Posted by: highmountainmuse | 19th Apr, 2011

Separation


It is time to move on
I could cling to the past
And am tempted to at times
But push myself to the edge
And jump
And trust my wings to carry me

I can’t say I’m not afraid
Of course I am
Who would not be
Leaping before you see the net clearly
Before you know you have wings

But I know they have carried me before

Curiosity of where I am going to
Is greater than the fear to hold me back

I separate from this mountain and find my own voice
Still no stronger than the sound of the winter river
Beneath a foot of ice

Tear myself free
In a land of shallow roots
What holds me so heavy to this ground
Upon which I am washed clean
Like the sides of the mountain in melting snows

Clear and strong
Now
The current of the creek
I find a voice that will sing the song of other lands
Other rivers

Winds
Wild flowers
And wild sides of me
Of my family
Of you

And thus I conclude my posts here and prepare for something new
I hope you will join me on the journey
Where ever
However
It unfolds
Blossoms
Turns to seed and begins again
Some days with radiance
Other days heavy and damp in the rain
Simple and salty like a single tear

I open myself to a new land

I hope you will join me in a new space and place
My postings will continue here:
www.GinGetz.com

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 13th Apr, 2011

More on these waters

These waters…
First, for those who care about these waters…

I start today’s post with a promotion for a wonderful cause, a fun event, and something for which I am most proud of Forrest and a friend for taking the time to organize (and indeed it proves to be a lot of time for both!).

There are few opportunities to show you care, to give back to something from which we take so much. Our mighty Rio Grande!

Land owner, tourist, farmer and fisherman.
We hope you will all help out by showing you care, and showing your support.
The 2nd Annual High Country Hustle.
A 6.6K run/walk for water, and fundraiser for the Rio Grande Headwaters Restoration Project, this Sunday afternoon in Creede, Colorado.

Please see the web site at: http://www.highcountryhustle.webs.comto learn more, sign up, sign on, show your support, and donate.

A most sincere thank you to all those who truly do love these waters and have already signed up to participate and/or donate. It means a great deal to see your support of the river.

Thank you! From the proud mother of Forrest, who is co-organizing this event once again with Heather Messick. Because they both care about these waters.

This time last year.
Forrest co-organized his first High Country Hustle.
About 80 people crawled out of the woodwork on a sleepy Sunday morning to attend.
Bob left for Canada following the Hustle with our “new boss” to confirm the arrangements for something we were diving into head first – moving to Canada to manage a cattle ranch. Alas, the pool turned out to be empty…
The following night, old Alan dog peacefully passed away in the loving arms of Forrest and me, right there with us at his place between our chairs at the kitchen table.
Eight days before making the big move, the job fell through. I know, we’re better off without them, everyone has told us so, and it’s not too hard to see. But watching your plans and future fall apart instantly from under you, well, for lack of a more eloquent term, it sucks.
So there we were, suddenly homeless since we’d already rented out our house for the season and hired caretakers we never ended up needing in the way we originally planned. We kept our word, kept them on, and paid them for a position that was no longer, from a salary we no longer had, while we spent the summer seemingly stuck in the one room cabin on blocks, the only running water a leak in the roof, a nearby outhouse, and back to hauling water like I had done back in the day.
And to fill a huge void, I bring home the puppy from hell and our world really gets stirred up.
This guy is no Alan. I’ve never been so challenged with a dog. As I told Karen yesterday, right now, he’s the best trained, worst behaved dog I have ever had. (And yes, I do believe someday, hopefully not too far away, he’ll be the best dog, period.) In the meanwhile, life with Gunnar is like the lessons my stallion, Flying Crow, taught me in the horse world. The most difficult ones teach you the most. They’re the ones who teach you how little you knew before.

And this time next year? Where will that find us? What adventures will we have between now and then? I’m pretty certain there will be plenty.

Stay tuned.
Stick with me…
There’s more to me than this mountain I turn my back to bittersweet.

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 11th Apr, 2011

Decisions

You know, few well thought out choices are ever really wrong. Some are just better than others. 

Only in retrospect do we judge.  And who needs to spend time looking back?  Today is already too short, too full, I’ll never get it all done in one day!  And tomorrow will be here soon enough.

Tomorrow. How do you figure out where to go, what to be, what to do when you grow up, and when will that finally happen?

Yes, it’s a big wide world.  I want to taste it all. How will I know if I don’t try? I wish I could take your word for it.  That would have saved much pain throughout the years. 

How many said I couldn’t live here?  Next month begins my tenth year.  I think I’ve proven I can.  And now I’m ready to try somewhere else.

Decisions are not always easy.  Bob has been here, working to not only keep the family ranch up and running, but to make it a better place, and has succeed. That’s got to feel good.  And at the same time, he’s ready.  Ready to try something else.  Finally free.  He struggles to see beyond.  He is catching glimpses.  Some days bright and shiny.  Other days blinding and quite exhausting.  I bet you know what that’s like.

Forrest has big decisions to make.  The future awaits his choosing. School.  College.  Career.  Opportunities.  Obligations.  Expectations.  And dreams.  Dreams yet to be.  Dreams still unborn.  Such wonderful options and opportunities!  How does one decide?  See which door opens widest and sucks you in…

Me, I have nothing to hold me back.  There are no roots.  The ground on which I stand is separate from me.  Still, a severed cord at birthing pours fourth blood.  Change is never without loss, remorse, pain.  When we look back.  Excitement, anticipation, and hope when we look ahead.  Which way do I look today?

I leap and rush to build the net as I fall if need be.  Weave together my own threads to carry me.

Shed my skin and step out unadorned. It’s only cold for a little while.

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 9th Apr, 2011

On mountain and sky and in between


We separate
Grow apart
I see her indifference more clearly
Turn from the mirror and stare into her eyes
And begin to feel the same

Indifferent is not how I live
I bursting with passion
Never one to turn my back
On you
On the mountain
On life
Dive in
No matter how frigid the waters may be

Words pour forth with plenty
But richer still are my dreams
Unending

I find myself now
On the edge of discomfort
Do I step back to safe and known
As the bottom falls out beneath me
This is where I wanted to be

Close your eyes to the air in your face as you fall
And as naturally as a young child struggling to stand
Wings unfold
You learn to fly again
With air
With wind
With life
Exhilarating as the sky that holds you

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 7th Apr, 2011

These waters


These waters that chill
Turning my submerged flesh red
What did I expect as I plunge in
While the frozen hillside still covered in white
That feed these waters
Begins to thaw

These waters without cleansing and comfort
Running brown
Taking the richness of the land with them
Stripping
Tearing
Raping
Taking with no remorse
The power of the melt off

The beating of the sun
Burning my nose and shoulders
The same which turns the snow to river
Taking soil and dreams and hopes
Down
In violent rush
I can hear from my porch
A quarter mile away.

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 5th Apr, 2011

Permanence

Another new moon rises somewhere out there where I cannot see
In the lightening sky beside the brilliance of the awakening sun
And I think of how many have come and gone
While I’ve sat here in the early morning hours
Silent alone with my old dog now young dog
And wanted to be somewhere else
Longing for home
Permanence if there is such a thing
I have read about but never found
A place to belong
Here I have been forever a stranger in a land that clings to familiars
Familiars which seem so false
Romanticized memories with no solid core
Shallow and shiny

I remember role models of pioneers and brave souls
Strong women willing and able to step away and try
Working the land raising babies and lambs and lettuce
Instead I find myself in a land based on getting away
As I prepare to leave
Shed my skin that has grown tight and weathered
Strip me clean and wash me free
And watch me step out naked and unbound
Stronger and freer than I have felt in years
Leaving

Leaving a land I have known so intimately
Yet knew had no connection to me to anyone else
A masculine rugged and indifferent land
Perhaps with the wider the view the narrower the vision
I have no attachments here
Anywhere
I fear I leave in anger
All I want is a release

Plans finally coming together
This is not the first time
I’ve been through this before
Here
Plans and preparations and packing
The boxes still stacked in the storage shed
Labeled “books” and “kitchen” and “canning supplies”
Wooden shelves Bob and I built years ago
Thick rough cut blued pine on the walls of our living room
Alongside the wood stove where I sit now warming
And in the empty hallway have been left bare all winter
I have refused to move back
I knew it would not last
And really I am glad
I have been gone all year though you can still find me here
My heart left long ago
Finally my body will follow

The iridescent wings unfurl in the morning air

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 1st Apr, 2011

Eighteen

The first of April is noted by the birthday of my son. Eighteen years ago on this day I was in downtown Chicago, living in the basement of my parents’ new town house.  They had just moved from New York.  I had just come up from Santa Fe where I had been working at the frame shop until my mid section deemed too big to belly up to the work bench.  I had been surrounded by a sea of men looking at the skinny thing that I was with the expanding stomach as if there was something alive in there besides my growing baby. Zero comprehension, but a few attempts at compassion.  I appreciated that, but it was not enough.  I was tired of being alone.  There, then, alone was lonely.  A month before birthing, I showed up at my parent’s brand new doorstep in a city where I had never been.

There I was in this old rusted black car with a big crack covering the windshield which made it hard to see when you were driving into the sun or headlights, and these brakes that worked in a way that required you to drive barefoot because every time you pushed down they would stick and you had to get your toes underneath to pull the petal back out.   The back seat was torn out to make room for my two dogs and everything I owned at the time, which although it was only what could fit in the little car, seemed like plenty, perhaps too much, as I drove pushed back so far away from the steering wheel, almost fifteen hundred miles in three days, pulling over in rest stops to climb on top of the platform of cardboard boxes and take a rest with my dogs, and all too often, quick stops for a quick relief from the growing pressure on my bladder.

The morning of the first of April.  The softest blanket of snow was settling on the tiny box of a yard outside the basement window.  I would look out there at the gentling world, lawn furniture covering in white, and forget I was in Chicago. It was one of the most peaceful sights I had seen or felt, though I imagine that may have been the hormones doing their part.  There I was, just standing, staring, watching the snowflakes fall.

The cable guy was getting my parents set up with that all important television connection in their new home.  I calmly walked into the room where my mother was and informing her that my water broke.  The cable guy was kneeling down working on some wires poking out of the wall.  He stood up fast when he heard me. You could tell he had been there before.  His eyes got huge, his mouth dropped open, and he left the job undone.  Said he’d be back another day.

So Forrest started his life in Chicago, born into my own arms and held tight from the moment of his very first breath upon my chest, lying there on a big bed in a birthing center with a midwife I had never met at the foot, and both my parents there beside me. Despite their having had four children, neither had witnessed a birth before.

After the midwife and family and visitors left, I lay on that bed that night, my baby and I, in such silence with a warm yellow light from the bedside table and the breathing of his little lungs against mine. For the first time I crossed the great rift between lonely and alone. 

I look at my mares when they birth their foals and see the softness in their half closed eyes, listen to the gentlest of nickering as they turn to nuzzle their newborn, and understand just how they feel, knowing everything in their life is right, everything has meaning, and that meaning is tied up into this one tiny helpless hungry bundle. 

Since then I have always loved snow on the first of April. Big fat fluffy flakes that cover the world as we know it, soften my view, and soothe my mind as sweet as any lullaby.

My life has never been the same, never been better, since that one snowy day.

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 30th Mar, 2011

end of march

Another storm comes

     And goes

          And leaves

               A dusting on the front porch

Freshens the still white pasture

That was brown from the sands in the spring winds

Laces the spruce tree with an antique patina as if

Once again I was looking at an old faded photo

On my grandma’s knick-knack shelf

Above her big farmhouse porcelain sink

Somewhere there in suburbia with the little lawn

And front steps where we’d wait for mailman and milk truck.

 

 

Yesterday I looked in the mirror

      Something I’m not keen on doing

          And saw

               The silver frosting as if from that snow

I lifted my hand to brush it away

My hand empty but for wrinkles so plentiful on the backside

And I wonder from where these came

On hands still so strong and able and firm

Hands which provide fare and comfort in a harsh world

     Creased with lines

          Deep with stories

How can I be aging when I have yet to grow up?

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 27th Mar, 2011

View from the road


The first geese settle precariously beside newly melted ice
Bridges remain for the coyote to cross
Feathers along the road
I pick one up and put it in my pocket
Let my puppy smell the fresh blood
He is more interested in the tracks
Chasing off the threat he perceives
A guardian, not a hunter
The vocation stirs in his veins
His bark answers a primordial call
Like the geese following the signs of the sun
Ignoring the still frozen flats on which they lit
Covered each morning this week with a new dusting of snow
As they mill about, impatiently squawking
Awaiting their world to thaw beneath them
And the coyote profits from their innate yearnings

Posted by: highmountainmuse | 26th Mar, 2011

Learning to leave


Learning to leave
To let go
Free yourself of the heavy burden
Let your wings unfurl with silver iridescence and dry in the morning sun
And rise with updraft as the still white meadow warms mid day

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