Showing posts with label gratitude. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gratitude. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 14, 2023

A Tribute to Mark


Mark and I go way back, more than 50 years.  I met him when I was 17, in the fall of 1971.  With my mother trailing close behind me I was carrying a cardboard box of my stuff upstairs, moving into a room on the third floor of a house at 9th and Dunn in Bloomington, Indiana to I begin my freshman year at IU.  

 


Mark stood in the upstairs hallway, bent over a greasy communal stove, wearing long thermal underwear and a railroad engineer hat, hair halfway down his back, skinny as a rail.  He was cooking up a batch of turkey-in-a-bag and rice, one of his go-to meals as an impoverished student back then.  He nodded hello.  He lived just down the hall, so we became friends, and we were friends for a couple of years before we became more than that.  We both liked good conversation, playing guitars and shooting baskets on the court just across the street.  Back then I didn’t drink coffee, but Mark showed me the way.

 

Believe it or not in those years I was surrounded by various young men who showed an interested in me.  But ultimately Mark stood out from the crowd because he admired and respected women. He truly saw me.  And he loved what he saw.  Not just my appearance, but my music and my mind.  At my small hometown high school in Ellettsville I scared away the guys—I used long words and got way too excited about ideas.  Mark loved writing, and philosophical quandaries, and long words.  We sparred intellectually, attending classes like Comparative Religion and “The Films of Alfred Hitchcock and Orson Welles” and first level Astronomy together, competing for the best grade.  He got the kinds of comments on papers he wrote that I only dreamed of.  He also had an excellent editor and typist for those papers, if I do say so myself.

 

Eventually I met Mark’s family—his Mom Jacki and Dad Bill, his siblings Bill, David and Ronna—all unique and interesting people who welcomed me warmly into the family from the very beginning, and I grew to love them all.

 


Around the fall of 1972 we became much more than friends, and in May of ‘73 we moved in together, or “shacked up” as my father preferred to call it at the time.  We lived in a communal house on West 1st Street where we shopped for food and cooked shared dinners each evening. Despite Dad’s misgivings about our living in sin, he often showed up for surprise visits to give us big shopping bags full of zucchini, green peppers, corn and tomatoes from his garden.

 

Mark had a spiritual connection to nature and especially all aspects of trees—their leaves, trunks and deep roots.  We went on long walks through the tree-lined streets of Bloomington, and skinny dipped at Griffy Lake, and lay under the forest canopy in Brown County breathing in the earthy scent of the leaves.

 

One of Mark’s favorite things was to go out to my parents’ house on Sugar Lane for Sunday dinner with my family.  Mom loved him from the start and her excellent cooking was a big draw with lots of grilled meat and potatoes and garden salads and lively talk around the dinner table.  Occasionally there’d be a big fish fry with blue gill Dad had caught in the nearby lakes, fried green tomatoes, corn on the cob, and wilty lettuce.  Despite his habit of wearing his hat to the dinner table, Mark started to grow on my father, and eventually my whole family came to love him.





After I got my degree in English with a certificate to teach in 1975, Mark, Mom and I took a road trip out west so I could interview for teaching positions.  At Mark’s request, Mom cut his hair short in the Sugar Lane kitchen before we left—I still remember that because I think it felt a little like some kind of transition or ceremony.

 

We drove the old blue station wagon; Mom slept in the back and Mark and I had a tent—occasionally we splurged on a motel.  My interviews were in Oregon and Washington mainly but we also travelled through Colorado and over the Divide.  

 

I didn’t snag a job but it was then we started to realize we wanted to live out west by the mountains, so we saved our money and in May of ‘77 we packed everything we owned into our rickety square-back VW and drove to Boulder, where we discovered to our horror that there were fewer trees than we expected, although we quickly found redeeming qualities in the town.  

 

Our master plan was to live a few months on our savings and write fiction, and Mark would attend Naropa University.  

 

Soon we settled into Boulder with CU jobs (Mark as a janitor and me as an admin for a scientist) and after some rental adventures we ended up at 619 Marine Street living with a few other people.  When we posted a notice for a new housemate, who should show up knocking on our door but Virginia Mitchell, newly moved from Chicago.  Ginny was the perfect housemate, and even moved in with us for a little while when we later bought our house in ‘83—she and Mark got along swimmingly and she’s still a wonderful friend to this day.

 

We lived with and knew many rock climbers, who would spread out and inventory all their gear on the living room floor in preparation for ambitious expeditions to Banff and other exotic destinations.  It was at Marine Street that we met an energetic young fellow named Mark McIntyre.  Memory fades, but it may have been McIntyre along with housemate Gene who actually convinced Mark and me to climb the Whale’s Tale in Eldorado Springs—I do remember one or the other of those guys poking me in the butt to get me up the rock face.  At the top Mark and I learned the hard lesson that the scariest part is the unroped descent, clambering down among the boulders and trying not to fall.  Little did we know that one day we would have a son who would become an amazing climber and boulderer.

 

My sister Nell came to live in Boulder on and off.  I remember her sitting on the Marine Street porch swing, enchanted by our friends and lives.  Eventually my brother Paul made the permanent move here, and stayed for the rest of his life.  

 

We had no Internet back then, children; I know it’s hard to picture.  Also, we had very little money.  We amused ourselves by hiking, cooking dinners together, playing penny ante poker, playing music, and sitting around reading poems we selected out of books Mark and I had from college.  Mark loved Charles Bukowski, Robinson Jeffers, and T.S. Eliot, and even the fascist Ezra Pound.  To the end of his days, he and I would quote Ezra to each other on the first really cold day of the year:  “Winter is i-cumin in, Lhude sing goddamn!”

 

More than once he quoted the last line of Dylan Thomas’s “Fern Hill,” which held great significance for him I think.

 


Mark loved bike riding.  Back then, he and my brother Paul were great friends and they’d take long rides together up into the mountains.  One evening I came home from work and Mark was lying in the bathtub up to his chin in a hot bath, trying to warm himself up after a mountain bike ride in a sudden hailstorm, and hoarsely muttering “Ward!  Ward!”  He’d finally made it all the way up to Jamestown and Ward, but barely made it back.

 

Mark played racquetball with Paul and later with Shannon.  He took great joy in tennis and played with bloodthirsty competitiveness against his Dad, his brother David, and others in Boulder and Florida when we went for visits.  

 


Ultimately Mark identified as a writer of both fiction and poetry.  Before we had children he wrote most of a novel, weaving his fascination of mythology together with his current work experience to create the story of a janitor who must, Orpheus-like, enter the underworld to rescue his true love.  We even bought one of the earliest word processors, a Kaypro II, so that he could edit his writing after I input the rough drafts for him since I was the faster typist.  As always with his writing, as I typed I performed a Lynn Weatherwax style “auto-correct” on spelling and grammar.  

 

Mark had eclectic tastes when it came to reading, from great fiction to poetry to science to deep philosophical works I couldn’t begin to comprehend.  He gave me no end of grief because I had never, despite my claims of a degree in English, managed to get completely through “Moby Dick.” He spoke of this so often that our friend Elizabeth, who loved arguing with Mark on any and all topics, gave him the gift of a coffee cup with a picture of the big white whale on it, which we own to this day.

 

I have to admit Mark was quite resistant to having children.  But after we’d been living together 13 years and with my biological alarm clock shrieking, I came home from a business trip one night and he’d written up a proposal:  we would have exactly two children, and he would quit work and stay home to care for them, and he’d have time to write.  Anyone who has stayed home with small children will smile at the “time to write” part of the proposal, but who knew?  So that’s what we did, and two beautiful children arrived on the scene:  Shannon and then Caitlin.

 



I will be forever grateful to Mark for that choice, which was a gift to me.

He often commented on how very glad he was he’d changed his mind, and he loved Shannon and Caitlin dearly.

 

Once I was pregnant with Shannon we went down to the Boulder County Courthouse on November 22, 1985 and Judge Roxanne Bailin officiated as we tied the knot, with just a few friends in attendance.

 

We launched into a full role-reversal, the dynamics of which back then were still quite perplexing to many people, but Mark did a stellar job of running the household, cooking all the meals, and rearing the children.  I worked, perhaps many more hours than was good for the family.  But because I had a “wife,” I had the time and energy to rise to a level in the computer field that allowed us to start accumulating some savings.  As the retirement accounts grew, Mark never lost sight of how lucky we were, regularly sending generous checks to Community Foodshare, the Boulder Homeless Shelter, Emergency Family Assistance, Habitat for Humanity, and other charities.  He continued to do this until his very last days.

 

Mark was reluctant to be tied down by owning a home and didn’t like owing money.  But I insisted, and in 1983 we bought the house at 40 South 33rd, making it our own over the years. 

 

Mark had always admired Dad’s big garden and now that we were home owners he began gardening himself, first vegetables and eventually quite beautiful flowers.  He took great delight in flowers, especially dahlias, roses, peonies and lilies.  He looked forward to planting the annuals each spring; it always lifted his spirits after the long, cold Colorado winters.

 


Mark had a passion for playing the guitar.  His fingers flew over the frets, producing impossibly complicated lead riffs.  In the early 90’s I gave him a Fender Stratocaster for Christmas and he played it for hours at a time.  We would play the blues together and he would weave in wild guitar leads while I strummed along with my steady chords.  He also loved listening to music and was listening to selections on Spotify even at the very end of his life.

 

As the children grew, Mark encouraged them to be curious and nudged them toward science.  He had a subscription to Discovery Magazine, and loved to read about the latest developments and inventions.  He was beyond thrilled when both Shannon and Caitlin graduated from CU in the winter of 2010:  Shannon with a degree in Integrative Physiology and Caitlin with a degree in Biochemistry.  



Caitlin later got her PhD from UCSF, another extremely proud moment, and Mark always asked her about her research and tried his best to understand what she was doing.  

 

Mark enjoyed games and played hours of chess with Shannon.  He also liked poker and in the last few years he and I enjoyed many games of Texas Hold ‘Em with Shannon, Caitlin, Justin, Nan and friends.  Mark was a Broncos and Nuggets fan, and Shannon commented just the other day that it was ironic that the Nuggets were finally having a championship season this year and Dad was missing it.

 

We’ve all been telling each other about all that he’s missing now:  the Nuggets season, the spring flowers, mornings sitting on the back patio with me drinking coffee and talking, watching his children’s lives continue to unfold and evolve.



 

When I look through all the photographs, I take comfort in reminding myself that he had many good years and was able to find at least moments of joy all along.  And even toward the end he kept trying in his own way.  He stayed around for us as long as he could despite immense suffering.  

 

No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t take the trouble from his eyes.  But he tried in his way to be free.

 

Even though at times he broke our hearts, Mark loved us very much.  

 

For those of you with Stoddardian blood in particular:  Bill, David, Ronna, Jordan and my children Shannon and Caitlin:  I hope that whenever you look in the mirror and raise a single eyebrow, or see a maple tree turn a brilliant red in autumn, or hear a thunder and lightning storm as it brings a deluge of rain or a particularly fine guitar riff, or read about an amazing new scientific discovery, or take a long walk in a forest filled with deciduous trees—and definitely whenever you plant a flower in spring, you’ll remember him with love.


He was one of a kind.



Saturday, January 18, 2014

Turning Point


New Year's Eve
Pearl Street Starbucks

A time comes when there are so many reasons to go that you know it's time; the center cannot hold, the balancing act can't continue.  You realize you're needed and wanted much more in a different universe.  I woke up this morning inventorying in my mind the removal and disposal of all the stuff in my office at work--perhaps the tide has turned?  What does one do with heavy glass recognition plaques marking one's 5, 15, 20 years at a company one must ultimately leave?  And what of all the books on leadership, Agile development, and more--would anyone else even want them?

I'll keep the six tiny carved laughing Buddhas; not so sure about the fountain with the stalk of bamboo growing in it.  How about the beautiful flowering cactus?  Yes.  I can surely keep it alive.

Many will envy me if I make this move and never guess how terrifying it is.  Shall I tell myself a different story?  It's not terrifying, but thrilling to imagine moving beyond this phase in my life to something new and potentially far more fulfilling.  

The sun obligingly shines through the Starbucks window and reflects a prism rainbow right across my journal page--purple-blue, then brilliant green fading to yellow, then orange and red.  A beautiful sign that taking care of myself and my family first is surely the right path, not selfish but wise beyond analysis, something that in the end I will not regret because of the new experiences I'll encounter on the next leg of the journey.  It is indeed a journey--not a final destination to save even more money so I'll finally, finally feel secure.  Nothing's secure anyway.  I have only to count already fallen friends and family to know that all is ephemeral, including the prism rainbow already fading from my page but marked by me while it was there in the moment as a sign, noticed before it was quickly gone, giving me a moment's joy.

To notice more--this is part of the journey; to be here now.  The unhappiness comes with fear of the future and regret about the past, but not from now.  Now contains joy and contentment and wonder.  Just remembering to breathe and be grateful for the oxygen can be such a relief.  Releaf?  And my current work becomes less important in a relative sense as my priorities change from more security and money to more time. 

Time to move on.

Martha Beck says:  "The way we do anything is the way we do everything."

The way I do things is to think, think, think.  This has left me with less ability right now to listen to myself (or others) and learn the heart's deepest desires.  But I'm hearing more and more clearly now.

Magically, the prism rainbow returns to illuminate my page!  A sign to be sure, if Im willing to tell myself that story. The colors are even more glorious than before and the joy returns.  Surely I'm on the right path.  I don't want to stop writing because I'm enjoying the rainbow so much.  I move the page so my hand doesn't block the light.

The message:  Do not allow yourself to block the beauty and happiness, for it is surely you alone who block them when they're right there!

The way you do anything is the way you do everything.  My way tends to include much cautious analysis.  I seek full assurance that everything will be okay and all my decisions will be the right ones.  In the last third of any life there is only one guarantee:  it will end.  All the rest is a crapshoot.  How do I want to spend the last third of my life?  What things no longer give me pleasure but are instead breaking my heart, and why do I still cling to them?

Martha Beck again:  "Everything I've ever taught boils down to this--I cannot believe people keep paying me to say this--if something feels really good for you, you might want to do it, and if something feels really horrible, you might want to consider not doing it.  Thank you, give me my $150."

Carpe Diem.  

Saturday, July 27, 2013

First World Problems


 "Spilled Starbucks coffee on my yellow t-shirt while sitting in the shade on the Pearl Street Mall."

A wordy yet apt example of a "first-world problem."  Jessica Hagy's Venn diagram illustrates the idea nicely.

Others include not being fulfilled in my high paying job, worrying whether I can live the good life in retirement, and feeling hassled about keeping all my mobile devices updated, synced and charged.

I recently hung out with my younger sister for a few days.  She is adept at both eliciting laughs and laughing at herself, utterly admirable attributes.  A few times she caught herself complaining about trivial problems like having to replace the cat-pee soaked carpet in her house after a tenant left, and she referred to these as "first world problems."

I find the term, upon examination, to be a valuable way to instantly regain sorely needed perspective when I am in the depths of obsessive worry in a complicated world.  Lately I've been invoking the concept often as I go about my day, since almost every "problem" I encounter pales in comparison with the life and death issues faced by much of the world's population.

The Urban Dictionary definition:  "problems from living in a wealthy, industrialized nation that third worlders would probably roll their eyes at."  Here in the US, many of us are so obliviously fortunate that first world problems are all we've ever known.  It's like an instant injection of positive mental health to remember this, except that you have to have reasonably good mental health in the first place to remember this.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Near Enchanted Mesa...





Near Enchanted Mesa the breeze breathes
through the pine trees.

Many spend forty days, forty nights
or more
in the wilderness 
seeking the centered peace I feel 
right here, right now.

Saturday, April 28, 2012

Squint


The card from the Observation Deck says:  Squint

The idea is that squinting at a familiar scene lets you see it in new and less familiar ways by observing lighting, angles and nuances not previously perceived.

For me, it becomes a blurred and shimmering glimpse of a terrifying future in which one of my most precious senses, my sight, might be diminished.  I'm filled with intense gratitude right now that I still have my vision.

Both my mother and her mother had macular degeneration - an eye disease that, spot by spot, robs you of your central vision leaving you with some peripheral sight if you're lucky.  For years my mother brought Granny talking books from the library so she could continue enjoying one of her greatest pleasures, reading.  Famous actress Dame Judith Dench who has the disease and now has to have new scripts read to her, has said that the thing she misses most is being able to see the face of her dinner partner at a restaurant.

Recently my optometrist gave me a sheet of paper with a grid and two angry red dots at the edges to be used for self testing. She sees the first signs of the disease in my eyes.    The idea chills me to the bone; of course, fear of what the future might bring is one of the things I am constantly trying to resist.

There are preventative measures:  diligently wearing sunglasses in the Colorado sun, taking supplements like lutein, regular check ups.  How could I face not being able to see the forest in Spring, a beautiful sunset, a future grandchild's face, or words on a page?  If all prevention fails me, will I in fact perceive the world in new ways, hearing the birdsong in the forest at dusk more distinctly and the beloved voice of the grandchild more clearly?  Helen Keller, who surely knew, said, "When one door of happiness closes, another opens."

Need a new perspective?  Just squint.