Cedar

A blog and a dog

Month: August 2023

Taking Heart

I always marvel at Cedar’s ready-to-go-ness each morning, and her incredible intuition about my emotions. This morning, again, she found me in bed and backed into me with a full on back-spoon, along with a satisfying little growl. 

It’s been a summer of “celebrations of life.” I risk writing about them here in a dog blog because each deserves its own space for tribute and celebration, and yes, mourning. But there’s something about pet ownership, and maybe a bit about this pet’s ownership, that brings them together for me. I think about this in disordered ways, like the confused blooming and dying and growing and molding I’m seeing each day on the Big Tree Trail. 

First there was a beautiful celebration of Chris, an absolutely dedicated father who’s daughter created a slide set of heart-rending tenderness, set in part to the tune, “Always Be Humble and Kind.” This man’s best friend gave a rousing ad-libbed speech about how Chris had the ability to “Show ‘em” rather than talk about it, when it came to giving love to others. Somehow, tragically, the humble and kind father lost his ability to keep showing them. (Brain chemistry can be so resilient and then so fragile.) I’m thinking about his family’s love in marking his passing with celebration, and how that love will endure and guide what they show to themselves and their loved ones.

Then there was Dave, my former boss, who in all honesty wasn’t really considered to be great at his job. We gathered on a sunny day at a beachside shelter, told funny stories about versions of his innocent love for the water and boating. To a person, the testimony showed that he was fantastic at his job, when you realized he interpreted his highest duty as showing kindness. 

Dave’s friend, Al, speaks to Dave’s kindness. Maybe Dave is still mentoring me.

There was Cayman, 17, who died doing his favorite thing in the world—taking risks and jumping off high things. His sister revealed that he died the way he wanted to, that he hadn’t really believed he’d be old some day. His brother told the story of his determination to find the strength of his own will. One day when they were boat cruising, young Cayman walked right off a dock in his pajamas. When they fished him out, he revealed he was trying to find out how straight he could walk with his eyes closed, and how long he could do it. 

Finally, last night, I watched the Mass and slide show from the celebration of life for Marge, Katrina’s mom. (Why I wasn’t there is its own little tragedy.) The priest in his homily ran with Katrina’s reference to Marge’s love for St. Francis, saying words attributed to him, and giving tribute to the way Marge lived her life and made others feel. “Preach the gospel at all times, and if necessary, use words.”  In Katrina’s take, Marge always gave everyone in her home a “felt sense of belonging.” When you act like that, the priest remarked, “People notice. They take heart.”

And so these celebrations of life allow us to “take heart” —to learn from the examples of others’ hearts. I’m learning this summer that I have a long way to go to “show ‘em” and that I too often land in St. Francis’ “if necessary” end of the spectrum, needing words to fill in the gaps.

One reason posts have been so sparse this summer, is that I had the rare treat of traveling the West of Ireland for seven days with Katie. I thought about her mom, who I would meet just a few days after my last trip to Ireland, the whole time Katie and I traveled together. We still don’t have a convincing cause of death for Ali other than “enlarged heart”; I think it’s entirely feasible she died of broken heart syndrome. In other words, she loved too hard. Maybe she broke herself on St. Francis’ altar. Maybe she kept her eyes closed like Cayman, or lost her heart’s resilience after trying just a little too hard to do it all. 

I don’t necessarily believe in unconditional love for loves beyond family love. Our relationships require conditions to contain them and to help us sustain ourselves and our love.  We can love too little or break ourselves by loving too hard, or at the wrong times. But I do believe in kindness. 

In both kindness and unconditional love, in heartbreak and in a daily celebration of life, I’m thankful for my tail-wagging, spooning companion. She helps me take heart every single day.

Dog Days

Dog Days bright and clear
Indicate a happy year;
But when accompanied by rain,
For better times, our hopes are vain.

The Farmer’s Almanac, “The Dog Days of Summer”

Well then. I can tell already that my first blog post in … I don’t know… a few natural disasters… is not going to be, as a local music performer billed himself, tinged by hope. According to The Farmer’s Almanac, The Dog Days of Summer (from early July to mid-August) “coincide with the rising at sunrise of the Dog Star, Sirius, as well as with hot and sultry weather.”

Dog Days have come and gone this summer. In America (as in pretty much all of you who are not us in Alaska), dog days are those hot, lazy days, when Sirius the Dog Star is warning the Egyptians of drought and everyone else of the dangers of Bud Light and sun poisoning. 

Cedar’s dog days… the heart of summer…were apparently good ones. I’ve been gone a lot this summer, and she’s had plenty of love, from Katie, from return house sitter and all-star human, Tenley, from Aaron and family at Shelter Island. But if we’re to believe the Farmer’s Almanac, what’s to come may not be so “sultry.” 

While America hid from fires and skin cancer, we’ve had quite a freak show here, too— a jökulhlaup, a rare thunderstorm, an atmospheric river, and for whatever reasons, a massive blog post drought. 

A jökul-what, you ask? Like “atmospheric river” this term was non-existent to all but specialists until a few years ago. It is not, in fact, an Icelandic heavy metal band. (I don’t think.)  Instead, it refers to a sub-glacial release of water. In Juneau, we have a basin — basically a huge, icy lake—that releases each summer, flooding the Mendenhall Lake, then the river which courses through Juneau suburbia. 

For many in recent years the jökulhaup has been a bit of a party. Pull up the lawn chairs and watch what floats by in the silty glacial river. But this year the lawn chairs went to higher ground. The graphs showing the expected peaks and the receding water levels were erased and modified on an hourly basis (which began to seem like eternities). It wasn’t long before many were up Shit’s Creek without a yard or a foundation. Trees gave up their hundreds of year holds, and houses 50 yards back from the river began to plunge in. 

Friend Betsy posted on social media, “It’s been quite a show. Things that cruised by this evening – massive trees, a refrigerator, pillows, couch cushions, a roof, part of a bathroom, a wall, all kinds of insulation, wiring The river is making a roaring sound as it sweeps by.” A friend posted, “My house just fell into the river. Let me know if you find my stuff.” My neighbor found a box on a beach 10 miles from his place. The police found his Glock pistol floating in the busy harbor may miles downstream. Still missing: a cat and backpack full of cash. 

A day later, a rare thunderstorm and torrential rain. A week later, an atmospheric river rain event. Then another, much smaller, jökulhlaup. No one near the river has returned to normal.

None of this is news from Cedar’s point of view, as far as I can tell. What is news is some doggy love (her Shelter Island summer fling, Libby) and a bit of cousin dog (who nearly lost her own yard) chill time, too. 

They’re kind of all Dog Days around here. Still, maybe it’s worth acknowledging that I’m breaking the drought of the dog blog, with no help needed from the watery world in which she snores comforting sounds to soften vain hopes. 

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