Honeysuckle Wind

robin in the snow

This year-round resident is not a harbinger of spring

Earlier that afternoon I tried to sleep, but I was just too tense. (Daytime naps are sometimes dangerous for me, due to things that wander in behind closed eyes.) After dinner, standing beside the wood store, my eyelids weighed a thousand pounds. I looked up at the clock:

“Hey, it’s only seven-thirty! I am so exhausted… It feels like ten o’clock!”

“Because it’s dark,” she said.

Oh yes, that. Less than four weeks until the solstice, thank God. But what about this afternoon? I’d been thinking about the honeysuckle, actually. Honeysuckle in the hedgerows and along the fences where we used to live in Maryland. My mother was from Maryland. When I was a little boy, she showed me how you could pull a blossom off and touch it with your tongue to taste the nectar. It must have been a subtle thing, because it never worked for me. I tried it several times when I was grown up but forgot how she had done it. Maybe that part never happened. Maybe I was never there.

I remember standing outside the kitchen door one evening at the old farmhouse my wife and I had bought and lived in for ten years. The sun had set but it was warm, with a scent of honeysuckle in the humid air. There were crickets, too, except that when I turned my head, they went away. (Wait, what?) I turned again: oh no! That was the first time I realized without a doubt that I was losing hearing in one ear. The grown man standing in the honeysuckle wind began to cry a little—mortal, after all. That was when I knew that we would move.

For all I love it in the mountains, we’ve never settled on a home. This is mostly financial, but I can still imagine buying a fine house with a ninety-mile view and feeling lost. An exquisite sadness, like watching someone you love get pulled out to sea by the current and there’s nothing you can do.

When I moved to Maryland in ’75, I returned to an environment I hadn’t experienced since childhood. Hot sandy soil and humid summer days. Crabs and corn and big tomatoes. Lightning bugs and honeysuckle. All was fecund and alive and blossomed in the hot white sun. It fascinated and intrigued this wandering ex-Air Force brat. Was I a man or still a boy? Everything was there, except my mother never made a mark of hope on me. Every now and then I feel the wind and sink into a long, slow ache, but I’m not after honeysuckle, am I?

My wife emerged from the bedroom in the old adobe to kiss me goodnight. She was shiny-clean and beautiful and smelled like Iowa in May.

“Are you feeling any better?” she asked.

“A little,” I grunted.

”A little,” she mimicked with a funny voice, and then bent closer so I couldn’t miss:

“The past is past,” she said…

We hadn’t even talked about it, and she knew. Verily I am a man. I can do what I must do, and make a story of the honeysuckle wind.

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Frozen Musings (Very Local)

front door of an old adobe in the snow

What force of will to melt a frozen brain?

Here we go again. Not Thanksgiving yet, and two snowstorms already. The first one was bigger. Snow, snow, snow. Just means I have to stay home. Maybe I even want to at first, with a wood stove six feet from my chair. Then comes the pressure. It feels so confining inside thick adobe walls with winter settling in for six long months, especially after vowing I’d never do it all again, at least not in this house.

I had a visitation from a lunatic the other day. (I know I’m crazy, but I’ve only been here fifteen years, comprendo?) He drove up in the mud and slush while I was walking back from the mailbox as the sun went down. I was looking at an extra from a Wild West movie: cowboy hat, long hair, and beard. Friendly fellow, though. Voice like a cement truck. Former tenant in the same house as us, lived there ten years before the heroin addict. I wish I were making this up. He was looking for the people who used to live next door because he needed someone to help take care of his two horses, or maybe I got that part wrong. How would they have been of any use? Like leaving a dead van with flat tires parked out front “to show that someone’s there” (a neighbor’s innovation), there was no logic to the tale. It was getting dark, and I was sinking deeper in the mud, standing by the open driver’s window, trying not to stare at the giant silent devil-dog in the back seat. Did I mention he was friendly?

“Say, if I come back here again, would it be all right for me to knock on your front door?”

Oh sure. I waited a few beats, but fine. What else am I going to say, freezing in the dark? Who are you? Just please don’t ask to see the old place and what became of the “improvements” that you made, because it ain’t a-gonna happen.

“What do you do? You don’t work. You’re old.”

Why was I even there? Jesus Christ. The guy was sucking data from me like a vacuum cleaner, not to mention I was standing in the mud, holding important mail for fruitcake offers from Corsicana, and the wind was picking up. I also didn’t want the Ghost of Ancient Hippie Madness running loose around the place again, not after exorcising so damn much. What did I have to do, sacrifice a goat? Dennis Hopper used to live around the corner, down a dirt road where he roared out wasted once in a big sedan and nearly ran over a dog belonging to someone else who doesn’t live here any more. This stuff is everywhere, it’s in the dirt. Fucking pot shards, arrowheads, old bones. Everything is so damned over but it never goes away.

Just then my apparition’s cell phone rang. To my surprise, he picked it up (“Hello, honey!”), oh holy intervention. I waved good-bye and slipped away. As if. Even in this little neighborhood, I feel the weight from way down under. Sometimes I mistake it for an inspiration. Every now and then, it is!

As someone told me recently:

You’re one of the few who arrived and immediately experienced the spiritual imagination of the place and appreciated it in an articulate and instinctive way. What intrigues me is how many people move here and are tone deaf. I can’t figure out why they are here since they might as well live in Colorado: beautiful but soul-less…the chthonic spirits are absent. ‘Course sometimes a man needs relief from the resonating spirits. They can drive you mad.

One of the few is right, and I deserve a medal. I wrote once that it was like riding an electric eel. I’m also driven mad. Terrible beauty is not a joke. There’s nothing light about this place. I honestly do not get why people come here to retire, but then I have the fucking gift. I need expansion and relief. We need humor, vision, and a home.

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Good Man Gone

snowy mountains outside Taos

Immortal sons of energy and light

There I was, sitting in front of the wood stove on Wednesday afternoon with the computer in my lap the way I always do, when all of a sudden I thought of someone I hadn’t seen or spoken to for a long, long time: Leo Sullivan, one-time manager for John Clay and the Lost Austin Band, the gloriously flawed and weirdly genius native Texan string band hardly anybody ever heard of, where was he now—sick, alive and well, or what?

“The reason we’re called the Lost Austin Band is because whenever we play, nobody knows where we’re at.”
                                                                                   – John Clay

Leo did a lot more things than work with the band, but that was how I met him. I can’t remember exactly how it all transpired. He must have known someone who knew me and that I played guitar—not amazingly well, but good enough for I, IV, V in the key of G. From early ’72 to ’75, I played or didn’t play rhythm guitar with John and Gary and Doug and Johnny, always under Leo’s watchful eye. The times I didn’t was when I was too pissed off to drive to yet another gig where we were supposed to be headlining or maybe actually get paid but ended up doing an “audition set” for free beer when the main act took a break. No matter what, though, Leo always made us feel like things were just about to break for us: so-and-so might be there, we could leverage this into a weekly gig, the barmaid’s boyfriend had a PA we could borrow next time… I was young and ambitious. I wanted us to go to Europe, where I thought John Clay would knock ’em dead. (Leo thought so, too.) Authentic West Texan, and not the way you think. Authentic deadly brilliant child-of-God West Texan, if that’s not redundant, with the soul of a drunken poet burned alive by Baptists. For several bars of just a couple songs each night, we sounded like real music you had never heard before and never would again. That was the thing, all right, though. You never would again.

I think Leo knew that. For all he loved John and wanted the best for him, it was the doing of it then and there that counted. During those years I saw Leo almost every other day at Les Amis, a university area hangout in Austin where I’d find him with his cigarettes and coffee, taking in the scene. I never really knew that much about him, but he always seemed to know a lot about everybody else. You just wanted to be in his orbit. Years after I moved away to Maryland and email was invented, Leo showed up again online. We didn’t communicate all that much, but that’s the way it sometimes is with real old friends, you know? You honestly don’t need to, because you’re cool.

I guess you know where this is going. I googled Leo’s name plus “Austin,” and the first thing that came up was an obituary in the Austin American-Statesman. I knew he’d had health problems for a long time—one of the things we did exchange some words about—so this wasn’t a total shock, but I was sad I’d missed his passing. Then I saw the date: he’d only died a couple of weeks before! Well, damn. I read a little more—ye gods, the burial was that day, Wednesday, November 19th, in a veteran’s cemetery in Killeen! Calculating for the time zones, probably that very minute.

This shook me up right good. He obviously wanted me to know that he was no longer of this world. Why else would I go looking for him on the very day they put him in the ground? I went out in the fading light to pull some firewood from the snow and felt an energy I recognized. He seemed to say that it was “wild” where he was, and that he could go wherever he wanted. Any country, any planet. That would have been just like him, having a good time on the other side. It was as if he were telling me that everything would be all right, for everyone.

Back inside beside the stove, I read the whole obituary. It wasn’t all that long but full of heart. Here’s my favorite part, italics mine:

Story-teller, sound-man, sage, friend, father. Leo was at the center of the Austin music scene while it was young and free. His knowledge, humour, perception, gentle, kind-hearted equanimity and untamed imagination are beloved still by all who knew him… Leo served his country as a veteran of the Korean conflict. He was a peace-loving, steadfast, independent, good and honest man who loved kids and understood dogs.

That last sentence really killed me. This is all we need to be. If someone says those simple things about you when you’re gone, you have lived a mighty life. Catch you later, man. Take care.

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After the Snow

Taos Pueblo land in snow

Taos Pueblo lands

Make of the beauty what you will, it’s awfully cold. This must be what winter looks like, only it’s November. I had to go outside again to get the shot. (There’s a window beside my desk that faces the mountain, but there are treetops in the way.) What I do is climb the driveway to the road and walk about sixty yards to where it goes up a little rise, then turn left into the piñon and juniper until I reach a certain spot. You can’t see the cactus under the snow. A couple of times I’ve picked up spines.

That’s a slice of Taos Mountain to the left. The white shapes at the bottom on the right are burned areas from a major fire the summer my wife moved to Dubuque. Not only was I on my own, there was heavy smoke and ashes falling in the parking lot outside our rented condo. Hot and dirty, couldn’t breathe, I had to find a cheaper rental. Turns out this was where I ended up, a one-bedroom adobe on the side of a hill across from Taos Mountain. She came back a few years later, piled her stuff on top of mine, and we have been here ever since. I don’t know how I got so lucky. Whenever I want to run away, I must remember this. For all my criticism and paranoia, our lives have been incredibly full.

Think of how much more I could have piled in if I hadn’t been complaining.

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Ghost Volcano

San Antonio Mountain

Looks to me like it’s advancing

This is San Antonio Mountain (10,9o8 ft), a free-standing volcanic peak in the Taos Plateau volcanic field of the Rio Grande Rift valley. I took the telephoto shot at 5:37 p.m. Mountain Time two days ago before the big snow on Sunday. You’re looking at that weather coming here, in fact. The leading edge of whatever, the thing that snowed that night. The peak is about forty-five miles in a straight line from Ranchos de Taos. It’s a very spooky place.

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