Welcome to the Monkey House

November 24, 2019

I wandered deep into Topanga on Saturday and emerged, at days end, a different person.…

Black Smoke. White Smoke.

November 18, 2019

Two key questions: are the Santa Ana’s blowing and what color is the smoke? If…

Fret Not

November 3, 2019

Was at an orchestra concert the other day watching my favorite cellist and noticed that…

Thirteen

October 24, 2019

Backpack half zipped on the kitchen table,Beat up paperback Fahrenheit 451 in the side pocket,Simpsons…

Deadicated 6.16.18

June 25, 2018

FADE IN Citi Field.  General Admission. Three rows back from the stage. The crowd dances,…

Divine Intervention

June 20, 2018

So here I am driving down the road, reeling from an earlier conversation, trying to…

Luggage or leverage?

June 3, 2018

One step back…WTF? These freaking voices in my head… So, the other day, I am…

Year of the Rabbit

May 1, 2018

"What year?" Vince asks. "1963." I say with a certain amount of pride. "Huh, year…

Oh, my…

April 15, 2018

Went to Supercuts on Saturday: to the usual one over on 18th and Wilshire.  All…

Learning to fly

March 18, 2018

  Took flight again today at Pranayama Breathe Class on a Sunday afternoon. I visited…

Squeak!

February 24, 2018

Squeak. Step. Squeak. Step. Squeak. Pause. Stop. Pause. Step. Squeak. Humph… My favorite shoes are…

#leftearrightear

February 14, 2018

  FADE IN. EXT: DAD comes into focus, a big guy, burley, mid-thirties, Oklahoma t-shirt,…

Have and Have Nots

February 6, 2018

I am struggling a bit.   A few days ago I woke up pre-dawn, made a…

I don’t know, it just

January 15, 2018

drives me crazy that people don’t really greet each other anymore. I’m not sure why…

Turn the tables

August 31, 2017

I have a coach that helps me navigate the training regime for all of these…

385 in dog years…

August 6, 2017

I am getting old. I’m almost 385 in dog years. Humph… The other day I…

And he lives in Nashville. Went there recently to reconnect and discovered a whole new…

Owling

July 24, 2017

Went owling with Vince the other night. We have a big tree in the backyard…

Coco and Adele

July 23, 2017

One afternoon in the Marais (how cool is that for an opening line?) Teri and…

Merci Madame Killelay

July 19, 2017

One of my favorite teachers, Madame Killlelay, taught high school French. I think she tops…

Nice is nice (PG13)

July 13, 2017

Was a hot day in Nice. I had some down time before the flight back…

Comrades in arms…

July 10, 2017

And legs. And mind, body and spirit. Just whisper “Kowies, Fields, Bothas, Inchanga or Polly…

Triple death by…

July 7, 2017

Seriously? It’s Saturday morning. I mean what kind of message is that suppose to send…

Wump-Wump-Wump

July 6, 2017

Thursday afternoon Dad via text: “send a pic people here want to see” Dad’s internal…

La Decima

July 5, 2017

He’s a god, a modern day god, like Zeus with a tennis racket. And we…

As far as elements go I have always had great respect for water. I appreciate its power in all forms: from a gentle drizzle to a howling Nor’easter, from puddles to oceans and rivers to streams. It’s some times a giver and others a taker. Constantly moving in a zero sum game, morphing from one form to the next. Spend anytime on a river and you begin to understand the power of the push and the pull, its predictability coupled with a fierce volatility that lurks just below the surface. Currents run deep.

Vince and I were backpacking up high in the Sierras on a father and son adventure. We had been climbing for most of the day when we came upon the “stream” crossing. Looked easy enough on the map through the eyes of a nine year old and his dad, just two small streams merging together high up amongst the rocks and rubble. Never gave it a second thought until we stood stream side, trying to figure out a way across.

I shouted to Vince above the roar of the rushing water, “IT’S FLOWING REALLY DEEP AND FAST!” I was one step across and having trouble holding my stance. The knee deep, ice-cold water was pushing me down stream, along with everything else in its path. Water will not be denied.

“ON THREE, STEP TOWARDS ME AND PLACE YOUR FEET ON MY FEET, ONE, TWO” he looked scared. “IF YOU FALL DON’T PANIC, I’M HOLDING ON TO THE BACK OF YOUR PACK”, he reached out a shaking hand, grabbed mine, and took a step. “EXCELLENT, NOW STEP BEHIND THAT ROCK AND PLANT A FOOT, I WILL FOLLOW RIGHT BEHIND YOU.” I could feel him tense up, working against the water. “PLANT YOUR FOOT, YOU NEED TO PLANT YOUR FOOT BEHIND THAT ROCK,” my words we rushed, just shy of panic. He stepped forward and landed waist deep mid-stream, shivering and surrounded by chaos. It was so loud the rest of the world faded away.

I stepped in behind him “OK, NOW, ONE MORE BIG STEP AND WE ARE GOOD TO GO. REMEMBER USE YOUR POLES, MAKE SURE YOU PLANT YOUR FOOT AND THEN PUSH HARD TOWARDS THE OTHER SIDE!” He steps out. The hiking poles go first, then the right leg sweeps out, followed by the left leg. He is turned completely around as water rushes up and over his pack. He frantically digs his fingers into my arm. My weight shifts as I brace for the impact, one leg loses contact, my right hand grips the top of a rock searching for purchase. My left hand holds on to the top of his pack. My mind races.  Falling is not an option.

Nature can be scary. It take’s you so close to the edge when it forces a decision. And it happens so fast. The internal conversation rages on: don’t let go, can’t breath, make it stop, not today, help me, give me strength, head above water, let us live, let us go…

With one big pull I swing both of us out of the main channel and into a side pocket where we regain footing.  Maintain composure, “WOOHOO, ALMOST THERE!”  His look of panic changes to one of deep relief and accomplishment. “NICE WORK VINCE, NICE WORK!” We stand together on the other side, wet, cold, shaking, watching and searching in silence, full of awe and wonder. She can be scary sometimes, really, really, scary…

Onward, ever onward->

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