Wednesday, September 19, 2012

WRITING PROMPT



“At first I didn’t know it was fire.”

I’m in a writer’s workshop led by Mary Sojourner, with several other eager disciples. We are by no means novices – the group (OWAC) is not for wannabes; but established, credentialed writers, editors, and even a scruffy publisher who looks like he just rolled in on the “3:10 to Yuma” – greasy hair slicked away from his leathered face, conspicuously sporting a tall felt bowler and long duster, despite the heat.

We’re in the back dining area at Tamarack Lodge, a boxy room lined with knotty pine paneling and old black and white photos, and crowded with tables and chairs. Orange glass lamps are hung too low from the ceiling. We are seated in uncomfortable straight-backed chairs at a cluster of plywood tables (clearly meant for linens) drinking too-strong coffee.

Mary is seated in front of a picture window, through which I can see leaves dancing in the wind like jingling bells. But she’s back lit, so I can’t see her face or expressions. I merely see the silhouette of her round head bob as she doles out anecdotes, wit and suggestions. She’s wise and irreverent. Candid. A little inappropriate. Citing the works of Kerouac and London, she remarks, ‘And that was before hallucinogens,’ (drawing out the word into a seven-syllable, five second utterance), ‘in the days of alcohol, peyote and very bad dope.’

She tells us to slow down. She doesn’t have the answers, she says. She provides a writing prompt, forbids us from stopping, sits demurely (she will bristle at that suggestion, no doubt) keeps track of our 20 minute time allowance, and then we read.

“At first I didn’t know it was fire.

I was at the tail end of the trail ride, eating the dirt of the preceding horses: 20 clip-clopping hooves stirring up the chalky loam on the track to Rainbow Falls in the Eastern Sierra. I rubbed my tongue over the grit covering my teeth, as the rolling, tumbling clouds of dust blocked the guide from my view.

I elected to bring up the rear, I said, because I wanted to trail Lindsey, who had never ridden a horse before; and her mount – a fat-assed mule named Hillbilly – was indeed taking advantage of that; routinely veering off course, going right when the rest went left, and stopping and starting at will. So I stayed behind to marshal her …But in truth, I wanted some solitude. I am a sailor and the ocean is my first love. So I desired a little time alone – an ‘affair’ if you will – with the land.

I was out of earshot of Bobby, the trail guide, and missed his snippets of information about the trail, the Sierras, the falls, the fire. So when we bent around the granite outcropping, and surveyed the mountainside covered with scorched tinder – so many sticks poking up into the bluebird sky; so many logs laying catawampus on the ground – I was aghast. The hills had looked so peaceful and green.  But these stumps looked like legions of tombstones. Like death.

Eventually the word worked its way back. It had been a fire, 20 years ago, that had devastated this sweep of mountains, rushed through the valley, and left these skeletons in its wake. And here – two decades later – was the most nominal regrowth. The slightest hint of regeneration. I never knew a fire could cause such devastation for so long.

So I suppose I am to be writing something fictitious.                         

And how it would be clever to segue into some tale of trial and tribulation … about how the forest fires of our lives can leave decades of devastation, and how hard it is for something new to take hold in the charred soil. And yet, how a plush carpet of green is pushing up between the remains …”

We sit in somewhat humility and awe, presenting our work with apologies and disclaimers, and even though her criticisms are meager (she says nothing about either of the pieces I read. I am either very, very good, or very, very bad) I walk away feeling inspired.

Mary gives me a lift back to the hotel, moving the two stuffed toy ‘guardians’ from the passenger seat to the debris field in the back. We talk easily (‘You’re poor?’ she asks. ‘I’m a writer,’ I emphasize. She nods.) and I notice more than one similarity between us (which I will not reveal, to preserve our dignity).  She gives me a book (“Delicate”) which she refuses to sign (‘W don’t sign for friends, only customers.’) and I feel as if I want to run back to my room and write. I don’t ... but I know I can.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

PRACTICE MAKES ...



PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT


Today’s ‘practice day’ was a day of chaos, and the skippers arrived on stage for their ‘meet the public’ stage show still weary and wearing their PFDs beneath their team shirts. What a pity: these buff sailor boys looking all pudgy and Pillsbury Doughboy-like

I was impressed (and consoled) by their admittance of how challenging the boats and venues are; having felt the new AC has left the rest of us sailors behind. Today’s quotes are very telling:

Terry Hutchinson:         “Every day of match racing is sudden death.”
 Yann Guichard:           “It’s my first time racing in San Francisco – a really challenging place. The conditions were really tweaky.”
Dean Barker:               “We had a little incident” (they flipped) “It’s part of the game now: you make a mistake, and you pay for it.”           
Ben Ainslie:                  “This was a great initiation to the AC45s … I would have enjoyed a gentler introduction.”
“Maxx” Sirena:             (when asked about their ‘spectacular capsize’ last week) “Maybe it was spectacular to you, but not us … obviously we chose the San Francisco venue to do that the first time. And the conditions are tough, it could happen again.”
Russell Coutts:             “It’s a challenging venue.”
Nathan Outteridge:    “We had a bit of a swim the other day … still working out where the limits are.”
Phil Robertson:            (late for the press conference: ‘picking seaweed out of his teeth’) “We went down pretty hard. It was like the first hill of a rollercoaster: I just held on and closed my eyes.”
J.R. Hildebrand – AKA “Captain America” Indy 500 Race Car star and Rookie of the Year – who went on a ride along on one of the boats.
“You don’t have to be going 200 miles an hour to feel like you’re hauling ass … I was very impressed to see how sensitive the boats are, the teamwork, how streamlined (the interactions) are … My job was to stay out of the way and hold on!”






BEEP! BEEP! BEEP! BEEP!

Marina Green was amok with the noises and commotion of set-up. Fork lifts unloading (and sometimes dropping) crates from trucks, quads of burly men (one trailing a dog on a leash, which worries me he’ll trip) carting and positioning panels and displays; cables being laid; tents set up; banners unfurled … for someone (me) who has termed the America’s Cup “over-privileged adults enjoying a costly recess…I defer to the building excitement. 

Several boats slide by the waterfront park, their mainsails towering visibly over the detritus. Fast. “Did you see that?!” Sharon asked as one zipped closely by. But I had turned my head for just a second, and missed it completely: they were that fast. And they weren’t even trying … yet.

Today is the official practice race. We leave the hotel in an hour to walk to the green for the official media meet-and-greet-the-skippers. Later Sharon will head out on a photo boat, where she’ll be positioned to shoot the AC45s as they approach the windward mark; while I head back to the hotel -- to finish up some work so I’m freed up to watch the races the rest of the week (and potentially shoot: both Sharon and Leslie want crowd & color scenes; our M.O. being that they pre-set the buttons on the cameras, tape them over, then I can just snap – LOL).

The fog horns have been bellowing all night – a promise of wind on the race course. Getting a bit excited … 

San Francisco, CA 21 Aug 2012

PHOTO: Sharon & AC book cohorts (L-R) John Owen, co-publisher; Bob Fisher, co-author; Insight Editions Director Michael Madden

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Coffee Karma



Georgia and Bob have a neat little coffee gadget on the counter, and although Georgia walked me through the step-by-steps, this morning’s coffee creation was problematic … 

I thought I was making one thing, but I put in another. An ounce of water shot out and it halted: so I pushed it again (universal solution to all things electronic: push the button again) but eventually realized I’d put an espresso thingee in, so I replaced it with a coffee pod, pushed again … suddenly I had too much water, dribbling on the counter … (all this for a cup of coffee!) and my unintentional blend tasted a bit yuck … So I added some half-and-half, ambled up the stairs (dodging my new BDF – BestDogForever –Buster, who likes to stop right in front of you to make sure you’re still there) and finally, finally sat down for a cup of coffee.

Ewwwww! 

Was the half-and-half bad? I tried again. BLEAH. Sour. As if I didn’t believe (praying for some water-into-wine type miracle?) I took another tiny sip. Gag!

Nope. After all the efforts to make the coffee, and then try, try, TRY to make it palatable, I finally grasped: I had to throw it out and start over again. I headed back down the stairs.

And then, halfway down (as I paused for Buster, who had halted one step ahead of me) I decided I didn’t want a coffee anymore. I wanted something different. I wanted something better

DING! After wasting w-a-y too much time on all sorts of mental mastication and machination and self-flagellation I figured it out. Stop wanting that. Yes I had longed for it, put effort into it; it looked good, smelled good, and I was so eager to drink it down. But in the end: it was sour. ‘Time to pour it down the drain.

And instead of trying to recapture or recreate it I am striving for something different, more, better. Much better. 

I made a cappuccino. Strong. Intensely present. Creamy and sweet and delicious. Better.

ON TURNING 50 (3 years late)


It is cool tonight in San Diego, where – surrounded by adoring (or perhaps just ‘hungry’) cats and a dog – I am taking a nearly unprecedented – of late – respite; reading, writing, drinking wine and smoking a cigar. Prompted by an anthology on Things To Do When You Turn 50 loaned to me by Cheryl (my accountant who surprisingly still talks to me) at my annual scolding; which alternately tells you to ‘stop obsessing about your flaws’ and ‘get plastic surgery’, and ‘start hiking … playing tennis … running’ while you ‘take it easy on yourself and accept yourself as you are’ … I was inspired by Dr. Patricia Farrell’s entry ‘Write Your Own Top 10 List.’

Clever.

So here goes. Now that I’m …. 40-10 (I still can’t say the F-word) (plus) my words of wisdom are …

1.    Forget your mistakes. Seriously: so many of my blunders took place so many years ago, they are ancient history. No living soul probably remembers them. Only the dinosaurs.

2.    Keep whatever hours you like. Get up when you want. Go to bed when you want. Nap. I still work 80 hours a day – sheesh!

3.    Accept that some things are water under the bridge. That the sun has set on some dreams and goals. Savor sweet memories; write fictitious novellas about the others. And this just adds to the urgency of …

4.    It’s time for the full court press on the things that haven’t transpired yet. Do the marathon (ok: half-marathon). Climb Kilimanjaro. Get the Captain’s license. Take Spanish lessons. Move to a foreign city. I’m not getting any younger.

5.    Do not let cheap wine pass your lips. Nor crappy beer. Better to have one luscious glass of Cab Franc than a whole bottle of (ptuh! ptuh!) Up-chuck Chuck. You know: unless stranded on a desert island and dying of thirst. Ditto on cigars. And food. We need to consume less. Share more. Waste not. Want not. You get the cliché … Consume judiciously. Give the rest away. Be generous to a fault.

6.    Be the first one to jump in the water. Or off the rocks. Skinny dip. Swim under the water falls. Do the daring thing. It’s exhilarating. And scary. You won’t die … probably. But if you do, much better than an aneurysm! 

7.    Dance as often as you like. By yourself. Or with friends. Or even better: with handsome men: soldiers, sailors, cowboys, young Latin journalists …  Close. Who the fuck cares?! Considering women ‘my age’ are nearly transparent, no one will even notice you. And if they do … see item # 8.

8.    Bang one out on a tropical beach if you feel like it. As my counselor (Yes! I just started going to a shrink and on our first meeting she earned her keep) chided me, peering over her glasses: ‘You’re a grown woman …!’ Exactly! So flirt, kiss that stranger, hold hands, lose your bikini top, whatever floats your (consensual) boat.

9.    In fact: have sex as frequently as possible. And when you find yourself in bed with an utterly delightful guy, do not – at any cost – get out of bed. I don’t care if the President is on the phone or Ed McMahon is at the door with the big cardboard check (is he even still alive?) Nothing is as fabulous as a good roll in the hay. And another. And another …

10.    Accept who/what you are. Well I find this the hardest one. Embrace who/what you are, what time (and tragedy) (and gravity) has manifested in your person and body. Of character and fortitude: continue to shape who you are and what you are becoming. That is totally within your control. 

11.    Be an excellent role model. Know that you are a role model: be brave and act with intention. I cannot believe I waited so many years to say some of this shit. But life is way too short and I can see the end of the runway from here; and although I personally intend to enjoy every remaining minute, I also want to leave a legacy and a roadmap for the future, that says it’s okay to enjoy life. That’s the plan!

12.    Don’t worry about being too precise or too accurate. If you need to take a little longer to accomplish something right … ie if your ‘Top 10’ becomes ‘12’ … so be it. Better to get it right.

SELF PORTRAITS OF ME @ 53 ... BIKING MAUPITI (TOP), HUAHINE BEACH (LEFT)

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

what day is it??

We have to look to see what day it is: our time in French Polynesia is such a blur, with one wonder after another.

Yesterday we left Maupiti after a FABULOUS layover where we went biking, snorkeling, swimming, dinghy riding, kayaking; ate, drank, relaxed; and repeated it all over again.
Today (Wed.) finds us in Raiatea - having stopped at the base last night to replenish our water and provisions (mainly beer & wine) and have our generator looked at. Shortly we will leave for Huahine to meet up with Liz Clark (www.swellvoyage.com) ... everyone is doing well, havinga great time - too darned busy having fun to write or pirate wifi so  remember: no news is good news!! Look at KC Matlock's FB for pix, I will post more hopefully tonight! 
~ Betsy  

Sunday, May 13, 2012

GREMLINS OR GUIDES?

Bora Bora! We arrived at this famed island after a gorgeous sail from Taha'a. The departure from which was spectacular, as we shot through the pass in the coral reef: with massive waves breaking on either side of us. 

Thursday we'd had a wonderful morning (it started early with 7AM departure from our anchorage - which meant arising at 6 to get the coffee etc rolling - to get to Alain and Christina's by 8) Alain packed so much into the 5 hour 'Vanilla Tour' which in fact covered the entire island; the history, heritage, plant origins and medicinal purposes ... all delivered in a gentle velvety French accent. It was magnifique!

The rest of the afternoon we lounged, napped, shopped (at Sophie Boutique) kayaked,  cocktailed - all from our 47' catamaran HUDSON ..  It was another super day.

This morning we had a more leisurely pace, but still were off by 8AM for our departure to Bora Bora. The sail was beautiful, uneventful (in a good way) and after eyeballing Mai Kay Marina (which was packed) we came to Bora Bora Yacht Cllub where we tied up for water (alas the ice was gone) then picked up a moring, and mostly lounged, swam, laughed a good deal, before dinner at BBYC.

SO much is going on and at such a nonstop pace of wonder after wonder after wonder, i have little time digest and write.  

Ironically, I am having technological issues ... I think I've killed the Canon Rebel for good. 

Yes, I admit I am a camera killer: i have hard on them. But it simply doesn't want to work. I've tried new cards, batteries, etc - I htink it is tired after so much rough traveling here & there. But I have my backup camera ... althoug that one does not want to charge: not via my laptop, not plugged directly into the wall, etc.

So I am wondering how Im supposed to 'work' - do take pictures for the guest and for articles and for my blog and .wonder also, is this some sort of sign that I'm not supposed to be shooting? Bizarre. I am trying not to let it get to me, becuase if I do I will totally wig out.

Been cooking and cleaning a lot and had a tiring day. Breakfast & lunch aboard (plus cleanup), mooring, docking, refilling water, dumping trash, remooring, did a bucket of laundry,and when the dinghy didn't fire up, paddled the boat to BBYC. So fairly exhausted - as I should be at 11:30 I suppose, so good night OX 

SATURDAY
Another fun day following a fairly sleepless night. The cat swung wildly on her mooring as rain squalls pummeled through. In the crew quarters - accessible only by a top hatch - this means you are trapped: unless you choose to fling open the big hatch, exposing youself and your bunk to the torrents of rain, dash across the deck to the salon, and check hatches. Instead tonight, I dogged my hatch and hoped that everyone would fend for themselves. They did.

We did a foray into town today: souvenir shopping for some, a light & early lunch, but for me more grocery shopping. This is a fascinating hobby: grocery shopping in foreign lands. It is always a mystery to see what they do and don't eat in other cultures, and other peculiarities: like the lack of eggs in French Polynesia. Presumably a bout of salmonella led the islanders to slaughter all their hens, so we cannot get any oeufs. 'Makes certain types of baking - and my planned Mother's Day quiche & brunch - a bit impossible. We'll make do. 

We got a r/t lift from Bora Bora YC (charming new management) downtown, then returned to the cat, stowed all thenew provisions (and massive quantities of beer & wine) then headed sw to an anchorage off a motu where the surroundings and snorkeling were amazing. Where the channel ended the cobalt water was streaked with neon greens and electric blues ... we did a little swimming in the shadow of Bora Bora's famed silhouette, then headed to Bloody Mary's for a big Saturday night ... closed! Impossible! We had nine crazy women ready to dance on the tabletops but for some unannounced reason it was not open.

Instead we had bbq'd tuna (we got from some fishermen late yesterday: marinated with wine and herbs, and dressed with a wasabi mayonaisse) plus fried rice with freshly stir fried veggies. We have been fairly well fed: breakfast and lunch or dinner each day, plus cocktail hours ... I try each day to get a jump on whatever meal(s) we are going to serve aboard and honestly, the prep and cooking and cleaning up can be exhausting. But tonight, as everyone howled around around the table, and the revelry continued on the foredeck where these women - many strangers until this trip - laughed and joked and really connected, makes it worthwhile. Although my writing is suffering ... and my photography nil (I looked into buying a new camera in town: a cheapie Nikon Coolpics would be 350K CFP - roughly $400 US: forget it! So funny: how my goal was to write and shoot and here I am, hands tied as far as doing either. Well how nice.

Just 10PM but we hope to leave for Maupiti tomorrow: weather permitting. No news is good news, I suppose!
XOXO 
HAPPY MOTHER'S DAY!!