Clog #3: Options

C: “Why do I always like the best and most expensive options?”

S:  “Because what other options are there, really?  Go ahead, pay $25 for bamboo knitting needles.”

Honesty

glass
chinks and chunks
clinking
sharp and beautiful
unexpectations, unexceptions
intriguing
blood on tongue
inhaling humid air
no breeze in sight
and back into soapy
sink of glass

The File

Link pulled out her file.  One gay.  One man in another state.  One 40-year-old Italian.  There were some obvious problems with the file considering the title–“Men I Have Considered Marrying.”

What happened between Link and these three men was nothing short of ordinary.  Each story filled with hope and commonality, then crestfallen–or gay.  Link sat in her Kansas prairie attic and thought for a while.

Link’s impressions:

#3.  I immediately thought of you as Emile DeBecque, that dashing Frenchman in South Pacific.  This was appropriate for the obvious reason that DeBecque was played by the Italian actor Rossano Brazzi in the film version of this slightly offensive musical.  Distinguished and knowledgeable–these adjectives were etched into every muscle, bone, and movement of your body.  Tall, fit, strong, quiet, greying.  The appeal was undeniable.  I found myself sincerely hoping you had a wife and family so that I wouldn’t have to deal with the superlative manliness.  Fortunately, this turned out to be the case.  Unfortunately, I did not discover this until 8 weeks into our relationship, friendship though it was.  Oh, I was anguished at night, but you knew how to lessen the torment by teaching me to cook real, delicate Italian food.  Food that took timing and intention.  I have to say, I also learned some lessons on love in that tiny kitchen of yours–like that it also takes timing and intention.  If you were not 40 and married, you would have been enough for me.  Your gentle teasing, strong arms, and grounded nature made you enough.  Did you know that?

#2.  Norwegian guys were once my greatest ambition.  I grew up with them and found them the epitome of simplicity.  They consciously stayed away from drama.  They showed excellent sense in driving their trucks to the other city cafe to avoid stirring up trouble.  You, sir, were a great Norwegian.  You had jokes and made them appropriately.  What’s more, your jokes made me laugh honestly and like a whole person.  Further, when I first looked in your eyes, I saw a depth of sincerity often absent in men your age.  Your humor was neat, direct, clear, and appropriate.  You didn’t push limits for the sake of pushing them.  You made choices as you spoke and I could see them, but you appeared relaxed and off-the-cuff at the same time.  It was this delicate balance of intention and spontaneity that drew me.  But in all of this cleanliness, your passion stayed your own.  If you had but sought me, you would have been enough.  Your focused speech, easy spirit, and wide smile made you enough.  Did you know that?

#1.  Days were easy with you.  My whole body relaxed.  This was true even before I knew you were gay.  Perhaps it was an innate knowing that allowed me to set aside my impressing genes.  I did, however, like to wear impressive jeans when I was with you.  We matched in so many ways.  Musicians.  Writers.  Composers.  Loud Laughers.  People who knew what we liked to eat and drink–however more adventurous I was in that area than you.  Communicators.  We could talk for hours on end and still have more to say.  But you were not for girls.  If you weren’t gay, you would have been enough for me.  Your honesty, creativity, and style made you enough for me.  Did you know that?

Link dumped her file in the trash, realizing it was defective and defunct.  It wasn’t working to only tell herself of the possibilities.  She needed to start showing others.  A file was not the same as a letter, or a conversation for that matter.  Link pulled out a new manila folder.  “Steps I Am Taking Toward Telling Men They Are Enough for Me.”  She stared at it for a while.

Secret Storms

The lightening comes in
long sideways windows.
I am sitting in my basement
on a couch that
smells like bonfire wood
that hasn’t yet been burned–
my secret getaway
right in the middle of the open
lights-out room.
It’s 1 am and I am
watching old episodes
of old TV shows
and laughing hard enough
I worry I might wake up
the house.

I hide away in storms.
I hide away in secrets.

Important Dates (The Next Ten Weeks in the Last Ten Minutes)

As I’ve grown “older,” I’ve realized that a week is really not the best way to assess time spent.  Being a teacher makes me work within the school week and keep track of progress by making daily tick marks in grade books and attendance logs and lesson planners.  But the rest of my life takes so much more time than Monday-Friday.  It may as well not be on a calendar.   Instead of weekly events, I have monoliths of projects and parties and pies all trying to pass through the space of my life.  (What movie am I referencing?) If anything, events drag on in terms of months.  It’s true that while still in March, I made plans for May and July and I’m not even talking about this year’s slog of summer weddings–about which, I’m ever so happy, of course.

With that said, I want to share some upcoming dates that I’m excited about:

1. April 20 is Pie, Piano, and Poetry at Danica’s House.  Come and share your work!
2. April 24 is Easter!
2. April 26, I just may find myself listening to Celtic Woman live.  (I only wish T could be there.  I hope it works out.)
3. April 27, I’m taking a group of talented singers for their first Select Choir rehearsal.
4. April 28, I’ll be playing piano for a student singing Katy Perry’s “Firework” at a benefit for Japan; I’ll also be in a fashion show that night.  (I can’t even say how excited I was when the student placed this on the piano and said, “I was thinking of this one.”  I responded very calmly, but gave a generous dose of encouragement because inside I was already dancing.)
5. April 29-30 will find me at my first women’s conference ever, but only if our names get called off the waiting list.  (It’s part of my couch-made agreement with my sister to be more involved in women’s ministry events even though they seem scary to us.)
6. May 2 is my first official JM Choir concert.
7. May 6 is my first Big 9 Contest event.  (This is like solo-ensemble for those of you from Northern Minnesota.  It’s a competition for the “Big 9” high schools in southern Minnesota.  It’s a big deal and today I got a little nervous–not going to lie.)
8. May 13 is a worship team audition I have been waiting for since February.
9. May 19 is my birthday, so let’s be gearing up, folks.
10. May 25 is the final official JM Choir event of the year, not counting graduation.

You know what, I’m glad I don’t do everything on a weekly basis.

Being Open to Closing the Door

Sometimes being open means closing the door.  It’s well and good to be open to the unexpected, but the unexpected isn’t the only option.  Be open, also, to the expected results of investing in your life right here and now.  It’s okay to close a distant, difficult door, especially if you feel you’re not going to be able to fit through it anyway, let alone handle what’s on the other side.

Her and Me: A Sisterly Conversation
The Basement Couch Publishing (c) 2011

Where The Sweet Things Lie

Sweet things sleep in empty beds
of swapped imaginations–
You in mine and I, in yours,
Sweetly dreaming hope’s sensations.

Sweet things are the seeds that fall
When we shake our tearing hearts.
Unlocking from the fibrous walls
Our inner, scary parts.

Sweet things ride upon the words
Of all our insecurities
Right up to the upper third
out past our chattering teeth.

Then carried on our windy sighs,
sweet things hardly know
that in the fracture of goodbye
sweet things are often sewn.

Sweet things start to burrow down,
Way down deep inside me.
I feel them stretching out their roots
searching rich and lovely.

There are sweet things on the surface
and sweet things buried deep.
Sweet things from your world to mine
to grow the flowers we keep.

Katharine Hepburn Guts

I dare you.
You’re so this and I’m so not.
You can try if you want to, but it’s not going to work.
I’m sorry I would never go out with you; It’s just that I’m sure we’d drive each other crazy and nobody wants that.
It would take a whole day to prove to you that we are not meant to be.
I’m sure you would have a grand time on a date with me, but I’m not convinced that I would be having a grand time.

I said to my sister, “Sometimes I just want to say to a guy, ‘I dare you.  I dare you to pursue me.’  But who has the guts to say this?”  She said, “Katharine Hepburn.”  Then we thought of some other cheeky, yet possibly brilliant ways to dare a guy.  See above.

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