Still Sundays

May 15th.

Some dance for the dead because they somehow still live. Sooner or later you come to what you recognize. Art is the marrow in the bones of time.

 

If you would like to know what Still Sundays is about, please take a quick gander here and just read the third paragraph. Thanks.


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Rain came with a rapid succession early morning this Sunday. Rain has a heavy hand some mornings when it pours like this. It’s not sweet, smooth and aromatic like some cat in a dream that walks by you.  Instead it is a wake-up call by the sergeant of time. The drumming pour shakes you awake.

Oh New York, New York you always get dirtier after the rain. Cloudburst rains, like tears, although they flush cleanse a lot but not without showcasing all the grime (the glitter and filth alike).

 

I went on a long walk Friday. Down 8th avenue from 34th street till I had reached the beginning of the New York labyrinth: intersection of West 4th and 11th. Usually the cross-section is a numbered street and an avenue, the grid with which most are familiar,  or at the very least some noun intersects a digit, but below Greenwich Village the streets are as good as if within a dream.  I know I am lost but I don’t try to find my way out either. This usually works if one is not running late to meet company, otherwise it can be frustrating and often many resort to hailing the land sharks, the quasi-omniscient yellow cabs.

You can only go so far without finding your way. You can either ask for directions or keep walking, but sooner or later you come to what you recognize to take you where you want to go. In New York. And in life.

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I learned a friend passed away this week. Days are a blur, time is drunk, I am sober.

I met Valerie on a bus ride from New York City to Philly during my hiatus from New York in March of 2010. I happened to be back in New York for a short visit although I was temporarily docked in California. I  was on my way to visit one of my best friends Erica. In the past I had driven whenever time would open the gateways to a long weekend to visit her and I had never minded the drive. But my car was now in California and it was my first time taking the bus. I was surprised to learn how convenient the two hour bus ride was compared to driving and how many commuted daily between Philly and New York City for work. It was the most uncertain period of my life in some ways. I suppose all life is uncertain but I was hyper-cognizant of how undetermined everything seemed and in fact was.

Valerie, an attractive woman in her 50s, was a widow without any children of her own but had two step-children, and filled with a vibrancy only reserved for those who are dancers in a sky where stars never burn out. She was president and CEO of  the successful consulting business she began twenty-five years ago, providing training in technology and critical business skills to private and public institutions.

We kept in touch via email and when I finally returned to New York City in June of 2010  she came over to stay for the weekend. She was in great physical health and none of the nail polish colors on her toe nails matched. She said she had always painted a different color on each toe nail ever since she could recall. She had been to Ghana so she could relate to my attachment to South Africa and desire to return to Africa. She mentioned I must visit Kenya. Ghana had just lost in the World Cup and I was still gutted over that loss.

There are people who come in our lives and speak a crystal truth so clear that we have no choice but to see ourselves anew.

She said something to me that weekend. I disagreed with her although I knew the accuracy. Her being accurate demanded a shift in my worldview which I was not prepared for or didn’t quite know how to manifest.

In July of 2010 I was still not convinced that I was going to do this—this writing thing—for life. I just wanted one shuttle ride to touch the light of one loony story and return. Doesn’t everyone want to go to the moon once? The galaxy of stories are a compulsion now and frankly I don’t know how far my gear will take me but I am way past a lunar landing. Small leaps, giant steps, dark holes of chaos, collisions with eternity in stillness…

The inertia induced by fears offers a comfortable and tempting guesthouse against gliding in horizons that are at once dreams come true and dreams I never dreamt.

We kept in touch but I didn’t see Valerie again given I did begin writing seriously, which is to say, I started living in some bubble that only I could prick every now and again with thoughts of mediocrity or upon persistent requests by friends to join them to smell air outside the creative air pocket.  Luminous nebulae appear brighter than they actually are. The only way to come up for air when dressed in this hydrophillic scuba gear made for the ocean of words  is to convince myself that what I am doing is somehow just not good enough. If I don’t, I can stay here without regard to much, where I can feel every cell in my lung exhale words, a respiratory system beyond ‘good enough’ and ‘great’.  It’s a dance for the dead because they somehow still live and stories and art is one medium.


Out of the blue is sometimes so blue it is black. Valerie had just finished ministry school, an area she always wanted to learn more. She gave her first ‘sermon’ on Sunday, mother’s day, and died Monday due to an unexpected heart attack. Her sister who returned my mother’s day text said, “It was her time.”

Her sister also said although she had never met me she knew of me because Valerie had mentioned staying with “a woman named Annie in New York who was a writer and she had befriended her on a bus” and “and child let me tell you, Valerie never, ever, ever stays the night at other people’s houses.”

I didn’t know this. I had never even said I was a writer.

However, Valerie did send me one email that had said, “Always take time to pick pennies, it will remind you to trust yourself.”

I told my mother about the unexpected sudden loss.

Mama said, “Miss every day if it so is, but live every day too.”

Death is indeed a continuum if you are living.

I only wish Valerie had expressed how special it was for her to stay with me. I would have liked to know then too. Although I don’t know how it would have made any difference in my hosting.

 

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I watched Herzog’s spellbinding documentary  Cave of Forgotten Dreams last night.

Although at one point we might have been evolving we are most definitely trapped in some destructive stasis for quite some time.

But this is no surprise, evolution has always been a struggle against entropy, perhaps entropy is our natural state then.

We have paper money without real trade, we are exchanging without sharing, we are creating with metaphors never experienced, singing to lyrics we are not even capable of actually feeling because we will never allow ourselves certain experiences. We are drawing caricature images that are a reflection we can’t see because our eyes are open too wide and the mirror within cracked.

Civilizations have come and gone, risen and fallen, again and again.  Art is not merely to leave our personal thumbprint, despite how often we think that. I can’t help but wonder if art and literature is indeed an attempt to leave artifacts to remind us of what we are capable, the good and bad. Maybe a generation will come and finally spiral out of the dizzy cycles.

 

 

An artist tells a muse he could create the best portrait ever if only she declares her love for him. She answers she loves him but not the kind of love where she desires him. He can’t create that portrait although he continues to create.

I wish for him to meet the spirits that live in the cave of forgotten dreams, where they created spellbinding art without even as much as signing their name at the bottom.

In humans, bone marrow in large bones produces new blood cells. Bone marrow is also a vital element of the lymphatic system, as it produces lymphocytes and acts to prevent the backflow of lymph. Lymph picks up bacteria and brings them to lymph nodes to be destroyed.On average, bone marrow constitutes 4% of the total body mass of humans.

Art is the marrow in the bones of time.

 

 

~a.q.s.

14 responses to “Still Sundays”

  1. Becky says:

    So you know… meeting you and calling you friend means a great deal to me.
    I have tears in my eyes from your Still Sunday today, beautiful.

    • annie says:

      Dear Becky, It was a pleasure to meet you. When again in Nashville, I would love to meet up again. : ) I appreciate your support of my work and am as inspired by your courage to live life on your terms. : )

  2. nayla says:

    Beautifully written as usual,especially ‘You can only go so far without finding your way’….after reading all about Caves of Forgotten Dreams…felt a nice feeling about those unknown artists who are long gone but still left such strong imprints of human emotions,…drawings need no language.They are understood by all.It reminded me of Caves of Marabar in E.M.Fosters novel ‘A Passage to India’written in 1924, with one big difference that caves of Marabar gave a very creepy feeling of spirits and darkness.It’s so interesting to see that when caves are well lighted and fitted with modern security cameras, surroundings become so comfortable .

    • annie says:

      Dear Nayla, Thank you very much. I have not read A Passage to India in its entirety although I am familiar with E.M.’s other works. I find it interesting how often spirits are portrayed in literature and film as creepy and dark. I think it is our living perception of life that makes them appear so. Moreover, I appreciate the connection you draw with caves and spirits. The movie is great and every scientist points to feeling something they couldn’t quite explain when that far deep within. Many thanks for stopping by.

  3. kari m. says:

    Dear Annie, as I`ve lost the person dearest to me to bone marrow cancer, this post is particularly meaningful to me. Thank you.

    • annie says:

      Dear Kari, I appreciate your courage to share that with me and to show me how it resonates with you on another level. Kind thanks, always.

  4. naomibacker says:

    Oh Death, what are we suppose to learn from you and from all those who disappear into the deep seas of sleep? Death grinned and then smiled at me and said, “I have nothing to teach you.” I looked again and saw Life. She drew closer, touched my face, cupped it gently in her hands and whispered into my forehead. ~ “It will teach you my ultimate nature. Be still and know that I am.”

    inside the stillness of your Sunday valley…
    ~naomi

    • annie says:

      Dear Naomi, thanks for stopping by and your passionate and honest response. In my worldview, we learn from life about death and it is not a deep sea of sleep but some kind of waking. Thank you for”Be still and know that I am”. I appreciate your thoughts always.

  5. tish says:

    It was this that made my heart smile today:

    “We have paper money without real trade, we are exchanging without sharing, we are creating with metaphors never experienced, singing to lyrics we are not even capable of actually feeling because we will never allow ourselves certain experiences. We are drawing caricature images that are a reflection we can’t see because our eyes are open too wide and the mirror within cracked”
    ♥ thank you for Still Sundays. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you!

  6. LunaJune says:

    my sunday was not still.. although it had great moments of meditation .. did 2 long mediations with a auditorium full of people.. it was indepth and awesome..
    today is now monday as I walk with you down those rainy streets of New York… Toronto is a grid too so really you can walk and be a little lost but eventually you know where you are.
    soo sorry about your friend.. she painted her toes like me… a rainbow of colour to brighten the day when I had to look down… and to give strangers an easy icebreaker :~)

    amazing how we meet..the ones we keep

  7. I have done that walk down New York many times myself during my time in Manhattan. “You can only go so far without finding your way,” What a fine way to move on with a bit less fear of getting lost, although getting lost can also be a way of moving ahead. Reminds me of “Rebecca Solnit’s field guide getting lost”. Enjoyed the post Annie, as usual.

    • annie says:

      Dear Peter,
      It is always a talisman in the wind to have you stop by…. I did not know of Rebecca Solnit’s work and now having researched some I somehow feel…well…’better’…or less lost given the path I have chosen which is very unattached to traditional measures of literary success….

      I admire your work as an artist so it means a lot when you add more to this stillness. Many thanks for much.

      ~a.