Monday, July 27, 2020

Covid adventures and a poem

We just received the news that one of our college sons is Covid positive. This is based on a test he took at home and mailed in before going to school.  They misplaced his test and had to reprocess it, so he didn't receive the results until he was sitting in the Dallas Fort Worth airport yesterday morning during his layover from San Diego to South Bend.  The doctor told him to stay in Dallas until this morning because then it would be 10 days since test date.  So he got a hotel room at the airport - DFW is convenient for this - and spent the night and now is on the way to South Bend. 


Not a symptom has he displayed. Nor has anyone else in the household.  But back on the Fourth of July, his worked his second job at the pizza place, came home and had dinner with us and a four of our friends, and then woke up the next morning to a call that his boss was positive with the virus.  His boss has now been in the hospital almost two weeks.   This first announcement scared us all. We notified our friends, shut the doors, and stayed at home for 14 days except for a few runs to the store.  In the meantime, our son was tested twice, and both tests came back negative.  I was tested and was negative, and our other son who works at a restaurant also tested negative.  So four negative tests in the family - which makes me skeptical of this positive test.  

Now we are in waiting mode, locked down again in quarantine.  We've had to notify a few people that we've seen in the last week.  I would like to count our 14 days from the day our son took his test, but the doctor said we should count our 14 days from the last contact.  He also said that the less conservative measure is 10 days without symptoms. And another option is to test at 4 days after the last contact and 7 days after the last contact. If those tests are both negative, then the quarantine is lifted. That option isn't really practical since we are so many people in one household.  

Blah. Is there a vaccine yet? I'll volunteer to be in the trials...

I came across this haiku from a link somewhere - it makes me miss the summer evenings of sitting on the back porch laughing and drinking wine and figuring out how to solve all the problems in the world. 


a party  

BY JOHN BRANDI
a party
where everyone says goodbye
then stays
John Brandi, "a party" from Seeding the Cosmos. Copyright © 2010 by John Brandi. Reprinted by permission of John Brandi.

Friday, July 17, 2020

Notes from a recent read: Backpacking with the Saints: Wilderness Hiking as Spiritual Practice by Belden Lane

I've had Belden Lane's book Backpacking with the Saints: Wilderness Hiking as Spiritual Practice checked out from the library since February - the advantage of the library being closed. But I'm feeling guilty about it, so I'm finally getting around to making some notes about it.  It begins with two pages of epigraphs, some that I've included on my syllabus for my nature writing class. They include:

Solvitur ambulando (It is solved by walking) - Attributed to St Jerome?

"I don't think it is enough appreciated how much an outdoor book the Bible is. It is a hypaethral book, such as Thoreau talked about- a book  open to the sky. It is best read and understood outdoors, and the farther outdoors the better." - Wendell Berry, Christianity and the Survival of Creation

Wilderness is not a luxury, but a necessity of the human spirit." -Edward Abbey Desert Solitaire

"Some people, in order to discover God, read books. But there is a great book: the very appearance of created things. Look above you! Look below you! Note it; read it. God, who you want to discover, never wrote that book with ink; instead He set before your eyes the things that He had made. Can you ask for a louder voice than that?" St Augustine, The City of God

I'm mournful that I am not teaching nature writing this fall; instead the full time, tenured faculty member who first initiated the course is teaching it again. The University is inaugurating an interdisciplinary minor in sustainability studies, which she is helping to spearhead, as she has degrees in literature and biology. I would like to be a part of it, but I will be teaching a composition course again this fall. I do have a section of Nature Writing in the spring, if the spring ever returns.

Lane wrote this book before he retired from teaching theology at University of St. Louis. In it, he describes what spiritual insights he gained from backpacking and reading spiritual masters while on the trail. He mostly hikes alone, although his shepherd dog Desert accompanies him most of the time. His trips mostly take place around the Ozarks, not too far from his St. Louis home, but the place is not so important here as the process.  Reading while backpacking requires a commitment - books add precious weight to a pack - plus a journal, pencil, some sort of light. Lane argues that combining book wisdom with experiential learning leads to some intense insights and epiphanies.  One of his theses is that the wilderness and reading certain texts both pose dangers - to body and to soul. Or perhaps it would be more accurate to say that books and backpacking both change a person and provide both challenges and balms.

The structure of the book outlines these: He sees a pattern in the development of a wilderness spirituality and of backpacking beginning with departure, then discipline, descent, and ending with delight, (he acknowledges Campbell's archetypal hero's journey). Lane begins by summarizing what he has learned from his reading in spiritual masters from the past and present. These writers and his own practice confirm that both spiritual growth acquired by reading and prayer, as well as by backpacking require solitude and self-abandonment, moving on the margins, relinquishing desires, seeing failure as growth, recognizing physical discipline as a source of spiritual insight, resisting the trappings of culture, and being open to a wider "community of exchange" - here he means the wilderness and all that is in it.

Lane's style of backpacking is one that fits the life of an academic who teaches near the hills - he takes weekend trips to the Ozarks, although Aravaipa Canyon in Arizona is the first hike he describes.  He does do some longer trips, but he is not describing how to take long backpacking trips in this book.  Neither does he particularly focus on describing his hikes. The places he introduces the reader to are not described in a lot of detail - I'd almost like more color in the description of place and the challenges and process of backpacking, but this isn't a manual. Nonetheless, he does indulge in lyrical language at times. For example, of the Sonoran Desert he writes, "Hildegard of Bingen might have said that I'd touched the body of God as well, running my hand across a startling vulnerability. Blood-stained rocks and strip-mining scars lingered in its flesh, but the vibrating life was unmistakable. Here was a God known  in the sinew and flesh of bedrock and cactus, smitten by longing -- a great desert cat prowling the edges of abandonment, lurking unseen in teh shadows, hungry for love." (5)

This reflection follows a view of the desert canyon from a high cliff - but much of hiking is just slogging along a trail. This continuous movement results in a different kind of insight - the "effortless pattern of flow"  - complete absorption into the task at hand without having to think about it, the state of being that convinces long distance runners, hikers, swimmers, bikers, writers, readers, etc to persist.

The book is dense with quotes - sometimes overwhelmingly so: Barry Lopez, Wendell Berry, David Abram, the poet Novalis, scripture, Martin Buber follow each other in a two page spread. Tielhard de Chardin's "spirituality of wonderment" is a guiding theme - we offer experience wonder in nature, the same wonder that leads us to a generous Creator. Chardin offers a mass on the altar of the earth, recognizing the cosmic nature of Christ's body.

Lane describes feeling guilt as a young person because he preferred being outside to being in church, but he comes to realize that knowing God is a matter of physical connection as well as spiritual - the medieval mystics talk of tasting, savoring, and relishing God.  Our encounters with God in the wilderness are physical, and a relationship with creation is a connection with the Creator relying on both physical and spiritual encounters.

By reading spiritual masters while removing himself from his comfortable living room, Lane is able to encounter and consider their words in new ways. Awareness of the words, of his own immediate surroundings, of his body carrying book itself, of the discipline of the saint, and of God's work in the world all merge to expand and deepen his understanding of the inexpressible ideas that the saint was trying to convey.  He reads Pilgrim's Progress  and feels the reality of the allegories.  John Climacus's Ladder of Divine Ascent describes virtues of simplicity, watchfulness, and courage that are essential to the Christian and to the hiker. Jean-Pierre de Caussade's Abandonment to Divine Providence teaches attentiveness to the "sacrament of the present moment," a practice that can be honed on the trail. Julian of Norwich teaches him to let go of fear and stay calm while alone in the wild.

I would like to spend more time noting some of the insights Lane shares as he describes his own spiritual growth through his journeying, a type of pilgrimage into God's creation instead of to a site of martyrdom or miracle, but I'm running short of time, and there is just SO MUCH in this book. I borrowed it from the library, but I'm tempted to buy a copy just for the notes on the texts. If I have a reservation about this book, it's that it relies almost too heavily on quotes from different texts. It's almost as if Lane wanted to include every quote he loves - an impulse I am guilty of.

The guides he dives most deeply into are The Live of Columba by an abbot of Iona, St. Therese of Lisieux's Autobiography, Thomas Traherne's Centuries of Meditation, which are his "poetic reflections on God's presence in nature," Soren Kierkegaard's Journals, in which he explains the 4 gifts of solitude: 1. "Capacity for separating the individual from the crowd" - no performance of self -  "to stand alone before God", 2. "Ability to nurture true self" 3. "access to the mystery found at the core of our being" - that God is in the self, 4. Connection to the "larger, otherwise hidden community of the natural world."  These gifts in turn call for the responsibility to take care of the self, to take care of and honor the land, and to be accountable to and for others.

Dag Hammarksjold's journal Markings is another text that gets a close look.  The secretary-general of the UN "fed his inner tranquility" with mountain hiking.  A great quote "in the point of rest at the center of our being... we encounter a world where all things are at rest. .. . Then a tree becomes a mystery, a cloud a revelation." (93)

Small books like Brother Lawrence's The Practice of the Presence of God  and Thich Nhat Hanh's The Miracle of Mindfulness also are carried at times in Lane's pack.  Thich Nhat Hanh and Merton knew each other and shared a similar attention to presence and monastic practice. Backpacking requires a similar attention to what is immediately in front of you, for safety and for sanity.  Backpacking and monasticism also create rituals of everyday practices - packing, eating, making camp, etc.

In the "Descent" section John of the Cross gets a close examination. His dark night of the soul required him to relinquish a desire for possession and to accept absence as a source of longing.  Confronting fear of absence - or physical fear on the trail - is one way of acknowledging that God's presence was at one time know.  Lane also muses on Martin Luther's experiences of failure and challenges in comparison to his failure to summit Mt Whitney (familiar).  He is more generous to Luther than I might be.  Lane also reminded me of Rudolf Dreikurs, whose name was bandied about in my early years of child-rearing because he encouraged parents to let their children make mistake - to have "the courage to be imperfect."  He also invokes a couple of desert fathers, John Climacus and Abba Poema, who are gentle on the failures of their fellow monks, not that moral failure isn't significant, but that God forgives, while we cannot know the interior of the sinner. The Cloud of Unknowing also addresses our fear of failure, which can lead to fear of losing control and fear of loving.  Setting of into the unknown requires openness to the possibility of suffering, as does opening oneself up to love. This is so true of parenting - we cannot control what we love, and we will be wounded, but letting go and trusting is a part of loving fully.  Giving up control, even of language in the example of  The Cloud of Unknowing, is a way of emptying the mind to let the heart guide.  The author says that "It is not what you are nor what you have been that God looks at with his merciful eyes, but what you desire to be."  That is a comforting thought for a frequent failer.

The section on "Delight," begins with a chapter about discernment - trying to find what is authentic among what is illusory in our lives.  This is a process I really struggle with as we move closer to my husband's retirement from the Navy and the next phase in his career.  I met with our priest before Covid shutdowns to try to get some insight into the discernment process and duly made charts of consolations and desolations.  But my resulting data offers no clear preference.  Perhaps mixed in between desire, duty, resistance to change, responsibility, aspiration, whatever all the mixed motives involved in making a decision about a major shift in life after having relinquished control for so many years are, there should be some clear, authentic self that yearns toward one path. Part of me that feels like God's will is out there somewhere and we just have to find it, but perhaps it is what should be most obvious to the interior self.  Maybe I have a split personality - what is the personality type that can't make decisions?  Of course, it's not entirely my decision to make anyway - plenty of external factors will limit our choices, which seem limitless at this moment.

Lane reflects on discernment with Rumi as a guide.  Rumi suggests that we shouldn't ask "what should I do? " or "What is expected of me?" but "what do I love? What arises now most naturally from my heart?" (159). Rumi, as a Muslim mystic, "spoke of creation as God's first prophet, a window revealing God as the 'hidden treasure' within all things. 'The world is like a reed pipe and God blows in its every hole.'"  Lane goes on to write, "This ability to discover the holy in everything is a gift of discernment that emerges from one's encounter with an extraordinary human being, a revelatory text, or a vivid experience of nature."  (161) He also credits Ignatius of Loyola for promoting meditative prayer that begins with a reflection on plant life and the elements.  Christian teaching overlaps other traditions in perceiving nature as a teacher and as reflective of God's glory.

Maybe I need to go hiking by myself for several days with a backpack full of books and notebooks. That sounds a little like Heaven to me, which is probably why this book appealed to me. Perhaps my indecisiveness comes from a love of many things...

Similarly, time alone in nature increases love for fellow creatures - knowledge and mystery go hand and hand, and an appreciation of community and interdependence grows. Thomas Merton, Desmond Tutu, and Teilhard de Chardin are the spiritual masters lane refers to in his section on Community. De Chardin's Divine Milieu and The Heart of the Matter both reflect on the interconnectedness of the physical and spiritual, beauty and danger, love and suffering. Creation is "God's chosen instrument" and "a living host." (177). This isn't to say that nature is God, but that God is present in the things that He creates and animates. I'd like to dive into Teilhard de Chardin's way of thinking even more - he has a subtle way of understanding evolution and scientific theories about the cosmos within a theological perspective that appeals to my own vague understanding of the alignment of faith and reason in these mysteries.

The final section of the book points to accountability and a responsibility to teh community of anture. He quotes Edward Abbey's line, "Sentiment without action is the ruin of the soul." (181) But Lane also invokes Martin Luther King, Jr, and Gandhi to apply their theories of nonviolent action and the need for spiritual discipline to sustain community to the crusade for environmental justice. The privilege of experiencing "wilderness" hiking continues to be limited by the decimation of the wilderness - if there are even any wild places left.  Rarely are you ever really alone on a trail.

Lane recognizes the challenge of letting someone else's words stand in for our own experience, though.  The goal isn't supposed to be an iconic experience, or an attempt to live someone else's practice, but to fill our own genuine longing, even if the experience isn't revelatory or sublime, but simply an encounter with ordinary beauty - like a reunion with a good friend.  He truly feels the "communion of saints" as he reads them and finds the similarities with his own experiences. He combines lectio divina  with lectio terrestris.

One of the last chapters, with reference to Merton, recognizes the folly of taking any of this too seriously.  Reading - like hiking - is dangerous but also magical (reference to David Abrams, whose interesting essay on the magic and ecology is in my anthology of nature writing).  The hiker, like the hero, eventually returns home. This book is his attempt to share his synthesis of all of these ideas and experiences - an ambitious project. These ideas have all been said before, these places explored and described before, but each person's connections between people, place, and idea adds to the communal understanding - and to sympathy and longing.  With a nod to Abraham Herschel, Lane ends the book with his promise to share the wonder - "Wonder is the wellspring of love ... and love, in teh end, is what drives us to a passion for all things wild and at risk."

Saturday, July 11, 2020

June- July Picture post

Despite being on somewhat restricted movement, we have had a relatively full summer. After the birthdays, graduation, and confirmation in mid- June, the two youngest and I took a quick trip to Arizona to visit our oldest, who just moved into his first apartment and started his first salaried job.  He is officially independent, although I think I am still paying for his cell phone (that's going to stop...) and we loaned him a bit to get him started out before his first paycheck. I mention this to remind myself of our approach when the next few take flight and leave the nest.  I want to help our kids out as they head off into the world, but I also want to treat them each fairly, while at the same time. I acknowledge that different kids may need different levels of assistance getting started. We were blessed to inherit a bunch of furniture and cast off household goods when we first started housekeeping because my grandparents were breaking up their home to live with my aunt and uncle at the same time.  It made starting out easier - although now I still own some random kitchen implements that I can't get rid of because they are antiques...

At any rate, visiting my adult son was a novelty.  He has a couch and a bed and an air mattress. I brought him a table and chair that I bought at a garage sale.  I also tried to bring him a box spring, but we had a mishap on the drive out.  My husband had strapped the box spring to the top of the Suburban, but halfway through the desert, the straps strapped, and the box spring went flying off the roof. The metal part of the ratchet tie hit our back window and shattered it. I had to pull off the highway, run down a bit to pull the box spring off the road (it already was mostly on the shoulder.) Praise the Lord that it didn't cause an accident. I tried to use a bit of packing tape we had in the car to secure the tarp that had covered the box spring over the broken window (too many prepositional phrases there), but it wasn't secure enough to drive another 3 or 4 hours, so we stopped in the next town where one of those mobile glass repair trucks met us an a gas station and taped up some cardboard over the broken window.  They didn't charge us a thing - just asked for Yelp review, which of course, we gave them, a glowing report and five stars.

Once arrived in Tucson, we had another bit of a scare when we took a wrong turn on the way to my son's apartment complex.  We found ourselves in front of a building that looked like a halfway house, or worse. Surely this was the wrong address.  And it was - a south number instead of north or whatever the mistake was. But this area, with barbed wire fences, free roaming pitbulls, and condemned buildings is only about a mile away from where our son has found a place to live. He went for cheap and close to work instead of a prime location.  He'll probably only live out his year lease because then he gets married next summer. His complex is clean and has a nice pool, but I don't see his fiancee loving the location. The school where she is teaching is a 20 minute drive, so not far, but for the next year, she will live in an old convent on the campus with the other volunteer teachers.

Tucson is an interesting city. We didn't really explore the town much, although we sampled two different shaved ice places. We ate Chinese take out for dinner one night and choose your own entree from Trader Joe's the next night.  The first day we did a little shopping for household goods, but we also got up early to take a hike through the Saguaro National Park, which actually has two locations, on the east and west sides of Tucson.  A hillside rings the city, so it is surrounded by hiking and biking trails, although one mountain was burning, apparently under control.  It was far enough away that we couldn't smell the smoke, but at night we could see the flames.

We probably should have started our hike an hour or two earlier, because even at 9 am, it was hot. And by the time we finished shortly after 10, it was over 100 degrees. Time for more shaved ice.  The hike was relatively flat, but difficult to follow in a couple areas, because determining where the trail winded through the cacti was sometimes difficult. I couldn't stop taking photos of the saguaros. They were just finishing their blooming season, and the fruits were beginning to burst like another burst of red flowers. And the cacti themselves were enormous. Their arms were so expressive, pointing in different directions.  I loved the hike, but the girls were wilting.

Three days were all we stayed in Arizona, because we needed to get back to celebrate Father's Day together. It was a very low key day, capped by some surfing time.  Poor dads. They don't get the pomp and circumstance that moms do.

Not wanting to let the dust settle on the Suburban, I loaded it up a couple days later with camping gear. My 14 year had asked to go camping with her friends, and even though the Arizona trip had been a little stressful between the drive and also having to finish grading some coursework, I didn't want to let a request to go camping go unanswered. This time we went north east to the San Bernardino National Forest. The campgrounds weren't crowded midweek. I don't know why we haven't visited this area before - it was beautiful, and only a 2. 5 hour drive.  Maybe because it is close to LA? Or close to Big Bear, the ski resort area? Or because it was on fire a couple years ago?  At any rate, I already want to go back and hike Mt San Gorgonio, when is the highest mountain in Southern California (if you count Mt. Whitney northern California).

Again we met with a little stumbling block at the beginning. The camp spot I had reserved was pretty and had large sites, but minutes after setting up our tents, a couple pulled up to the site across from ours. The man had a beer bottle, and the woman, who was driving, was crying and cursing and accusing him of wanting to break up. They were obviously intoxicated or high or something.  I kept hoping they would just hurry up and break up and leave, but the woman kept setting up the tent while the guy occasionally called her mean names and responded unintelligibly to her shouted accusations.  It was a scene.  When the camp manager came around to check people in, I asked him if we could move.  Unfortunately, this campground didn't have any sites with two nights availability, but he directed me down the road a couple miles to a more primitive campground that was first come first served. Since it was also a National Forest property, the fees I had paid could apply to this place, too. He told me to give that camp manager his name, and we'd be all good. He didn't seem to be too upset by the warring couple, but he didn't seem surprised by my request to move.

So the girls and I threw our stuff back in the car to check out the other place. It was infinitely preferable. The sites were shaded by big pines and redwoods, and only a few sites were occupied. A creek ran through the middle of the  campground dividing the tent only sites from the sites with access for trailers. But there were no electric hook-ups here and no flush toilets, so most of the other campers were in tents, too.  And the trail I wanted to try was just across the street.  Despite the inconvenience, we felt like we won the lottery.  So the girls set up the tent, complete with battery operated fairy lights, and we made ourselves at home.  They had a great time burning marshmellows and pine cones and settled down early to sleep.  I had my own tent with the six year old, who was thrilled to be camping and delighted in every detail, except getting left behind by her sister and her friends.

The next day we did a six mile hike to a river, which wasn't the prettiest. We saw lizards and squirrels and plenty of birds and butterflies, but no bears or deer.  The only other wildlife was some lady relieving herself right at the trailhead. She didn't even attempt to find cover, and then she yelled at the girls to look away - which of course, caused them to look right at her. Embarrassing all around. She, too, didn't seem quite sober.

I promised the girls ice cream in the afternoon, so we drove to the little resort town to get treats.  After waiting in the longest drive through line ever, we were finally refreshed and ready to head back to the site, when we ran into another road block. A fatal accident had occurred on the twisting mountain road near where we were staying. The road was closed and the coroner was still two hours away.  I debated turning around and heading back into town for pizza, but after consulting with the road crew who were manning the road block, I decided to wait a bit. One of the guys was trying to get permission for people who weren't going all the way down the road to be allowed to pass.  Just as I was about to give up hope, and the girls were beginning to get anxious for a bathroom, the road crew moved the barrier for "local traffic" to go through.  So we were able to go back and cook our hot dogs and baked beans and then hike up the hill behind the campground to watch the sunset. I don't like feeling aggravated by someone else's tragedy, but empathy was elusive.

After these two adventures, we settled in to celebrate a couple more birthdays - 18 and 16 - and the Fourth of July.  We had two neighbors over for a cookout on the Fourth, friends that we have seen regularly for wine on the porch or long exercise walks.  But I was struck with guilt when, the Monday after the Fourth, our son found out his boss at the pizza place, was Covid positive.  Although we were tertiary contacts, we let everyone know and my husband decided to work from home until our son was able to get tested and get his results. We found out yesterday that he is negative, which we assumed, because he and his boss consistently wore their masks at the restaurant. It was a scare, though. And now our 16 year old needs a test before he can go back to his job washing dishes at the French bistro in town. This was  cush job for him, but we've had difficulty getting him a test because his PCM won't order one for someone asymptomatic, and the walk-up site only tests people over 18. Since we waited in line there, I went ahead and got tested myself.  We have an appointment scheduled at a state testing center next week, but I'm halfway worried they will turn him away, too.  He may not be able to go back to washing dishes. Since he made about $500 already this summer, he isn't too sad about having his weekend evenings back.

So that brings us to the present.  The 16 year old's birthday was yesterday, and since we were on restriction waiting to hear about our older son's test, he didn't see any friends, except a couple who dropped off gifts for him on our front porch. Plus he was already on restriction for not being where he said he was going to be on the Fourth of July.  I might have been a little more than a little upset when I found out. There were a few illegal displays of fireworks around the area.  Another concern is a breakout of positive Covid tests among some kids in my older daughter's class - a graduation party that got too big. Thankfully, it didn't involve anyone in her small circle of friends, but some of these kids work around town in summer jobs. I'll be happy when a vaccine is developed.

I have a couple book posts brewing in my mind, but by the time I get around to writing them, I likely will have forgotten what I wanted to say ... the peril of not writing down thoughts immediately.


A balcony shot - I did not get very good first apartment photos.


Fire on the hillsides of Tucson.

Desert landscaping at the school where my future daughter-in-law works

Starting a desert hike - still smiling.


Looking for lizards

Petroglyphs

Saguaro NP landscape


Don't touch the prickly pears. 

A tunnel web

Cactus flowers

Large saguaros. The sky even looks hot. 

A dying saguaro is a home and food source for other creatues.

Relief from the heat


A home of his own


Father's Day feast




I picked up a couch at a yard sale, so we rearranged our family room. A place to lounge

The fateful first site.

Someone loves sleeping in a tent!

Trees for hammocks at the second site. 

Crossing the creek

Redwoods

Snapdragon like wildflowers


Trout lilies?

I want this cabin in the woods.




Waiting for sunset and bears.

Wait for me!

Our third hike was to Jenks Lake, a pleasant little fishing lake in the hills.

Baby ducks




A legal adult!

Ice cream cake with whipped cream frosting,  a brownie crust, and a chocolate chip cookie middle layer. Yum. 




Happy Fourth!

Sparklers!

Worn out!


A short hike to Elfin Forest Recreational Reserve


As you can see, the landscape wasn't quite fairy land - or as pretty as the San Bernardino NF

Olivheim Reservoir


Playing in the creek to cool off after a hot hike.



Sweet sixteen!

Cherry icebox pie and eclair desert instead of cake for this guy. 


Reading is one form of escape. Running for your life is another.
-Lemony Snicket