I had another blog discussing the way the color is draining from our world and how Marina has been making me go on long hikes documenting the different leaf variations.
I had another in my head about the long drive to Suzanne's for the writer's group. See, we are writing a book. I got the idea last summer (arg! summer seems so far way now!)for a book called Extreme Housewives of the North. You can see the title is a take on the Real Housewives of _(wherever)___ and Extreme _(whatever)____. I thought it was a hilarious and good idea.
Irene ran with it and now we are focusing our mighty power on the first chapter, "How I became an Alaskan." If you know any publishers who are interested in taking us on please contact me before I start substitute teaching! (My substitute teaching story will follow in the next few weeks.)
Since, nothing seems to fit here in this blog with these pictures, I think I will share what I wrote with the group. (Be warned, mine was the least skillful of all our essays. And this is a rough draft! Irene and Suzanne really have something going here.)
HOW I BECAME AN ALASKAN
I will tell you that for me it was when I picked up my first hitchhiker without a hint of anxiety or discomfort. (Californians don't do that. We learned that lesson from that girl who had her arms cut off.) This was the same season that I stood on a cabin deck with nothing holding us from falling over the side but a simple rail made of 2 x 4's on posts. We stood there and looked up into the evening sky to watch the Northern Lights crackle across the stratosphere. They reached for us like witches fingers. That night we could even hear the aurora snapping the air was so full of electricity. The cabin was swaying from the movement of the people inside dancing. Fishing/cannery season was over. Darkness was over taking the daylight by five minutes each day. The hours of the day began to loose their significance. No one that I had met asked me what I did for a living, instead they asked where I was staying and how was I going to stay busy over the winter.
These events occurred after a month of my sitting in the meadow of Seaside Farm. For an entire month I spent most of each day sitting looking out over Kachemak Bay and onto Grewingk Glacier. I just watched. When the rain would come I would sit under the rain roof and continue to watch that glacier move while Matt Yaki strummed his guitar. That glacier was telling me everything my soul had missed during it's absence and my body responded by becoming slower. The atoms twirled in my cells a fraction of a nano second more slowly after that month and everything made more sense. Any sense of rush faded as Matt plucked away and the light rain fell on the Plexiglas roof.
I will admit, while I am here I don't feel much like an Alaskan. I have my wonderfully supportive Alaskan husband who has taken over most of the highly Alaskan activities that we must participate in for our comfort. By doing so he has made it so that I can focus on the family and children (and myself!). But when we get on an airplane and leave this state, regardless of where we head, everything around me makes me realize that I am an Alaskan, completely, and that it won't matter where our roads take us from here on out. My fate is sealed. I can only leave in body.
I am an Alaskan.
2 comments:
You write as well as you take pictures. You inspire me. You will always be my Kumar!
Love,
Roldy
Very well put.
I can step into your thoughts, and embrace who you are.
I love all that you said.
Miss ya. (the Un-Alaskan)
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