Wrong plant, ma’am

The coyotes rested beneath a dense bower.  I could see them but couldn’t find a clear view.  Earthen shadows mingling in a world of shadows was all they appeared to be, yet a bit of movement here and the flash of an eye there told me what they were and where they were.

These woods are closed woods, thick woods with every available space occupied by verdant flora.  In winter they are passable; from spring through autumn they are at best difficult to navigate and at worst impossible to get through.  I moved slowly along the drip line, briers and brambles reaching skyward and embracing each other to create impenetrable brush.  Every few steps I caught a glimpse of the coyotes.  But I wanted photos and this riparian jungle was doing everything it could to ensure that didn’t happen.

I slowly made my way around a curve in the forest edge.  That’s when I came upon a young woman standing motionless near the trees.  She stared intently through heavy foliage and around ligneous obstacles.  She seemed to be looking in the direction of the coyotes.

My sudden and silent appearance gave her a brief start.  She recovered quickly and turned to me.  Her eyes fell upon the camera for a short moment, then she looked at me and said, “What are you photographing?”

I hear that question a lot.  I gave my standard reply: “Everything.”

“Oh, cool,” she commented, then she added, “I think there are some coyotes right there.”  She pointed.  “But they’re hard to see.”

“Yes, I was just looking for a way to get some photos of them.”

“Then I should get out of your way.”

I had every intention of working around here.  I’m not pushy.  Still, I appreciated the gesture.  “That’s kind of you.  Thanks.”

She took a few steps backward.  Behind her rose a leviathan tree, an eastern cottonwood (Populus deltoides) that seemed to hold the sky atop its highest limbs.  Already our summer snow had been falling for weeks, so beneath the tree was a blanket of seeds and seed hairs that colored the ground white, and the air moved in a constant, dizzying slow falling of snowy particles.

Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) growing on the side of a tree (2010_04_10_052875)

To the trunk of the tree clung two vines, each winding its way toward the heavens.  In places the lush growth mingled together and in others the two plants seemed to avoid one another.  The woman backed against the tree and leaned into a thick patch of one of the vines.

“Uh, you shouldn’t lean on that stuff,” I immediately said.

She glanced over her shoulder before replying, “Oh, it’s OK.  It’s not poison ivy.  That’s what’s growing over there.”  She pointed at the second vine partway around the tree.

Virginia creeper (a.k.a. five-leaved ivy; Parthenocissus quinquefolia) growing on the side of a tree (2010_04_10_052881)

“No, really, you’re in the poison ivy.  That other stuff is Virginia creeper.  Remember, three leaves means bad and five leaves means good.”

“Are you sure?”  Her eyes widened a bit.

“Yes, I’m quite sure.”

The damage had already been done.  The ivy had rested in her hair, on her clothes, on her bare neck and arms, on her legs.  If she’s allergic to it, she was going to be in a world of misery quite soon.

Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) and Virginia creeper (a.k.a. five-leaved ivy; Parthenocissus quinquefolia) often grow in the same places.  They both like the same conditions: soil, light, drainage.  So where one is found, the other shouldn’t come as a surprise.

Close-up of poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) leaves (2010_04_10_052876)

For people like me who aren’t allergic to poison ivy, recognizing the three-leaved pattern is a convenience, not an imperative.  Though it goes without saying that repeated exposure to the plant’s oils will sensitize me to them, at which point I become allergic.  So I don’t go around touching it intentionally, but I also don’t panic if I find myself in contact with it (which in my life has been a handful of times, at least that I know of).

Close-up of Virginia creeper (a.k.a. five-leaved ivy; Parthenocissus quinquefolia) leaves (2010_04_10_052879)

Knowing the five-leaved pattern of Virginia creeper, on the other hand, is a matter of being a good naturalist.  Since the plant poses no threat, recognizing it is the same as recognizing a dandelion or a bald cypress tree.  Then again, perhaps knowing that the five leaves are harmless is another way to remember that three leaves could be a problem.

As for the woman, I can only imagine her anguish if she’s allergic to poison ivy.  When I was quite young, one of our neighbors found herself in the thick of the vine.  She swelled up and broke out in a horrible rash.  We—as children are wont to do—laughed because she looked like a sunburned chipmunk packing peanuts in her jowls.

And those coyotes?  I never found a clear view of them.  When I tried to work my way into the woods hoping to locate a clear view, they bolted.  Which sounds all too familiar.

— — — — — — — — — —

Photos:

[1] Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) with a bit of Virginia creeper (a.k.a. five-leaved ivy; Parthenocissus quinquefolia) visible on the left edge of the frame.  Note the woody vines beneath the poison ivy; those are poison ivy from previous seasons and, though they look dead, they aren’t and they can pass on the same chemical attack as the green vines.

[2] Virginia creeper (a.k.a. five-leaved ivy; Parthenocissus quinquefolia) with a bit of poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) on the right side of the frame.

[3] Poison ivy (Toxicodendron radicans).  Notice the oily appearance of the leaves.

[4] Virginia creeper (a.k.a. five-leaved ivy; Parthenocissus quinquefolia).

And hear one bird sing

It may not always be so, this that we share.  What stands between us now in this place is sacred, but all sacred things succumb to the onward march of time.  Entombed for eternity in emotions both primitive and urbane within this human heart, would that it lasts forever.  Alas, this is not to be.  Whether it ends with a life that carries it forward or whether it ends because its self grows weary and cannot be sustained, it will end.  So I say:

Your lips which I have loved, of whose passions I have tasted, should they touch another's lips with the same conviction, come to me and tell me.

Your silent embrace which I have known, the strength of which helps me to endure, should it be felt by one removed from this we have, send me a little word.

Your soft fair hair which has lain against my chest, the feel of it lambently caressing my skin like gossamer wings on air, should it lie on another man's skin in the same silences I have known, whisper the truth to me.

Your intoxicating scent which has engulfed my senses, the smell of which I ably recognize among a million different sensations, should it befuddle a mind other than my own, call to me that I may know.

Your enrapturing utterances which have writhed within my being, a voice soothing my restless spirit, should they speak likewise to the essence of another, impart to me such reality.

Your strong hands which have seized my body in times not distant, softly calloused fingers clutching my heart with strength, should they bind you to a different figure, inform me of this embrace.

Your skin whose effulgence has lighted my dark nights, cloaking me in soft warmth and pillowing my head lovingly, should its puissant aplomb offer such repose to another, dispatch to me notice.

Your desires of which I have partaken and which I have fulfilled, rapturously meeting oneiric longings both primitive and complex, should they be gifted to another to satiate and share, recount for me that which you newly covet.

If this should be, you of my heart, that fleshly desires or sentimental privation drive you into the arms of another, bequeath to me sincerely that which I need know, that I may go to him in humility and graciousness.  Gently I will take his hands, and my heart will breathe to his heart, and I will offer all happiness and contentment.  I will assuage his fears, I will say that I gladly long for your bliss, that I delight in whatever gladness you two may share.

Then shall I turn away from him and from you.  I shall turn my face away that you see not my tears, for they are tears both of joy and of sorrow, having sprung forth from the same tenderness and compassion within me, our love having carved in my heart the well which now contains this lamentation.  I shall weep then, these tears of love and loss, and I shall weep alone.  This is my pain to bear.

Terribly afar, distant from me in time and space, my tears shall find comfort in the song of one bird, perhaps caged, perhaps free, but nonetheless warbling the same song of loneliness which resonates within me, tempered only by the joy of knowing you are happy.

Early syrphid

A syrphid fly.  In this case, Palpada vinetorum.  A bee mimic.  Usually about half an inch/12 mm in length.  And quite abundant around these parts.

But typically abundant from June through November.  Not this year, though.

Syrphid fly (Palpada vinetorum) perched on a twig (2009_10_18_032640)

Harsh winter notwithstanding—won’t-let-go winter for that matter, these flies began showing up in March.  Those early bloomers no doubt fell to the sadistic hissy fit thrown by Mr. Snow Miser when snow and freezing temps hit us on the first day of spring.

And yet only a few weeks later the flies seemed to enjoy a robust population spike.  Now they’re thriving.  Odd.

Syrphid fly (Palpada vinetorum) perched on a leaf (20080921_12592)

Slowly growing over the summer, their numbers tend to blossom in October and November.  It looks like they’re getting an early start this year.

A public soliloquy in three parts (II)

Or: ‘This is how we go on.’

Waning gibbous moon (2009_03_05_011871)

This is how we go on: one day at a time, one meal at a time, one pain at a time, one breath at a time.  Dentists go on one root-canal at a time; boat-builders go on one hull at a time.  If you write books, you go on one page at a time.  We turn from all we know and all we fear.  We study catalogues, watch football games, choose Sprint over AT&T.  We count the birds in the sky and will not turn from the window when we hear the footsteps behind us as something comes up the hall; we say yes, I agree that clouds often look like other things—fish and unicorns and men on horseback—but they really are only clouds.  Even when the lightning flashes inside them we say they are only clouds and turn our attention to the next meal, the next pain, the next breath, the next page.  This is how we go on.
— from Stephen King’s Bag of Bones

Life became recitation, a bathos unfamiliar to its former self, a series of habits and cycles and phases repeated with rote efficiency.  The love of friends and family bathed me, work occupied me, nature exhilarated me, and all the while I accepted the staid form of my life.  It became the comfortable harness I wore faute de mieux, the obdurate reality with which I cloaked myself.

I flew through the gloaming of my self-imposed exile as if suspended by the air itself, a sprite held captive by a breeze too weak to lift a leaf yet powerful enough to give me wings, and only crimson hues seeping over the horizon kept me company in the sky.  I used sophistry to keep myself distanced, disinterested, disenfranchised from the possibilities.

At least once over the years I held in my hand the very real promise of something more, yet I released it with intent so it would not become an object to crave.

Lest I deceive even myself, I never proscribed relationships after Derek’s death.  On the contrary, like all feeling people I still longed to be held, to be loved, to be kissed passionately; I longed to share life with someone, yes, but it stopped being the crux of existence, the pinnacle of direction, and it became a constant war betwixt my emotional self and my reasoning self, between the part of me that wants and the part of me that defines via logic the next step to take.  For if one can avoid pain, one wishes to do as much.

Despite my efforts to hold the world at bay, living never became a vapid endeavor, never became a tedious employ.  My life ab ovo has never been such a thing, most certainly not after thinking myself above the tawdry motives that push so many to seek relationships, even damaging ones, simply because they feel they need to be connected to someone, need to call someone their own.

I walked the path of relationships with adroit avoidance, constantly dispelling the myths of promises made for days to come by telling myself that quotidian rhythms could comfort as much as strong arms.  And so I marched forward, happy in the ways I could be and satisfied in the ways required for existence.  In a sense it coupled the base essence of both survival and living.

Some days were better than others and some were stranger than others, but regardless of which I received, all I could do was go with what I had rather than what I wished for.

My feet trembled with each falling step.  Rocky and treacherous, the road appeared to lead toward the destination I set before me.  And still it felt laden with dangerous travelers and pitfalls.  I feared the threat of being crushed under carriages drawn on hooves of trampling steeds.

When the sky stretched out before me, painted in dark hues marked only by countless stars, my journey seemed illuminated by those busy on their way to and fro, scampering here and there in hurries of worldly endeavors.  That a few caught my attention and drew me in gave me reason to pause, reason to wonder, reason to think.

In foliage dark and deep lining the road I heard predators stalking me.  They kept pace, their eyes flashing brilliantly in small, open spaces where they chanced a peek at their quarry.  I felt like so much game dashing about the savanna trying to escape the inescapable.  I felt the hunter’s breath upon my neck, felt the rumble of its growl as it leaned near and whispered promises of pain and anguish.

How did I come by this bleak boulevard?  On what road did I travel before my footfalls echoed silently?

This way, one so lightless and hostile, began to appear impassible, the menacing trace of lifeless prey too long removed from this time to warn others of the perils.  Sinister beasts were on the prowl in the night, and I feared their eyes had settled upon me already.  With no exits in sight, what was one to do?  How was one to survive?

In all I had denied, in all I had pushed away, I found reason to long.  Longing to take flight on gossamer wings I did not possess.  Foes rested around every corner lurking in shadows deep, the cold of their gazes my only company in such lonely nights.  I tried to take comfort from the dark and only wrap myself in shameful dross.  It was cold to the touch.  It felt like me.

The smell of ashes filled the air.  Was it the hope of fire around which brethren meet and join together for warmth, or was it the telltale sign of more lives giving way?  I had no way of knowing.  I dared not investigate without inhaling the danger in too deep breaths.

In the distance, I heard music, perhaps an aria carried by the voice of a goddess, yet the song chanted verses incomprehensible to the ear but equally graspable as it floated through the heart.  She wept, lamented even, and sang of aloneness.  Too distant and too quiet, I couldn’t make out the language her tongue unfolded into the night sky, but I didn’t need understand her.  I needed only listen.  Her faint and melodic dirge seemed all too clear.  I could almost see the tears streaming down her face as she cried out.  Did she know there was no one to answer her plaintive cries?  Despite the beauty she offered freely into the empty coldness, I dared not respond lest I deepen her sadness with my own.  Or invite the hunters to take us both.

Yet beneath her singing, I heard something else.  A dog barked somewhere in the distance.  The warning fell on ears too eager for life to hear its meaning, and even as I strained to absorb as much of it as I could, I suspected it was a voice of loneliness.  He spoke for all of us, methinks, this dog barking not in savage tones but in pleading ones.  He answered the woman, or he answered my heart, or even both called to him.

And in that moment of realization, that metaphorical discovery of languished longing held too distant for true happiness, I received a piquant missive, a delightfully presumptuous message that at first made me laugh.  A voice from the digital ether.  An unknown.  A challenge to my being that said the voice knew what I was but not who I was, and asked if I would take a chance on a stranger who seemed contrary to my being.

Part 1 | To be continued…

[photo of the moon waning gibbous]

A public soliloquy in three parts (I)

Or: ‘Rage, rage against the dying of the light.’

A rooting collybia (a.k.a. rooted agaric or beech rooter; Xerula furfuracea) mushroom (2009_09_27_029772)

Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
— from Dylan Thomas’s poem “Do Not Go Gentle Into That Good Night”

Let me begin with this proffered tidbit from my personal journal, the offline complement to this blog.  I wrote this on September 7, 2007.

While I intended to put great effort into some near-holy writ enamored of remembering this day, this shadowed anniversary of a darker occasion, some bit of prose remembering the death of a dearest Derek now three years removed to this very date and time, standing still in my own starless night leaves me empty and wanting for that which I cannot share.  I rest restlessly alone at the window in a darkness darker than the color of midnight, a paint so villainously shadeless as to be those vile monsters who proffer self-made doomsayers to avoid: regret, emptiness, sorrow, lonely tears, tortured anguish, and unrelenting lamentations.

Dare I let slip the eager beast now wanting remorse to rule the day?  Can one relentless train of tears drown the soulless behemoth pinning me to an altar upon which hearts alone are sacrificed?

Nay, I know, for even the rain beautifully cannot quench such thirsts.

Parched spirits wander about me even now, demons of remembrance too potent to repel waltz their sickly dance skillfully as sounds silent and stark rend my fleshless recollection.  What an impossibly soothing noise they make.  What a marvelously ghoulish sacrifice they demand even as they rip and tear at my being.

Can weeping be a delicate gesture, delicate enough to warrant reprieve from such leviathans of languish?  Suffer they the same as we, as to comprehend what devilish blade they wield and its heartless suffering against my essence?  Unlikely.

Instead, and in grieving acceptance of sad distress, come to me, you shadow cast, and play your drama about me without reluctance.  I take you unto myself and hold you near and dear like so many scars.

Let the pain remind me I feel.  Let the tears fall in storms of wailing such that they might drip their cold encumbrance upon my being.  Let me fall upon the sword of loss expertly forged with hammer and heart.  Let me cry in the caress of specters both ancient and new.

More than six years ago I lost the second of two great loves in my life.  The first, Drew, was lost to his inability to be honest; the second, Derek, was lost to his death.  To never love represents the greatest tragedy in life.  But to love represents the opening of oneself to pain, to grief, to scars that never fully heal.

For many years I believed I could not experience true happiness without sharing my life with someone.  To wit:

Too immature to understand what would be so clear a decade later, my sole purpose in life defined itself in terms of “being with someone.”  I raced from boyfriend to boyfriend, from bed to bed, from heartbreak to heartbreak.

Finally, in a relationship that ended long before I realized it—or accepted it, I wasted emotional credit buying time in a desperate search for that which mattered little yet deserved my every breath.  My heart lay broken upon the eternal shore of deception and selfishness, and there I remained for too long trying to put it back together.

‘How can one survive without another?’ I often asked myself, and with equal rapidity I gave the same tired answer: ‘One cannot survive without another.’

So I went on aching and lamenting what I thought I needed, comparing my own misery with that of “normal people” too crippled by anguish and torment for their own good.  I knew someone without another meant little, deserved less, and died reaching for loved ones who did not exist.

I refused to be that person.

Torturous distress in codependent hell motivated me to seek others, to keep looking for something more. Life became an endless search.

When finally I met Derek, suffering beset me from every side and I reached out to him with a longing I dared not acknowledge.  In return, he became a confidant, a friend, a lover, a roommate, a sounding board, a debate partner, an adversary, and a loved one.

I have never denied that sharing life with someone offers levels of happiness that can’t otherwise be attained.  And I certainly would never deny that love is a precious gift; a tumultuous thing to be sure, but a precious gift nonetheless.  Still, following Derek’s death, a great deal of soul searching helped me realize that, for

all their value in creating stability, family, and community, relationships are not for everyone.  This doesn’t mean those who don’t want relationships are unstable, anti-family or anti-community.  It does mean there are other ways for people to express themselves or promote their own stability, family and community.

I no longer see it as necessary to be in a relationship, the early and unrelenting pursuit of which can lead to bad experiences, emotional turmoil and heartache.

[…]

Many younger people worry about being alone and lonely in their thirties and forties and up.  I can’t say I’ve never worried about this, but, as I’ve discussed with my closest friends, I grew out of that mentality.  I eventually learned that being in a relationship in your twenties and thirties is no guarantee you’ll still be together in your forties or fifties.  People change, grow apart, and die.  As you’ve learned if you’ve followed my writings here, I, through experience on more than one occasion, have learned that all of those things are a natural part of life.

Put quite simply, fear of a lonely future seems a horrible reason to enter into a relationship, or to remain in one that doesn’t work anymore.

[…]

I have realized that being happy without being in a relationship is perfectly normal, that not having the desperate need to be with someone at all costs is also quite normal, and that my life need not be focused on the pursuit of a relationship in order to be complete.

I am living by a very simple axiom well stated by Francois de La Rochefoucauld: “When we are unable to find tranquility within ourselves, it is useless to seek it elsewhere.”

To have truly loved twice in a lifetime seems a gift, an unexpected yet welcome definition to the more than three decades which encompassed the first great love and the second great love.  So having been gifted with such unbelievable fortune, after Derek’s death I withdrew from the possibility of pain by holding the world at a distance, by slamming the door on that part of me that became so rooted in these two lives.  Yet even I know that darkness and dank fail to hinder the growth of beautiful things.

Part 2

[photo of rooting collybia (a.k.a. rooted agaric or beech rooter; Xerula furfuracea)]