February 8, 2013

Bare

It’s Friday. Five Minute Friday. Today’s word is “bare”.

Bare. Fully exposed. Vulnerable. Out there.

Winter. Lifeless. Or is it?

When I look out the window or wander through my yard this time of year, at first glance it’s easy to think everything is bare. But it doesn’t take long for my imagination to start running. Soon I see leaves budding on trees, crocus poking up out of the ground. Then, much like the animated movies it all starts happening faster and faster, lawns green up flowers bloom and the next thing you know, the bare yard is lush.

This year I will be converting a part of my yard, which some may currently see as lawn, but what I see as bare, into a productive edible yard. That open space will bring flowers for pollinators, the fruits of berries, and veggies of every color. There will be beauty and structure. Something to look at next winter so it doesn’t look so bare.

Soon, the snow will melt and my dream will become a reality.

Kate

Five Minute Friday

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February 2, 2013

Connectedness

Breathe in. Breathe out.
Breathe in. Breathe out.
When you take a breath what do you think about?

Do it again. This time, think about your breath and the air you breathe.
Where does it come from?
Breathe in. Breathe out.
Breathe in. Breathe out.

Did you think about the plants and the trees?
I know. Many of us don’t want to stop and think about that. We feel weird. Or think others will think we’re weird.
But the plants and trees give us the gift of oxygen every second of our life.
And we, in return, give them carbon dioxide.
We have a relationship with the plants and the trees around us.

But it’s easy for us to forget.
It’s easy for us to forget that we have a relationship with the plants and trees on this planet.
But there’s more to it than that.
We have a relationship with every living species whether we want to admit it or not, we are connected.

When I stop to think about that, it makes me wonder, why is it then, that we find it so easy to abuse that relationship?
Why is it that we get so focused on “me” and lose focus on them?
Why do we find it so easy to ignore the earth and neglect the environment?

I know, some of us, myself included, like to think we’re being conscious of the environment. I recycle, I shut the lights off when I’m not using them, I don’t use chemicals in my yard, I compost and I try to be conscious of the Carbon Footprint I’m leaving behind, but the reality is, I like my life.

I like sitting on my iPad, typing away in my dining room, while the furnace runs to keep me warm on this frigid day. I like my car and the ability to go where I “need” to go whenever I want to.
I like the convenience of the stores that provide the “necessities” within a couple of miles of my home.

I like my life. And the reality is, to acknowledge that I’m connected to this planet, to the air, to the water, to the plants and the trees, and every living being from the microbes in the soil to the animals in the jungle on the other side of the world means I need to take responsibility for it.

Most of us would do anything to take care of our family and friends if they were in need. They are our blood, they hold a special place in our heart and we wouldn’t want to lose that. Yet to ask us to think about the earth, the environment or the living things around us is a different story. We take it for granted. In our lifetime, we’ve always had air to breathe, water at our disposal and food on our tables.

What if you chose not to feed your children or take care of an elderly grandparent or neighbor, how would you feel? Would you feel a pang of guilt in the pit of your stomach? Would you heart hurt knowing you’re neglecting them when you could be and should be doing something to help?

So why is it that when the plants and trees that supply the air that we breathe get neglected or the water that we take for granted that runs from our taps everyday gets wasted and when we abuse the resources that the environment provides for us, by using more than our “fair share” do we not feel equally guilty? Why do we find it so easy to disconnect ourselves from this?

What if we didn’t? What if, instead, when we go out the door or look up from our phones or out the windows of our house or cars, and we started paying attention to the air we breathe, the amount of water we use and the ways we could take care of the world around us a little better?
What if we treated the air, the water and the environment like family? Would you do anything differently? I know I would.

And when you really stop to think about it, we should. Because whether we want to acknowledge it or not, we are connected. We’re connected to every living thing around us just like we’re connected to our families and friends. Yes, we have a direct relationship with some, and a more distant relationship with others, but it’s no different than the relationship we have with our parents versus our distant cousins. And while we might feel a tighter bond with our mother or father or siblings than we do with our great aunt she is still family nonetheless.

So let’s pretend, even if it’s just for a moment, that the air is our mother, the water our father, the soil our siblings and the oil our grandparents. Let’s pretend we love them and value them the same as we do our families. Let’s pretend we care. Because if we do, we might change how we treat them. We may start paying attention to them. We may begin feeding them, nurturing them and watching out for them. We may restore the neglected relationship we have and start living in harmony again.

Let’s pretend for a moment that we are connected to the entire world around us. Let’s pretend that if we care for that world, that it will care for us.

Because guess what? She’s not called Mother Nature for nothing. We are connected.

Kate

February 1, 2013

Afraid

It’s Friday.  Five Minute Friday.  Today’s word is Afraid.

Afraid is a big word. It’s a scary word.  But what pops in my mind is that to be afraid means not to trust.  Not trusting in yourself, not trusting in others and not trusting in the Universe or whichever higher being you believe in.

Fear strikes all of us, but I think it’s important to catch it, be aware of it and when it strikes, when we acknowledge we are afraid, we can reign it back in.  Because when we think we are afraid of something, it’s usually a fear of the unknown.  If we can grab our fear, check it out and figure out what it’s all about, often times we will realize that our fears are really pretty irrational and often times out of our control.

Fear, too, can be limiting.  When I’m afraid, I become paralyzed.  I often psych myself out so badly that it causes me to take no action.  But if I can acknowledge the fear, figure out what it is that I’m afraid of and put take action on the things I can and let go of the things that are out of my control in trust in God and the Universe to take care of me, I will no longer be afraid.

I hope the same goes for you.

Kate

Five Minute Friday

 

January 27, 2013

I Owe It All to Mr. Courtney

Oh, the memories… We sat, we laughed, we reminisced. It wasn’t a class reunion, it was better. It was a small group. A somewhat spontaneous gathering. A mix of us that went to and graduated from high school together.

Stories came out. Laughter roared. I’m pretty sure the other people in the establishment were a little bit jealous. Curious faces questioned what all the laughter was about.

The music thumped in the background. Unforgettable bass thumping, bringing us all back twenty-plus years.

The conversations jumped back and forth from present to past. We talked about friends, classmates, teachers and students from other grades.

We reconnected on different levels; shared experiences and current views.

A conversation touched on teachers. And I stopped. We talked about a teacher. Mr. Courtney. I spoke up, very seriously I said, “I owe it all to Mr. Courtney. If it weren’t for him, I probably wouldn’t have graduated.” Most didn’t hear me. One did.

Most people think of their senior year in high school as their glory days. I wish it were that way, but it wasn’t for me. My senior year was rough. For me it was the year of life lessons.

But before I go any further, let me explain a little about who I was in high school. I was shy. Didn’t talk to many people unless they talked to me first. I kept to myself. I was quiet, unless among friends. Growing up as an only child, or maybe just who I am, I was eager to please and set out not to disappoint my parents. I went to a private school, which I knew my parents made sacrifices for me to attend, so I didn’t want to disappoint them. I tried hard in school. I was a honor roll student, but not the top of my class like some of my friends. While it was a little frustrating at times, I was okay with that. I was proud of where I was. I was proud of my school. Proud of my education. While I tried to be athletic, it was clear early on, that it wasn’t my calling. Instead I opted for stuff that moved me. Primarily music. But music and band weren’t “cool” in my school and I played piano anyway, so band was pretty much out of the question. But I did love dance. I grew up with dance. I started at a young age and loved it, so I joined the dance line. It wasn’t really what I thought it would be, but some of my friends were there, so I had fun. In a way I think it was a way for me to come out of my shell even if it were just for a few minutes.

Then came my senior year. They dissolved the dance line. We were too “provocative”. The school wouldn’t support it. (I went to a private, Catholic school.) So I joined the Yearbook Committee and Golf Team. I still have not played a game of golf, but that’s another story. Cut to late winter/early spring of my senior year, everyone else is on a high. Instead, my Mom’s brother and sister, my Uncle and my Aunt, pass away within weeks of each other. I’m a mess. Growing up as an only child, my extended family was really important to me. My aunts and uncles were like surrogate parents and my cousins, like distant brothers and sisters. I loved them no differently. To lose two in such a short period of time was devastating.

Shortly thereafter I got Mono, and not a mild case, mind you. I would come home from school exhausted. I would plan on taking a nap before doing my homework but climbing the steps to my bedroom felt like climbing Mt. Everest. I would stop and rest… sleep… on each landing before finally making it to my room.

Needless to say, I would fall asleep doing my homework, I couldn’t stay awake to study for tests and reading a book for English class was totally out of the question.

Then test day came. I can’t even recall which book I was supposed to have read, all I can tell you was it was one of the classics. The exam was passed out and what normally felt like a piece of cake, felt like a horror film. I read the questions, one after another, flipping pages until I could find a question I was comfortable with. There weren’t any. It was an essay test. I had no chance in hell of even making “an educated guess” as to what the answer would be much less writing an essay about what happened and the meaning behind it. But sadly, where it would have really bothered me in the past, I thought, “I really don’t care. What does it matter anyway?”. I scratched in some answers and flipped over my test. I glanced around the room. A few heads popped up, quizzically looking in my direction. I knew they were questioning how I could finish so fast. They knew I either didn’t know what I was doing (in which case they were correct) or they felt intimidated thinking I’d brilliantly finished before them (in which case they were horribly incorrect).

I turned in my paper, walked out the door and didn’t think twice. I was pretty disconnected the next couple of weeks. Nothing really seemed to matter anymore. (Death will do that do you.) That continued until the day our tests were handed back in English. Our teacher, Mr. Courtney, always made a habit of passing exams back in grade order, commenting as he handed them back. If you were one of the prized students that meant he gave you accolades in the beginning. Mine was usually just behind those with accolades, but not in the disapproval group. That day, I was missed, or so I thought. He went through the accolades, through the average students and on to the disapprovals. “He must have missed mine.” I thought to myself. But he still had a couple in his hand. That could either be really good, as he occassionally called out the student(s) with a perfect score, or really bad. He called attention to a perfect score. “I can’t believe it!” I thought to myself, “I got a perfect score! And I didn’t even finish the book!”

Then he came down my aisle, looked me straight in the eye as he set my paper face-down on my desk and said, “Klingberg (my maiden name), I want to see you after class.” My stomach sunk. I felt all the blood in my body rush to my head as my face and neck flushed. I didn’t hear anything the rest of the class. I couldn’t listen. I couldn’t participate. I was paralysed. Humiliated and paralysed. But the rest of the class continued on as if nothing had happened. It was almost as if the rest of them knew my day was coming and it had finally come.

The bell rang. Class was dismissed. A few goodie-goodies stuck around to ask questions. I was silently begging and pleading them to leave. The tears were welling in my eyes and I wasn’t sure how much longer I could hold them in. The palms of my cold hands were clammy.

Finally, they were gone. Mr. Courtney, still not making eye contact or even acknowledging that I was still in the room, calmly walked over and closed his door. “Here it comes.” I thought. I don’t know what I thought was coming, but I was sure it wouldn’t be good.

He walked back to his desk, sat on the corner facing me and calmly said, “Klingberg, what the hell is going on with you?” I was shocked. “He said the “H” word! Can he do that?” I thought to myself. But then I regrouped, I got the point. Shock therapy. Fighting tears I explained that my Uncle and Aunt had passed away and I’ve had Mono. Surely he knew that. I’d had excused passes and he’d sent homework home. Homework I didn’t do. I thought for sure he would understand. I thought for sure he would listen and let me off the hook.

Instead he explained that he knew. And that he knew that most seniors were on the “senior slide”. They had already been accepted into college, there were just a couple of months left of school so they quit trying. I shook my head, no. But he already knew. “Klingberg, I know what you’re capable of. This isn’t it.” He explained that he understood what I was going through, that he was sorry for my loss, but that things happen in life and that you need to figure out how to pick yourself up and continue on. He said if I didn’t turn things around I would fail his class. He expected my grades to turn around by the next exam or I wouldn’t graduate. In my head I knew that meant I would go from being an Honor Roll student to failing my senior year. “You’re excused.” he said. “Are you freaking kidding me?!?” I thought to myself. “I hate you.” Devastated, I went to my locker. I grabbed by books, threw them in my backpack, slammed my locker shut and stormed out the door. I got in my car and left the school parking lot as quickly as possible. And then I sobbed all the way home.

That night I thought about it. Much as I didn’t want to admit it, I knew he was right. The funny thing is, I realized that my grades had slipped in all of my other classes too, but either the teachers didn’t notice, didn’t know me, or simply didn’t care. Mr. Courtney cared. I realized that night that Mr. Courtney was more than “just a teacher”. He really cared about his students. He cared about me and he had the guts to tell me to pull it together and move on. Mr. Courtney taught me a life lesson.

He taught me that no matter how tough life is, no matter what happens, no matter what blows you feel like you were dealt, you need to pick yourself up and continue on. He saw my potential when I didn’t. He helped me to see what I could do and what I could be and I will forever be indebted to him for that life lesson.

Tonight, when we sat around laughing and reminiscing, I remembered that I never did thank him for what he did for me. That day, Mr. Courtney gave me a gift. That day, Mr. Courtney taught me a life lesson I will never forget. That day, Mr. Courtney changed the way I saw myself and from that day forward, when I’ve had a hard day, a hard week or a hard year, I’ve practiced picking myself up and continuing on. I’ve practiced doing what I’m capable of even when I don’t think I am.

Twenty some-odd years later, I’m finally getting around to a thank you.

Dear Mr. Courtney,

Wherever you are, thank you. You may not remember that conversation, that day or even that year, but I do. And I appreciate your taking the time to pull me aside and let me know that I mattered enough not only for you to notice but for you to take me aside and talk to me. I appreciate your honesty and the lesson you taught me. Someday I hope to repay you, but even more, I hope in some way, over the years, you’ve felt my gratitude, because if it wasn’t for you I wouldn’t be where I am today. I’m forever indebted.

Thank you, Mr. Courtney.

Sincerely,
Kate (Katie Klingberg) Clarity