Sunday, October 24, 2021

Seven-Year-Olds Still Have Wings (A Monologue)


This is the result of my first venture into script. The class I took was Memoir to Monologue

[AT RISE: GRACE, a teacher, on a school playground in the rain. She’s holding a pink envelope.]

The last thing I want to do on a rainy Saturday in June, is go back to the school. But that’s what teachers do, right? They show up for their students, even when they’re tired, even when there are only 5 days left before summer break. It’s been a tough year. This rain, like tears of exhaustion…and today, grief.

I have to be honest with you, I barely knew you, what with quarantine, and masks, and as a movement specialist, I see 500 students a week. It takes me several months to learn everyone’s name, but I remembered your name right away; Lennox, such a unique name. Still, I only saw you twice a week at best before the pandemic. Maybe that’s why it was more important than ever for me to show up today. I feel guilty, like I neglected you, like I didn’t take the time, when I had the time, to know you. Like maybe I could have prevented…no, I can’t go there. There was nothing I could have done.

[GRACE fingers the pink envelope]

This? The PTA lady gave it to me. There’s a Painted Lady butterfly inside. I just wasn't ready, earlier today, to let her go. Lennox, it’s a Scottish name meaning “with many elm trees.” Elm is the liberty tree with interlocking grain used for wagon wheels, chairs, and coffins. How do I know that? I’m a teacher, I like to learn.

[GRACE chuckles]

I Googled it. Did you know that about your name? Do you feel the liberty of your name? I saw your liberty, your freedom, when you danced. I saw your light, I remember your light, not just the lightness of your hair, but of your feet when you skipped around my gym. I remember the lightness in your eyes and on your wings when you leaped.

[GRACE sighs quietly to herself]

Yeah, seven-year-olds still have wings. It’s a cool thing. Wings…I didn’t know that you LOVED butterflies. But now that I think about it, I saw it when you danced, the way you would flit and float. So, it’s fitting, today, that the PTA dedicated this butterfly garden, your garden with a release of Painted Lady butterflies. The flowers, the lupine, hollyhock, cosmos, sunflowers, they’re all just little starts right now, like you, in first grade, just starting, supple green stalks of limbs and the promise of blossoms…futures…blossoms in patches of dry dirt that nobody paid attention to before. They’ll pay attention next fall. The rain is a good thing today, watering those tender baby shoots, masking our tears. I forgot my raincoat, but I have my umbrella, the big one I take out for bus-duty when all of you are standing shivering and unprepared. Did I shelter you once with my extra-large umbrella? I don’t remember. There were a lot of people at the dedication: your mom, of course, and grandma, all the first grade and kindergarten teachers, oh, and girls from your Girl Scout troop who painted stepping stones for the garden. There was a lady who remembers you from the senior center that you used to visit. Quite the humanitarian, huh?

[GRACE pauses as if listening]

Oh, that means you are kind and thoughtful to other humans. She said you were a wonderful storyteller and brought many smiles to their faces. I learned a lot about you today–– not enough, though. There's still a lot I want to learn about you, Lennox, but for now, have a sublime summer. 

            [GRACE releases the Painted Lady butterfly from the envelope]  

  

Oneing

Today, the first Sunday of vacation, I still cannot rest in the scared, mother-womb darkness. Tomorrow is the first day of winter yet robins roost in the bare maple branches, not one or two, but 10 or more, waiting, annunciating the advent of...what? 

This Advent I signed up for a course with Matthew Fox and Mirabai Starr about Julian of Norwich.


The opening mediation was a Hebrew one, a call to "oneing" with the Creator: "Listen, oh you, who struggle with the infinite, ALL is one." That's a progressive translation for sure. The Arabic prayer, Shahada, the oneness of God, "La ilaha, illallah." While the literal translation is "only one God, Allah," not being a literalist, I hear this as God is One and one is God, panentheism, interrelational, nameless, formless intimacy with ALL. This is a call to enter the liminal mystery I so value. The unknown mystery we reside in daily now, the Thin Place, the white space we have been walking through as a result of the pandemic. Nothing is certain and very little in our control. We are called to surrender to the unio mystica, the flow, the oneing, the ecstasy of "union with reality."


This summer I hired a leadership coach who led me to design this intention for living, "How am I hyphenating the collective-self between known spaces and unknown graces into co-creative liberation and wholeness?" I am present daily with this intention purposefully phrased as a question and have found that the Covid upheaval, the racial protests, the political corruption, all of it has not been a surprise, nor has any of it diverted my flow. I feel companioned as a sister Anchorite with Julian. Radical recluse in my quarantined home, yet, one window open to people/students, to serve, and all those busy beehives, producing...and words of unity and love, liberation from God of retribution, wholeness acquired through recognition that through God we are what we are and we are ALL ONE.


Yesterday I made St Lucia Lussekatter (Swedish Saffron buns). They took all day to encourage the yeast, wait for two risings, knead and knead. I felt impatience in the time it took, having not made bread outside of a bread maker for years. The demand for patience, for waiting, for delayed gratification has been the primary challenge of 2020, with vacations cancelled, travel shut down, teaching plans rerouted, social gathering delayed. Our morning reading this vacation is Rockwell Kent's "Wilderness," about his Christmas in Alaska in 1918. We had planned to read it after our Alaska trip last summer, which was delayed until 2021. These delays and rerouting have actually sweetened the anticipation and will no doubt heighten the awe when the world opens up to a new day and I step more fully into a new way of being.

Our outdoor Christmas lights burnt out last night...the circuit blew and will not recharge...so now, we have some imposed darkness along a street of festive lights...I wait, like the robins, each day, for the wonder and awe of both the mirth and the mourning. It all matters. I write you this while listening to Gary Richardson's guitar meditations and hold thoughts of your being, your spirit, in my heart until we can safely meet again in person.