Evenings: 09.06.2013

I want you to experience this.  I’m writing this to touch you.  I want these words read and I want them to cause an effect.  It’s metaphorical and literal. Sit. Focus.


I want you to experience this. I want you to practice this.


I want you to come out of the reclusiveness of the evening and the hideout of the night. Be born into the break of dawn and expose yourselves.


If you are in need, reach out.


If you are hurting, ask for a shoulder.


If you are struggling, seek out aid.


I’m telling you now, you have the power and ability to achieve your goals and meet your needs.  My gift to you today is this.  You are not alone.  


Do not hide your shame in the cloak of the darkness.  The night time in which we cry and scream and hurt.  We save our financial crises for the evening, we save our emotional turmoil for closed doors, we smile and answer robotically to the “How are you”’s. Lying not exposing the truth. EXPOSE the truth.


I challenge you. When you are asked this question or when you ask it….Listen, tell the truth,  be present. We are all in this together and everyone needs something.  

I will let it start with me. Don't let it end with you. 

Evenings: 09.03.2013

The sun sets behind our house. Golden light filters through, shadows darken. The breeze shifts from warm to cool. It is a comforting part of the routine, the pattern, the rhythm of our days.

Giggles rise from the sandbox and waft into the open kitchen window. A desperate plea for just two more minutes of play. She knows bath time will be soon and that means bed will follow. She knows the routines, the patterns, the rhythm of our days.

The dogs pace, anxious for their walk. Dinner has been served and devoured, light is fading quickly. They know that the running bath water and sound of clean up means their adventure time draws near. They know the routines, the patterns, the rhythm of our days.

The table gets cleared, dishes scraped. Laundry is gathered and tossed into the machine. We know the silence of sleep will come soon and take advantage of this last hour of noise. We know the routines, the patterns, the rhythm of our days.

She falls asleep. The dogs find their places to curl up. The dreaming begins. We sit together, enjoying our time with the quiet. My head on his chest, sharing the stories of our day. 

I love our routines.
I love the patterns.
I love the rhythm of our days.

**Check out more photos that compliment this piece on our sister site: Luminous Traces**




Evenings: 09.02.2013


dedicated in gratitude to the fleeting and indefectible beauty of Maples

Things I noticed:

A young boy, maybe 9 or 10, with brown tousled hair falling into his eyes, making sure his mom was watching his skateboard trick. He did it on the rumble of the bricks and upon completion whipped his locks around immediately, like a rubberband releasing tension, to see if she was looking. She was. His shoulders relaxed for the slightest moment and then it started all over again.

In the same square, a man and woman. Were they homeless? Rough and ragged. Hewn from heaviness. I could only clearly see him from my bench. His hair was tousled, too. The color of  worn life in his locks. Not that it was gray necessarily. It was indeed sunkissed by the elements with veins of gold, but lackluster. It rested madly, just above his shoulders. I noticed I didn't want to make any contact--that some people put off tinder. But then he put earphones on. And I witnessed the most glorious, un-selfconscious, head-bobbin', hands air-drummin' display of joyous rocking out. The heaviness in some alchemical mystery transformed.  

The Whetstone creek kept a steady and comforting drone. I was so drawn I twisted my body so I could look at the disappearing water. There were two small brown birds scantering in the bushes. I found it sad I didn't know my winged neighbors on a first name basis. I noted that and my disturbance. One bird approached with the usual staccato movements. Closer and closer. There was just enough pause in between to see the soft face. Even the beak looked soft.  And gentle, gentle eyes. I could have looked into this innocence for hours, it was so consoling. 

I smelled the young guy at the market. The one with psoriasis and awkward social manners. The one that has the straight, stringy hair, who cut it short recently and didn't quite know how to respond to my compliment. He smelled of body odor. Unpleasant. I wondered if anyone has ever mentioned it to him. Or how they would, considering he seems so guarded and sensitive. And I thought about fragility and the delicacy of communication.

I heard the voice of a child. I never saw her. I heard her say with such conviction, "But I don't just like it, I LOVE it."

The woman from France tasted the Vermont raclette and was transported across the sea back home. The nuances of flavor, texture, aroma, all resurrected a remembrance of things past. Like Proust's 'petite madeleine' cake, she left with a half pound of her involuntary memory. 

If my phone hadn't been stolen at the Burbank airport, if it wasn't time to renew my contract, if I wasn't so ignorant (and perhaps non-caring) about these technological devices, if I wasn't so ready to trust the salesman's opinion partly out of impatience (just give me a phone already so I can leave thank you very much!), I wouldn't have had the type of device that allowed me to check my email on my break. And I wouldn't have had to endure the rest of my shift with a stone on my chest. I wasn't a good clown that day, but I was an amazing actor. Customers left with bouncy steps and packages of mold. 

One evening, with the encouragement of a friend, I forced my frail heart to go hear the swing band. I even danced. Getting lost in the steps, fumbling, laughing, apologizing and smiling the whole way through. It felt good to move. I drank Frangelico. It was a warm and buttery comfort drink, like liquid macaroni and cheese. I watched friends of the clarinet player, a family, sit in front of us. And when the red-haired freckled boy floating towards teenage years got up to sit in his Father's lap, I wondered if this would be the last year of his nonchalance. 

If I remove the stone and breathe into the chambers, I can unearth the place of gratitude and gilded grace. A place beyond desire or attachment. It flits in and out but it is there. When the sun sets there are many colors in between before succumbing to the Night.

"Living awake is the dying and living awake."

The piano tuner came back to finish the job. When he was done, I asked him to play. I was so tired. My chest heavy. I gathered some pillows and a throw blanket and lay upon the wooden floor to listen. He sat facing the piano. Slumped. He unconsciously took his right middle and index finger, cocked his head and scratched vigorously for 3 seconds. What compelled him, I do not know. He sat slumped again. I thought to myself, and then actually told him out loud, that if I were teaching Clown, I would take that gesture and amplify it. It is a beautiful action that speaks to and for him. From his own body and being. I watched him do that very same gesture before playing piano the previous night. Perhaps it re-calibrates something, because what transpired next could only be described as sublime.

He listens to his heart, his soul, and it comes out his fingers as an exertion upon the keys. Soft, heavy, lighter, louder. A caress, a slide, an aerial drop--his fingers dance across. I marvel. I want to do that. To be the medium for that kind of birth. No book or sheet music. Unadulterated. Pure. I want to cry. Eyes closed, I feel the wooden floor beneath me and let the resonance envelope me. Medicine. I notice it is in the pauses, the inhalations, that the notes sink into my skin. They shower me with beauty and remind me of my pain, my desires, my dreams, my failures, my joys. They wash over me and I don't want him to stop. I want the piano tuner to keep scratching his head and playing. A prayer in the moment. A Tibetan sand mandala. And then the sounds are whisked away by silence. 

We don't move and let the stillness descend. After a bit, I break it by asking what he was thinking about while playing. A brief pause. And then he answers, "where to go next."