax.

Step 3: What do they value the most? Your protagonist should be in conflict not just with the world, but also within themselves. The battles and travails along the way should reveal the things that they care most about and their true qualities. Best of all, they should have to give up something important in order to get the thing they want the most.

Best of luck to everyone setting out on a writing project in November — the forums are fun and writing buddies are best friends forever, but you will be surprised at what emerges if you sit down and write at least  2000 words each day. It might not be publishable, it might be doggerel, but it may be surprising. Creative writing is a good way to get to know oneself and the preoccupations and stories lurking under the surface.

Owing to work pressures, I doubt I’ll get a novel finished by the end of November (the goal of Nanowrimo). But I may get a short story or two  completed, or even a novella. And I will have the opportunity to read many other novels in draft and know I am not alone when I sit down at my desk each morning.

Storms in a teacup

There are times when sober living is one storm in a tea cup after another. I don’t mind that much now that I’ve come to realise it’s not always all about me.

And I have planted up delectable Rosa tomatoes in great glazed planters that once were sealed and held lotuses until we had a frog invasion. Don’t ask. The tomatoes are interplanted with basil, spicy and lush. As I completed the planting and stood back to admire my work,  my small foxy dog took a flying leap into the pot and flattened two tomato seedlings. I don’t know if she will destroy all the other seedlings. There is a certain quality of despair that only seasoned gardeners know when trees topple or bushes become diseased or lawns go brown or plants are killed by too much love. So many uncertainties and yet we go on planting year after year, learning from our mistakes and making new mistakes.

It was great to get to a meeting and I wish I could say more about that. The sober friend giving us a lift lectured his hapless passengers all the way there and all the way back. His topic was ‘women’ and all the things women do or say to make men feel bad. There is a generic script wheeled out in discussions of heterosexual relationships ( I have never heard anything like it in lesbian  or gay relationships) that is tedious and iunauthentic. Emotional laziness and entitlement. And I like this man, he is troubled and harrowed and stuck in a mindset that is getting him nowhere. But all of us women passengers arrived home with a splitting headache.

Him: ‘When I met my first wife I knew I had the capacity to give us both the relationship we wanted and needed.’

Women passengers, in silent unison: This is something you only say if you are talking to your reflection in the mirror. Really. Nobody has the capacity to carry both sides of any relationship. And none of us know what another person wants and needs and how those desires might change over time.

Him: ‘I spent most of my salary on presents for her, everything a woman wants.’

Women passengers, silently, with vehemence: Material gifts are not a substitute for substance. And perhaps she might have wanted or needed those material things but not you as part of the gift, needing to feel beholden to you. Would she have been free to say ‘A paid-for holiday in Mauritius would be wonderful but I would prefer to go there with my sister’ or were the gifts all about you?

Him: ‘I wanted to us to start all over in a brand-new relationship.’

Women passengers: Aargh! Some of the script is about gender relations and that power imbalance between men and women and  some of it has to do with a shared lack of realism. If your ex-partner wants a brand-new  relationship, he or she will have to find a brand-new partner. You are the same people and in the same relationship with memories and patterns that will not just disappear. Startiung over is wishful thinking. Better to make amends, forgive and accept that the memories will stay around for years to come.

Him: ‘You know what bugs me most about women? –’

Women passengers, aloud, in desperation: ‘Oh look there is a chanting goshawk perched on that fence! And the moon is coming up over the mountain! The problem is not you, Henry. The problem is patriarchy, that dinosaur lurking behind the scenes. We will find some way to address sexism and all those weird expectations about women that surround us like a fog all our lives. Why does male privilege blind men to their own sense of entitlement? Would it be different if men suffered sexual violence or were financially dependent on women? ‘

Unlearning sexism is like unlearning racism. And no, women complaining about men is not the same thing. The insights of Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich, Simone de Beauvoir and bell hooks should be required reading for basic lifeskills.

That feels better.  On the whole my temper has improved in sobriety because I speak up more often and trust my instincts when it comes to reading situations and recognising my own part in what happens. And sober confrontations might be painful and jarring but don’t go down the road of vodka-inspired lunacy.

But it isn’t easy. Active alcoholics adopt an escapist lifestyle while drinking, habits of thoughtless idealism or cynicism, procrastination, avoidance. Easy on ourselves, hard on others. Recovery meetings are accepting of lousy interpresonal skills and unquestioning social attitudes. But those old expectations and attitudes carried into a new more conscious way of living are like rocks lurking just under the surface of the water. They leave us floundering or unsatisfied or wondering where the hell we went wrong. Think, think, think! as the message above the chairperson’s seat at a meeting reminds us. Change may be called for, a renewal of the mind.

Day by day

A morning of telescopic clarity, mountains grainy and layered on the skyline, the skies a tender blue. I got up early and planted out moroq (wild spinach), seedlings of basil and rocket, put in some yams and butternut on roughly tilled earth at the back. As I plant in my carefully propagated seedlings with their fragile stems and new leaves, I can see in my mind’s eye the bushes of basil and handfuls of peppery wild rocket I shall harvest in late December for holiday luncheons. I want sweet cherry tomatoes next to the basil, that synergy is extraordinay. Dogs running around and scratching at loose earth, curious sparrows chirping at me as the sun came up. Then I bathed and dashed off with wet hair and scrubbed fingernails to plan out a workshop.

Long phone conversation with the kind AA member who will be giving several of us a lift through to a distant  meeting this evening — we won’t be back before midnight, travelling on bad roads. His 1992 Ford Cortina has no suspension and the seats are threadbare buckets covered in horse blankets. He is a kind man though (details here altered to conceal identity)  and sober 16 years, but spoke to me this morning of the hounded and driven forces that have made his life hell in drunkenness or sobriety. No easy answers: he has had therapy, has worked the Steps, has gradually come to accept that this is his hardwiring in terms of personality. As he wrily remarked, it is harder for his family and all his children left home, shot out of the front door, as they left school. His wife spends long vacations with her mother and sister. His loneliness is extreme but he admits that when he befriends others, he drives them crazy. ‘I cannot let others be,’ he says.

There are three tiny new chameleons lurking in a fountain of brown and gold restios and I hang around hoping to glimpse them without disturbing them, mother love from a distance. They are mottled pink and green and a soft silver brown, such beauty. At night when I let the dogs out under a full moon, I sometimes see their arched bodies clinging to a swaying reed of restio, pale as old nutmeg.

Evasive action

Rainy Sunday with brief periods of cloudless skies, but the skies seem to be losing their grip on the sun. My ancient mendacious landlord is celebrating his 80th birthday and I decided not to go despite a personal invitation. I wish him well and have called him with apologies and sent along a beribboned gift. But I don’t go to events where a) an unlimited quantity of alcohol is being served and, b) I know in advance that am going to feel stressed and chewed up inside, unable to leave and surrounded by merry, loud-voiced, disinhibited partygoers. That leads to the default impulse to have a little drink or two. The landlord will get riotously cheerful on expensive Scotch and then want to talk to me, explain why he thinks subdividing the rented property is a Good Idea. I will disagree. He will argue with me and get red in the face. I will struggle to stay calm. He will get belligerent, my politeness will break down. His family will feel I am ruining his birthday party. I will feel infuriated, hurt and helpless and in need of an obscure something to settle my nerves. How we get to know ourselves in sobriety! Before I sobered up I had no idea who I would be dealing with.

So I am taking evasive action. Somebody told me the other evening that at 14 years sober, she still does not drive down the road where she once purchased wine on a daily basis. Why stir up the old demons? She is happy and strong in her sobriety, but still she does not take that road with the spacious bottle store and the convenient parking lot on the corner. Temptation comes to all of us in differing guises.

Update: and the housemate came home roaring with laughter and said it was a very good party. The landlord sent me some birthday cake and confided that he was hoping to convince me of his rightness in all things. He insulted his granddaughter’s new husband. He gave a speech that had everyone in tears and adoring him. There were roast lambs on a spit and he urged  the guests to have second and third helpings, reminding his daughters-in-law that they need to lose weight and should leave the pudding alone. There was a local sangoma present who has the knack of bringing rain for the crops. And the Calvinist dominee who said a blessing. The sangoma brought all five of his wives. The place settings were horribly muddled. There were guests whom the landlord could not remember inviting, a table that collapsed under the weight of several ice-cream cakes, an offended guest who left early after having her bottom pinched at the buffet table.

I would have enjoyed it, but staying away was probably wiser. One day at a time and gradually we get to rejoin the world and participate with discernment and intuition.

Frangipani perfume

And yes, Carol, National Novel Writing Month (Nanowrimo) is nearly here and  I will dash in and write something new during the month of November. Probably not a novel but maybe a novella. The company of writers is a wonderful thing. I have writing buddies (cool elegant friends with an eagle eye for glitches, as it happens) but writers like to hang out together and distract one another rather than write. Nanowrimo is perfect for stints of hasty writing and longer stints of making jokes and encouraging one another to go and write but not right now.

There are baby owls nesting in an oak tree down the road, fluffy and wide-eyed. I can’t stay away.

Just had some nasty but expected bills delivered by the new postman. Who is a 10-year-old boy who can scarcely read. I am hoping he is helping his father during school holidays, because South Africa has an unspeakable history of using child labour in defiance of international human rights agreements. Nobody at the local post office is answering my calls.

For those of us who can’r resist well-written landscape, Kim Stanley Robinson’s Pacific Edge:

Despair could never touch a morning like this.
The air was cool, and smelled of sage. It had the clarity that comes to southern California only after a Santa Ana wind has blown all haze and history out to sea – air like telescopic glass, so that the snowtopped San Gabriels seemed near enough to touch, though they were forty miles away. The flanks of the blue foothills revealed the etching of every ravine, and beneath the foothills, stretching to the sea, the broad coastal plain seemed nothing but treetops.

And then there is the world’s most useless hangover recipe book, with complicated knuckle-grating remedies for six kinds of hangover, welcomed only by sophisticated social drinkers with a teeny headache from one too many sherries:

The Broken Compass, (confusion, restlessness, fear and loathing) demands “spicy comfort food to reignite your passion for life”, such as devilled kidneys on toast. The Sewing Machine, (makes you feel as if you’re being stabbed in the head) calls for something “soothing and comforting”, such as the Elvis Presley peanut butter, banana and bacon sandwich. The Atomic demands “hearty” recipes such as cardamom porridge with spicy apple sauce.

The book is sure to sell, but is it any use? Personally, I’ve never had a hangover worthy of the name that would let me zest a lemon, as required for Crawford’s lemon and demerara sugar pancakes, or slice fish and coat the goujons with breadcrumbs, as in his fishfinger sandwich.

As for those six types of hangover . . . many of us get them all rolled into one, like Bertie’s friend Catsmeat. The sight of him, Bertie notes, occasions “pity and terror in the bosoms of those who wished him well”. Does that sound like a man who’s ready to crush some cardamom pods?

A good day to be sober! My neighbour has a small Australian frangpani tree covered in scented yellow blossoms. The fragrance makes me dizzy.

A celebration and consolation

The inscrutable computer, mysterious in all its ways. What else can I say? Emails bouncing, but times when I can access everything without being able to post. And my email inbox is crowded with strangers offering prescription drugs from China.

Fear in a handful of dust. I always joke about living with cobras, but a smallish dark green-brown snake slid out in front of me when I was coming in from hanging out washing and I had a moment of heart-stopping terror. Then I looked more closely and realised it was a harmless grass snake, probably looking for water or a cool place to sleep.  Strange that the redwing starlings did not make any noise, bird cries are often the warning alert for snakes in the vicinity and if I hear the birds sounding agitated, I watch my step.

Several friends have family members struggling with active alcoholism  or drug addiction. Living with helplessness is hard.

Teaching extra French classes for a pittance and facilitating literacy workshops, whatever keeps the household afloat. When the going gets tough, the tough do whatever it takes and stay away from the old solution. Stick close to sober friends and reach out to newcomers. Deal with the feelings as they come up like turbulent minnows. Keep going and pause from time to time to count the abundant blessings. Meditate and  drink pots of green tea. Read poetry.

Anna Akhamatova

Sunbeam

I pray to the sunbeam from the window -
It is pale, thin, straight.
Since morning I have been silent,
And my heart – is split.
The copper on my washstand
Has turned green,
But the sunbeam plays on it
So charmingly.
How innocent it is, and simple,
In the evening calm,
But to me in this deserted temple
It’s like a golden celebration,
And a consolation.

Again to seize the day

Up at dawn, the wind blowing clouds over the valley in spills of yellow and grey. We climbed through a mountain gorge and edged into a small kloof or ravine to look at red disas growing near a waterfall. Slipping on moss, noting the oily speckled backs of Cape platannas, listening to the alarmed cries of small birds. However quietly we walked in single file, we were interlopers, a threat. Glimpses of grysbok, bontebok, an orange-breasted sunbird. We stopped for doorstep sandwiches and a flask of coffee at a spot where we could look down towards Rooi Els where the mountains tumble into the foaming ocean, the Cape Rock Thrush darting between boulders. Talking as we sat there in the wind and  sunshine about the old eland trails over the mountains, the Gantouw Pass, the crossings used by wild game and followed by the Khoi-Khoi nomad pastoralists each spring. Back in the 18th century it took two or even three days to cross the mountains into the Overberg and an early Dutch traveller (Anders Sparrman) wrote in his diary:

The next day…we got up at day-break, in order to take our journey over Hottentots Holland’s Mountain, in the cool of the morning. The way up it was very steep, stony, winding, and, in other respects, very inconvenient. Directly to the right of the road there was a perpendicular precipice, down which, it is said, that waggons and cattle together have sometimes the misfortune of falling headlong, and are dashed to pieces.

High sandstone mountains, the Helderberg, the Hottentots-Holland. None of us were climbers, so we just walked the contour paths, taking out time to identify wild gladioli and proteas, listening to the bird cries carried on the wind. The bracing smell of wild buchu. Thinking as I clambered up between rocks and slippery clumps of restio: this is core to sober living, staying present to the beauty of nature and companionship, the aches and pains of the body stretched beyond comfort, the wide panorama stretching to the horizon. Letting go of self, releasing the questions and doubts and pinpricks, just losing myself in practical gratitude, the climbing upwards, the sunlight, the wind, the clean empty skies and that invisible point where they meet the indigo line of ocean.

Came home and had a call from an unhappy woman whose mother said something rude to her, an affront, hurtful, cruel even: and now the daughter wants to drink, wants to sit in her flat staring at the walls and rehearsing her grievance, drinking until the hurt and resentment and bitterness become incoherence, her dulled mind stumbling around in forgetfulness. Alcoholism has only one song to sing, that maudlin note of complaint repeated again and again. You have hurt me; I will will punish you by hurting myself. You don’t understand me; you cannot understand why I drink. You cannot escape; I will follow you in my mind. You cannot make it right; I will never forgive or forget. You hurt my feelings; you make me want to drink, you are responsible for my unhappiness. When you hurt my feelings, you drive me to drink, it is all your fault. You hurt my feelings, you give me a reason to drink again and again. You hurt me; I hurt myself and hope to hurt you. You will suffer as I suffer, you must share the consequences of my drinking. A windowless room, a corridor with no exit.

By the time I put down the phone, I feel I could be suffocating, I need fresh air to breathe. That old terrifying claustrophobia of the alcoholic obsession.

What Joyce Carol Oates said: Tragedy is not a woman, however gifted, dragging her shadow around in a circle.

Outside the bees are thrumming away in the lavender, a crazy joyful dance. Life opening like a great  invisible door. Come out and play. Enjoy the day while the day is there to be enjoyed, live while there is still life. Reclaim your wasted life, snatch back a few hours of time. It seems to me just yesterday that I was standing barefott with hair falling over my sleepy face at the front door of a student communal house, saying that I couldn’t be bothered to go for a picnic in the mountains, that I would rather sleep off the hangover and let the day go by without acknowledgement, waving goodbye to the others and heading back into the musty passage, my head pounding, my eyes sore, wanting only the mussed pillows and knot of sheets, the shutters drawn. . And then the days and years flew past as I slept — and now I have no memories except those I make in the time left to me. And all the while, there was so much beauty out there, so many friends waiting to accompoany me, so much living to be done.
.

Here’s one I made earlier

Spent yesterday up in the roof with a volatile and leaky hot-water geyser. The plumber confessed he had no head for heights and sat on the loft steps eating a ham sandwich slathered with Dijon mustard that I had made to coax him up into the loft. My dogs shrieked for me to come down while the geyser grumbled and spurted. I did things with a spanner, ineptly. Nothing has been solved, but the hot water is flowing and the geyser has fallen silent. The plumber will doubtless send me a bill

Failure could be my middle name right now as regards freelance work and house repairs, but I got up at dawn and went out into the garden to admire orb spider webs looped and strung with tiny drops of glittering dew. Years ago when I was just sober (well, not that many years ago then) during a very unhappy time of my life, I ventured into the enclosed garden of a Welsh cathedral to pick ripe mulberries from an ancient tree. My priorities stay close to nature and nature has always been a source of bliss and a reminder that this broken world is a beautiful miraculous place. They were the most delicious tart-sweet black-as-sin mulberries I have ever eaten. Mulberries are consoling even in heartbreak. And intricate glittery spider webs are somehow more significant that personal failure. In sobriety I am have become someone who is less defined by her job or career than she used to be when any external success had to be pitted against the misery of drunkenness. But failure is still failure and especially worrying at 3am in the moony pallor that passes for night.

Wouldn’t it be nice, if when faced with an unsatisfactory, subsiding sort of life, you could reach into a deep shelf and produce a brighter and more shny version, saying ‘Here’s one I made earlier”?

Which reminds me that I am going to make sweetcorn and coriander muffiny things for lunch to cheer up someone who had a predictable relapse last week and is now calling me long-distance at 6am each morning  (she gets up early to feed chickens) to tell me it is Day 4 or 5. She will be driving through the rainy countryside en route to have lunch with me and then carrying on to her seaside home. We can sit at the kitchen table and read pertinent paragraphs of the Big Book together while she thinks out what she might want to share. Some of us are more reticent than others and chickens are not attentive listeners. When I was on holiday once I wrote down all my deepest secrets on a sheet of handmade paper and tucked it into a sealed bottle (that had once held a litre of Absolut vodka) and threw it into the waves. I didn’t feel the ocean was listening either, but I couldn’t imagine confiding in anyone. That is how we keep our secrets secret and they fester away somewhere inside. Better to sit at the kitchen table eating sweetcorn muffins and try to mumble a few details out to someone who has been there and knows all about it.

Coming up into the sunlight of the spirit

The back garden flooded with pure icy water from mountain streams. My small dogs splash like otters, yelping and doggy-paddling around in mad circles. There are African harrier hawks perched in trees at the end of the garden and clouds scudding fast over the valley. I could live on the beauty of this landscape. The wild bean that sprawls all over the garden and throws up purple pea-like flowers, a delight to me. Red pelargoniums, deep purply-red bougainvillea.

Red-winged starlings in a flurry at the top of the loquat tree, divebombing the fruit suddenly sweet and ripe, that benign yellow. Newborn weaver birds tumbling off the stoep wall as they learn to fly.

Bowls of green-yellow apples piled high around the kitchen. Last autumn’s apples stored over the winter, a neighbourly gift. And what to do with all the apples? A puree or apple sauce perhaps, some kind of apple crumble. Sweet and crisp but not interesting, generic apples. The abundance I so often take for granted in my life, that plenitude.

All my recovering  friends are sober and thriving, so emails fly back and forth. I love days when it feels as if we are all getting better and making sober lives a reality. Even the unmanageable work on my desk seems less daunting and I plunge in again after sneaking another quick glance at the Chilean miners emerging out of darkness, a miracle, good news in a world starved of hope. Lives restored to literal and metaphorical sunlight, the bravery of those who go down into that dark deep shaft to lead out the trapped into freedom..