10/17/2024

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

Having ambition in the arts is never an easy thing. Whether a person wants to be an artist, a musician, an actor, a dancer, or, you know, a writer, you’re heading into a profession that doesn’t have an obvious ladder, or obvious steps, or even an obvious path. Worse, those that hold the positions that can push you forward hold opinions and observations that are subjective…one person might think you’re the best thing ever, while the other doesn’t give you the time of day.

Makes you want to run right out and do these things, right?

Well, if you’re actually a writer, artist, musician, actor, dancer – yes, you still run right out and do it. But you also question yourself every step of the way.

Last week was the launch of my novel, Don’t Let Me Keep You. It’s my fifteenth book, eighth novel – numbers which mean a lot to me. Why? Because each subsequent book validates me, allows me to believe, at least for a little bit, before the next bout of self-doubt comes, that yes, I am actually the person I think I am.

I’ve always said about writers that they are the weirdest conundrum – a huge ego (I can write a book and everyone will love it!) combined with a crippling lack of self-confidence (why did I ever think I could do this? I can’t even write a grocery list!). And I am very much a part of that conundrum.

On top of what was probably the conundrum showing  up naturally in me, given who I am and what I feel driven to do, there was the duality of my young life. I lived in a family that called me – outright – stupid. My mother even used the dreaded and now (thank God) forbidden R-word on me. Then I’d go to school and be told I was the exact opposite. Instead of the R-word, G-words were applied (genius, gifted). In one high school (I went to three), my teachers and counselor even made me take an IQ test three different times to show me the results, to convince me that I was not stupid. The excess praise probably didn’t help me much, but it didn’t hurt me either. It allowed me to start questioning things.

And it led me to throw aside all the expectations and rules thrown at me and follow what I most wanted to do in life. Which is why there are now 15 books and hundreds of individual publications in the short story, poetry, and essay.

And why there is still that constant questioning. “Is this the one that is going to make people realize that I’m really not any good at all?”

Yeesh. It’s a life.

One of my Moments of Happiness this week happened at the launch of Don’t Let Me Keep You. The room was packed; standing room only, despite my obsessive fears that not a single person would show up. After the presentation, I was signing books when a woman shyly approached my table. “I’ve read everything you’ve ever written, and getting a new book from you is like going on an adventure.”

An adventure! No one ever described my work that way. As I watched her leave the bookstore, hugging the book to her chest, I had no doubt that the book would be read from cover to cover that night. And maybe even read again. And again.

And, in that Moment, in that bookstore, at that very second, I had no doubt that the book would be loved.

For that second, anyway.

But even better was the night before the launch.

Historically, I have trouble choosing what to read at events like this. So, at two o’clock in the morning, seventeen hours away from the launch, I was in my office, poring over the book. What chapter? What section? What paragraphs? I knew I wanted to read a bit at the beginning of the evening, and then another bit at the end. As I paged forward and backwards, I decided I wanted the first reading to be the part in the book where my main character, Hildy, chooses what she wants to do with her life. Then, as I searched for the second reading, I thought about my final chapter, which is the only chapter in the book that includes the entire family on the page. I turned to it.

And then I gasped. I’d forgotten that the event grounding that chapter was Hildy’s silver wedding anniversary to her husband.

And the day before the launch was my silver wedding anniversary to Michael, which I wrote about last week.

Reading from that chapter would be a way to bring Michael to the launch. I am not Hildy, and Hank, her husband, is not Michael. But the blending of experiences would allow Michael into the room.

But while that was a Moment, it wasn’t THE Moment. That happened when I marked the pages, and then closed the book.

And I said out loud, to my dog, Ursula, and to my cats, Oliver and Cleocatra, “This is a damned good book. The best one yet.”

Oh, yeah.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

The crowd at the launch of Don’t Let Me Keep You. (photo by Ellen Schneider)
Yay!
Reading from the book. (photo by Barb Geiger)
Answering questions. (photo by Barb Geiger)

10/10/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

Yesterday was the silver anniversary of my marriage to Michael. Twenty-five years. Of course, Michael was not here to celebrate with me, and so the day was a difficult one. But it was also a day of reflection and sorting through happy memories.

When I married Michael, he made me promise, as part of our vows, that I would stay married to him for at least 17 years and 1 day. I was married to my first husband for 17 years, and that ended in divorce. Michael wanted to make sure that he lasted longer.

I stayed true to my promise and then some.

Our marriage wasn’t perfect by any means, but then, I don’t think any marriage is. When I told a friend the other day that our marriage had its difficulties, her eyes got wide. “What?” she said. “Really?”

Really. It shouldn’t be a shock, I don’t think. But the point is, despite the difficulties, we were still together, with no end in sight. Until a negligent driver changed all that.

I really ruminated over our 25th anniversary. We were supposed to be taking a cruise through Europe, a first for both of us – neither of us has been on a cruise, and neither of us has been to Europe. I canceled the trip while Michael was still in the hospital. It was pretty clear that it wouldn’t be possible, with all of the recovery we thought he had in front of him. I kept thinking back to my ex-husband’s parents’ twenty-fifth anniversary. I was still married to him then, and the whole family took his parents out to a lovely restaurant in Port Washington, WI. We gave them a silver tray with their names engraved on it, and the date of their marriage. I remember that I had prime rib, and had two grasshoppers for dessert. And I daydreamed about my own silver anniversary, when I would have children who would think to throw this kind of lovely party and gift me and my husband a beautiful, but you know, useless, silver tray.

That first marriage didn’t make it to twenty-five years.

And now, my second marriage, the one that was lasting, didn’t make it either.

Technically.

I really perseverated. And felt angry.

And then I thought…I’m going to celebrate it anyway.

As far as I’m concerned, I’m still married, even if I’m supposed to check off “widowed” on legal forms. And we did make it to twenty-five years. The fact that we aren’t together is from an outside source, not from our own choice. We aren’t the ones responsible for tearing our marriage apart.

So I sat and thought about it for a while. I am currently wearing my wedding ring and Michael’s. I thought about having the diamonds removed and having a new ring created, with those diamonds, but in a silver setting.

I thought about ordering my own useless silver tray.

I thought about taking myself out to a fine restaurant, overlooking Lake Michigan, and eating prime rib and drinking a couple grasshoppers.

But none of those felt right.

I thought hard about Michael. His favorite season was from October to January. October is our anniversary and our daughter Olivia’s birthday. November is Thanksgiving, his second favorite holiday. He loved to cook. December is Christmas, his favorite holiday, and also his birthday, two days after Christmas.

I thought about decorating our Christmas trees year after year. Before Michael and I were married, he decorated his apartment to the extreme. He had one of those tiny ceramic villages spread through every room. A large tree filled with ornaments celebrating Old Time Radio, old movies, Monopoly pieces, and one weird little ornament in the shape of a spatula, given to him by a beloved nephew.

He even decorated his bird cage. The parakeets had their own little tree.

So I tossed the idea of a useless silver tray out the window. Then I focused onto Christmas ornaments. I ordered a crystal and silver ornament, silver for the anniversary, and had it engraved with “25th Anniversary” and “Michael & Kathie” and “10/9/1999”. For now, it’s sitting next to me on my desk. It will go on this year’s tree. And then after Christmas, I will find a place to hang it in the condo for the rest of the year.

When the ornament arrived, I felt at peace.

It will do.

We made it twenty-five years, even if he isn’t right here standing next to me. There are some things a negligent driver can’t destroy.

Our marriage, our partnership, is one of them.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

One of our wedding pictures. Odd shape because it used to be in a heart-shaped frame.
Our ornament.

10/03/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

Well, if you know me, if you read me, if you’re a student or a client, or if you follow me on social media, you likely know what this moment is all about.

Today, October 3rd, 2024, my 15th book was released. My 15th book in 14 years. My 8th novel.

Don’t Let Me Keep You.

By now, you might think that this is old hat. That I woke up this morning, yawned, stretched, had my breakfast, let the dog out, pet the cat, met a few clients, glanced at my calendar, and thought, Oh, that’s right. My book comes out today.

Oh, hell, no.

There was a time that I thought of giving up on ever having a novel, or any type of book, published. It was a hard, hard thing. I published for the first time at 15 years old. That was a really, really long short story where I rewrote the story of Christ in 1970’s slang. I was inspired by reading The Big Fisherman by Lloyd C. Douglas at the same time that I was listening to the rock opera Jesus Christ Superstar by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice. So I wrote the story and sent it off to, of all places, the Catholic Herald Citizen. They loved it and published it as a serial.

Whenever I thought of who I was and what I wanted to do, the answers were that I was a writer and I wanted to write. Everything. I especially loved fiction, but I loved poetry too. A beloved creative writing teacher in high school told me to stick with fiction after we had a poetry unit, and that demolished me enough that I hid the fact that I wrote poetry for years and years. But I fully embraced fiction, especially the short story, but the novel too. Everything I did seemed to point me down the road of success – the early publication, followed by more and more short story publications, being accepted into graduate level creative writing classes when I was only a freshman at the University of Wisconsin – Madison, going through four agents, bing, bing, bing, bing, all of whom promised bigger and better things, a personal letter from Ray Bradbury, encouraging me to keep going.

The novel remained elusive. But I didn’t quit.

One of the hardest moments for me came when a student asked me at a reading why I couldn’t get a book out. He said, “You’ve done everything right. You have the reputation, the credits, the hard-to-get agents, all of it. Why no book?” And all I could answer was, “I don’t know.”

My parents didn’t believe I was any good at what I did. They told me I couldn’t major in English or creative writing in college;  I had to major in something that would give me a job. So I tried. I majored first in Special Education, with an emphasis on autism, which is ironic now. I very nearly flunked out of that, and switched to social work. I grew so bored, I fell asleep in lectures. So I changed my major to what I wanted to do – write – and told my parents if they didn’t want to pay their portion of my education anymore, I would drop out and get a job until I could afford to come back. They continued, but from that point on, if someone asked them what I was doing in college, they said, “Oh, she’s getting married.” Which I was. But that’s not what I was doing.

A huge low point for me came when my father told me he felt my college education was the biggest waste of his money in his lifetime.

But I kept going. Editors believed in me. Agents believed in me. And I believed in me.

I went through agent after agent, who would try to sell my most recent book for a year, then tell me to shelve it and write the next one. I followed their advice until The Home For Wayward Clocks. There was something about that book. I wasn’t going to give up on it, even after my agent told me to shelve it and try with another book, and I fired her instead and went out on my own.

And I sold it. By myself. My first novel, The Home For Wayward Clocks, sold when I was fifty years old and was released when I was fifty-one.

I will never, ever, ever forget receiving that acceptance email.

By then, both my parents were gone. They never saw any of my books. But I wasn’t in this to prove anything to them. I was in this to be authentic to myself, to be who I felt I was, to do what I most love to do in this world.

And so the books started coming. Eight novels. Two short story collections. A book of essays. Four books of poetry.

And I’m working on Book #16, though I don’t think it will be appearing in 2025. From January 17th to August 27th this year, I didn’t write a word. Not because I was blocked; I knew what I wanted to write. There was no shortage of ideas. But my whole world shrunk during that time to Michael. I don’t resent it. I don’t regret it. He needed me, and I needed the time with him. The absolute depletion I felt after Michael died did scare me – I wondered if I would ever have enough energy to write again. That was answered when I went to Oregon, sat down in the writing nook, and suddenly produced 72 pages.

I felt that I stepped back into my own skin.

But skin with damage. With a wound. Michael always brought me flowers on the day that a book was released. There are no flowers today. He was always in the audience at the launch. The launch is next week, and I know when I look out at the audience, he will not be there.

But when I woke up this morning, alone, I turned off my alarm clock and sat up. I looked out the window and said, “Don’t Let Me Keep You is in the world today. My fifteenth book. And there will be more.”

There will be.  Never a doubt. Never.

I hope you join me at the launch for my 15th book, Don’t Let Me Keep You, on October 10th at 7:00 p.m., at Books & Company bookstore, 1039 Summit Avenue in Oconomowoc, WI. This is a Southeast Wisconsin Festival of Books special event. While I won’t see my husband when I look out at the audience, I hope to see friendly faces, offering support and encouragement as I continue to face down this new challenge in my life, trying to find myself all over again.

Though I don’t have to find one part. The writer. She is always right here.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

To see the  podcast, What Are You Reading? What Are You Writing?,  aired today for the release, where I talk about Don’t Let Me Keep You, go to

To see the trailer for Don’t Let Me Keep You, go to:

Me with the advanced review copy (ARC) of The Home For Wayward Clocks. 2010.
Me with Don’t Let Me Keep You.
All 15 books.

9/26/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

I’m asked all the time now how I am, and how Olivia is, and how my big kids are, and my granddaughter. But if I’ve been asked how the pets are, how they are dealing with Michael’s disappearance, I honestly don’t remember, which means it’s been rare. But I’ve watched them – particularly Ursula. Oliver, our new orange kitty, only knew Michael for a few weeks before he went off to the hospital for the last time.

Besides losing Michael this year, we also lost our fat orange bowling ball polydactyl cat, Edgar Allen Paw, and the inimitable little gray cat, Muse. The cats died first, Edgar, then Muse. They died five weeks apart from each other, and as I was neck-deep in what was going on with Michael, it just felt like blow after blow.

Edgar was fourteen. In the last year, he’d suddenly had fits of his back legs falling limp and useless. But they always came back. The vet was baffled. And then one morning, the legs simply left for good. Our home is a danger for a cat who can only use his front legs…there are stairs and concrete floors. I didn’t wait for a horrible death to happen. I helped Edgar on his way.

Michael was still in the hospital when Edgar died. I hesitated over if I should tell him, as his memory and even his present day observations were still off. But I told him anyway…and he seized onto it. He talked about Edgar, and truly, memories of Edgar and Michael’s sadness at losing him seemed to help him get grounded in reality again.

Michael finally came home, after six weeks in the hospital and three in rehab. Muse, the little gray cat, would not leave him alone. As soon as he sat, he had a cat. Muse was well known for understanding where things hurt. She would lay with me in bed and knead and knead my back if it was sore, my hip if it was sore, my knee if it was sore…and when I had a foot cramp, she’d lay on the foot until the cramp went away. Now, on Michael, she draped herself over whatever she could reach.

Late at night on her 20th birthday, Muse suddenly gave an ungodly yowl from down the hall. I found her on her side, with fluid all around her. It is unclear what happened, but the vet said it was cerebrospinal fluid. I ran her to the emergency vet, and I came home without Muse.

Which leaves Ursula, our dog. Ursula is a rescue, a dog who came here from Alabama, after living most of her life in an outdoor kennel, having litters of puppies. She was high anxiety, and still is, even after four years. During the time Michael was gone after his accident, she was restless and unsure. She looked out the window for him to come home from the bus garage. She was puzzled when it was me who brought her out to do her business in the early morning and the late night. I gave her the shirt that was cut off of Michael by the paramedics and she slept with it.

Then one cat after another disappeared. In between, Michael came home. Ursula took up a station by his side, either sitting by his recliner or on the end of the couch. In the morning, when she and I would come downstairs, the first stop had to be in Livvy’s room, where Michael was sleeping as he couldn’t do the stairs. Ursy sat there while I got her medication, and after taking her outside, she would stay in the room by Michael until he got himself up and out to the living room. As he rolled his walker, she walked in front of him, backwards, watching his every step.

And then…Michael disappeared. He was originally gone for 9 weeks, to the hospital and the rehab. He had a one week return trip to the hospital after he came home. And then he went back and didn’t come home. He’s been gone now for 14 weeks, longer than he was at the hospital. I was planning on bringing Ursula to the hospice, but Michael was gone before I could get her there.

The shirt that she slept with was thrown away after Michael got home. All of his laundry was washed and dried. I couldn’t think of anything to give her at first, but then remembered the pillow I had made for Michael, out of a photo of Ursula. Michael slept with it, in the rehab, at home, in the hospital, and in hospice, with it tucked under his cheek or his neck.

Ursula sleeps with it all the time now.

By the way, before Michael went into the hospital for the last time, Oliver showed up. Michael and Olivia came with me to the humane society to meet him. Michael was in a wheelchair. By the time Michael disappeared from our home, Oliver, who was shy with men, was sitting on his lap.

When Michael went into the hospital for the last time, Ursula quit sleeping in her spot on the couch. Even when Michael rested on the couch, he made sure his legs and feet left room for a 59 pound dog to have her corner. That corner of the couch, closest to the fireplace, became Ursula’s soon after she came home with us. There’s a pillow there, and three special stuffed animals. Ursula tears apart all stuffed animals, except for these…she sleeps with them. All of them were picked out by Michael, from Menards, when he worked there.

There is a rainbow-striped monkey, named (by Michael) Pride Monkey.

There is a black and white panda, named Intolerant Panda.

And there is a moose, named…Moose. Michael loved moose. They were his favorite animal.

Throughout the long hospitalization and the rehab stay, Ursula slept in her corner of the couch. She scrunched there with Michael when he was home. She slept there when he went in for the short time before coming home again. But when he went in for what we didn’t know was the last time, Ursula stayed off the couch. She slept instead on the floor, in front of the coffee table. She slept there for his entire last hospital stay and his five days in rehab. And she’s been there for fourteen weeks since his death.

Until last night.

I was watching the Love Boat, the show Michael and I were watching together, because we were supposed to be going on a cruise for our 25th anniversary. Ursula suddenly stood up, stretched, glanced at Michael’s urn on the piano, and then jumped onto the couch. She nestled her head between the stuffed animals, her friends, given to her by Michael. And she stayed there the rest of the night.

I thought of last week, when I froze on the stairs, realizing I’d gone three days without crying. And now…my dog was back where she was supposed to be.

I still reached out and patted Michael’s empty recliner, next to me. I called out to Ursula, “What a good girl, Ursy!” and received a tail thump.

And then I breathed a sigh of relief. The humans aren’t the only ones who have been suffering.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

Michael with Ursula.
MIchael in rehab, the day he received his Ursula pillow.
Ursula and Michael, when Michael finally came home.
Ursula finally returns to the couch, to her corner, with her friends given to her by MIchael. 9/24/24

9/19/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

I was halfway up the stairs from the first to the second floor of my home when I realized. I stopped on the step.

It was eight o’clock in the evening. I hadn’t cried that day.

I leaned against the railing and reeled my mind backwards. When was the last time I remembered crying?

Sunday. On Sunday, I first drove to a grief support group meeting. When I got there, there was no one in the parking lot. I wandered around the church, trying every door. All were locked. I felt utterly abandoned. I couldn’t even get to a grief support group! (I found out later, when the facilitator called me, that there are two churches with the same name in that town. My GPS brought me to the wrong one.)

I cried in the car, then pulled myself together and told myself I should go get the grocery shopping done. Grocery shopping, and cooking, used to be done by Michael. I hate grocery shopping, and I don’t know how to cook.

I reminded myself that there was a Packers game that afternoon, so at least the grocery store should be mercifully free of crowds and quiet. Instead, when I got to the store, the parking lot was almost full. Inside, it was a madhouse, people and shopping carts everywhere, the volume so high, I couldn’t even hear the muzak.

The Packers apparently played early in the afternoon. Now, everyone was here.

Every aisle was like a traffic jam. Kids were screaming, parents were yelling, customers were getting pushy as they tried to get through and get through fast. I had to go to a back corner several times just to breathe, to ward off a panic attack. When I finally got to the check-out, the line with the fewest number of people in front of me was six deep.

Six deep. Just like they say a grave is six feet deep. Six feet under.

And loss was all around me again.

I got out of line, ran for the bathrooms, parked my cart (please, nobody take it and make me start over!), and ran into a stall. And cried.

Awful. The whole thing was awful. But there, on my stairs, I realized that day was the last time I cried. And that was three days before.

Since Michael died, I haven’t had a single day without tears. I haven’t had a single day when I haven’t thought, How am I going to do this? Until now. When I suddenly went for three days without tears, and three days of just moving ahead, one step after another, after a veritable storm of tears.

That day, three days ago in the empty church parking lot and in the grocery store, the thing I remember thinking, over and over again, repeating it to myself, is “This is never going to be over. I am never going to be okay again.”

Standing on my stairs, as I counted the days without tears, I was flooded with a sense of hope.

Maybe I will be okay again.

Being a writer, I noticed the tense that my thoughts took. I will be okay again. Not I am okay now. Not yet. But that will be was such a big step from never.

Climbing the rest of the way upstairs was much easier. I had a lighter step.

And yes, being a writer, I saw the metaphor in that too.

That was Wednesday (yesterday). I didn’t make it through today without tears (I’ve been dealing with my health insurance company, my doctor, and the drugstore – something I would have typically left to Michael, because he was better at yelling at people!), but I know, from that moment on the step, that moment of hope, that moment of happiness, that this doesn’t mean that never is in force.

Since Michael’s death, when people have asked me if I’m okay, my answer has been a steady, “It depends on the moment.” I’m changing my answer. It’s now, “No, but I will be.”

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

Us. Better days.
But I will be okay.

9/12/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

I left the little house in Waldport, Oregon, on Sunday morning, to drive into Portland, where I began my flight home on Monday. Before I left the house, I went for my final walk. I realized I hadn’t seen any whales on this trip. On the majority of my previous trips, if not all, I’ve seen whales. Last year, there was a whale party going on one day and I sat on the deck and watched whale tail after whale tail, breach after breach. There is a whale tail on the cover of my most recent book, Hope Always Rises, and seeing the real whales right there in front of me, I didn’t even need binoculars, just took my breath away.

So realizing I hadn’t seen them made me a little miffed. But then a brown head surfaced next to me in the ocean. It disappeared, it came back, it disappeared, it came back. It kept pace with me.

A sea lion joined me on my walk and I laughed out loud.

He continued with me until I turned to go back to the little house and my waiting car. Then he disappeared.

Before the visit from the sea lion, I was in tears. Again. I am getting very, very tired of tears. I swear my skin is dry because of the constant onslaught of salt. But then, thanks to the sea lion, I laughed, and when I gave my last wave to the ocean, I was smiling.

Then I set off on the journey home. Waldport to Portland, overnight, Portland airport to Salt Lake City to home.

Whenever I first arrive at the little house, I walk or run through to the sliding doors, throw them open, step out on the deck, and gasp when I see the ocean. Always, always, the gasp. The first time, I wasn’t surprised. I was seeing the ocean, it was in my back yard, and oh so glorious! But time after time, even though I know the ocean is there, even though I see it on my drive from the moment I race down the mountain and burst out through the forest to find the coast spread out before me, from Newport to Waldport, and even though I can see it through the sliding doors, my reaction is the same. I gasp, and I bring both hands to my mouth. The awe and love and admiration I feel each time, even when it became familiar, is overwhelming. My reaction is spontaneous.

I always cry upon leaving too. Though this year, that sadness was heavier than usual.

My plane didn’t land on Monday night until 9:30. By then, I was exhausted and stiff. The Milwaukee airport was emptier than I’d ever seen it before – no one waiting for flights, all the stores and kiosks closed up. I plodded my way through the airport and when I turned onto the final aisle that would lead me to the terminal, I began to look ahead.

I was being picked up by my son  Andy and my daughter Olivia. I watched for them and I couldn’t see them. When I stepped into the terminal, I looked all around and still didn’t see them. But then they stood up.

And I gasped.

Familiar to me as can be, one child 38, the other almost 24. I knew they’d be there. Just like I knew the ocean would be there, each and every time, and I gasp anyway. The awe and love and admiration I feel each time, ever since the day each was born, even when they became familiar, is overwhelming.

So here is my ocean at home. Which makes my home as lovely as the little house in Waldport, with the big ocean in the back yard.

Sons Christopher and Andy. Daughters Katie and Olivia. Grandgirl Maya Mae. Son-in-law Nick, daughter-in-law Amber. And of course, my daughter-by-proxy Rayne, who I’ve known since she was in high school with my big kids (Christopher, Andy, Katie), and who I stayed with in Portland.

I was greeted with hugs. And then that sibling dialogue that every mother of multiples knows so well:

ANDY: You’ll never guess what Olivia did.

OLIVIA: Shut up!

38 and 24.

I think that we always need to be aware of who is still in our lives. Who is always there, who greets us with hugs, who can say things that you know they’re going to say. Who makes you gasp. Even when, and maybe especially when, you know through every layer of yourself that someone is missing.

That pain can make you gasp too. I am often feeling breathless.

But this other gasp, this gasp for the ocean, and the gasp for my kids, is filled with a joy that allows me to exhale and then just keep on breathing.

I have the ocean there. I have my human ocean here.

Gasp!

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

My last morning in Waldport. Standing on the deck just before my walk.
Son Christopher, with daughter-in-law Amber behind him, Grandgirl Maya Mae in front.
Son Andy and daughter Katie (don’t ask!)
Daughter Katie and son-in-law Nick.
Olivia.
Rayne and me.
All of us many years ago. Look how little Olivia is! Katie wasn’t married yet, and Maya was not yet in existence. From left, Christopher, Amber, Andy, Michael, me in front, and Olivia.

 

 

9/5/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

When I went to bed last night and when I woke up this morning, my last and first thoughts were about what I was going to write about this week. Nothing really stood out to me. There were some good days and there were some bad days, and then there were some really awful days, which seems to be the pattern grief takes on. I relished the good days, I plodded through the bad days, and on the really awful days, I took three showers, standing in the comforting heat of the drumming water and soaking myself in tears.

During breakfast, I thought I came up with an idea. Then I checked my emails, took yet another shower, and prepared for my walk. Right before I left, I noticed someone left a comment under one of the many photos I posted of the Oregon coast. This one showed a path in the sand made by some sort of vehicle, and I pondered if it was showing me the way to go. Someone asked, “Will it lead to a sand dollar?” I answered, “Hasn’t yet, but I didn’t ask for one this year either.” I headed out the door.

For those that don’t know, sand dollars have provided some stellar moments for me here in this exact spot. One year, when I came here feeling thoroughly defeated, thoroughly useless, and like I’d wasted my whole life, I had a yell-at-the-ocean moment in which I asked what the world wanted from me, and then I said, “If I am on the right path, if I am doing what I’m supposed to be doing, then let me find a whole sand dollar. A WHOLE sand dollar. Not a broken one.” A few nights later, on a foggy night, I was walking next to the ocean and heading back to the little house. An old man appeared out of the fog, walked right up to me, got in my face, and asked if I’d found a whole sand dollar. He reached in his pocket and pulled out three and told me to choose one. I did. I never saw him again.

Then, the year after I had breast cancer, I came here again and yelled at the ocean. “You didn’t tell me my path was going to include cancer!” I yelled. “If I’m going to be okay, then this time, let ME find the whole sand dollar.” On my last morning here, I walked out to the ocean to say goodbye. I felt a bump on my toe and found a small whole sand dollar, washed right up to me.

During the breast cancer year, a friend came out to the west coast, not in the same place as I come, but close. He said he was looking out at the ocean, thinking of me, when he felt a bump against his bare foot. He looked down and found a sand dollar, which he brought back to me.

So sand dollars mean a lot. But this year, when I got here, I didn’t say anything to the ocean at first. Finally, I just said, “What the hell?” and then I started moving through my two and a half weeks here. I did not ask for a sand dollar. It would take, I thought, a lot more than a sand dollar to make me feel better. To make me feel that what happened this year in any way was supposed to happen.

This is, without a doubt, the worst year of my life.

So this morning, I headed out on my walk, thinking I knew what I was going to write about in this blog, and having answered that, no, I hadn’t found a sand dollar and I hadn’t asked for one.

It was a noisy night last night, and when I stepped onto the beach, I found that the tide came up very far, farther than I’ve ever seen it. It left the beach filled with detritus, huge clumps of seaweed, logs of driftwood, dead jellyfish, crab shells, rocks, clumps that may have once been sea birds. The sand was very uneven, boggy in places, hard in others, and I had to be very careful where I stepped. So I moved more slowly than normal, and my eyes roved often from the waves to the ground in front of me. I torqued my right hip a couple days before coming here, and it was just starting to feel better. I didn’t want to get hurt.

Moving slowly, not wanting to get hurt, but aching with an ache that feels like it will never go away, my eyes were drawn to a small white disk. I knew what it was before I bent to pick it up.

The teeniest, tiniest, slimmest, most fragile of sand dollars. Whole. But no bigger than my thumbnail.

For a moment, I stood there, looking out at the ocean. I thought about throwing the sand dollar as hard as I could, losing it again to the sea. I thought about dropping it back to the sand and then grinding it under my heel.

I mean, you’ve got to be kidding me. What the hell?

In the end, though, I cupped it in the palm of my hand and curled my fingers over it. I carried it for the rest of my walk and then back. As I passed the place where I found it, I saw that the water had come in and rolled over it. If I’d come by a few minutes later, I would never have seen the sand dollar.

Before I climbed the steps up the bluff and to the little house, I turned and faced the ocean. Her waves were reaching out.

“Thank you,” I said.

Maybe I’m going to feel better, little by little.

Hope always rises, people.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

The “path” on the beach.
This morning’s beach. Detritus everywhere. Tide very far up.
The sand dollar.
I put it next to a pen, so you can see how tiny it is.

8/29/24 (the real blog)

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

This last Saturday, I traveled to the Oregon coast, to the little house I’ve stayed in at least once a year since 2006. It is as familiar to me as my own home. The back yard is the ocean. There is a writing nook with a wide-open window that allows me to glance up at the waves in between words. The owners of the house keep a bookshelf in the nook that displays all of my books. And I needed this place more this year than ever before.

It is a place where I come face to face with who I am, without all the roles I’ve taken on over the years.

My daughter Olivia has come with me here several times, but my husband Michael only once, on my second year here in 2007. I see him still, standing down at the ocean’s edge, looking out at the waves, with a little Olivia by his side. I wish I could share that photo here, but my photos are on my computer at home, not the small one I’ve traveled with.

But mostly, when I come here, I see myself.

Several times, I’ve come here feeling lost, and I’ve run out to the ocean upon arriving and shouted at her. It’s like those moments you see in movies, where people in crisis look up at the sky and shout at God. I don’t shout at God. I shout at the ocean. I call her Ms. Pacific.

But this time, when I arrived here feeling so lost that those other times felt like nothing, I walked out to the ocean and stood there, at first having absolutely nothing to say. I walked for a bit, then turned and faced her again and said, “What the hell?”

I think I’ve said, “What the hell?” a bajillion times since the phone call on January 17th, when I was told that Michael was in the ER after having been hit by a minivan.

I’ve struggled since his death. I’ve struggled with his loss. But I’ve also struggled with what felt like the loss of myself.

Am I still married? Am I still a wife?

Should I still be wearing my wedding ring? Is it a lie now? No longer a part of me?

Am I a widow? What an awful, awful word.

I don’t know how to do this. What the hell?

When Michael was hit by the minivan, I was writing under deadline to finish my next novel, Don’t Let Me Keep You, by March 1st. I spent a lot of time in the ICU at the hospital, sitting next to a non-responsive Michael, talking to him, holding his hand. And so I set up a work station and I read the entire book to him, putting on my final touches, and finishing the book. I sent it off to the publisher. It will be released on October 3rd.

And from that day forward, I didn’t write. Except for this blog. I tried. But my whole being was caught up with Michael, with his care, with being his advocate, being the power of attorney, and trying so hard to hold our lives together.

It wasn’t writer’s block. I knew what I wanted to write. I had ideas. But whenever I sat down at the computer, whenever I had a brief moment in time, all I could do was stare. And cry.

When Michael died, the advocacy turned into an amazing amount of work that had to be done. And it turned into such moments of heartache and stunned disbelief that it bent me double.

What the hell?

And so I came here.

When I’ve come here before, I’ve set aside every role that I’ve taken on and boiled myself back down to who I was as I grew up and realized the dreams and passions that were important to me. When I came here, I set aside the roles of small business owner, teacher, editor, community and writers’ advocate, wife, and even mother, except when Olivia traveled with me.

Everything moved behind me and waited for me back in Wisconsin. From the moment I got here and sat down in the writer’s nook, I felt the same thing, the same cloak, come over me as it did when I was in the fifth grade.

I was living in northern Minnesota. A new teacher came to town, teaching fifth grade English. Her name was Mrs. Faticci, an exotic name in the middle of a primarily Finnish community. And she introduced Creative Writing Thursdays.

I had no idea what that meant, but I biked to the Minute Mart by my house and bought a special blue spiral notebook. In black marker on the front, I wrote, Creative Writing. We didn’t have to have a special notebook for those Thursdays, but I knew I wanted something that set it aside from everything else, even though I didn’t know what it was. Creative Writing sounded as exotic and wonderful as my new teacher’s name.

That first day, Mrs. Faticci put a record on the record player. The song was “Oh, Shenendoah”. “Just listen to it and write what comes to mind,” she said. And so I did. Afterward, she had us each get up and read what we wrote. The kids wrote, “There’s a boat.” “I hear water.” “Floating.”

I got up and read a complete short story, with description, dialogue, characterization, you name it. And when I got to “The End”, the room was silent.

From the back, Mrs. Faticci whispered, “Oh my god, Kathie. You’re a writer.”

And that cloak fell on me with all the rightness of the world. It was like hearing my name.

When I came here, all those years, that cloak was the only thing I wore.

But I came here this year with my feet pulled out completely from beneath me. I was so lost.

I arrived on a Saturday. I spent Sunday sitting on the deck, looking at the ocean, but not always seeing it. I didn’t step into the writing nook until Monday. And it is stepping into – there is a step up to get into the nook.

I stepped up. I looked out at the ocean. And then, the next time I looked up, there were 20 pages of a new novel on my screen.

I felt the cloak. I wrapped it tight around me. I heard my teacher’s voice. And I felt so much relief, I can’t even begin to put it to words.

That evening, before putting my computer to bed for the night, there were also four new poems on the screen. One begins with the line, I don’t know how to do this widow thing.

What the hell?

I’ll figure it out. But one thing I do know… I am no longer lost. I’ve lost my husband and my heart aches with a hurt that feels like it will never end.

But I’m still here. Me. I’m here.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

The writing nook.
The little house.
Olivia’s first time meeting the ocean. This photo became the cover of my book, No Matter Which Way You Look, There Is More To See.
Me, walking the ocean. This photo was taken by Michael, the only time he was here.

8/29/24 – a fast reminder

For those who are looking for this week’s Moment Of Happiness, please know that I am on the Oregon coast this week, and so in a different time zone. I’m two hours behind where I normally am. The blog will be posted a couple hours later than normal, at 3:00 Oregon time.

8/22/24

And so this week’s moment of happiness despite the news.

Michael’s antique cash register is going to be on stage, in a play. Maybe several. And I know this would make him very, very happy.

Since Michael’s death, I’ve been on a cleaning bender. Make that a cleaning/straightening/clearing out bender. I want room in my rooms! I want space in my space! I want to open up a closet or a cabinet and be able to see clearly what’s inside, with room to add more if needed. I want to not feel crowded. I want…well, to breathe mostly. With all that’s happened this year, I’ve felt the walls closing in on me more than once.

Michael was an old time radio fan. He got his start in writing with old time radio drama. He fell in love with the genre soon after his father died, and his passion just kept growing. It didn’t take long before he decided to try writing them himself, and he had quite a bit of success. Some of his shows were internationally produced. He moved through the years from a gigantic closet full of cassette tapes of radio shows to flash drive after flash drive of mp3 recordings. And he collected old time radio paraphernalia, which takes the form of tabletop radios to full size floor model radios. These are scattered throughout the house. One is an RCA Victor radio/record player console, complete with the display protective covering on the turntable.

And many of them were gifts from me.

One oddity that stuck out was a working cash register from the early 1930s. I bought it for Michael for a Christmas present. He loved it, and often, when he walked by, he would hit the Sale button, just to hear it ring. There were times I’d pass by and notice random numbers sticking up in the glass display. I’d hit the Sale button too, just to make those numbers go back down, only to find more up again soon after.

A few of Michael’s radios are now in our off-site storeroom. A couple of the tabletop models have made their way to St. Vincent DePaul. But the cash register, the console, and one floor model radio were listed on Facebook’s Marketplace and CraigsList. I wanted to find owners that would love them as much as Michael did. I don’t love them as much; they deserve to be with people who really appreciate them, and Michael would want them with people like that too.

I mostly picked these three to sell because of their size and placement in my home. The cash register sat on top of the floor model radio, and they’re right in front of a window. Because of their placement, I can’t reach the window to open or close it without getting out a stepstool and climbing up. I would like to be able to reach the window with ease and without the threat of falling and breaking something – mostly me.

For a couple of weeks, there was no interest. Then one man stopped by, looked at all three, told me information I already knew, and invited me to his house to see his clocks. No. He left without purchasing.

Then I heard from a woman who was interested in the cash register. We went back and forth several times, and she mentioned that she was buying it for her brother’s business, which is to supply props to theaters for plays and productions. I swear I felt Michael lean over my shoulder, his breath in my ear, to read that email.

Because of his love for radio drama, Michael also loved the theatre. One of his favorite jobs, before he was downsized, was as an accountant for the Milwaukee Repertory Theatre. The job came with the perk of tickets to the shows, and we saw so many productions. On his lunch breaks, Michael would go to whatever theatre was having a rehearsal and he would sit in the theatre seats and listen.

It was one of his happiest jobs, surpassed only by his most recent, at the Milwaukee Area Technical College, where he was able to do accounting amidst a place of education and dreams. Well, teaching for AllWriters’ was right up there too.

But now…his cash register could live on in the theatre.

I told the woman about Michael, about who he was, and about what happened. At first, I thought she was shopping for the actual theatre where the play would be, and I told her I’d be happy to lend the cash register out for such a purpose. But then I heard about her brother’s new business. And she heard about my husband.

I understand what it’s like to start a new business. And so I leaned forward to read more closely too.

She called me the next day. “I talked to my brother,” she said, “and we’ve decided we need to get this cash register. Even if it doesn’t work out for this particular production, we want it to be on stage as many times as possible.”

I’ve had mixed feelings about selling these things, and I won’t sell them unless I feel like they’re going to places that Michael would approve of, and where the beloved items can be happy. But I turned over the cash register with a content heart.

The radio it sat on is still here, so I still can’t reach the window without a stepstool. But the window is fully exposed and the sun flows in. The cat now has room to jump on top of the radio and look out a new window. He’s happy. I’m happy. And I believe Michael can be happy too. The cash register is a star.

And I can breathe just a little bit easier.

And yes, that helps. Despite. Anyway.

The cash register, sitting on top of the radio and blocking the window.
The radio.
The console.
The console with the doors open, to show the turntable and the radio.