Tag Archives: depression

Monday Morning Personal Kvetch…

Alienation is at the top of the list of deplorable aspects of the human condition.  Alienation and islation are married to each other.  Alienation is the antithesis of community and the underbelly of hope.

I’ve blogged before here about the fact that sixteen years ago I was teaching at the University of Colorado when my boss put me on medical leave after I disclosed my battle with depression.  Despite suing the university under the ADA and winning a small settlement, I took the dismissal to heart and let it end my teaching career.  I took subsequent hits to the psyche to heart as well:  the collapse of a relationship, falls from horses, economic marginalization and the deterioration of my health. I withdrew, over time, from my community and gave up on remaining connected to my own muse.

Alienated, I am furious at what has happened to me and others like me.  We are the victims of a system that rewards people who appear to be doing well and functioning at a high level, and shuns people down on their luck or different by virtue of how they appear, shoving them to the sidelines.  We need advocacy, but there isn’t any. The personal becomes very political.

I should take a page from Obama’s book; he’s gone about the business of being president and not let the BS flung at him by the GOP get him down.  Rightwing conservatives want to portray him as arrogant and not listening; I believe that he is courageous, modeling how to take a hit with grace, still standing, giving himself to relationship-building and wisely accruing the support of big powers like India.  He has nothing to lose, as he can’t do anything right in the eyes of the racist right wing.

It is true that I’ve made a huge effort to write and produce good work since January, and that I’ve written a memoir, a novel, numerous essays, and two collections of poetry.  But the minute I stop my frenzied daily production of words, my nemesis alienation with its harbingers depression and stasis,  is waiting.

I’m tired of living in survival mode– but I know that I have to get tired enough to make changes.  I know that it’s up to me to summon the will to take care of myself and not permit the actions of others to define my life.  It’s a tall order.  We either save ourselves, or not– we either accept help in overcoming a malaise of spirt and the sense that the fat lady has sung, or not.

As a fat lady who sings, I would hope that anyone who happens to read this who might know of someone who looks depressed and seems to be a loner, that we all have our pride.  It is very hard to reach out– especially if you have a massive fear of rejection.

Thanks for putting up with this.  Check back later for a more upbeat post, and see my recent poem up at La Parola Vivace, where Blogger doesn’t screw up my lining and the white letters on dark look so classy.


Caregiver Giving Out….

In her hands, safe (a sculpture)...

So I go out to the place  after my daily nap, daily latte, daily trip past the horses where I see that Dazzle has gotten confused about a new fenceline and separated himself from the mares; I finally decide to leave a word for Animal Control as the owner’s phone is out of order.

I come in, as I said rested, bathed, hi, how are you, last night was nice, as in five hours of nice talk to jazz…and I go into the bathroom to the corner on the green towel where the mama cat is and despite reassurances that the litter’s o.k.,  there’s a fading kitten in the corner.

I made my custom formula of canned milk, egg yolks, karo syrup and vegetable oil.  I found a syringe and needle and got out the expired bottle of penicillin in the fridge and ran some through the syringe and needle.  Then I found a few bags of Ringer’s solution on the utility shelf.  I drew up three cc’s of Ringers and sat with the kitten and injected the fluid under the skin.

I couldn’t find my tube-feeding kit that I used and boiled and used and boiled for twenty years.  I couldn’t find the little new baby animal nursers we keep around.  I did find a glass eyedropper and so then I trickled a little of my warm formula into that tiny mouth.

I’ve been trying to save things that can’t be saved or people who don’t want to save themselves for years.  It was my job as the family hero.

I couldn’t save my mother from drowning from addiction, or my father from emphysema, or the family dog from aging and cancer. I haven’t been able to save broken, lonely men I’ve loved from being lonely and broken, and in many respects, I haven’t been able to save myself from bad things happening to me because bad things happen.

But, I’ve saved a whole lot of animals, and maybe because I couldn’t save my family, I find other things to rescue.  I once pulled three litters of puppies through parvo, singlehandedly, no help, up around the clock, running fluids in under the skin, jabbing with penicillin, plugging up with immodium.

Once my neighbor bought feeder calves at the sale barn that had been jerked right off their mothers, with wet umbilical cords.  One by one the calves got sick and scoured, as in uncontrollable diarrhea, so that no matter what I did, they went down.  Why couldn’t I just lie in my bed, listening to them throughout the night and let it happen?  They weren’t my calves, after all but the owners wouldn’t call a vet.

Something within me thinks I still have to go on duty like this.  It is nearly impossible for me to let a tiny animal that doesn’t want to make it go quietly in its sleep among its litter mates.  That’s what happened to the kitten last night.  It didn’t want to make it, and it curled up and went to sleep.

In the name of nurture I’ve done a lot of interfering with nature.   I’ve climbed into pens of calving cows and taken membranes off little Black Angus faces.  I’ve been on duty for oh, fifty years or so– perhaps that explains my anger that other people won’t or don’t step up.

I admit to getting very angry when I found the kitten.  Perhaps rage at things beyond our control is an affliction like others. And I’m pretty sure I need to learn the art of distress tolerance, enduring things I find unendurable so that I am not at the mercy of my reactions. Sometimes, tiny little things that come into the world aren’t going to make it.  Sometimes, I say to myself, it’s o.k. to call Animal Control and hand over something stressful and intolerable that is off the scale unaffordable, to them.

Sometimes people aren’t going to respond to a living thing’s distress in the ways I think they should.  Few people would drop everything to try to save a fading kitten, so that I need to practice some acceptance.

I also could use a brush up in the art of detaching with love from things I can’t change that are others’ to change if they choose, or to go away altogether if exposure to someone’s dysfunction or a given environment is too painful to me.

I felt compelled to go on duty to the kitten last night, angry that someone else didn’t.  This tells me I have a pretty vicious case of caregiver’s distress.

Maybe, then, two steps forward and one step back,  like any illness, any moral failing, any malformation of innate good will into simmering anger, we have to forgive others and ourselves even the most problematic things,  as we would a child, because there is sure as hell a vulnerable soul within each of us doing its best.


When the Past Isn’t…

new life...

“Movin’ On

I’ve dealt with my ghosts and I’ve faced all my demons
Finally content with a past I regret
I’ve found you find strength in your moments of weakness
For once I’m at peace with myself
I’ve been burdened with blame, trapped in the past for too long
I’m movin’ on

– Rascal Flats

This morning one candle burns in my writing corner.   I’m playing lyrical, classical music: the Faure Requiem: stunning, comforting.  My dog laments in her crate; at this hour– the middle of the night, early morning for me, she thinks we should go out into pre-daybreak cold for a game with the ball.

Dream:  I was trying to saddle a chestnut stallion, who wouldn’t stand still to be mounted.  Dream:  I think I was a man, setting off on a journey; so many things to attend to, putting right the heavy curtains in a deserted house, securing provisions at the back of the saddle, checking and rechecking.

I see this dream by the light of my OCD and obsession with horses,  and an old notion that men can move, leave, take wing and women are trapped, perhaps, because I struggle with these things.

For better or for worse, after a few rough days doing painful archaeology– as noted in my previous post– I have framed a new collection of poems after twenty-five years of keeping them in a box, on various hard drives, disks.  Currently, I’m calling it At Dusk the House Fills With Water; few of these poems directly address moving on, but as I read them, I see and feel emotional and spiritual growth– a separation between now and then, me and the events they chronicle.  This begs the question, perhaps several questions:  what is moving on, anyway?

In 1990 when I met the person I so often refer to as my companion, we threw our lot in together fast.  After weeks of politeness between us, establishing common interests, his mowing of my lawn and repairing of things around the small trailer house I was renting– and as a thunderstorm rolled in– I took his hand and led him back to my bedroom.

What was I thinking?  I took off his Texas straw hat that he wore working with the horses at high noon.  We kissed.  He drew back and looked at me.

“Oh, now, you don’t want to start this?”  He seemed amazed, stunned, reeling a little,  as if he’d just been hit in the eye with a BB.

Why not, I thought.  It has to happen sometime.  I kissed him again,  shucked him of his jeans and he became interested, so that we made an impact when we hit the sheets.

This was my skewed logic in those days, those young, green days.  In Spanish “verde”– green– refers to desire.  As a poet there was a profound connection for me between all things sensual and writing and plundering the moment of its good things.  In those days two weeks of courtship was a long time for me and plundering seemed like a good thing.

So, in that dusty bedroom, in the midst of the thunderstorm, we launched our ship.  We put in at high tide whereupon we had to fight through roiling surf to get to open water.

I had just settled into that little place.  I loved its wood stove, the writing alcove where I could look out at the mountains.  But suddenly I was in a couple; with this guy there was no going home and silence in the aftermath. The next day there was a bouquet of flowers and a card on the front seat of my car, and an invitation to dinner. We spent two weeks never making it through a single movie we rented; metaphorically speaking, we were making our own in that luscious early steamy sex of discovery.

I found us a job on a horse ranch as a caretaker couple, closer to Boulder where I was teaching.  We took that job.  Then I noticed an ad for a teaching job in Longmont and told him about it; he got that job and has now been there for twenty years.

Moving to Boulder was important to me, as I needed to move on.  I needed to leave Fort Collins and its troubled ghosts, how mired I was in the past.  I could see I was stuck somewhere in the grief process.  I  needed to bid a final good-bye to two  parents who had died within a year of each other,  a house it was necessary to dismantle and sell, various locals and onetime friends, grad school cohorts.  I ached to say adios to an old life and hello to a new one.

You could say I wanted a geographical cure, to reinvent myself in a new locale and begin a new history.

I have written about our rich and adventurous year on the Joder Ranch and for now that time is not on my mind.

On my mind is that we only stayed a year, and then moved back to the very place where we started out, to buy a piece of land and live there. Much has happened there, for good and for ill.  Over time, my kennel of beautiful Golden dogs under a canopy of silver poplars came into being. I had an engagement ring on my finger. We had our interludes of happiness, our adventures, our fights and makings up.  In fifteen years I raised twenty some litters of stunning dogs, carrying around baby bottles full of my patented formula in my pockets, filling up our land with things to worry about and things to do.

I  still love it when the alfalfa on the pasture to the north is cut, because the air fills with that smell so particular to the West, even though when this neighbor puts in a night of felling his crop, it rains the next day.  I love the bales of leafy may that in the curing compact themselves with their catnip-strong leaves so that they flake apart. The two grey Arabian mares we still share live for first cutting alfalfa; they clean it up and  stand around dozing in bliss.

Eearlier I had attempted to leave Fort Collins and a long, grueling adolescence behind in moving to Minnesota with a boyfriend.  After we split I stayed and put in seven years there, only coming back to take care of my mother because I thought I should.   That cost me, in terms of my career; I had birthed a book and become a literary fellow of the National Endowment for the Arts.  I kept thinking I would go back the following month and now over thirty years have passed.

I really stapled myself to this community when I rode my Arabian Mare WR Apris drunk, forgot to check the cinch, and fell when the saddle slipped after our ride, fracturing my leg.  Then, I had a long recovery ahead of me, half of it in a nursing home and half of it back together with the companion from whom I needed to move on, the guy I was going to marry but didn’t, whom I now, tongue in cheek, sometimes  refer to as my “wasband”, because that’s what he was to have been…

He is kind and generous and took care of me, but under those conditions I grew down; I fell back into darkness as opposed to climbing on into the light of a world made new, rain-cleansed by grieving and closure.

The hardest leavetaking of all has been to re-extricate myself from the “us” we became again, and begin to recover my independence and reclaim a writing life and I can tell, as I write this with a lump in my throat, that I’m still in the middle of the process.

Now, for the time being, geographically and situationally hung up, all I know to do to experience my life as fluid and not static, is to write.  My recent past is as close as a few miles to our place, and even, right  next door.  The nursing home is there and before everything I’ve chronicled above happened, my mother lived there at the end,  so that on occasion, on windy days, I see her in my mind’s eye sitting in a metal chair dressed for church, waiting for me.  I chat briefly with her ghost and keep writing.

One day not long ago, I was sweeping my kitchen floor, noticing that it calms me to sweep and that I do it often.  Suddenly an idea came to me for a story, a silly, fanciful story, about a kind of Quixote-esque figure I called the Pasha.  I wrote something I called “The Pasha, The Sweeper and the Stallion”, which I’ll post sometime.

This was new for me and it gave me a sense that my life wasn’t as stalled as I thought, that despite the fact that the Alzheimer’s ward of the Golden Peaks Nursing Home and the rooms where I recovered from my leg fracture are about fifty yards away, separated from me only by a few brick walls and a privacy fence.

The world of my invention is thousands of miles away in another time; it is a kingdom of odd little people, a cultural amalgamation of characters doing silly things.  Writing my Pasha stories has been pure escapism and given me the courage to take a look at some of the pieces I’d put away, some of the memories that stand out that don’t  so much make me think in terms of being trapped in a dead-end life and don’t wake up the ghosts.  I not only dusted a few of those off, but started some more, and then I started to finish the things I’d begun, posting them and write new things, embarking on the writing of memoir and vignettes.  Writing these things has begun to make me feel that the past is the past and that I’ve arrived at some new intersection of time and circumstance.

Our lives  don’t always move in a straight line from birth to high school to college to marriage to empty-nesting to golden years.  I see that the kind of moving on one needs most to do is to take hold of the present, and dwell within a new psychological location, jettisoning baggage, processing grief,  gathering up the work worth keeping and ditching the rest. Why drag every anchor?

My cousin Holley and I reconnected a few years ago, thankfully before she died of breast cancer.  I had belatedly grown an interest in our family past in a good way; I had begun to wonder about the story told in one photograph in particular of my great great great grandmother, my great great grandmother, my great grandmother as a young mother, my grandmother as a young girl, all four women sitting in faded grey light under trees, , in dark dresses, looking at the camera.  When I set a photo of my mother holding me next to it, there are six generations of us, the New Mexico women, the Southwestern side of the family.

Holley was startled when I asked her to tell me what she knew of these women, and what had happened to the family china she had taken off to California when she got married.

“I sold it all,” she said.  ”I don’t want anything in my house from those years, that belonged to those people.”

I was stunned.  As we talked it became evident that she had done her utmost to divorce all of us, even relegating us to the status of her “crazy family”.   To move on, her husband left the East Coast of his roots for Sauselito,  where he lives on and writes and on a social media site, cites his pastimes as “drinking and staring at the ocean.”  He still goes to Paris to grieve her; he scattered all of her ashes there, although I would have liked to have a tiny cache’ of them with me.

Before Holley died she sent on family papers, and copies of a picturesque account of my pioneer family archived at the Albuquerque museum. I have pieced together my origins and roots from those papers and passed what I learned along to her oldest son.

Meanwhile, I brought with me here pieces of my history so that I wouldn’t lose track of it.  I need to feel connected to my past and my family– I just need to live in the present and not keep trying to go home again, even though it is comforting to visit, and lie in the shadows of my old room, in my old bed, with the dogs I had to leave behind– for a few hours, no longer.  Going back to a familiar place ought to be for comfort, solely:  inevitably, it isn’t where I thrive anymore.

Stay tuned for a post on a trip I took to Italy in my early twenties which became a life within a life for me– a rich, romantic time.  When I had to leave, there was an abrupt parting, a severing, as my amore was whisked away leaning out of the window of a train.  It was a clean end to a real-time opera,  with sharp grief; in a few days I became grateful for my adventure and looked at the road ahead:  after all, how many people get to go to Italy and fall in love?

Being time-caught between past and present can be its own kind of hell.  For me, I think, it’s about it being very hard to say good-bye:  it is, in fact, my least favorite phrase.  However, if I don’t keep answering to where the last years of my life want to take me, no matter how hard it is to let go, it is abundantly clear to me that one day I will become trapped in grief’s soft and familiar bed, and the curtain will fall.  My cousin in law has written that as he left Paris someone said au revoir to him, as opposed to adieu.  Until we meet again vs. good-bye.  This became what he said to himself as he caught a cab for the airport.  In Spanish:  hasta luego– until then, vs. adios.  We can soften our leavetakings this way.

Enough about me:  what of you, and your thoughts and experiences here about “closure,”  letting go,  moving on???


Retraining the Writer’s Eye…

One of the hardest things to do is to carry on despite disability and the depression that comes with it.  I’ve been talking with a friend about Hemingway and his depression at the end of his life, how he stopped feeling that he could write and spiralled into a dark place of no return.  I’ve also written here about coming back to life and trying to reclaim a writing life after many years of distraction and illnesss.

None of us likes to think about this, I conjecture– our own darkness and demons.  I would personally like my own to stay away for good.

But I think about who I would be if having them didn’t push me to write.  I mean by that, as someone living marginally, recently disabled after a roller coaster life, the making of art has on the worst days been a productive distraction and on the best, a living up to my gifts.  I think of Hemingway’s extraordinarily detailed description of the wounded lion in Macomber:  it tears your heart out.  You want to reach into the pages and strangle the character for missing the shot, and then you want to strangle Wilson for killing beautiful animals, and this absurd code of manhood….but then, you realize you are reading well-crafted fiction.    And, how artfully the story is told, of a man become a man in an instant and extinguished in an instant.  At least, that is one interpretation.

The point is that when this was written, when any of us writes, we are engaged with our subject and with language.  We are in another dimension apart from whatever might be going on with us at any given moment.  In writing at this moment, I  forget that I got no sleep last night and woke up bitter and angry that my life is so damn hard.  I mustered myself to sit down and revise this post as a beginning on making something of this day.

Yesterday didn’t go so well.  I broke into an archive box-full of poems tucked away for an embarrassingly long time.  I’ve started pulling together a manuscript of poems; it needs to be forty-eight pages and I don’t want to pad it with poems I don’t think are strong or that I don’t like anymore.

I found myself hunched over the box, reading and reading, far into the afternoon, a good ream of poetry that a more objective reader might have viewed more kindly:  what struck me was that there was so much darkness and sadness in these poems.

They span two decades and several relationships– lots of living. I felt badly for myself, to be honest.  Had I been in so much pain?  Out of the richness of a Western life and so many adventures with people and animals, why do the prose pieces have a lighter tone, when the poetry delineates so much suffering?

I took a look at what I have for a manuscript thus far.  There is far more balance in the recent work– still some hard moments addressed, but a tempered “elan vital” and embrace of a spectrum of experience comes through.

Ultimately, I was so overcome by the evidence of how low I had been, and for how long, that I nearly threw  everything away– my thesis, everything.  Why inflict so much morose work upon the dwindling reading public, were my mss to be published.

Then, I called my companion and told him that my entire oeuvre– to use the word du jour– was dark and sad.

Don’t throw them away, he said.  You’ll regret it.  Put them away.

I argued that I was making a new start in a series of short stories and in the flash memoir I post here, and that I needed to jettison the past in some palpable way.

Then, I reconsidered.  It became obvious that I just needed to stuff everything back into the archive box and put the box away, and do all of that winnowing piece by piece, when I’m not tired and when I feel more charitable toward my early work, perhaps even to myself: after all, I’ve kept on through everything themed in my own life and in even my best early poems.

If I don’t have enough strong work for a contest manuscript this year, fine by me.  I have about thirty poems I would like to share, as in put out another collection; maybe that’s enough.  And, I can try sending out a few for homes in quarterlies first.

Many artists have had terrible setbacks.  Leon Fleischer, the great pianist– Jacqueine DuPre, the great cellist, afflicted with MS.  Fleischer made a comeback.  VanGogh cut off his ear but he kept painting.

Perhaps I am being cavalier and uncharitable, but I long to be ever more obsessed with life and the wealth of material it offers we writers.  It was natural for me, as a young writer, to train my artistic vision on the tragedy in my family– in many respects I thought it was my job to articulate all of that, but they’re gone.  They rest in peace.  How long do I keep excavating a lousy childhood, and haven’t a multitude of us had lousy childhoods?  Do we really have to write about it and sing the swan song of victimization until we drop in our tracks?

I like the pieces I’ve posted here about trying to be unburdened of my virginity when I was young, about a goat I rescued, and albeit it is tinged with sadness, about the brave little girl I was.  I like them because they say to me that I can dwell among the living as a writer, that my writer’s eye can gather in the luminous moments that reveal a variety of things about humanity and aren’t only about me. That is extremely liberating, to feel that I have grown as a writer to the point where if I write autobiographically I am also telling a larger story.

Yesterday’s solution to impasse and frustration and today’s, if I push myself too hard and get another case of good old Colorado cabin fever, will be the same.    I bandaged my legs and put on a brace and long pants, got my car keys and the dog, and  went out into the day, where in the mere driving down Jefferson Street for me there are forty years of history, to Highway 287.  Then,  I was nearly side-swiped by a U.S. Mail truck barreling through an intersection. Finally, I went shopping at the little Mexican store at the side of the road, so that an hour later when I came home, in my grocery bags I had some imagery in butcher paper, and fresh narrative waiting inside a ripe avocado when I cut it open.


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