A June Letter

Hello everyone,

It’s Thursday morning as I’m sitting down to write this, and as usual I’m not sure where this letter is going to lead. I just know that my days got very full in the last month and sitting down to write a leisurely letter feels a little contrary to the demands of our business, which requires quite a lot from us this time of year. Still though, I see this letter writing as a practice and so I’m taking a deep breath, putting the business and garden chores aside for a couple of hours, and coming back to one of my favorite places, which is in front of a blank page.

How are you? Has anything interesting transpired in your life since I last wrote you in May? I hope that anything that may have come about is interesting in a good way. I know it can go either way.

Here, we’ve literally gone from winter to summer with the summer part really only starting just a couple of weeks ago. Winter was especially cold this year, and it dragged on for an awfully long time and while I aspire to be one of those people who takes whatever Alaska throws at us in stride, I was beginning to despair a bit. Now things are greening up and even though our garden looks a little stunted, it’s at least in the ground and no longer in danger of freezing. I’ve mostly stopped fantasizing about moving to New Mexico, too, now that we’ve had a handful of days in which we haven’t had to light a fire in our wood stove.

I don’t mean to complain. It’s just that sometimes I struggle with the coastal Alaskan climate. I don’t want that to be the case, but it’s reality. There’s a certain fortitude that living here brings out, and in that sense it pushes me to be strong, to dig deep, to put on the right gear and get myself outside in spite of the weather, but sometimes I just want the sun.

A peek inside our sweet little greenhouse.

I’m sure the climate here has shaped me, that the inconvenience of living a rural life of burning wood for heat and hauling drinking water has effected the way I view the world. I know the distance from extended family has granted me the opportunity to know myself in ways I couldn’t have had I not moved up here as a young adult. I wonder how the vastness of it all has influenced my perspective. Who was that 24-year old person that came up here all those years ago? While I’m sure there are personality traits that haven’t changed since then, there are parts of the younger me that I hardly recognize anymore. And that’s one of the reasons I’ve chosen to stay, even when it gets hard. The challenges of this place are worth something. They’ve helped me come to know myself.

It would have happened no matter where I landed, and that’s what makes the idea of up and moving seem appealing at times. What aspects of myself might I come to know in a different environment?

I’m curious to know what places, what people, what experiences have shaped you? What has changed you the most? What fundamental parts of yourself carry through, no matter who you’re with or where you’re at?

Several years ago I was semi-obsessed with learning to play old-time fiddle and it was my first real deep dive. Do you know the kind of deep dive I’m talking about? The kind that keeps you awake at night thinking about it? The kind that makes you lose track of time? The kind you organize your days around? Until then, I’d never experienced anything close to what the psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi termed flow. If I picked up my fiddle, I’d have to set the timer so I wouldn’t be late to pick my kids up from school. I had to be strict with my boundaries about when and how long I’d play so that other parts of my life wouldn’t fall apart. I went to fiddle camp every summer for a few years, and I took every opportunity I could to play tunes with other people. Love for the music and the opportunities to play with other people kept me going, but the deep dive itself filled a need I had at that time in my life.

When I was deep in it I couldn’t imagine that my obsession would fade, but gradually it did. I bring this up now because last week I picked my fiddle up again for the first time in several months. Every time I return to it after a long hiatus I expect to be discouraged, but memory is a remarkable thing and usually I end up feeling pleasantly surprised that whatever gains I made back in the day are still there. The difference is that fiddle playing used to be a social thing for me and now it’s more of an isolated endeavor, and that social piece of it used to be a driving force. I’d practice like mad because I wanted to play well with other people. Now I have to figure out where it fits into my life. I’m still sorting that out, but in the meantime I’ve decided to choose a handful of new tunes to learn. My brain craves the deep focus that learning fiddle tunes offers, so I’ll start there.

And why is it always in the summertime, when there are a million other things going on, that I feel most inspired to play music again? Maybe it’s the manic energy that comes from so much daylight. Maybe it’s because I have so many great memories of playing outdoors with friends in the summer months. Maybe it’s when my brain most needs those moments of deep focus to bring me back into myself. Whatever it is, I’m happy to be playing again.

And speaking of flow and deep focus, writing is the other thing that pulls me in and makes me lose track of time. So I remind myself that this is a letter and not a book.

One of our many Rhodiola plants that is not bothered in the least by our long and cold winters.

What else? I’m currently reading the novel Buckeye, by Patrick Ryan. This particular story takes place during WWII and the years after it ends, and one of the characters in it helps facilitate communication with the dead, which is a topic that fascinates me. There was a scene I just read last night in which this character was visited by a recently-passed friend in a dream. It stuck out to me because I experienced a similar dream last week.

When I was in Colorado for my sister’s memorial service, I learned that a dear friend here in Homer had died and the news hit me hard. We weren’t best friends and we would go long periods of time without seeing each other, but she was a dear friend nonetheless. Our kids grew up together and attended each other’s birthday parties. Our daughters danced together in the Nutcracker. Many years ago we hired a water taxi to take us across the bay for an afternoon of blueberry picking. We each came home with a five gallon bucket full of berries to freeze for the winter. When I heard that she was gone I wished so much that I’d had an opportunity to say goodbye.

But then I had this dream in which she came to talk with me. It felt as real as all the times I ran into her around town. In this dream visit we chatted, we went for a drive together, we acknowledged our friendship, and it made me feel better for not having seen her again before she passed. My friend Ben has popped into my dreams a couple of times, too, to catch up and to remind me that even though he’s dead he’s not fully gone. It’s a mystery that could just be my subconscious mind trying to bring order to things I’ve had a hard time accepting or it could be something more. Either way, these dreams have offered me something valuable and it doesn’t really matter that I can’t explain them with any amount of certainty.

Have any of you had similar dreams or experiences?

Anyhow, that’s a bit of what’s been up with me these last few weeks and I really do need to wrap this up now as the timer I set for myself has just gone off. I hope all is well with you and that your summer is off to a good start. I also hope that you’re making the time to do something that enriches your life and enlivens your soul. And I’d love to know what that is, if you’re willing to share.

Thank you for being out there and for reading another one of my letters. It’s a connection I value very much.

Before signing off completely, I’ll leave you with just a couple more things. First here is a video of three of my fiddle camp teachers playing one of my favorite tunes. Sadly, Trevor, the fiddle player, is no longer with us, but his music lives on and still inspires.

And here’s a poem by Matt Moberg that I came across on Facebook last week that has stuck with me. I found a version of it on another website so those of you who aren’t on Facebook can enjoy it as well. It really is worth the time it takes to read it.

https://pattidigh.substack.com/p/poetry-wednesday-every-human-being

Wishing for you a lovely stretch of time between now and my next letter.

With love,

Teresa

Fear and Fascination

When I was a little girl I sat through a lot of church services.  I’m talking two church services every Sunday until I was about fourteen years old.  Most of them have blurred together into one memory that includes the strong scent of ladies perfume, singing hymns and daydreaming the hours away while the pastor delivered his message.  Always at the end of the service the congregation was invited to go to the front of the church for an “altar call;” which meant we had the opportunity to make ourselves right with Jesus by recommitting our lives to Him and confessing our sins.

One service though stands out from all the others.   A missionary family from Calcutta visited when I was about nine years old to share their experiences and to gather support for their work with the poorest people in the city.   They told stories of leprosy, spiritual darkness and poverty the likes of which I could scarcely imagine with my limited Colorado small-town-girl perspective.  After that particular service my own personal altar call involved lots of pleading, praying and crying, not for the little children shown in the slideshows, but for God to please never make me go to India.

Perhaps my childhood fear of having to go to India actually planted the seeds of what has become for me a fascination with all things Indian.  Still though, going there didn’t really cross my mind until recently.  It seemed too far out of reach.

Two weeks ago at the library we received a greeting card from a young man who taught a digital photography class to kids in Homer.  The card featured a photo of his most recent students in a small school in northeastern India, not far from Nepal.  Something happened when I saw the card.  I went back to it several times over the day and looked again at the school children on the cover.   For some reason the card made it all seem possible.

My growing desire to go to India wasn’t something I shared with many people and I didn’t expect my family to jump on board with my crazy idea.  But much to my amazement they’re into it.  We don’t know any of the details yet, only that it will take about two years to save enough money to make it all happen.  A savings account has been opened. The beginning of a plan is in place.  I haven’t felt this excited in a long time.