Showing posts with label Inspiration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inspiration. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Tangier Man

Writing about our own experiences, I am told, is what makes a blog. Well, I am still new to this and perhaps not as savvy as you all, and furthermore I love my little snipets of myths and quotes and reserve freedom and delight to post these as the spirit moves me. And yet I may as well also go ahead and tell a little romance story. After all, spring is in the air!

People who are salt of the earth are decent, dependable and unpretentious.


Last autumn, I met a rather memorable man while visiting my Dutch friends' farm on the eastern shore of Maryland. Never had I been, and I had no idea the beauty and sweetness of the place! And yes, he was a handsome single man, but thats not exactly what the story's about...

He climbed down off the tractor from where he had been plowing and gave a nice strong handshake along with a nod, looking directly at me introducing himself by full name, to which I chuckled ever so lightly and returned the grounded greeting. He is a neighbor who helps out on their organic farm when he is needed and refuses to take money for his services because "that's the way he was raised". Since my women friends are a gay couple in their fifties I think its pretty safe to say that his intentions are pure. Anyway, I was charmed. As we all walked the land, shared dinner, sipping wine into the wee hours by candlelight in their 18th century home, I was charmed. Seeing his land the next day, his excitement at the growth of the trees he's planted along the fields, placing his hands in the black soil, urging me to do the same, I was charmed.
I am not so easily charmed, I want to assure you. What I noticed first about this lad was an odd country-ish, yet rather eloquent manner of speaking that as I listened to the rhythm of I could not place, try as I might. Here we were on the eastern part of the Chesapeake Bay, and this man sounded as though he grew up somewhere between the mountains of Southern Appalachia and the Isles of Scotland, which indeed he had. I also noticed that he had a very clear way of speaking right to the point of things and tended to express himself thoughtfully and meaningfully, or else remain quiet and listen attentively. He had me laughing from deep down inside, and speaking quite frankly myself - at times sharply debating him, at others wholeheartedly in agreement. Always very engaging and natural. His blue eyes sparkled a great deal. I appreciated this earth-wise sensibility about him, one that our mutual friend often brings up - this distinct & increasingly rare human quality that only people who live very close to the land hold in their being and carry with them, an actual scent about them. Genuine. Hardy. Salt of the Earth.

I myself come from people like this a generation before me, and it has imprinted on my soul. Long ago left behind in search of wild adventures, self discovery and presumed liberation, I have felt at times deeply out of place in the urban world of academia where I have placed myself, a world I had long ago sworn off! A world of winning prestige through intellectual prowess often disconnected from anything practical or particularly useful to the world, where people frequently take the most elaborate and vague routes of speech to avoid saying what they really mean, or simply to impress their peers. Yet my childhood was in some essential way steeped in the value of hands -on visceral intelligence, of rural identity through my loving grandparents, of endless summers spent on the farm, running in the fields, bon fires in the grove, finding arrowheads left by the Kickapoo and Wea and shards of pots left by my own great great grandmothers. Always that sense of being from a human heritage that is inherently part of the land. Perhaps this is what lit up and stirred in me with our Tangier man. It was different from the many back-to-the-landers Ive come across and lived with over the years. Something was definitely different.


Now, our man did mention that where he was from is Tangier Island - a place Id never heard of, an island in the Chesapeake. He spoke of it warmly and yet never explained much about it. I later took it upon myself to discover more on my own... Wikipedia states

The tiny island community has attracted the attention of linguists because its people speak a totally unique dialect of American English, hypothesized to be nearly unchanged since the days of its first occupation by English colonists.

Fishermen and farmers, they have also been studied for their rich folklore and traditional customs. Their heritage appears to be chiefly from Scotland, Wales, Ireland, and Cornwall, and they have remained relatively isolated from the rest of the world since the 16th century. Over ten miles from the nearest port, accessible only by boat or emergency helicopter, they did not so much as have television or internet until the last decade.

Well no freakin wonder he has this quality.

I cannot help but think on him fondly as winter thaws as soon I will likely meet him again when I venture across the bay to help with spring planting and canoe among the cypress groves along the Pocomoke River. I would like to learn from him all I can and enjoy his vital spirit. Do I fancy him to be my soul mate? No, even with a confessed tendency to romanticize such things, sometimes ridiculously so, and even as my biological alarm clock is sounding off with resounding bells, I do not. He had softened his voice with a moment we had alone, and in a most endearing and reserved way asking if he could call me, would I like that?...hmmmmm..., and later making general reference to his belief in proper courting. I am not kidding. I simply have not really come across this before. I had been thinking that sweetly sharing passionate kisses wouldnt harm a soul. Yet an actual romance would almost certainly be destined to fail, respectful friendship being the supreme choice. Opposites attract, but do they make good long term partners or mutually supportive parents? It is an understatement to say that some of our key core values and ways of viewing the world differ vastly. The first time I ever practiced non-violent civil disobedience I was a very young woman protesting the war he was busy fighting in on the other side of the world. I would do it again in a heartbeat, and so would he. The noble soul shared with me how he reads the bible to himself when he rises in the morning, around 5:30 or 6 a.m., the King James version. I didn't mention how I often sing love songs to the moon Goddess around 3 a.m. or so, still wide awake, crystals warm in my hand, with tiny offerings for the elementals... Ah well, cheers to how different we all can be, and how much more interesting life can be when lovely opportunities open for us to celebrate this and appreciate each other - across genders, cultural identities, and seemingly over centuries.

Thursday, November 30, 2006


When I dare to be powerful – to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid.
- Audre Lorde

Monday, November 27, 2006

Eros from an Athenian vase 490 BC

As women, we need to examine the ways in which our world can be truly different. I am speaking here for the necessity of reassessing the quality of all the aspects of our lives and of our work, and of how we move toward and through them.
The very word erotic comes from the Greek word eros – the personification of love in all its aspects – born of Chaos, and personifying creative power and harmony. When I speak of the erotic, then, I speak of it as an assertion of the life force of women; of that creative energy empowered, the knowledge and use of which we are now reclaiming in our language, our history, our dancing, our loving, our work, our lives.

~ Audre Lourde from Uses of the Erotic as Power

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Song for You


There is a very pretty Emmylou Harris song in my head that keeps going round and round. So I'll sing it for you here:




If I had a bird, a little bird
I would teach that bird to sing your name
Prettiest song that you have ever heard
Your indifferent heart I will claim
So be off my little bird
Fly away, fly away
And when my love you see
Only then, my little bird
Cry away, cry away and bring that heart to me
If I had a moon in the sky
I would light the world and pull the tide
And when the moon is full, like my heart
It will surely pull you to my side
But in the darkest night I pine away, pine away
Until your face I see
So throw your light my lovely moon
Shine away, shine away and pull his heart to me
If l had a wagon made of gold
Pretty painted horses numbered four
With a silver harness I would hitch them up
And drive that wagon to your door
And if my hand you choose to hold
Ride away, ride away with the pretty horses four
But darlin' if you heart is cold
Hide away, hide away I’ll trouble you no more
Trouble you no more


Emmylou Harris/Kate McGarrigle/Anna McGarrigle





Sunday, November 19, 2006






Thlolego EcoVillage in South Africa,

Findhorn in Scotland,

And the Permaculture Institute in Northern California

Saturday, November 18, 2006


From the beginning, humanity's survival has depended upon women's sexuality. Every tribe's survival has depended upon women's capacity to give birth, to bear healthy children into the next generation.
Our ancestors understood women's birth-giving power as kin to the Power of Being that creates, sustains, and transforms the world. Their images and icons of the Sacred Feminine celebrate women's awesome ability to regenerate life. In woman's body, the Great Goddess becomes manifest.
Our sexuality is not only our capacity to bear children. It is, as well, our power to promote creation in any dimension we choose. In these times, humanity's survival depends less upon the capacity to bear children and more upon the conditions into which our children are born. Survival depends upon women birthing new ways of being and doing that promote peace, justice, and sustainable economies on our planet.


With movement and breath, we cultivate the pro-creative power seeded in our Energy Garden - our body's center.

We know ourselves as sacred beings and respect our sexuality as a sacred force of nature.

We realize that we're sexy—at our juiciest—as we express the truth of who we are.

And, we direct our pro-creative power not only for sacred pleasure but also for personal and planetary healing.

by Lisa Sarasohn Author of The Woman's Belly Book

World Dancer





Everything in the universe has rhythm. Everything dances.

- Maya Angelou


Friday, November 17, 2006

Nightime Dance


Life is a dance and I am remembering how to be a World Dancer. I may have sat out the last few songs but I was tired and needed to rest and just watch, perhaps snooze for a bit and be a hermit for awhile. And yet now I am up again and dancing - moving through all of the myriad emotions, experiences, blessings, challenges, and devotions. It has everything to do with rhythm and letting go into the music of Life. One essential thing I am grateful for, it is music. It is that my life is a great dance and that my soul has inherent rhythm.

Sunday, October 02, 2005