symposium

look

Hadas looks cool, Phil looks on, jeff looks away. . . 

Caesarea


looking down on empty streets, all she can see
are the dreams all made solid, are the dreams all made real
all of the buildings, all of those cars
were once just a dream
in somebody’s head
- gabriel

Now I know this is coming. I certainly watched the bit about Israel in This Is The Sea 4 (or T4 as I’ve come to call it) with some interest. Still, It’s hard to imagine paddling right next to aqueducts built sometime around 22 BCE. I’m having nightmares of getting distracted and eating rocks. Certainly some are easily distracted by Bikinis, (It’s not like I don’t notice…) but history, now that is a major distraction. For a geek like me anyway.

Imagine. . .

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walking through walls

mary0307.jpg
This desert rose
Each of her veils, a secret promise
This desert flower
No sweet perfume ever tortured me more than this
– sting
It was funny. Oh, yeah and a bit depressing. The first year or so after I started my blog as a strange thing started happening. At symposiums people started coming up and saying hello. . . . to Mary! Sure, I could walk around unnoticed, but Mary on the other hand. . . So she’d go to the showers or whatever and come back to the tent and tell me all the names of guys who would come up and say, “Hey, you’re Mary aren’t you!?, I’ve seen you on that blog, by that guy.” Yeah, well, thanks very much guys!! :) To add to that of course Mary’s rolling clip continues to be one of the most watched videos on the website. Leon, Doug, Mark, Roy and I are all just second fiddle. Sad I know.


Well, I bet you’re wondering where Mary’s been of late. Well, she’s been on a bit of a sabbatical for a time. Doing all the things we all do as we seek our place in the world. Something we all must do at some point in life. No getting around it. Kayaks are, as we know not the most important things in life. Then suddenly last week, for the first time in what seems like ages Mary just jumped in the Romany and with a moment’s hesitation reached back for that body memory, set up and rolled, and rolled and rolled. Mary the kayaker has returned!

One thing most of you don’t know is that Mary suffers from an almost nightmarish fear of water. Well, she did anyway. Then this whole kayaking thing started. While I’m out learning to roll or play in surf, Mary had to take tiny steps along the way to slay her dragon. For some, rolling is not about technique, it’s about overcoming a very real fear of being engulfed in a liquid world where everything around you is a surreal, blurry universe without air. It can be a terrifying place. From a time when she could not stand ankle deep in liquid, she moved to sitting in a kayak, forcing herself to fall out, and finally learning to roll. All the while the demon was standing on her shoulder. Then, suddenly and without notice, the demon took her. She was again forced to watch from the beach. It was tough. Over the last year she hardly ever sat in boat. Kayaks became representative of fear and failure. And kayaks in our world are everywhere. kayaking is part of our life. Something she hears about everyday. Conversations just punctuated those fears and made her feel worse about what she was dealing with. So she stopped coming along. It was too hard to watch everyone having fun and feeling somehow like the kid who was not good enough to play too. Of course no one felt that way, and kayaking is just kayaking. No one said she had to paddle. Yet she really wanted to. She wanted to play too. Then recently as I began rolling in the pool daily, she began learning to swim. Slowly with a pfd at first. Weeks past. Then she started swimming without the gear. Then in the deep water with me near by. Then on her own. Until last week when she started for the first time ever, Jumping off the diving board. Wow!

What’s more she’s been off getting buff and tough as we found out last night when she demonstrated how 2 months working out every day at the gym brought on the ability to pin my silly hide when all I really wanted to do was throw another dart from my place about 15 yards from the board. Yeah, you have to be careful when I play darts. I’ve found it much more fun to go for the three pointer! (to mix my sports metaphors) I get a silly joy standing as far away as possible and just arc those dogs in. :) Double Outs’ a bit tough though. ;)

So today’s post is for Mary. Watching her return to life and life in the water has been like watching a flower bloom. Like the return of spring. Welcome back Mary. Good work, good job and it’s great to see you rolling again. I’m very proud of you! :)

On the other hand that means I get to look forward to people stepping past me to say, “Hey, you’re Mary aren’t you!??” Well, that’s ok. She’s worked for it.

Recovering The Satellites

So why’d you come home to this sleepless town, It’s a lifetime commitment, Recovering the satellites, All anybody really wants to know is… when you gonna come down? – Counting Crows

lighthouse1The symposium came to a quiet, contented and sleepy end. Everyone scattered back to their homes or to other events, some to homes just minutes away and others to far flung destinations such as Florida or Newfoundland. I passed the lighthouse on the Muskeegon breakwall one more time as the high-speed ferry jolted out into the darkness to take me home. . . .

So, I got back to Wisconsin in the wee hours of Tuesday morning, carried across the momentarily calm inland sea we call Lake Michigan. After days of sun and blue skies, winds and rain, cormorants, shipwrecks, lighthouses, sand dunes, students, teachers, music, wine, and automated weather reports, I find I’m still disconnected and out of focus. I am awkwardly working to slip back into daily life of phones, deadlines, engine noise and shopping malls with limited success.

I have galleries coming from our trip and from the West Michigan Symposium. Hopefully I will post them this week. Maybe even later today. I am also working on writing down the stories for journal reports in the coming days but for the moment I just want to thank everyone in Michigan for their warm welcome and support as I navigated my way through this first multi-day open water trip and busy symposium to follow. Thank you!!

More to come. . . .

dm.





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