Radiant Vision

The sun arose and filled my eyes

With heavenly glory personified

Tears down my face did solemnly pour

I stood transfixed, and begged for more

Golden rays lit up the new morn sky

With brilliant spectacle for the eye

With mouth agape I did profoundly stare

And wonder what God’s doing up there

To me He gave such wondrous gift

That my poor spirit felt tremendous lift

To my knees I should have promptly fallen

But I could not move despite hearing Him callin’

Frozen in place with feet on the soil

I praised the Lord’s amazing toil

For humankind: to free our souls

From worries: to give us lofty goals

Reaching deeply into my empty purse

I feared God’s wrath, or maybe worse

Instead my heart did nearly burst

With joy: I knew I was not cursed

The sun arose and filled my eyes

With heavenly glory personified

Surprise!

            My best friend wanted to add a dog to her kennel. I rode along, as company, not intending to bring one home. However, as we drove from one rescue shelter to another, the craving inside me grew and grew.

            Not for the big dogs or the ones that barked and growled. Not for the Sherpa who looked dangerous. Not for tiny things that might break if we stepped on it accidentally.

            It was the medium sized dogs that called to me.

            The cocker spaniels and terriers and mixed-somethings that promised to stay relatively small spoke my name. I resisted, over and over.

            Until we entered the shelter in my home town.

            In one cage was a female and three pups; My friend said they were border collies plus something that she couldn’t identify.

            Two of the pups were the traditional black and white that one expects for that breed. It was the brown and white one that stood out. Not because of size, as they were all small. Not because it looked at me with its brown eyes. I couldn’t say why, but I HAD to have that dog.

            There was a waiting list for the black puppies, but none for the one I wished for. However, they were too young to separate from their mama. And, we were told, all suffered from flea infestation.

            The shelter employee shared their sad story. The owners moved, leaving the female tied to a banister inside the house. They left no food or water. It was quite warm. Neighbors heard cries, loud, desperate cries and called.

            Police broke down the door. They found the mom and five puppies. One was already dead. They took the survivors to the pound. They bathed the mom, but the puppies were too young.

            Another died in their care.

            We put in an application for the one we wanted. The kids could hardly wait! We visited the pound almost every day. We sat on the floor outside the bars and talked to the dogs. We got to pet the female. When the puppies were walking, we touched them as well.

            Meanwhile we searched for the right name. When we came upon MacTavish, it felt right. We could call him Mac or Mackie, or when he misbehaved, the whole MacTavish.

            We were so excited when the call came to retrieve our dog.

            Mike had built an enclosure in the backyard out of metal fencing. Shortly after we got home, we took Mackie outside. He took a few steps and fell down. We watched, but he couldn’t seem to be able to walk.

            We fed him puppy food and water, but he refused food.

            The shelter had given us coupons for services, including tow different vets. My mother-in-law used one of them, so I made an appointment. The vet wanted to do a complete blood transfusion. He had treated one of the other puppies, but he couldn’t tell me what was wrong.

            We didn’t have that kind of money. This was a pound-puppy, not a purebred. His treatment would have cost more than taking one of our kids to the pediatrician.

            However, we could leave Mac there for the day and they’d keep an eye on him.

            I don’t remember how many dollars it cost, but since we were going to see the Oakland Athletics play, Mac would be safer there than at home alone.

            We retrieved Mac later that afternoon. He hadn’t eaten anything, but had consumed a little bit of water. No, he still couldn’t walk. They had done little more than nothing.

            My friend knew dogs. She’s been raising and showing dogs for many years. She told me what to buy. Then she arrived. Mixed up a gruel. Using a syringe which I had gotten from our dentist, she forced-fed Mac.

            We fed him that way for days and days. Eventually he was able to walk a few steps before collapsing.

            Around that same time, we went camping. We brought the gruel mixture and syringe. But, we also had summer sausage. Mac’s tiny ears came alert when we sliced into the sausage. We knew it wasn’t proper food for a dog, but we gave him a tiny bite. Then another and another.

            This was the first solid food Mac had eaten on his own!

            We had a small collar and a leash. When we went for a walk, Mac walked. Until we came to a tiny, tiny stream. He refused to cross over. Our oldest son picked up Mackie and carried him the rest of the way.

            That trip solidified that we were doing the right things and mac would live.

            When he grew bigger, Mac began playing catch. His version wasn’t really catch. He got the retrieving part, the bringing it close to the thrower, but not the dropping part. Over and over we tried to teach him, but Mac never learned.

            He developed a love of all sizes and shapes of balls. His favorite, though, were soccer balls. He’d use both front paws to surround the ball, then pick it up in his mouth. With sharp claws and teeth, the ball didn’t stand a chance.

            When he was a freshman in high school, our oldest made it on the JV team. One night when it was time to pick up our son, I decided to take Mac. He loved riding in cars. Oh, my, would he get excited!

            He loved cars so much that sometimes he’d get in the car as we were unloading groceries and wouldn’t get out until he went for a ride.

            I was running late, so I didn’t bring a leash. Mac was pretty obedient, so I wasn’t too concerned.

            Our small car had a hatchback. Our son was still playing when we arrived and it was too warm to stay in the car. I figured I could open the hatch and sit here, my hand gripping Mac’s collar.

            All went well until Mac saw the soccer ball. He got away from me and stormed onto the field, bringing the game to a halt. I ran over (yes, I could run back then), in time to see our son chasing Mac and the ball.

            Thank goodness Mac’s claws didn’t puncture the ball, as high school teams use the expensive models!

            After my son grabbed Mac and returned him to me, I tugged him back to the car, put down the hatch and stayed there until the game ended.

            My son wasn’t angry, but his coach was upset.

            The story of Mackie running onto the soccer field, disrupting a high school game, was one that was retold often.

            Our kids are grown up and out of the house and Mac’s been dead many years, but just thinking about him still makes me smile.

Help from on High

            The only prayer I knew before first grade was; “Now I lay me down to sleep, I pray the Lord my soul to keep. If I die before I wake, I pray the Lord my soul to take.”

            Pretty dismal. Imagine being three or four and thinking about dying in bed. I was terrified to close my eyes and drift off, certain that I’d be dead before sunrise. In my mind, God was not a friend and not someone I wanted in my life.

            To enroll my brother in the Catholic elementary in Dayton, Ohio, we had to prove that we attended Mass and gave money to the church. We drove into town, sat through a boring service conducted in Latin, a language I didn’t know, then hurried home to watch football or bowling.

            The next year I enrolled in the same school. Now my days began with prayer, ended with prayer, included instruction in religion, and had prayer time all day long. Lots of praise God and Alleluia. Threats of eternal damnation and black spots on your soul. Displeasing God so badly that he’d turn his back on us.

            At home I had to get on my knees every night and pray next to my brother. I’d learned new prayers: Our Father and Hail Mary. At least now I didn’t go to bed thinking about my death. But I had new things to worry about.

            Did I talk back to my mother? Did I have awful thoughts about my brother or sister? Did I hate my teacher? Classmates? Did I waste food that could feed kids in China?

            God took, terrified me, and shook His finger. He offered nothing positive. No hope. No escape from my dysfunctional family.

            While part of me didn’t believe God cared about me, I prayed to Him anyway. I prayed for relief from the constant torment from my siblings, from the anger directed toward me from both parents, from the overwhelming sense of despair that surrounded me.

            Even as young as eight, I hoped, prayed, that God would lift me out of my living situation and drop me into a happier one. By twelve I was planning on running away. By fourteen, when we moved to California, I studied so as to go to college, another escape. In fact, it was the only way out, other than marriage, something I was opposed to given the poor relationship between my parents.

            Considering years of prayer, with little change, I thought about giving up. Why pray if no one was listening? It seemed like a fruitless activity.

            But when things worsen, when life becomes unbearable, you must do something. I was too young to move out plus I had no means of supporting myself. No relatives lived nearby, so I couldn’t change residences. The one hope; having good enough grades to earn a scholarship.

I prayed constantly. In between classes? A prayer. Eating lunch? Pray. Riding the school bus? Another opportunity to pray.

I refused to give up, to think that God had abandoned me when I hadn’t done anything seriously wrong.

Toward the end my junior year of high school, a letter came addressed to me. I was a recipient of a scholarship from the State of California! It could be applied to any college, whether public or private. I had done my research and knew what colleges were at the top of my list.

San Francisco State University and College of the Redwoods had excellent teacher education programs. SF State was also strong in math, my top subject. My parents wouldn’t let me go to either. They laughed at the idea of me being a teacher. Good, old, shy me. The girl who could sit among others and say nothing.

I prayed.

I applied to the University of Southern California, in the math department. I got accepted! My scholarship would cover the tuition. I borrowed to pay room and board.

It wasn’t at the top of my list, but because my brother has been accepted there, my parents let me go, only after telling him to keep an eye on me.

I thanked God.

While at college, I was walking back to my dorm when I heard this amazing music coming from a one-story white brick building. I stuck my head in, to discover Mass with drums, guitar, tambourine, and folk music that I knew and loved.

That discovery led me back to God. Not the fire and brimstone version in my younger life, but a God who loved me and cared for me. I went on a retreat with the Neumann Center. When I got off the bus somewhere in the mountains, and smelled the pine needles, walked among the debris on the forest floor, touched the bark of a redwood and looked up, up, up so high that it hurt my neck, I knew there was a god.

That experience changed me. Things still went wrong when I had to go home. After all, my parents were the same, my siblings were the same, so why would I expect something new?

I’d like to think I grew a spine, thanks to Divine Intervention. God infused my soul with grit. He empowered me to take risks, to stand up for myself. To create goals that I wanted to accomplish and strive toward them.

That was fifty-four years ago. God is still in my life. I believe He watches over me, helps me make decisions and guides me in many, many ways.

Sometimes we need a little help.

Just for the Picking

Ten thousand wishes float into the air

Brightly lit rainbow dots drift without care

Air-filled hopes slowly rise into the sky

Waiting for the moment to multiply

Realistic fantasies within reach

Specifically crafted for us each

Inside, a single dream lurks unfulfilled

Waits for perfect heart in which to be spilled

Dandified dreams as mystic butterflies

Burst in multicolored hues ‘ere our eyes

Windswept images of forgotten faces

Mist-enshrouded thought of faraway places

Everyday troubles weathered away

Lucky lazy bubbles brighten the way

Worlds of wonder wrapped in shiny white

Drawn down to earth by fragile string of kite

Electric energy for those who dare

Ten thousand wishes rise into the air.

Walking in the Snow

            I was born in Dayton, Ohio. Our first residence was a tiny house that was once owned by Wright-Patterson Air Force Base. Looking back at old photos, I now realize we lived in the “projects.” Every house looked the same. They marched down the street, like soldiers.

            We did have running water and electricity, but the only washing machine was an old-fashioned wringer type. I had to catch the clothes as they emerged, with a caution that I’d lose my hands if I wasn’t careful.

            I was an imaginative child. Every night, I dreamt of a hand being smashed between those rollers.

            Our next house was in a nicer neighborhood. It was two-story, with the upstairs unfinished. At some point my mom let me move upstairs, probably to get away from my younger sister.

            My brother and I often played outside in the snow. We weren’t allowed out of our yard, so our activities were reduced to building snowmen and throwing snowballs.

            Just before my fourth-grade year of school, we moved to Beavercreek, Ohio. It was a large subdivision bordering a forest owned by the Air Force. Nothing could be built there as it was part of the runway.

            The upper part of the subdivision was fairly flat. As the streets headed south and east, hills came into play. Our house sat on one of those hills. The house to our north sat a tad higher than ours, while the one on the south was a bit lower.

            No fences on any of our properties.

            Ohio can be incredibly cold and snowy. One winter it snowed so much that it came up to my ten-year-old knees. Often after a snow, it warms slightly, then chills at night, turning everything to ice.

            My brother got the idea to build an igloo. We thought we knew how to build one as we’d read many stories about indigenous peoples. I wasn’t allowed to use the saw, so he did all the cutting. I was the porter and the builder. He cut a block of ice; I carried it to the site and layered one block on top of another.

            When the wall was too high, he had to finish off the igloo.

            Somehow, we succeeded! There was a hole as a door. The walls curved inward, creating a dome at the top.

            Crawling in was fun, except for when the ice melted. Then our mittens and knees of our pants got soaked. Once inside, though, it was surprisingly warm. We’d pack lunches, crawl through, and no matter the temperature outside, eat in comfort.

            I’d just learned how to read thanks to a children’s librarian who showed me a collection of easy-to-read nonfiction books on Indigenous people. My mom insisted her great-great-great grandmother was “Native.” She claimed her tan skin was evidence, as well as her love of bread and gardening.

            I wanted to know more about that relative, and so read every book the library had. When it wasn’t too cold, I’d take a book into the igloo and spend precious time reading. Alone. Out of the maelstrom of my life.

            The following winter very little snow fell, but thanks to freezing nighttime temperatures, there was plenty of ice.

            My brother and I would pull our sled uphill into the neighbor’s yard. With a good running start, and a timely jump, we’d fly down that hill, sail across our yard, downhill into the next, ending midway into that neighbor’s yard.

            It was great fun. We also never got hurt.

            On our last winter in Beavercreek before moving to California, once again, little snow fell. It was cold, though, so cold that huge icicles hung from our gutters and every powerline. The combined weight of icicles pulled the powerlines down, down, down. We lost electricity several times, the popping and snapping terrifying me. It was not until crews came out and removed the ice that our electricity was returned.

            The wind was fierce. It howled like a banshee, a truly scary sound. We’d huddle inside, not daring to go out in that storm. When morning came, we went outside to discover roof-high piles of snow on the north side of our house.

            Huge icicles hung everywhere. When the sun lit them up, the sparkling light amazed me.

            We broke off the tips from some, licking them as if they were popsicles. They were flavorless, but in our minds, they were as good as the best thing we’d ever had.

            Those were good memories. While I think fondly back on those times, I am grateful to live in the San Francisco Bay Area where it never snows.

Ebb and Flow of Life

            Just as the sun rises and sets, things in our lives ebb and flow as well.

            When I was young, I had become painfully aware of my mom’s constantly changing emotional state. She might get up happy, but an hour later be yelling and threatening physical punishment. Without provocation on my part.

            I never knew what would set her off. It could be a blouse I’d put on after school or shorts that were too short. I might not be allowed the blouse on a Monday, but it was fine Friday. If I mentioned I needed new shorts, my mom might agree and plan a shopping trip. Or she might chastise me for being indecent.

            When I went away to college and got out from under my mother’s irrational behaviors. For a time. When I returned in the summer, she resumed her on again, off again ranting. I tried to stay away from home. I had daytime jobs that kept me away for much of the day, but at night, I was under here watchful eye.

            It was a huge relief when, after I’d graduated, I was hired by the federal government, making enough money to first buy my own car, then rent a studio apartment. The relief of being able to go wherever and whenever I wanted was immeasurable. Sitting around my apartment listening to MY music filled my soul. When I bought a small television, I could now watch anything that I desired.

            Being wife takes mastery of that ebb and flow. Excitement when we went camping, boring when I had to fix dinner and clean up after. Laundry. Ironing. Driving kids to doctors’ appointments was boring, but coaching the soccer teams was exciting. Keeping score during little league baseball games, exciting. Folding laundry. Boring.

            As an older adult nothing has changed. Book club meetings? Exciting, unless it’s a book I didn’t like. Writer’s club? Exciting when we do our monthly write-ins and when we meet for a meal. The monthly membership meetings are usually boring as the same individuals say the same things every time.

            My writing critique group? Exciting. I learn so much from my friends as they help me improve my writing.

            Writing prompts? Boring. Writing personal essays like this one? In-between.

            After my first bout with COVID I developed long Covid. I had no energy to do anything. Brain Fog stole my ability to process words, making it impossible to write and to read novels.

            I forced myself to maintain my routines, going to the gym when I was too weak to stretch rubber bands. I stopped using the elliptical because it required too much effort.

            I have a fantastic doctor. She listened to my concerns, believed that I was indeed suffering, then put me on the one medication I have since learned offers some relief.

            Last week I was able to focus on my writing for several hours each day. This was exciting! I accomplished so much and felt quite happy with myself.

            I increased activity at the gym, returning to the elliptical. I use more weight machines and have joined a kickbox aerobic class. And I swim one day a week.

            And then the ebb hit. After being so productive for almost a week, my body collapsed. I couldn’t do anything except sit on the couch. Reading was, once again, impossible.

            I can hardly wait for the flow to return!

            Today it dawned on me that all of life is one big ebb and flow. I just have to be patient and wait for this to pass.

My Political Journey

            Growing up, probably like most kids, I paid little attention to world events. Until in the mid-1960s, when the threat of a war with Cuba, our school held bomb drills in the hallways. We’d be ushered out of our classrooms, then be told to sit on the floor, facing the wall. Cross our legs, bend over so that our foreheads touched our legs and cover our heads with our arms.

            We’d sit there, in fear, until the drill was over.

            With my active imagination, I pictured my annihilation. Over and over. Nightmares occupied my nights. I’d get up in the morning, brain dead and barely functioning. In the middle of the crisis, my family moved to California. My dad rented a home in Sacramento, without air conditioning, a miserable experience.

            I don’t think my dad visited the home long enough to understand that it was below the flight pattern of the air force base. Night and day bombers flew overhead, their distinct roar blotting out all other sound.

            I’d stand in the front yard watching them, imagining the crew going off to war. And the enemy, Russia, sending planes here to destroy America. Scenes of death and destruction haunted me.

            When the crisis ended, my fears eased somewhat, but it took many months before I slept all night long.

            We were involved in Vietnam toward the end of my high school years. The draft had begun. My brother’s number didn’t get called right away, so he was able t begin college.

            I was now watching the news, keeping myself aware of world events. Something about the war bothered me. While I couldn’t identify any facts that supported my misgivings, I continued to believe that America didn’t belong in Vietnam.

            My brother had to enlist or leave the country. He debated both. Escaping to Canada seemed a good choice, except that, like me, he had been given a state scholarship to use toward any college in California. If he ran away, he’d lose the money.

            He was sent to an army base in the Midwest for basic training. When he called home, he told us about how often he was beaten by the drill sergeant. How he was punished by excessive chores or being forced to run in the heat and humidity until he fell ill.

            When he refused to carry a gun or clean a gun or even carry a fake gun in parade, he was beaten so badly that his jaw was broken and placed in the brig. When his time ended, the army sent him home. He never had to go to Vietnam.

            Meanwhile I was fixated on the news. Every night we were bombarded by gruesome stories coming out of Vietnam, reinforcing my belief that America had no business being there.

            After a year at the community college, I transferred to the University of Southern California. I never skipped a class or turned in a late assignment out of fear of losing my scholarship. Without that money, I’d be lost.

            About mid-year, groups began organizing protests against the war. I went to several town hall meetings in which information was presented that made me cringe. I hated seeing the pictures of injured civilians and soldiers, but couldn’t turn away. I helped make signs and write protest speeches for other, braver students to deliver.

            In between classes I’d join marches on campus. We’d chant as we walked past classrooms, causing quite a fuss.

            The activists planned a mass day of protest for a weekend. Like hundreds of other students, I sat in the grass in what was known as the quad. I listened to speaker after speaker, all who said the words that I didn’t have the guts to say.

            About halfway through the morning, men in black suits appeared, standing along the edges of the quad. They looked the same with their military-style haircuts and ridged postures. Without being told, I figured they were feds, there to spy on us.

            I didn’t see cameras pointed our way, but fear overtook me anyway. I snuck off, afraid of being identified, labeled, and arrested.

            Later on, I learned I left just in time, for there were arrests, mass hysteria as students tried to escape, and injuries from falls and being beaten with cops’ bully clubs. I never attended another town hall meeting, but I did still participate in campus marches.

            For another month. Then, the group behind marches declared that they were going to set fire to the on-campus ROTC building. That was the demarcation line for me, a step I refused to cross.

            Because I don’t have a political background and took few classes in government or history, I can’t site instances or details. For this reason, I’d never win a debate or convince someone that their perception is wrong.

            Since then, I have consciously followed the news, but don’t join protests, unless you count sharing information of social media.

            I grouse with friends and family, but that’s it.

            My political experience was short-lived, but something I will never forget.

            I admit to obsessively reading stories and listening to news on public radio and television. To fear being left out, of not witnessing an important event that changes history or our government, and there’s a lot of that happening, every day.

My New Best Friend

To know God,

to truly know God.

That’s what I want more

than anything.

He’ll come to me as a friend

and sit by my side.

He’ll sing to me of love, joy,

and inner tranquility.

He’ll tell me what a good girl

I’ve been all my life,

and how pleased He is with

the paths that I have chosen.

When tears run down my cheeks,

He’ll wrap His arms around me

and hold me tight, not letting go

until the shuddering subsides.

We’ll share cool water from my fridge,

some homemade bread, and a bowl

of fresh fruit, picked off the trees in

my backyard.  Before we begin, we’ll

bow our heads and offer thanks for

all the good and kind people in the

world, for peace, for love, and for

self-acceptance.  I won’t like that last one.

When He bites into the apple and juice

runs down His chin, I’ll snap a photo,

and then we’ll laugh.

He’ll take a picture of me smiling, so that

I may treasure it forever.

After our meal, I’ll invite Him to spend

the night.  We’ll have a slumber party

with popcorn and a G-rated movie.

He’ll sleep in the front bedroom, and

when I close my eyes that night,

I’ll sleep soundly until late the next day,

for the first time in a long, long while.

In the morning, He’ll wake me with the

warmth of His smile.  I’ll feel tingly all

over, and when I get up, that feeling will

cling like plastic wrap.

Before He leaves later that afternoon,

He’ll pull me aside and whisper in my ear.

Like a gentle breeze, I’ll hear Him say

that He will be my one best friend.

Forever.

First Time Camper

            I grew up in a rather isolated environment. My family restricted my friends, so much so that I could count on one hand how many girls made it past their screening. Perhaps it was because we were quite poor and my parents didn’t want our level of poverty exposed. Or maybe it was because they didn’t want me finding out what others were doing.

            My awareness of what other girls my age did was quite limited. I saw them at school, of course, but that didn’t expand to friendship: there was no sharing of secrets or playtime at each other’s houses.

            In fact, except for one neighbor in Ohio, I wasn’t permitted inside anyone’s house. (Until I became a teen and figured out how to escape the restrictions!) If there’s no indoor time, you don’t know how many toys someone has or what they do for fun. You have no knowledge if they have a television or if they do, what they’re allowed to watch. You don’t know if they have just one old doll or dozens of new ones, or how many clothes they have in their closets.

            Because my interactions with others were heavily supervised and restricted, I had no idea if they went away to camp or just traveled with family, or it they went anywhere at all.

            When you grow up in such an environment, your knowledge of the world is comparable to living in a tunnel, with restricted view of what lies beyond.

            My family didn’t camp. We seldom took a vacation unless it was to stay with one of my mother’s sisters/ And none of those cousins ever went to a camp because they were just as poor, if not more so, than us.

            When I took a course at the College of San Mateo about a proposed development in the mountains, I understood that camping was part of the course. I expected information to be distributed detailing what types of equipment one needed plus clothing and other necessities.

            None of that happened, so I was on my own. This was pre-Internet, so I had no way of researching information other than going to a library, which, in all honesty, I failed to do. That turned out to be a huge mistake.

            Back then you could collect Green Stamps by bowling high scores. Every weekend, I went from alley to alley, bowling sets of six games, the maximum, and collecting stamps, which I later glued into books. Once you had enough books, you could trade them in for whatever was offered at the Green Stamp redemption center.

             I perused the catalogue, marking camping equipment that I thought I should have. Once I had enough books to redeem, I’d get someone to drive me there, trade them in, and return home proud of my “purchases.”

            Some of the things I got: a small canvas pup tent, a camping stove and lantern, a sleeping bag, air mattress and utensils. At a thrift store I bought a backpack: a canvas bag on a metal frame. I also bought a warm jacket and sweaters.

            As time neared, I began putting items in the pack. Once everything was inside, I knelt down and slid my arms into the straps. I couldn’t lift it off the floor! Then I sorted through my belongings, removing anything I felt I could live without for three nights.

            When time came to leave, my brother drove me to the meeting place on campus. As others deposited their packs on the ground next to the bus, I realized, with great embarrassment, that my equipment was all wrong.

            Not one person had canvas anything. Their packs were lightweight aluminum and nylon. Everyone else had jackets that stuffed into tiny bags, unlike mine which was bulky. Their sleeping bags were also nylon, unlike my flannel-lined cotton one. No one had an air mattress: instead they had thin mats that tied onto the tops of their packs.

            There was nothing I could do to change anything, so when it came time to leave, I put my stuff in the bottom of the bus and took a seat.

            The drive was amazing. I was surrounded by happy voices as people sang and shared stories. The voices were animated and filled with joy. Their energy was contagious, and although I didn’t participate, I loved simply being in their presence.

            At the trial we put on our packs and began walking. There were three leaders: one at the front, one in the middle, and one bringing up the rear.

            I started off in the middle, but as my inexperience and heavy tack pulled me down, I soon was at the rear. And struggling. I hadn’t realized that cheap tennis shoes wouldn’t work. Since that’s all I owned, I felt every stone, every stick, every rut. My feet grew sore within the first hour.

            As I fell further and further behind, the leader was stuck keeping me company. He offered encouraging words, like keep going, you can do it and so on. He must have realized that his words had little effect, for soon tears began flowing. If the bus had been at camp, I would have turned around and gone back.

            After an hour my shoulders were aching so badly that I imagined the straps of the backpack cutting into my skin. I pictured blood streaming down my back and chest. I thought I’d pass out, as it was also quite warm.

            This was before cell phones, so the leader stuck with me had no way to communicate with the others who had been out of sight for a long, long time.

            Someone must have noticed our absence, for a camper came down the trail and took my pack from me. He made a snide comment about my choice of equipment, which hurt, but there was nothing I could do about it.

            Without that weight, I could move faster, although not as speedily as others wanted. Eventually we joined the others, who had stopped at a wide spot on the trail. Because of how slow I was, we were far behind where we should have been. While only one person chastised me, I got plenty of angry looks.

            When others began putting up their tents, I worked to unstrap mine from my pack. I was told to leave it, as it wouldn’t be sufficient. Instead I was squeezed into a tent with two strangers, one on each side, which meant my spot was dead-center on the trail. On top of rocks. Which poked me all night long.

            I wasn’t prepared for how temperatures drop in the mountains. As long as I was somewhat near the small fires we had, I didn’t suffer too much, but once it was time to sleep, the cold smacked me all over. My sleeping bag would have been fine on a sleepover in someone’s heated bedroom, but insufficient outdoors, even on a warm day.

            I froze. I shivered all night long. Even though I had bodies on either side, their closeness provided no warmth. By the time morning arrived, I was unable to move. I couldn’t sit or stand. My fingers and toes were stiff. My face couldn’t change position.

            One of the leaders noticed and offered me his giant gloves and someone else loaned me a scarf. I was grateful. These people were experienced campers. They might have scoffed earlier, but their kind hearts refused to let me suffer too much.

            When we resumed walking, the men took turns carrying my stuff. I was embarrassed, as they had their own lightweight packs, showing their skills outdoors, with my cheap stuff added to their weight.

            Once re reached out destination, a view of the valley where a famous company wanted to build an expensive ski resort, the view was stunning. Other than when my family moved cross-country, I’d never seen mountains or deep valleys or mind-boggling views. It was so beautiful, that turning it into a resort seemed sacrilegious.

            That was the point of this trip: to expose how this company would destroy the environment to create a playground for the wealthy.

            After a quick lunch, which thankfully others shared with me as I had brought no food (oh, I forgot to mention that they also gave me food for dinner!), we headed downhill.

            By now I was able to carry some of my stuff, but the bulky items had been tied to others’ packs. My fingers and toes still hurt, so walking was treacherous as I couldn’t feel anything under my feet. I stumbled about, like a drunk. I still had the gloves, which helped somewhat.

            The bus was waiting when we got down to the parking lot. Our stuff was loaded into the bottom and we headed north. Because it took longer than planned to get me up there and back, we couldn’t drive all the way home that day.

            We camped at a rather boring site off the freeway. Once again they shared food, but because I was feeling better, I put up my own tent. During the night there were unfamiliar noises outside the camp. I had to pee, but was too scared to go out on my own.

            In the morning, I made a beeline to the restroom, the first one up. When I was awake enough to see what had happened during the night, it was obvious that some kind of creature had broken into everyone else’s packs. We had no food left.

            It was a long, hungry drive home. We did stop for hamburgers, but I hadn’t brought any money! Someone gave me a few fries, but that was it.

            Back home I was too embarrassed to tell my story. I simply hid in my bedroom for the rest of the day, spent time unpacking, then carried my stuff out to the garage.

            I never told my family any part of my experience. My parents were experts at ridiculing me, making me feel stupid and incompetent. I refused to give them another morsel to add to their weapon cache.

            That was my first time camping. While you might think it was my last, you’d be mistaken.

            My husband’s family loved camping at Lake Berryessa. Before we were engaged, he took me there to join his family. They were already settled in a spot, apparently the one they preferred. My husband hadn’t brought a tent, to my dismay! I was terrified of bugs and was convinced that they’d eat me up during the night.

            When I awakened in the morning, my face was swollen, so much so that I could only open one eye. My soon-to-be mother-in-law was a nurse. She applied compressed which brought down the swelling.

            My concern, my biggest worry, was that she’d tell her son not to marry me! Thank goodness, that never happened. Instead it became part of the family lore.

            After that, my husband and I camped many, many times.

What is a Friend?

A true friend is a gift from God.

No more, no less.

Ears, eyes, heart

finely tuned

to every thought

action

need

A friend seeks balance,

craving only that which

is offered

and not one drop more

Giving, sharing

even the smallest things.

A warm hug,

kiss, smile

A friend knows when

to step up

and when to step down.

Never pushing or demanding

Reaching fingers

with open palm.

Electric energy pulsing

across the gap,

joining two strangers

into one compact unit.

A friend asks for nothing,

but is grateful

when something

drips into the heart,

warming the soul’s

ties.

Prayers offered

and heard.

Thanks given

for the smallest

of gestures

A friend is all that

and more.