>Lassoing the Moon

>

It stormed here today.

Not completely unexpected, mind you. But after several days without a cloud, one becomes hopeful the storm has passed.

For four days and nights, the weather was dry, uneventful, and the clouds separated, more than once, to reveal blue skies and multi-colored sunlight, as I allowed myself to be lulled into a place of anxious comfort.

Before the storms came.

And thunder rolled in the form of a sob that filled my head with sounds no one else could hear.

No one ever, really, lassoes the moon…

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

Are You A Writer?

Are you a writer?

The question, as it came after reading something I had posted, affected me; made me think, made me question, embarrassed me a little…

It was as though, after I’d introduced my son, he had asked, “Are you a mother?”

Or, upon meeting me, sweaty and winded, on the track, “Are you a runner?”

My defensive reaction to a simple, albeit unwitting question, paced back and forth in the recesses of my mind for the rest of the day, occasionally coming out front and tapping, lightly on my brain…

“Hey! Are you? Are you a writer?”

In the few quiet moments I had to consider the question I was left with this…

I readily admit to being lots of things; I am Mom, I am friend, I am employee, I am daughter, I am sister, I am family to those whose own has forgotten them, and, I am object of affection, too tired, too drained, too raw, to give anything back.

And, none of these things define me.

In a remarkably transcendent way writing does. There is something about describing myself as a writer that leaves me feeling bare and open; exposed.

Because that’s what writing does. Writing takes all the ugly, half-used, naked, and very real stuff we all carry around with us, and puts it out on the table.

And declaring that you are a writer demands, “Look at it.”.

I am a writer.

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

>Are You A Writer?

>

Are you a writer?

The question, as it came after reading something I had posted, affected me; made me think, made me question, embarrassed me a little…

It was as though, after I’d introduced my son, he had asked, “Are you a mother?”

Or, upon meeting me, sweaty and winded, on the track, “Are you a runner?”

My defensive reaction to a simple, albeit unwitting question, paced back and forth in the recesses of my mind for the rest of the day, occasionally coming out front and tapping, lightly on my brain…

“Hey! Are you? Are you a writer?”

In the few quiet moments I had to consider the question I was left with this…

I readily admit to being lots of things; I am Mom, I am friend, I am employee, I am daughter, I am sister, I am family to those whose own has forgotten them, and, I am object of affection, too tired, too drained, too raw, to give anything back.

And, none of these things define me.

In a remarkably transcendent way writing does. There is something about describing myself as a writer that leaves me feeling bare and open; exposed.

Because that’s what writing does. Writing takes all the ugly, half-used, naked, and very real stuff we all carry around with us, and puts it out on the table.

And declaring that you are a writer demands, “Look at it.”.

I am a writer.

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

Arm-wrestling God

We share 20 years.

She hosted a beautiful wedding as I joined my life to my first real love, and provided a haven when he returned to his; liquid, cold, uncaring, and violent.

She was there through the howls of birth; first mine, and later, theirs.

And, as I suffered through the death of one not to be born alive, she was there as I emerged from the examination room, holding a single rose, and her tongue, on the long, silent ride home.

When I determined to try again, staring down forty, she propped me up when my feet were too swollen to carry me, and never failed to remind me of the folly in my decision.

Now as I bare my soul, share my guilt, and bemoan my lack of restraint, she does what only she can do….

“You arm-wrestled God for a man, honey! What did you think was gonna happen?”

This is her gift…

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

>Arm-wrestling God

>

We share 20 years.

She hosted a beautiful wedding as I joined my life to my first real love, and provided a haven when he returned to his; liquid, cold, uncaring, and violent.

She was there through the howls of birth; first mine, and later, theirs.

And, as I suffered through the death of one not to be born alive, she was there as I emerged from the examination room, holding a single rose, and her tongue, on the long, silent ride home.

When I determined to try again, staring down forty, she propped me up when my feet were too swollen to carry me, and never failed to remind me of the folly in my decision.

Now as I bare my soul, share my guilt, and bemoan my lack of restraint, she does what only she can do….

“You arm-wrestled God for a man, honey! What did you think was gonna happen?”

This is her gift…

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

A Fork in the Road

The World History class was required for my degree. I have no particular interest in World History.

The professor, a bespectacled, soft-spoken man; dumpy, mousy, and pastey.

Within a week, unheeded, I was bringing a Bible to class. As he methodically dissected human history from it’s very beginnings, he hearkened back to that holiest of texts, debunking fiction after fiction until the leather-bound volume in my back-pack became akin to an early incarnation of Aesop’s fables.

And he never raised his voice, or spoke in tongues, or gestured wildly, or challenged, or questioned. He stated facts, eloquently, quietly, and intelligently.
I aced the class. He changed my life.
I remember, as a child, following my mink enshrouded mother into the sanctuary and becoming aware of countless pairs of feminine eyes taking her measure. Inside my child’s brain, the experience felt incongruous.

I remember sitting and listening to my ancient Sunday School teacher recite, by rote, long passages of contradictory verse, and as I sat, looking at the faces around me for some sign that I wasn’t the only one who suspected we were all part of some kind of wild mind-bending experiment.

I saw lots of things…

I saw rapt eyes over gaped mouthes.

I saw girls whispering, posturing, and primping, and boys, doodling or dexteriously fashioning paper footballs whose mitered edges never really resembled a football, at all.

I saw lots of yawns.

But, I never saw real doubt.

I didn’t dare to interrupt Dr. Dick’s diatribe. I sat, obediently, until creativity, in the form of a more adventurous friend, suggested we skip Sunday School. A local shopping plaza absorbed the time, until our parents came to collect us, none the wiser.

Later, as an adult, I began what has been suggested to be a genetically inclined quest for knowledge. My father, you see, while seldom attending church, has spent his life in study of various relgions and spiritual dictates.

I began to read and study religions of all types.

I read the Book of Mormon from cover to cover, finding some solace in it’s words, but more interest in it’s story.

I have read several different versions of the Bible, ranging from King James to New World, as the highlighted pages of my current, more traditional, volume will attest.
I read, with interest, L. Ron Hubbard’s, “Dianetics”.

I have studed Daoism, Buddhism, and currently own two translations of the Tao Ching; one stays at home, the other travels with me. This poetic text has served me well in times of unrest and insecurity…

After over 40 years of research, and soul-searching, and education, and experience, I have reached a place of comfort.

As I sit on my patio, early morning light dances between green needles in the towering pines that surround my landscape. And birds, whose very existence attests to a power greater than that enjoyed by any man, dart to and fro in my periphery. As I breathe the soft, clean air of daybreak, I know, deep in my soul, a loving power. A higher power. A wiser power. A driving energy that exists within every living thing.


And this knowledge imbues in me a respect for all creation; from the smallest insect to the largest mammal.

And it soothes me, with the surety that deep within each us is a voice, full of reason, full of love, and flush with wisdom.

Our impetus is to listen; to listen and to hear, to allow this rich wisdom to permeate our consciousness and guide us, without restrictions imposed by those who would control behavior in an effort to create a monochromatic society, without traditions imposed by those soothed by sameness, without dictates that would keep us from recognizing our true potential as fellow holy spirits.

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

Library night

It might be library night…
I never really could keep up with it. Is it the same night, every week, or more a circumstance of convenience?

Yeah, it definitely could be library night…

The thought comforts me as my hand parts my hair 5 times before my head comes to rest in my palm, against the car window.
We probably wouldn’t be talking now, anyway…

I do so miss the talking.

And not even the talking, really, but all the little nuances built into talking;

the anticipation of talking,

that first, long, drawn-out “Heeeyy”, that rides out to meet me on the rush of a deep sigh,

oft-used phrases,

words that feel like you….

“Can I ask you a question?”
The smile that never ends, and the laughter.

Good laughter, long laughter, unadulterated, unexpected, and healing laughter.

I miss the joy in laughter.
For the first time in my life, I would rather talk than write. Writing, is after all, all about me. The places I can go are restricted by the confines of my mind, by my experience, by my hopes, and my dreams.
I miss the voice that gently took me places I had never thought to go, but, even more, I miss the wide-eyed enthusiasm as whole new worlds opened up to you through the doorways in my words.

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

>A Fork in the Road

>

The World History class was required for my degree. I have no particular interest in World History.

The professor, a bespectacled, soft-spoken man; dumpy, mousy, and pastey.

Within a week, unheeded, I was bringing a Bible to class. As he methodically dissected human history from it’s very beginnings, he hearkened back to that holiest of texts, debunking fiction after fiction until the leather-bound volume in my back-pack became akin to an early incarnation of Aesop’s fables.

And he never raised his voice, or spoke in tongues, or gestured wildly, or challenged, or questioned. He stated facts, eloquently, quietly, and intelligently.
I aced the class. He changed my life.
I remember, as a child, following my mink enshrouded mother into the sanctuary and becoming aware of countless pairs of feminine eyes taking her measure. Inside my child’s brain, the experience felt incongruous.

I remember sitting and listening to my ancient Sunday School teacher recite, by rote, long passages of contradictory verse, and as I sat, looking at the faces around me for some sign that I wasn’t the only one who suspected we were all part of some kind of wild mind-bending experiment.

I saw lots of things…

I saw rapt eyes over gaped mouthes.

I saw girls whispering, posturing, and primping, and boys, doodling or dexteriously fashioning paper footballs whose mitered edges never really resembled a football, at all.

I saw lots of yawns.

But, I never saw real doubt.

I didn’t dare to interrupt Dr. Dick’s diatribe. I sat, obediently, until creativity, in the form of a more adventurous friend, suggested we skip Sunday School. A local shopping plaza absorbed the time, until our parents came to collect us, none the wiser.

Later, as an adult, I began what has been suggested to be a genetically inclined quest for knowledge. My father, you see, while seldom attending church, has spent his life in study of various relgions and spiritual dictates.

I began to read and study religions of all types.

I read the Book of Mormon from cover to cover, finding some solace in it’s words, but more interest in it’s story.

I have read several different versions of the Bible, ranging from King James to New World, as the highlighted pages of my current, more traditional, volume will attest.
I read, with interest, L. Ron Hubbard’s, “Dianetics”.

I have studed Daoism, Buddhism, and currently own two translations of the Tao Ching; one stays at home, the other travels with me. This poetic text has served me well in times of unrest and insecurity…

After over 40 years of research, and soul-searching, and education, and experience, I have reached a place of comfort.

As I sit on my patio, early morning light dances between green needles in the towering pines that surround my landscape. And birds, whose very existence attests to a power greater than that enjoyed by any man, dart to and fro in my periphery. As I breathe the soft, clean air of daybreak, I know, deep in my soul, a loving power. A higher power. A wiser power. A driving energy that exists within every living thing.


And this knowledge imbues in me a respect for all creation; from the smallest insect to the largest mammal.

And it soothes me, with the surety that deep within each us is a voice, full of reason, full of love, and flush with wisdom.

Our impetus is to listen; to listen and to hear, to allow this rich wisdom to permeate our consciousness and guide us, without restrictions imposed by those who would control behavior in an effort to create a monochromatic society, without traditions imposed by those soothed by sameness, without dictates that would keep us from recognizing our true potential as fellow holy spirits.

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

>Library night

>

It might be library night…
I never really could keep up with it. Is it the same night, every week, or more a circumstance of convenience?

Yeah, it definitely could be library night…

The thought comforts me as my hand parts my hair 5 times before my head comes to rest in my palm, against the car window.
We probably wouldn’t be talking now, anyway…

I do so miss the talking.

And not even the talking, really, but all the little nuances built into talking;

the anticipation of talking,

that first, long, drawn-out “Heeeyy”, that rides out to meet me on the rush of a deep sigh,

oft-used phrases,

words that feel like you….

“Can I ask you a question?”
The smile that never ends, and the laughter.

Good laughter, long laughter, unadulterated, unexpected, and healing laughter.

I miss the joy in laughter.
For the first time in my life, I would rather talk than write. Writing, is after all, all about me. The places I can go are restricted by the confines of my mind, by my experience, by my hopes, and my dreams.
I miss the voice that gently took me places I had never thought to go, but, even more, I miss the wide-eyed enthusiasm as whole new worlds opened up to you through the doorways in my words.

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll

Today…

Today, for the first time in weeks, I woke up to….nothing.
I changed my routine,
and spent less time staring at my computer monitor.

Today, I no longer felt the need to keep my phone in my hand, but rather, allowed it to rest, recklessly, atop a cabinet in my office.
I changed my ringtones.
I viewed my empty inbox with relief,
and realized I had gone 72 hours without hearing his voice…
Today, I brought my phone charger home and plugged it back in next to my bed. My phone has held a charge, all day, for the first time in months…

Today, thoughts of work were uncluttered.
I set priorities in hopes of moving on to goals.
I had a daydream…about cleaning out a closet…
I participated in a political discussion in which, for the first time in weeks, my entire mind was engaged,
and, I read several pages of “Atlas Shrugged” while eating lunch.

Several times today, I remembered an anecdote or experience shared by a mutual friend and thrilled with the anticipation of sharing, until I remembered…
I stopped and thought, “Oh, I can’t wait to tell him…” before realizing my best friend had stopped listening…
Today, I heard his name spoken time and time again, and, each time, it hurt a little less…

Today, I realized, with certainty, that my conviction to refuse to live my life according to a set of man-made rules is right…for me…

Today the landscape seems brighter…

© Copyright 2007-2008 Stacye Carroll