21 April 2009

COLORADO COLLEEN: Ski Season Ends (at many but not all Colorado resorts)

We got in 22 days of skiing this season, and we figure that's respectable for two adults with full time jobs in Denver.
Our Colorado Pass has the tagline: "It's why you live here."
Well, at least part of the reason why we live here.







Too busy soaking up the last runs of the season to take photos of the closing day festivities on the mountain. Such a scene! Picture--if you will-- a happening beach party, only instead of flat sandy beaches, imagine the slopes of a snowy mountain.
Girls in bikinis and skis. Barebacked young men on snowboards.

Last Sunday, Vail buzzed with skiers and riders in hats and wigs, capes and boas, leis and Mardi Gras beads, costumed as cats or Vikings or Paul Revere. Men in women’s clothing. Women in men’s clothing. Ski poles wrapped with flowers. Lederhosen and Alpine hats. Cowboy hats. Rhinestones and sequins. Vintage, one-piece ski jumpsuits. It’s all part of closing day on Vail—a celebration of another spectacular ski/ride season come to a close in Colorado, at many but not all resorts.

At the base of Golden Peak, Vail served up a free bbq to the crowd assembled to watch the World Pond Skimming Championship. Each year, a pool of competitive pond skimmers--many of them costumed--make a run straight down a slope and off a ramp, hitting the pond with their skis or snowboard, attempting to glide across a fairly narrow, shallow pond. Yes, it’s a bit crazy and involves great personal risk--sort of like skiing, in general. It’s a hoot to watch these free spirited pondskimmers with the gumption to make a leap of faith—and most often crash and splash into the pond. Some do make it all the way across, to the roaring approval of the crowd.

I’m not entering this competition any time soon, though in 1990, I did join the Boulder Polar Bear Club on New Year's Day. The actually cut out a portion of ice from the Boulder Reservoir, and people--crazy people--jump in. To make it official, if I remember correctly, Polar Bears must stay in the water for 60 seconds. I was younger, and it was a good hangover cure. Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.

Saying goodbye to the mountain seemed especially sad this year, yet I’m accepting the fact that all things have their due seasons. On to gardening, bicycling to the lake to read, swimming laps at the neighborhood pool, grooving to outdoor concerts, dining al fresco in the secret garden, driving with the top down, enjoying fireworks and fountains, and sleeping with the windows open—even as a door closes.

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TREBLE CLEF: Bono's inaugural NY Times column


The painting above hangs in my studio, ethereal against the midnight blue wall. I'm sorry I do not know the artist, nor is it signed.
"Not all soul music comes from the church," Bono wrote in his new column.



SUNDAY'S NY TIMES INTRODUCED A NEW COLUMN BY BONO, lead singer of the Irish band U2, and a philanthropist. I knew Bono could rock, and I suspected he had soul, yet who knew he writes so well? His message--if not his style--might surprise you. It's not a fluke; I read one other piece by him of equal calibre. Read on. Does not sound like a ghostwriter.

I AM in Midtown Manhattan, where drivers still play their car horns as if they were musical instruments and shouting in restaurants is sport.

Photo by Deirdre O'Callaghan


I am a long way from the warm breeze of voices I heard a week ago on Easter Sunday.

“Glorify your name,” the island women sang, as they swayed in a cut sandstone church. I was overwhelmed by a riot of color, an emotional swell that carried me to sea.

Christianity, it turns out, has a rhythm — and it crescendos this time of year. The rumba of Carnival gives way to the slow march of Lent, then to the staccato hymnals of the Easter parade. From revelry to reverie. After 40 days in the desert, sort of ...

Carnival — rock stars are good at that.

“Carne” is flesh; “Carne-val,” its goodbye party. I’ve been to many. Brazilians say they’ve done it longest; they certainly do it best. You can’t help but contract the fever. You’ve got no choice but to join the ravers as they swell up the streets bursting like the banks of a river in a flood of fun set to rhythm. This is a Joy that cannot be conjured. This is life force. This is the heart full and spilling over with gratitude. The choice is yours ...

It’s Lent I’ve always had issues with. I gave it up ... self-denial is where I come a cropper. My idea of discipline is simple — hard work — but of course that’s another indulgence.

Then comes the dying and the living that is Easter.

It’s a transcendent moment for me — a rebirth I always seem to need. Never more so than a few years ago, when my father died. I recall the embarrassment and relief of hot tears as I knelt in a chapel in a village in France and repented my prodigal nature — repented for fighting my father for so many years and wasting so many opportunities to know him better. I remember the feeling of “a peace that passes understanding” as a load lifted. Of all the Christian festivals, it is the Easter parade that demands the most faith — pushing you past reverence for creation, through bewilderment at the idea of a virgin birth, and into the far-fetched and far-reaching idea that death is not the end. The cross as crossroads. Whatever your religious or nonreligious views, the chance to begin again is a compelling idea.

***

Last Sunday, the choirmaster was jumping out of his skin ... stormy then still, playful then tender, on the most upright of pianos and melodies. He sang his invocations in a beautiful oaken tenor with a freckle-faced boy at his side playing conga and tambourine as if it was a full drum kit. The parish sang to the rafters songs of praise to a God that apparently surrendered His voice to ours.

I come to lowly church halls and lofty cathedrals for what purpose? I search the Scriptures to what end? To check my head? My heart? No, my soul. For me these meditations are like a plumb line dropped by a master builder — to see if the walls are straight or crooked. I check my emotional life with music, my intellectual life with writing, but religion is where I soul-search.

The preacher said, “What good does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses his soul?” Hearing this, every one of the pilgrims gathered in the room asked, “Is it me, Lord?” In America, in Europe, people are asking, “Is it us?”

Well, yes. It is us.

Carnival is over. Commerce has been overheating markets and climates ... the sooty skies of the industrial revolution have changed scale and location, but now melt ice caps and make the seas boil in the time of technological revolution. Capitalism is on trial; globalization is, once again, in the dock. We used to say that all we wanted for the rest of the world was what we had for ourselves. Then we found out that if every living soul on the planet had a fridge and a house and an S.U.V., we would choke on our own exhaust.

Lent is upon us whether we asked for it or not. And with it, we hope, comes a chance at redemption. But redemption is not just a spiritual term, it’s an economic concept. At the turn of the millennium, the debt cancellation campaign, inspired by the Jewish concept of Jubilee, aimed to give the poorest countries a fresh start. Thirty-four million more children in Africa are now in school in large part because their governments used money freed up by debt relief. This redemption was not an end to economic slavery, but it was a more hopeful beginning for many. And to the many, not the lucky few, is surely where any soul-searching must lead us.

A few weeks ago I was in Washington when news arrived of proposed cuts to the president’s aid budget. People said that it was going to be hard to fulfill promises to those who live in dire circumstances such a long way away when there is so much hardship in the United States. And there is.

But I read recently that Americans are taking up public service in greater numbers because they are short on money to give. And, following a successful bipartisan Senate vote, word is that Congress will restore the money that had been cut from the aid budget — a refusal to abandon those who would pay such a high price for a crisis not of their making. In the roughest of times, people show who they are.

Your soul.

So much of the discussion today is about value, not values. Aid well spent can be an example of both, values and value for money. Providing AIDS medication to just under four million people, putting in place modest measures to improve maternal health, eradicating killer pests like malaria and rotoviruses — all these provide a leg up on the climb to self-sufficiency, all these can help us make friends in a world quick to enmity. It’s not alms, it’s investment. It’s not charity, it’s justice.

***

Strangely, as we file out of the small stone church into the cruel sun, I think of Warren Buffett and Bill Gates, whose now combined fortune is dedicated to the fight against extreme poverty. Agnostics both, I believe. I think of Nelson Mandela, who has spent his life upholding the rights of others. A spiritual man — no doubt. Religious? I’m told he would not describe himself that way.

Not all soul music comes from the church.

Bono, the lead singer of the band U2 and a co-founder of the advocacy group ONE, is a contributing columnist for The Times.

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20 April 2009

COLORADO COLLEEN: A Shadow and a Tail



Above at center, Brother Squirrel perched on Mr. Crabtree in the secret garden last winter. I miss the little varmit, even though he chewed up a cotton tablecloth and broke a gift of a ceramic angel. We'd made a lot of eye contact over the winter.

THE NATURE OF
FOX SQUIRRELS


An opportunity to meet the gaze of a bear, or a bald eagle, or a coyote comes all too infrequently. A face-to-face exchange with a squirrel is not so unusual. Then again, there’s nothing common about crossing the path of a squirrel. Squirrels are more than rats with uptown tails. Anybody who has observed the ambitious squirrel at work could not deny the impressive instincts of the species.


Something to chew on

The nature of squirrels is such that Native Americans associated them with forward-thinking and the ability to move swiftly. The medicine of the squirrel prescribes preparedness, the stockpiling of reserves that allow survival long after the season of harvest.
With its prominent, obsidian eyes, its hand-like feet, and its vocalizing, the squirrel can be easily anthromorphized. Watch a skittish squirrel and it freezes, watching you, matching your curiosity.
Watch it waggle its bushy tail and flippantly jeer, teasing the dog cursing below. Watch it whisk itself off in a spry scamper, darting and dodging at breakneck speed, climbing and leaping and scrambling up trees, across rooftops, over power lines, flaunting its free-roving ability, lifting the spirits of many a grounded human.
The unassuming squirrel can capture our imagination. And our birdseed. And sometimes, even, infiltrate our own nests--all with a shadow, a tail and an attitude indomitable.

Urban naturalist

When my dogs Friday and Copper patrolled the secret garden, squirrels tended to keep their distance. After both dogs passed over, the squirrels quickly came over the fences and into the secret garden. Now that no fur-people live with me, I feel even closer to the wildlife visiting my corner of the world. I see and often smell the musk of red foxes in my yard. I’ve spotted raccoons on the parkway. I enjoy the red-shafted flickers, the black-capped chickadees, the house finches, ravens and crows, hummingbirds, mourning doves, and occasional other fine-feathered friends.
And then there are the squirrels. Acrobats, they walk the tight ropes of utility lines, pounce from crab apple tree to roof, tiptoe across window sashes and fencetops. I leave treats for them, from time to time, with the agreement that they not chew up the hammock or the chair cushions or the tablecloth. I spot them daily, several times.
This morning, when I rolled out the recycling bin, I saw a squirrel dead in the street. He must have fallen from the wire above. His blood left a bright red stain in the busy avenue, and his tail still swished as cars drove past. It was one of those overcast, misty days that bring on the melancholy, and I felt a loss over the squirrel’s loss of life.
By the time the recycling crew had emptied my bin and I rolled it back to the garage, the squirrel carcass was almost totally gone, having been run over and over by passing traffic.

I remembered that I had written about squirrels, so I post this revised piece in honor of that little creature no longer scampering around my backyard, over my windowsills, in my birdbath.

A SHADOW AND A TAIL


The word “squirrel” derives from the Greek words “skia,” a shadow and “oura,” a tail. Squirrels use their tails for balance, as a shade from sun or a stole for warmth, as a rudder, and to signal danger to other squirrels.
Approximately 300 different kinds of squirrels exist. In Colorado, the most common is the fox squirrel, sometimes known as the red squirrel. Through pretty and full of personality, fox squirrels can be host to parasites carrying diseases, but incidents are rare.
A life-form industrious and entertaining, squirrels delight the interested on-looker with tight-wire walking, daring stunts and frolicking gymnastic feats. Squirrels are the planters of unintended trees, often forgetting where they bury their nuts or seeds. But biologists report that squirrels recover about 80 percent of their cached food.

Middle of the food chain

Squirrels eat nuts and seeds, fruits, twigs, buds, bark, leaves and pine cones, roots and mushrooms. They’ll accept just about anything picnickers offer. Maurading squirrels plunder bird feeders. Squirrels also raid birds’ nest, stealing eggs or eating nestlings.
In turn, a variety of mammals eat squirrels. Raptors prey on squirrels, and so do snakes, raccoons, weasels, bobcats, cats, dogs, coyotes and foxes--though agile squirrels can often elude terrestrial carnivores. Squirrels frequently are casualties of cars; in fact, winding up roadkill contributes substantially to squirrel mortality.

Squirrel family life

Though they occasionally share nests during winter, most tree squirrels live solitary lives. Naturally, they’re not always alone. Their courtship involves rambunctious chases around the trunks of trees and hither and yon from limb to branch.
Female squirrels typically deliver 2 litters a year, generally with two kits. Male squirrels are deadbeat dads, often neglecting parenting duties entirely, leaving the females as single parents tending the young. Once their eyes open after about 5 weeks, squirrel babies grow up fast. From 5 to 8 weeks, young squirrels immediately begin gathering food.

All that chasing around squirrels do? The chewing of holes in your trash bags? The digging in your flower pots? The raiding of your birdfeeders? The invasion of your attic? Squirrels are just trying to survive, same as we are.

COLORADO COLLEEN: How To Keep Squirrels From Driving You Nuts

The telltale sign that a squirrel has invaded the house is the sound of the animals running overhead. If you have squirrels in your neighborhood, some preventative measures can save a tremendous amount of damage. To safeguard your home and prevent squirrels from driving you nuts, follow these critter control suggestions:

* Don’t feed squirrels. (I know it's tempting.)
* Check for and repair openings that might allow squirrels entry.
* If you have a fireplace, put chimney screens on the flue.
* If you feed birds, use a feeder with a parabolic bin at the bottom, so that seed doesn’t collect beneath the feeder.
* Keep trees and bushes trimmed back from the house.
* Metal sheeting on trees limits squirrels only if they cannot jump to that tree from another tree or roof. Squirrels can jump about six horizontal feet.


18 April 2009

COLORADO COLLEEN: Mt. Melancholy



FROZEN WATERFALL
in Colorado's Rocky Mountains between Denver and Vail. Old Man Winter hasn't had his last word with us yet.





VIEW FROM THE PORCH -- Winter or Spring? In Denver, Colorado, Mother Nature can't decide. This snow was so heavy, I could barely hoist the shovel. This was the most possible water content in snow. Any more and it would not be snow, but rain. We so need the precipitation, so the moisture comes as a benediction. The trees on my corner seemed fine since the snow wa mostly melting off. *** Elsewhere, though, roofs caved in, including a new roof on a library. I70 was closed both east- and west-bound; foothills had about two feet of snow. Got out of Denver late, and made it to Vail, to ski Day 21. Tomorrow is closing day on the mountain and several other resorts. But you never know: Last year, Aspen opened for Father's Day. And there's always the possibility of eking a few more days out of the season at Arapahoe Basin. Today on the mountain, skiers and riders seemed melancholy. The snow had held up surprisingly well, and new snow fell. Light went flat. At one point, we were like blind skiers, skiing through fog and small pellets of snow that sandblasted our faces as we made our way down.

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IN MEMORIAM: Remembering Columbine

Photo by James Baca -- Columbines are Colorado's state flower. In Christian iconography, they symbolize the Holy Spirit because the flowers resemble little doves.

REMEMBERING COLUMBINE MEMORIAL

This piece was published in a slightly shorter version 9 years ago, at the time of the one-year anniversary of the Columbine High School massacre.

So that the living won’t forget, and so the dead won’t be forgotten: That’s the intent of memorials.
A year ago, as people paid their respects at the makeshift memorial near Columbine High School, a reverent hush hovered, broken from time to time by the sound of sighs and sniffles, the sound of shoulder-shaking weeping. Occasionally, a musician added a song, a trumpet rendition of Amazing Grace, for example. A tree filled with wind chimes jingled and keened.
Like “The Fence” in Oklahoma City, Clement Park was the repository of shock and shame, sympathy and grief, righteousness and outrage. And the park was the repository of mementos. Scores of silvery mylar balloons glinted in the sun, some shaped like butterflies in flight among clusters of blue and white balloons, representative of Columbine’s school colors. In the inclement conditions--snow had fallen like a funeral pall--most balloons were flagging, not unlike the spirits of those who shuffled over the straw underfoot, ambling through the acres of shrines that offered a certain buoyancy, a certain deflation.

Candles burned and burned out

The bucolic setting with open space and foothills and a lake lent itself to
the sense of the shrine, the pilgrimage. Pinwheels churned the air. Candles burned and burned out.
The memorial drew people in business attire and bib overalls, infants in strollers, toddlers clutching daffodils in one hand, their mother’s hand in the other, senior citizens making their way with canes or the arm of a companion, people with their leashed dogs. An elementary school girl held in her small hand a package of forget-me-not seeds. A teen with tattoos and blue toenail polish, earrings and toe rings, placed a poster signed by a group of students. A couple leaned against one another; their infant slept, strapped to the father’s chest. Others in automobiles snapped photos from their cars as they passed by. A mother led her three young blond children through the maze of amazing expression, and they asked her what would happen to all of these balloons and bears and banners and bouquets. She replied, “I don’t know.”
Some people knelt, crossed themselves. Others stood, hands gathered behind their backs. Somebody blew delicate, iridescent soap bubbles that pirouetted through the memorial.

An ocean of flowers

A woman walked slowly, cradling an armful of white carnations individually wrapped, white plastic rosaries dangling from the bundle. She added her flowers to the ocean of flowers, the natural expression of so many emotions. The fragrance of fresh flowers overwhelmed, the perfume of thousands upon thousands of blooms piled on the ground, woven into chain link fencing or lattice, leaned against candles or crosses.
Everywhere were expensive, elaborate, professionally arranged flowers alongside the more humble bouquets: a few tulips picked from the garden, the bottoms of their stems wrapped in aluminum foil; pansies in terra cotta pots; bundles of yellow daffodils, clutches of red roses, single stems of calla lilies. Many of the flowers wilted in the sun or rotted in the snow and rain, yet they held their sentiments. The flowers testified to sorrow and sanctity. With their beauty, they softened the ugliness of what had happened.

Global grief

The memorial displayed not a local sorrow, but a global grief, as evidenced by a wreath from school kids in Kosovo; flowers from Maui, Hawaii; a letter from a student in Forster, Australia.
Throughout the memorial, dangling from rope strung from post to post were countless signs and posters, letters, messages written on denim jeans and T-shirts, embroidered on handmade quilts, scrawled with magic markers on bed sheets. A middle-aged man earnestly went about drilling more lattice to mount, providing still more room for expression.
The messages were computer generated or hand-lettered, painted on boards or silkscreened on weatherproof banners. Some sentiments were influenced by personal philosophy, song lyrics or politics, but most had a religious theme: “Put prayer back in school and God back in our lives.” “Pray for peace.” “Let us pray, then, not for patience and tolerance--but for the courage and resolve to drive this evil from our community.” “The Lord made a hard decision today. He brought some of our children home so we might open our eyes.” “Jesus wept.”
A preschooler’s poster depicted a line of crudely drawn and colored angels, their heads formed from cut- out newspaper photos--the by-then familiar faces of the dead. Another poster proclaimed an apocryphal millennial prophesy comparing the 12 students and one teacher slain to the 12 apostles and Jesus Christ.
Somebody had placed a concrete statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary; dangling rosaries almost hid her praying hands. An oil painting on velvet of Jesus praying in the Garden of Gethsemane leaned against a tree. Everywhere, there were crosses: wooden crosses labeled with the names of the slain and the killers, crosses formed of pine logs, or flowers, crosses formed of teddy bears or gutter pipes or pipe cleaners.

A heroic teacher, fallen

At a section of the memorial devoted to the late Dave Sanders, the heroic teacher and coach killed in the massacre, a former athlete had left a pair of running shoes dangling from a tree limb with a note that read, in part, “You taught me to be a man.” The softball team and the “bleacher bums” were represented in posters and an enormous softball cut from Styrofoam. At the softball diamond, somebody had left a sign labeling the place “Sanders Field.”
Along with the fresh flowers, the memorial was strewn with strands of paper flowers, columbines crafted of construction paper. There are plastic flowers and silk flowers and simply, sweetly drawn flowers from small children. Near the tennis courts, more of the same: more flowers, more crosses and condolences. And more obscure things, even a bottle of maple syrup.

A place of pilgrimage

A plastic-wrapped watercolor depicts columbines growing before mountain peaks. The painting is lettered “Stand tall.” Even before arriving at Clement Park, the prevailing sentiment was evident in wreaths hanging at the entrances to communities and cobalt blue satin ribbons tied to trees flutter in the neighborhoods surrounding Columbine High School.
For thousands of mourners, Clement Park has become a place of pilgrimage and prayer, a shrine of sympathy. At the park, cars fill the parking lot, the same lot where Rachel Scott and John Tomlin left their cars parked April 20, the day they were murdered at school. An awning protects Scott’s red Acura Legend and layers of flowers and letters, stuffed animals and photographs obliterate her car.
The same is true of John Tomlin’s brown pickup truck, covered by well wishers. A letter jacket with a message penned on a white leather sleeve drapes over the tailgate. A pocket sized version of the New Testament rests on a tire.
The cars are just two of a series of makeshift shrines throughout Clement Park, where a staggering number of mementos, sacred and the secular,
Yet another poster, signed by the father of slain student Daniel Mauser, read “I want the world to remember my son and all who suffered here.”
Those who suffered there were celebrated there, pondered, prayed for. The memorial was not so much maudlin or morbid or morose as it was comforting, peaceful, healing.

At the top of the knoll, originally one cross stood, its arms draped with necklaces and ribbons, piles of flowers at its foot and a shallow basket holding red and yellow apples. Then 15 wooden crosses were erected. Then they were torn down. A controversy ensued, not so much about the separation of church and state but about the separation of the killers from the victims.
On the muddy hillside, a heart woven of flowers took shape. Through drizzling rain, visitors made their way up the well worn dirt path to the vantage point overlooking Columbine High School. At the end of the building, the library windows were boarded up.
Atop the knoll, a man, hands shaking, voice breaking, said, “I know we all came out here to pray privately for these children. But can we maybe do so corporately? Can we make a circle hand-in-hand and pray together?”
And we did. We formed a circle. Heads bowed, we were strangers acquainted through tragedy. We were people wanting to forget, yet willing to remember.

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17 April 2009

IN MEMORIAM: Carol Dempsey Shannon


Today would have been my friend Carol Dempsey Shannon’s 50th birthday, but she died when was just 42. We met in kindergarten. That's Carol at left. How I miss her and our conversations! But we're still connected.

This essay is based on the eulogy Carol's husband asked me to write for her funeral.


To describe somebody who appears sad, shattered, crestfallen, there’s a cliché: “You look like you just lost your best friend.”
When Carol and I turned up in the same kindergarten class, we had no way of knowing our friendship would span almost four decades. We were raised together in Mason City, Iowa, immortalized as “River City” by Meredith Wilson in the musical, “The Music Man.”

BOOKS, WOODS, ART, STARS

Bookworms, Carol and I carried armloads of volumes across the same footbridge where Marian the Librarian and Professor Harold Hill spooned. As girls, we passed the lion’s share of our free time in the vicinity of the public library. Once we’d worn ourselves out in the woods of the Library Gardens, we went inside to check out books. Carol was one of the most intelligent individuals I’ve ever known. On our Iowa Tests of Basic Skills, she used to rack up near-perfect scores year after year.

Frequently, we hauled our books next door to the MacNider Art Museum, where we headed upstairs to the reading room. Side-by-side on the couch, we turned pages beneath the glow of the ceiling paneled in alabaster. It was about the only time we ever sat still. Then, and when we’d lie on our backs, staring up into the summer sky, trying to pick out constellations. Carol’s favorite? Cassiopeia.
As I pedaled with my friend perched on the handlebars of my bicycle or sailed beside her on the swings at the playground, as we staged underwater tea parties at the swimming pool or ice skated together, as we climbed the maple in my front yard or peered through her microscope at molecules of sugar and salt and rain water, I had no way of knowing my best friend would die so young from breast cancer.

DIFFERENT PATHS, SAME JOURNEY

Carol would remain in our old neighborhood, raising her son Nate and her daughter Errin Colleen. Once she’d been tagged “terminally ill,” Carol did take a road trip with her husband to the South Carolina shore.
“Louder than I had imagined,” she had said of the waves breaking on the beach.
I would marry, divorce, bear brainchildren, living our childhood dream as a writer with respectably stamped passports. To share my wanderlusty adventures, I sent Carol postcards from where ever I landed: Europe, Israel, Asia, the Caribbean, Central America, and destinations across the United States. I posted glossy images of oceans and deserts, glacial bays and island flowers, ancient ruins and contemporary art.
Carol answered with letters drafted in her careful, calligraphic penmanship, always with the same hometown postmark. And, eventually, our correspondence evolved into e-mail messages.
It was a phone call from her husband, however, that alerted me to Carol’s rapidly deteriorating condition. We had planned for her to visit me in Denver. Instead, I dropped everything and cashed in my frequent flyer miles. Upon the day of my return to my hometown and my friend’s deathbed, Carol roused a final surge of energy. At her suggestion, we took a walk--much to everyone’s surprise since she hadn’t exhibited such spunk for more than a month.

THE FRAGRANCE OF CHILDHOOD

In our old stomping grounds, Carol and I caught a whiff of perfume from a flower bed. “Smells like childhood,” she said.
We made our way up a hill, talking and talking as we slowly walked, admiring the houses by Frank Lloyd Wright and the Prairie School architects. We stood midway across the Music Man’s footbridge and looked down on the landscape of our youth. Carol pointed out a turtle in the slow olive waters of Willow Creek.
We wound up in the Library Gardens, where our friendship had grown in earnest. In the quiet green, a capricious cardinal sang overhead. “My name means ‘a song,’” Carol said. Then she stared toward the Children’s Reading Room, an enchanted octagonal space with window seats high above the river bluffs. We had spent many hours there, together.

MAKING OUR OWN PATHS

Carol looked one way, then the other. Her brow furrowed. “Where’s that path?” she asked, agitated.
I knew she was right. There had indeed once been a trail where she pointed, but the footpath had long since filled in with lush overgrowth.
“I think we made our own paths,” I said to her.

“I REMEMBER FOR YOU; YOU REMEMBER FOR ME”

Just a few evenings before she died, Carol and her husband and I sat at their kitchen table. The three of us talked late into the night. Nostalgic and punchy, we giggled and guffawed until we practically slid off our chairs. It seemed like old times, even though we would have few new times. Carol and I reminisced about the mysteries and mischief we had shared over the span of all those years since kindergarten. I recalled a funny phrase we used when we were kids.
Carol laughed. “I’d forgotten all about that.”
And then, as we continued to chat, she reminded me of why I had broken up with my last boyfriend: “He was a nice guy, but he wasn’t your guy,” she said. “You were looking for enlightenment; and he was looking for oblivion.”
I recognized my line, the summary I had offered her after the split.
“That's right," I said. "I forgot I'd said that.”
Carol said, tenderly, “I remember for you; and you remember for me.”

"I REMEMBER FOR YOU, AND YOU REMEMBER FOR ME"

One of the last things my friend reminded me of was to look for love. Love, Carol knew, really is stronger than death. “Light and love are the way to go,” Carol wrote to me in an e-mail about six weeks before she died. “At some point in time, we will realize how profoundly easy the route is and be astounded that we didn’t see so,” she wrote. “So pray for love; the rest is icing on the cake.”
My last night in town, I crawled into the hospital bed with Carol at her invitation; and we hugged one another without an iota of self-consciousness. She fell asleep in my arms. She seemed to glow from within, the way a candle does when it has burned down. She resembled a baby, her face full of innocence, her hair a soft fuzz. I wanted to sob, but didn’t want to wake her.
Saying good-bye to her the next day was one of the most painful things I’ve ever done. “Are you going to be okay?” she asked me, her last of a lifetime of questions posed to me.
I said, “I’ll have to be. But I miss you already."
I managed not to cry until I got around the corner, in her kitchen, where I collapsed into the arms of her burly brother-in-law.
The next thing I knew, Carol’s little sister and her daughter were driving me to the airport. A cell phone rang within the hour. Carol had asked to be moved from her home to a hospice.
Carol died in that hospice--just across the street from the library, the library gardens, and the art museum that had figured so prominently in our life as children. There, just one day after I bid farewell to my friend for the last time, the life of her body ceased. The life of her impressive mind ended. But I still recognize Carol’s light. Especially in Cassiopeia.


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Pass it on!

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