Tag Archives: wild

Project 365 | Week 32

Instead of doing this by day, I’m just going to show you how pretty the wilderness is, and history, and standing on a mountain graffitied with love stories.

I believe these are days 222-229.

First, we went to Floyd, VA.

Floyd Arts & Yoga

We spent the week(ish) in & around Fairystone State Park.  At the top of the mountain is Floyd, VA.  We met bluegrass and yoga there.  I’ve never been a yoga gal – my mom does sun salutations every morning, but I’ve never started.  I want to go back to Floyd and say hello to the mountain using my body, folding my legs and arms, bringing my face up to the sky and thanking the world for such wonder. Thank you, Floyd.

Bob White Covered Bridge

Virginia is for lovers, standing in the clear of the creek, brushing bare toes against skipping stones and being a shadow in the oval space of an open door.

Lover’s Leap, VA

Had to take the honorary chaco’s shot.  Walking the world in strapped sandals, talking to cows through the metal fence.

Nancy’s Chocolate Warehouse

What’s a stop to the mountains without checking out the local goods.  Truffles are my weakness, they even have a cute name. It’s like you want to tie a bow to them and hang them on a Christmas tree branch.

Mabry Mill

One of the only places in the US that still makes millstones.  A little history mixed with a little literature never hurt anyone, in fact the two go hand in hand.

My favorite photo from Mabry Mill

I used to believe that my dolls wanted to look out the window if they weren’t turned towards one another and having a conversation.  This doll has dreams of wrapping her scarf tight around her neck and climbing through a soft yawn.

My very first winery.

I’ve never been a wino, but definitely a whine-o.  I love the grape bunches.  They remind me of kings and girls with large green leaves fanning the sweat from their foreheads.

Not sure where we are, just some wild adventure.

“All our wisdom comes from the trees.”  All our our longing comes from the water.


“Let us dance in the sun, wearing wild flowers in our hair…” ― Susan Polis Schutz

Let me preface this review with this: some of the writing was beautiful in Wild and I do adore Cheryl Strayed on The Rumpus as “Dear Sugar.”  I will continue reading that column forever and you should too.  Here is a link after you read my ranting (and literally raving) review.

I’m sure Cheryl Strayed had a reason for waiting twenty years to write this journey.  Or maybe she didn’t try at all until now.  She may have nursed her life back together with tips on coffee and breakfast specials at the diner she inevitably worked at after the trail.   I don’t know what happened in twenty years to make her “write down the bones” but it came out in Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail after two babies and a marriage to the one man we don’t find in the book.  (That wasn’t a sentence filled with judgment, by the way).

Appalachian Trail, Summer 2009

While I don’t normally read Oprah books (ever), and I waited for this on the library loan list for over two months before it finally sat on a shelf with my full name stuffed into the open side, I decided to read it because I’ve hiked a trail before.  Gasp, you thought I sat behind this computer all day and didn’t explore my world.  It’s true, I don’t even own hiking boots anymore (I do own some strappy unwashed mountain girl Chaco’s though) but hiking is at the center of what I dream for myself.

When I imagine myself – by myself – I imagine this rugged, unshaved, heels one day, boots the next kind of gal who goes off exploring territories filled with pine sap, wild horses and nylon tents.  I see myself with one long braid laying against my spine, and mud on my shoulders from where I scratched a mosquito bite too hard.   If there’s anything I like more than writing and reading, it’s being among the trees.

All our wisdom is stored in the trees - Santosh Kalwar

Wild by Cheryl Strayed

I believe everything happened in Wild except the conversations.  There’s no way a person remembers conversations word for word after twenty years.  She definitely used some liberty with these direct quotes.  I tend to believe the “wow” words when she met the man she fell in bed with because we always remember those conversations with wild crushes that we never see again. (Usually those conversations don’t quite go our way). They’re welded into our bones or something, repeated day after day, remember that time….

I also tend to believe her conversations with her dying mother because no one can seem to lose those.  I wish I could forget the sound of my grandmother’s “do, do, do” from her new stroke dialect, but I want to forever remember it as one of the only sounds I have from her that still works and beats.

Most of the time during Wild: From Lost to Found on the Pacific Crest Trail, I wanted to shake Cheryl Strayed.

Honestly, I’m pissed at her idea of redemption.

Horn Reviews @ Tumblr – Thanks THERUMPUS.NET as well.

She didn’t open up her wound to the world or fill it back with the wild of nature – she was still Cheryl Strayed who relied heavily on her sexual desire to point her in a direction.  I feel wrong for saying all this like I’ve somehow gone against the entire gender of women.  For some reason, it was in that moment that I felt like Strayed didn’t learn a thing while she was on the trail – she was still impulsive, unreasonable, and couldn’t actually stay alone and fix herself without the touch of a man.

I think part of my big issue is that I’ve trusted Cheryl Strayed in her “Dear Sugar” columns for as long as she’s been writing them.  On the other hand, I’ve watched one of my closest friends sleep with random men until she felt like she was almost whole again only to go into another despairing month, another down spot, another sleep all day, tissues crumpled all over the bed, never shower kind of month.  I watched her give herself away because it’s not true that you can just have sex with someone and not mean it in some deep way (or maybe that’s just my sentimental way of looking at it).  I believe in my little heart, bigger than grinch size, that anytime bodies intwine there is a give and a take.  You are giving something of yourself to the other person (and it’s more than just heat).  Both of these things made it hard for me to read that Cheryl Strayed, in a way, strayed back into her former self.  We’ve all abused something, I sound like such a judging-jerk right now, but I so badly wanted her to just take that time to herself; cherish her body for still walking after her feet were blistered beyond quick repair, cherish herself for being able to do this without someone touching those intimate parts of her. She made a point several times to tell readers that he didn’t even ask her a question about herself.  That upsets me and clearly it upset her too or she wouldn’t have repeated it several times.

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The moments of her mother were the hardest for me.  Lady’s (mother’s horse) death made me want to come home again for the moment when my parents put down the cat I had for 15 years, Puss.  She’s buried, like my grandfather always wanted to be, under the magnolia in our backyard.  Lady’s death was the most profound moment of this entire book for me.  I can imagine myself hiding behind a tree, staring at the shot gun, feeling like the boy in Old Yeller just before he put his eye to the scope and measured the exact line to Yeller’s head, Lady’s white star forehead.  I could cry now just thinking about that yellow dog, and chestnut horse.

It was the trail that ruffled me as well.  I wanted a book that was the diary of her journey.  How does it feel to walk alone in the woods for weeks at a time searching out the sounds of water pouring over smoothed rocks.  How did people smell when you hugged them.  After a walk, my mother always smells like freshly mowed grass.   What did the paper of the letter’s she sent look like, what was on the front of the cards from friends all over the country.  I think a lot of Wild is sensual, and what the eyes can see, but where’s the heart.  Why did a bear only alert a whistle and then we moved on.  FACK, a bear, I would have written nine paragraphs on how scared I was and probably peed down my leg, leaving my mark on the trail.  Wild is certainly a story of the beauty of hiking, but it isn’t a story about the conscience of hiking.  Not once could I picture the image of a mountain range in front of me through Strayed’s writing and believe me I really wanted to see the Three Sisters because that’s the name of one of my favorite bookshops.

Illustration by Daniel Horowitz @ The NY Times

I have one memory from the Appalachian Trail that I will never forget.   I climbed the highest point of a rock face with three of my girl campers.  We were burned, sweating, my hair was matted to my forehead and in a wicked braid where it had stayed for more than four days.  I would undo that hair-tie in two more days with kinks where each strand of hairs folded into the other.  I showered last at the end of the week so I got to look at myself in the mirror; count my extra freckles, the kinks, how I compared to myself before this hike.

We were warriors on that rock face, staring at the sun.  I held my pocket camera snapping photos of them; muddy and gorgeous.  We were laughing so much even though we had only eaten granola for the entire day.  I had pieces stuck deep in the valleys of my teeth and no brush to push them out.

And my blondest girl said, “let’s pretend we’re on America’s Next Top Model and pose up here.”

She was right. We were nothing but beautiful on those mountain ridges.  Maybe nature isn’t about finding what was lost, but about finding the best version of who we are.


When Women Were Birds (A murder of crows)

Dear God,  if I never read this book, I would have been at a loss.

I am completely, utterly, every whimsical note of my body, indebted to Terry Tempest Williams for everything she put on that blank page  while she wrote, When Women Were Birds.  (In fact, I would love to see her out takes basket).  This book is the landscape of writing, the geography of being a woman – how your body is indebted to fields, and seeds, and words unspoken, left mingling with the soft air puffed just before you open your mouth.  I have never felt more myself, and more a woman than when reading this book.  I know, I know, I have this affinity for birds and I metaphorically and literally believe women were probably once birds, but that has nothing to do with the hope, and power of the words that are voiced in this book.

I can’t even begin to type this blog.  It took me twenty minutes to convince myself that I had to share this book regardless if I had the words, or not.  The whole point of this book is to remind us that we’re women, and we have it, we’re made of it, we are IT.  We are feathered, and skinned, and silent, and lionesses, and remarkable.  If ever I wanted to know the mural of my own body, what the roundness of moles meant, and the sow of freckles, it was during this book.  I mean you have to pinch yourself over and over while you read it.

Am I a woman, you say.  Am I everything.

When Women Were Birds is the story of the secret lives of women.  Tempest tells the historical crow etchings of women in China that could only be read by other women, her own life surrounded by wilderness, her mother, her husband and Mormon tradition.  She is at one point sliced above the eye by a falcon on a river trip and so her connection to birds is physical.  It begins with the Mormon tradition (of women) to write journals for themselves and their daughters.  On her death bed, Williams’ mother tells Williams to seek out her journals only after she has passed.  Williams finds the journals, all stacked in their leather glory, she opens every single one to the white field of blank page.

My Mother’s journals are paper cranes.

My Mother’s journals are “just after.”

My Mother’s journals are a “harmony of silence.”

A few weeks ago, a dear blogger told me that although she was gifted with her mother’s journals when she passed away, she never read them.  I am the kind of daughter, and woman, that would scavenge the pages for the imperfections in my mom’s cursive.  I would learn how to read shorthand so I didn’t make mistakes with the swift movements in her margin notes.  I’d play a guessing game with food stains.  Where was she.  What was she doing while she wrote this. I would decipher her language, and like a sponge store as much of my mother’s internal life as I could.

Sometimes, when we write journals we imagine our daughter’s reading them and then the whole concept of journaling goes out the window.  A journal, is a moment within yourself.  A way to remember something twice, the way it was when you were there and the way it is on the page.  When you journal, or you write, you get to live every aspect of your life twice, whether you’re living it in reality, or in the lie that you’ve created it to be.  Writers have that odd ability to not actually live in the moment, but just secretly record everything that’s going on.  I used to go to parties in college and constantly say to myself remember this moment, remember the way that boy spilled beer on the table, remember the way “musty” smells, remember the way boys bicker with each other which isn’t anything like the way females bicker.  Writer’s don’t live, they soak, and prod.  They create something magic between the pen and hand.

Here, I am blogging my guts, and yet, I’m not writing what I would say about my family in a journal, what my dad sounds like when he sleeps, or my mom smells like after a day at the bakery.  Those are my private secrets, the ones I leave blank for you, but I fill to the brim in my stitched journal that goes everywhere with me.

My journal (Quotes from When Women Were Birds)

Throughout this book, I was weeding quotes of Williams and salting my page with them.  My journal is now covered in quotes that split the world open.  Quotes like:

“My mother’s voice is a lullaby in my cells.  When I am still, my body feels her breathing” (19).

“I have talked to myself for years in the privacy of my journals.  The only thing I’ve done religiously are keep a journal and use birth control” (43).

“It is winter.  Ravens are standing on a pile of bones – black typeface on white paper picking an idea clean.  It’s what I do each time I sit down to write.  What else are we to do with our obsessions?  Do they feed us?  Or are we simply scavenging our memories for one gleaming image to tell the truth of what is hunting us” (56).

“I want to speak and comprehend words of wounding without having these words become the landscape where I dwell” (204).

These quotes speak only a dribble of the weeping that this book holds.  It makes me fascinated by my mother, by my need for words and the lines of a page to smear into my own harbored print.  But mostly, it made me proud to be a woman, whether I keep silent (which is rare), or I test the waters. I yell, I screech sometimes to get a point across, but never does a screech work.  I should learn to be silent sometimes, or just quiet.  I should learn to listen to the birds harmonize and the orchastra of mumbles, and throat tickles.  Listen to the way my father coo’s when he naps, breathing out bays of air. I shared this even though I know you are reading, even though this is my public journal, and my mother will smell like knead and yeast when she takes off her apron and throws it onto the washer machine this evening.  She will have white icing stains on her pockets that look like finger-paint and the spiral print of her thumb.

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I hate it when I want to talk about a book and I don’t have the words.   I just watch the white space pile up like ocean froth.  It’s drowning.  The white expanse that I’m supposed to fill up with words that make you want to get in the car, even though it’s been a long day, and it’s bath night, and their are suds opening from the plastic bottle.

You need this book because it breathes exactly what you are.  I dropped chocolate granola bar in the binding and almost called-out because I wanted the library-goer who got this book after me to find it pristine for the picking.  To find their way through the book without a compass, the way all good books find you lost in the wild.  I want a reader to go in wild, go into the margins, go into the cracks, and the o’s, and the words, and the steam that comes off the pages of a book that takes you across valleys within yourself.

How do you tell someone how you are changed by a book.

Do you write a blog explaining that you can’t tell them because here, it’s too personal, and here the choreography of your body has taken over.  You are all feel, no reason.  You are exactly what we are meant to be, human substance: cells, atoms, water, free.

I am a bird on a wire.  I am wondering why the electricity is not surging.  Why is it that birds can sit on the cords and not be shocked.  How can they sit so still when they have wings.  And how do women (or people) conquer white pages, conquer their expected roles, climb through the square face of fence binding them, conquer centuries of silence, the smell of palm when a hand covers their mouths.


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