From home.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day.
From home.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day.
I go out to take a nap in the yard one afternoon. I realize that I am not alone. A mother deer and two fawns are already napping under the magnolia. I reassure them that I am not a threat and lie down. I go right to sleep. They are still lying down when I fall asleep and are gone when I wake up.
For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: juvenile.
Oh, no, I am not including a recipe. Just the photograph, for the Ragtag Daily Prompt buttery. I do not have many buttery photographs. Sometimes the light is buttery, though, even when it is not yellow.

This rose is buttery inside.

In college at the University of Wisconsin, I dated a gentleman who was following the Zen Buddhist tradition.
He meditated daily, for forty minutes, facing a wall.
I was quite intrigued. I did not think I could do that. I am a fidgety person and can’t sit still. I promptly tried it.
Forty minutes is a long time facing a wall at age 19.
I would fall asleep. I would start tilting to one side or the other on my zafu and jerk back up. I knew I was not supposed to follow thoughts, but I couldn’t not think. It is more subtle than that: I slowly figured out that I can let the thoughts pop up from the toaster brain, but try not to follow them. Wave at the thought. Let it go.
One day there was a small hole in the wall when I faced it. A tiny spider came out and went back in. I was very happy about the spider.
The next day the spider came out and waved one leg at me. Then it went back in the hole. The end of the 40 minutes is signaled by a chime. I got suspicious afterwards and went back to the wall. Not only was there no spider, but there was no hole, either. I did not see any more holes or spiders.
I meditated regularly daily for two years. After that I would return to practice intermittently. Meditation trained my breathing: my breathing slows way down during meditation.
I use that breathing when I have pneumonia. In the worst episode, I was in the hospital and disbelieved. I slowed my breath way way down to calm myself and so that I could think. Eight counts in, eight counts out. Then ten, then twelve. I needed to focus and figure out what was causing sepsis symptoms. And I did figure it out. The provider sent me home that morning, septic and 6 liters behind on fluid, but I was able to survive.
Now the pain clinics are teaching slow breathing. Five seconds in and five seconds out. Start with a few minutes and work up to twenty minutes. “Almost everyone goes from high sympathetic nervous system fight or flight state to the parasympathetic relaxed nervous system state.” I think we need more of that, don’t you? This is being taught for anxiety, for chronic pain, for fear and depression. I asked a veteran to try it. His response: “I hate to admit it but it works.” Also, “I’m not used to being relaxed. It feels weird.” I laughed and said, “I think it might be good if you get used to it.” He reluctantly agreed and continued the practice.
Peace you, peace me.
I took this last Saturday at the 1:30 pm Blues Fest Concert. This is Jerron Paxton and he just loves the music so much. He started by saying everyone participating in the Blues Fest is tired by the end of the week, it’s so intense! Then he played. Completely delightful.
For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: concert.

Most of the time I am fine (I miss you I miss you I miss you).
I am busy during the day (You said I needed my own life).
What shut you down, I wonder (the family event).
You said I always try to learn daily (you say you refuse to change).
I have friends that love me and my kids (you say you do not love me).
I don’t think I know what love is (your actions felt like love sometimes).
Mostly I don’t think about you (sometimes it is very dark).
I hope that you are well (I wish I wanted you to be happy without me).
I am patching my heart again (for you I use elk sinew).
The deer remind me (life goes on, even when one doesn’t want it to).
A previous poem, when my sister died: The deer remind me.
there is a part of each of us
that we don’t control
a stubborn stubborn voice
inside that won’t do what we want
insisting: the person promised
we would always be friends
the person promised
so they could come back
yes, I say, but that doesn’t mean
they WILL come back
people can lie
people can refuse to change
they promised
insists that stubborn voice
which will not give up
ever
and no matter what I say
I can’t shake her
she waits
and waits
________________
For the RDP: understand.
The first picture is two swimmers on December 21, 2021. I declined to join them!



For the Ragtag Daily Prompt: SWIM.
For Cee’s Flower of the Day.
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