Friday, 26 May 2023

Katsu

 



He was the cat I didn't want. Tiny kitten, eyes as big as saucers, staring at the camera with a distrustful, not to be touched air about him. But he came as a pair, bonded to his bigger, more vocal brother and his rescuer felt they needed each other.  They were feral cats, born in the pig bays of a farm. Sick for a time, lucky to have survived. Extraordinary, the farmer's wife said, what a battle it was to get him to take the antibiotics when the others didn't bat an eyelid and just accepted it. Suddenly I recognised that fierce independence as a self-reliant protection.

It took time and patience. Hours of quiet waiting until he crept out from his hiding places when hunger, curiosity and playfulness got the better of him. He would join his brother in leaping around the furniture, making inquisitive darts past us humans trying to make up their minds - friend or foe? His brother trusted first and then slowly, as his sense of safety grew, he began to inch closer. I learned not to reach out when he approached as his flight reflex would kick in and he would be gone - hours of  building trust undone. Until one day, trembling and tentative, he crept onto my lap, circled around a few times and then hunkered down. I held my breath and slowly let it out as the quiet warm weight of him settled against me.

I can't really explain the connection. I knew almost instinctively he wasn't okay when he slipped in from the garden one evening and onto the chair in the kitchen where I was making dinner. Days of worry followed and I felt his suffering in my bones. He would have been in a lot of pain, the vet said, after they diagnosed an intussuception of his bowel that required major surgery. In all the prodding and poking and medical interventions to save his life over the course of that week, he never made a sound but for a deep purring as I whispered to him over and over that he was safe, he was safe. 

He was snow falling softly. A quiet presence blanketing a winter landscape. The only sound he ever really made was a little chirrup in unexpected moments when he came across me suddenly or I reached out to stroke him when he tip-toed up with his little arched-back. It was a sweet sound, like a little bubble of joy. At night, nestled beside me, I would feel a little paw reach out gently to touch my arm, my face - a reassurance for both of us. I didn't know how much I needed him. Seeing him and his brother together gave me a feeling of wholeness and completeness that healed a part of me I didn't know was broken. Katsu himself eased a loneliness that had been gnawing at me for years. 

This missing - it's familiar - I've been here before. I will settle into again even though I don't want it. Like a timid, distrustful cat, I will circle it awhile before finally giving in. But this time, I will keep the door of my heart unlocked to honour a little "rare blue-eyed" ginger kitten who wasn't supposed to make it but did long enough to nudge it open. 
 

Wednesday, 14 February 2018

Dream-peace

"They talked together late that night, and though always they came back to the bitter matter of what lay before Ged, yet their pleasure in being together overrode all; for the love between them was strong and steadfast, unshaken by time or chance. In the morning Ged woke beneath his friend's roof, and while he was still drowsy he felt such well-being as if he were in some place wholly defended from evil and harm. All day long a little of this dream-peace clung to his thoughts, and he took it, not as a good omen, but as a gift. It seemed likely to him that leaving this house he would leave the last haven he was to know, and so while the short dream lasted he would be happy in it."

from "Wizard of Earthsea" by Ursula K. Le Guin


Monday, 13 November 2017

What are we now

Tigers
What are we now but voices
who promise each other a life
neither one can deliver
not for lack of wanting
but wanting won’t make it so
We cling to a vine
at the cliff’s edge.
There are tigers above
and below. Let us love
one another and let go.
 by Eliza Griswold

Ten simple lines tell the story of what we are now. This is us - clinging to a vine at the cliff's edge, tigers above and below. You holding me in this moment feels like all I've ever missed, wanted or needed. But it's no place to live - on the edge of peril, swinging precariously in mid air with our hearts in our throats. Loving you is the easy part, not even a choice but as necessary to my life as breathing - loving you is not something I can undo, not now, not ever. So I wonder about the letting go - what it might mean. What if we let go together? What if we chose to fall into the unknown? What would that hold for us - certain death maybe or perhaps the tigers are imagined or can be tamed, perhaps we could survive them? Or do we let go of each other, climb back up into our separate lives and face the tigers we know? Or maybe in the letting go, just one of us falls and the other climbs back or stays swinging on the vine. There's a loneliness in that that scares me more than the tigers.

Sunday, 10 September 2017

Letter - Part Two

Do I honestly think I made a mistake?

I honestly don't know. Some days I believe I did, other days I believe a different version of the truth.
You said it was your stupidity - that you pushed me away. But at the time you had your reasons, I didn't try hard enough to understand and I didn't fight to stay. I just got lost in the hurt. Later when you tried to make it right between us, when you braved honesty and asked if we could start over again - I was the one who pushed you away. I had my reasons then too but now, all these years later I don't think they were good ones. I was worn out from the pain of always missing you, tired of being alone and couldn't see the way forward for us to be together in the future. I lost faith in the distance between us disappearing and gave way to doubts about whether or not we were right for each other.

I fell easily for someone else's words and promises in the here and now - that lent even more weight to my doubts. In the end I chose simple and uncomplicated over heartache and uncertainty. At least that's what I thought - turns out I was wrong about that too. I won't detail the wrongs in my marriage here, you know a little from what I've told you but telling it all feels disloyal somehow. And maybe it's no more or less than most relationships struggle with.

There has been good in the choices I made, not just good but wonderful too - I can't deny that although I'm finding it hard to hold on to those memories right now.  But in the back of my mind is always the thought "If this was absolutely the right choice then why are you always thinking of someone else, why can't you leave them behind in the past?" The pain of missing you has never gone away, I have always felt alone on some level and wondered if you felt that too.

My head tells me I should let you go, that a future with you is just a mirage - a fairy-tale in a book that can never be real. It tells me I should make the most of what I have, focus on the present and not give up on the promises I made but work to keep them. The grass is only greener where you water it...

But what if you're the only one doing the watering?


Wednesday, 6 September 2017

Summer's skeleton


"Toward the end of August I begin to dream about fall, how
this place will empty of people, the air will get cold and
leaves begin to turn. Everything will quiet down, everything
will become a skeleton of its summer self. Toward
the end of August I get nostalgic for what’s to come, for
that quiet time, time alone, peace and stillness, calm, all
those things the summer doesn’t have. The woodshed is
already full, the kindling’s in, the last of the garden soon
will be harvested, and then there will be nothing left to do
but watch fall play itself out, the earth freeze, winter come."
by David Budbill
For the first time in a long time it's quiet, i'm alone and i can feel what i feel. 
I miss you.
It's as simple and as complicated as that.

Tuesday, 22 August 2017

Letter: Part One

I promised you a letter but I can't promise it won't be chaos. I don't have the answers to the questions you asked, no certainties except how I feel about you. I don't know how to make the fairy tale real and like you, I'm scared of destroying it in the process. This is all I know:

At the airport, waiting for our luggage and knowing that you were waiting on the other side not so far away, I could hardly breathe. I felt like there were hundreds of wild winged creatures flying around inside me. But as soon as I saw you it all went calm, I knew it would be alright.

Just being near you, sitting beside you, even in silence I felt at peace. I was happy - the kind of happy that doesn't depend on circumstance but just thinks "I'm here with you - nothing else matters." You asked me what I was thinking and I told you I was imagining an alternate reality but in truth I was imagining us there in that moment abandoning all pretence. What it would be like to hold your hand, put my arms around you, kiss away your tears. What it would be like to fall asleep beside you without the ache of knowing that the day after, or the day after that, one of us would have to leave again.

Then there's the actual reality - that in this moment we aren't free to be together and what keeps us apart matters too. In time maybe they will matter less, or we'll find a way to make it all work... there are no guarantees. All I do know is that I hope that I can find the courage and the strength to follow my heart when a crossroad appears. I didn't the first time around - I don't want to make the same mistake again.






Friday, 18 August 2017

Heading home

Wild Geese

"You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees
For a hundred miles through the desert, repenting.
You only have to let the soft animal of your body
love what it loves.
Tell me about your despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.
Meanwhile the world goes on.
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain
are moving across the landscapes,
over the prairies and the deep trees,
the mountains and the rivers.
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,
are heading home again.
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,
the world offers itself to your imagination,
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting —
over and over announcing your place
in the family of things."


by Mary Oliver

 Wild thoughts in my head are still trying to settle themselves into words. But this poem says something of what I feel. How I ache to love what I love, let go of what weighs me down and be free. I've searched for home my whole life and grown tired of trying to make myself stay in places that aren't. Something in me knows where I'm heading, it's moving me across landscapes and I know I will end up where I'm meant to be. There's a kind of peace in that for me; trusting in the natural order of things, how one season leads into another and soon the wild geese are heading home again.