Living in the Liminal Spaces – Birthdays, Flowers, Finding Space, More Tests
- At April 20, 2016
- By Jeannine Gailey
- In Blog
- 5
I’ve had to get used, lately, whether I like it or not, to living in the liminal spaces – in other words, the in-between. We have sold our house, but haven’t yet found a new one (lost the 18th or 19th bid – I’m starting to forget how many we’ve lost in this crazy market.) I’m turning 43 at the end of the month, a month which has gone mad with flowers – cherry trees, iris, dogwood, rhododendrons, azaleas and lilacs all blooming at the same time – and with heat – three days above 85 out here in the supposedly chilly and damp Pacific Northwest has made us all wilt a bit, even the sunlovers. And I’m getting another (hopefully definitive but slightly dangerous) test next week, a couple of days before my birthday, that hopefully will give us more answers in the mysterious world of the scary health stuff. I am trying not to talk as much about the cancer scare going on, but I notice when I don’t talk about it when I’m awake, it shows up when I’m asleep. I literally had a dream in which I spoke the line “I can’t do that, I might have cancer” – an unspoken background in my mind right now that’s leading me to only making tentative future plans, because…well, we don’t know yet.
Except I AM thinking of the future in a positive way – visiting the Skagit River Poetry Festival in May, making our annual pilgrimage this summer up to Port Townsend, even thinking about AWP 2019 in Portland. I’m thinking of my book launch in September, at least a little, already (Where would it be fun to read this time? Should we have a party?)
But I notice I’m pickier about what I commit to. I’m quicker to throw down a book if it tries my patience, if I’m not really enjoying it. I’m conserving my energies each week for one outing that’s good for my spirits – a visit to Open Books to talk poetry, or down to the Japanese gardens to watch the different trees and shrubs open up to bloom.
I spend more time photographing light and color, especially birds and flowers.
I’m making small efforts to be healthy, too – eating the most beautiful produce in the stores – asparagus, strawberries and blueberries, new lettuces. I’ve been making a tremendously delicious soup out of barely-cooked fresh peas, fennel, and a little honey and salt thrown together and immersion-blended into a bright green shot of spring flavor and eating (drinking) it almost every night with dinner. (So different than the dim brownish split-pea soups of our seventies childhoods.) I’m reading old poetry books I loved in the past at night, finding the poems I loved the most when I first started writing.
Is this how you live within limits, within a space where your end goal is no longer clearly defined? You throw yourself into the things that make you feel the most alive, not just happy, but the most “you.” What would you miss if everything were going to be taken away? That’s what I’m trying to hold onto right now.
Sherry Decker
I’m continuing to pray for you, Jeannine, and I believe you will be healed no matter what the diagnosis. See you Sunday at the HWA meeting, I hope.
Alison H.
I’m keeping you in my thoughts and prayers, Jeannine. I’m considering attending the Skagit Poetry Festival as well, if I can find someone to commute with.
Susan Reese
And doesn’t it make you wonder why we don’t live more quietly and fully all the time? Each time I’ve been forced to withdraw because of illness, I find a certain peace that so often eludes me, and vow to take that lesson forward with me, say “no” more often. It lasts a while as a conscious goal, but then everything becomes interesting again, ‘yes’ my default response, and I’m running crazy again in days like games of Whack-a-Mole in which I’m hitting most but missing some that are really important. I pray for your return to health and a house and all the activities you love. Meanwhile, you remain a superhero, modeling grace and gratitude in this spring engorged world. Love and hugs to you and Glenn.
Jeannine Gailey
Thanks, guys!
Sherry, yes, I hope I’ll be able to come Sunday!
Alison, yes, the Skagit Poetry Festival is very worth attending, at least for a day.
Susan – thank you. Yes, it does allow us to look at life from a different perspective, the enforced quiet.
Suko
A month which has gone mad with flowers is a wonderful description!
Jeannine, continue to nurture what is most important to you, for as long as possible. Health is wealth, so treat yourself to the best, organic fare.