Saturday, December 27, 2008
By Appointment and Chance
Sunday, December 21, 2008
Happy Day of Birth...
Saturday, December 20, 2008
Te Amo, Nieve: finding peace
Friday's forecast stated 100% chance of more snow, upwards of an inch an hour. An evening phone call from my brother held the flint for a Friday venture up to Hunter for the a day on snow. I struck his statement against my insides and instantly a light began to glow. I decided to call work in the morning and inform them of my mature decision. Bags were packed and my truck and I headed northbound for a sleep-shower-eat-stop in Oakland, followed by a morning ride over the Bear Mountain Bridge to my brother's place.
Although we got a late start, due to my personal incapacity in navigational skills, it was for the better. Snow just began to fall as we came within 20 minutes of Hunter. Much to our delight, the snow simply did not cease as we made our first blessed turns of the year. With Sigur Ros as my soundtrack we bounced, spun, carved and yipped our way through a constant renewal of white. The feeling of sliding sideways on snow is always an experience beyond comparison. One is often brought to a point of lost words, that even if they were to be recovered, would not do any justice. The feeling is an electricity, a certain confluence of energies.
With ten minutes until close my brother decided to head back to the car while I went up for a solo run. No audible words were exchanged between myself and the white squall that encompassed my moving body and the mountain it moved on; there was no need. The conversation was an internal, constant presence, an instinctual call-and-response. We had missed one another, and like two individuals who need not words in order to remain understood and respected in one another's eyes, the snow and I embraced a silent reminiscence, at peace to be together once again.
Monday, December 15, 2008
Sweet Soweto
Lights in the theatre dimmed to a soft, grey, dust of dark as more than a dozen individuals clothed in vibrant South African garb filed across the stage. The first notes caused a smile to spread across my insides, and like burgundy wine on a white carpet the feeling only seeped throughout the rest of my consciousness with each song. In the strength of their voices, in their unique sound and guttural expression of deep history, I felt the social construct of race and color dissipate until the audience was one.
Whether we acknowledge and embrace its presence or not, it is in us all, the rhythmic beat of palms on the stretched skin of an animal, the ancient calls and mixture of South African languages, the song and the dance; it is within us all. Traditional songs from Soweto led into variations of "This Little Light of Mine," "Go Tell it on a Mountain," and "Amazing Grace." Because of the truth and strength found within their natural movements and deep, solid voices, a salt of emotion slid from the corner of my eye, streaking my cheek for the time being and a standing ovation ensued.
An unexpected encore followed the fading flutter of hands clapping, as the choir broke into a series of Christmas selections, including "Silent Night," "Little Drummer Boy," and "O Come All Ye Faithful." The last notes of the night saw a sea of human beings, out of their seats and dancing, keeping beat and singing; each person feeling and living in their own reality, while the audience as a whole shared the reality of a truth presented them by the Soweto Gospel Choir. Glancing over to my mother, beaming in the moment, I acknowledged in her the gifts she had passed into me at birth, those of a free spirit and an appreciation for life.
Walking out into the soft silence of snow falling, now an audience of common ground, we became strangers once again, creating divergent paths in a thin layer of white. Each individual car ride home, each family's walk around the block and every couple's train stop brought us further apart. Perhaps, though, strands of the night's performance would hold steadfast, tied with string to the thick of our hearts, and preserve the common bond between us all.