<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><rss xmlns:atom='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' xmlns:openSearch='http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/' version='2.0'><channel><atom:id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939</atom:id><lastBuildDate>Wed, 21 May 2008 15:39:19 +0000</lastBuildDate><title>May Day Cafe</title><description/><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/</link><managingEditor>noreply@blogger.com (NieldsBlog)</managingEditor><generator>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>63</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>25</openSearch:itemsPerPage><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-7792470222992637543</guid><pubDate>Wed, 21 May 2008 15:34:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2008-05-21T11:39:19.339-04:00</atom:updated><title>Let It Be</title><description>I didn’t used to be an emotional person.  I’d notice people–sometimes my friends–crying at movies or during a sad song, and I’d wonder why.  Of course, when I was a kid I had trouble keeping the tears back, and so I trained myself well to keep that from happening: think of something funny.  Think of a math formula. Think of a chord progression.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I got good at cutting off my body from the neck down.  If I could work through problems in my head, I could usually come up with a calm, rational way of dealing with them.  This was helpful in lots of areas of my life, specifically relationships.  If my partner was behaving badly, or treating me “unfairly” (extremely easy to do, since my tolerance for being treated any way other than like a member of the royal family is low), I could go up in my little attic of a head and give myself a pep talk.  “He was abused as a child,” I’d counsel my hurt self.  “Don’t take it personally.” Or, “She’s envious.  She doesn’t have your advantages.”  Later, as I became slightly less insecure and slightly more evolved, the pep talk would be more along the lines of, “Maybe you didn’t treat him enough like a member of the royal family.  Maybe you’re actually envious of her.  Can you look for the gratitude and the acceptance?”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I could and did.  Gratitude and acceptance became my watch words.  Cultivating gratitude—working actively to appreciate the life I do have, the gifts I have been given, rather than focusing on what I think I lack––has turned my inner world into a much more pleasant place to live.  And seeing acceptance as my path to God—taking what comes, letting things be, going with the flow, seeing reality as my true source––works a lot better than fruitless prayer that things be changed, improved, altered, avoided, granted.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But lately, I’ve been pregnant.  Lately, I’ve been invaded not just by this new person (whom I did pray for, did invite), and not just by frustrating back troubles which have kept me on the couch during the most glorious season of the year, but worse, by all sorts of hormones raging, turning me into someone especially touchy and twitchy and prone to—yes—cry at the drop of a hat.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Exhibit A.  Saturday morning I woke up for the first time in about five months with absolutely nothing to do. Nothing I had to do, I should say.  There was plenty I could do, like fold diapers, organize my daughter’s books, write her yearly birthday letter, call my parents, help Tom make bread, do something crafty, etc.  But the only thing I wanted to do was to break my eight-week media fast and find out what the polls were saying about Barack Obama.  So I put on my comfort disks  (Beatles and Bob Dylan, plus Dan Zanes, ostensibly for Lila but really for me) and went online, only to make myself sick the way I used to make myself sick by reading women’s magazines.  I started to read a New York Times article online about McCain and Obama clashing about Iran, when suddenly emanating from my ancient stereo, I heard the first chords of “Let It Be.”&lt;br /&gt;I’ve always liked the song, (who doesn’t?) but it’s not like it’s one of my favorites.  After the age of 13, I eschewed the more sentimental Paul McCartney songs for the grittier, angrier “more real, man” John Lennon ones.  Give me “Come Together.”  Give me “Happiness Is a Warm Gun.”  Give me “Julia,” Lennon’s tribute to his dead mother who was hit by an off duty cop when Lennon was just 16 years old.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But on Saturday, something wordless came over me, and I started to sob. Taking the advice of an old friend (which I dutifully passed along in How to Be an Adult), I lay on the carpet with my feelings, which were huge and wet. As I lay there hoping Tom and Lila would stay in the kitchen and continue to make bread, I wept on the floor, listening to the familiar chord progression, the background vocals of George and John singing their “ahhs”, the overdubbed guitar solo, the raw sentiment of the tune, what it meant to the fans in 1970 to hear this song, knowing their favorite band had broken up, thinking about Paul’s own “Mother Mary” who had also died (of breast cancer) when he was 16—but Paul, unlike John, had been mostly reticent on the subject.  The song bore into me, and I felt like a channel of all the world’s pain, and so I just cried along.  I suspect this is a pretty typical pregnant woman response—when we are suddenly conduits of new life, our bodies really do become channels for the Other, whether that’s God (in the case of another Mother Mary) or just the pain of the world.  I certainly can no longer witness children in any kind of pain any more, nor can I hear about families losing their children, such as the many stories coming in from China over the weekend.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So I cried and cried and after listening to the song twice through, I picked up my guitar and tuned it and played along to the next song, “The Long and Winding Road.”  Lila came in and sat next to me, excited to see the guitar out.  “You cwying?” she said pointing to my face.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“Yeah. But it’s okay.  Mommy cries sometimes when she ‘s sad. And then she feels better.  Just like you.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Lila crawled into the space between my rapidly diminishing lap and the guitar and sat quietly while I strummed along. I thought about 1970, the year Let it Be came out: my own mother struggling with the many burdens of young motherhood (like I will soon be, she was the mother of two kids in diapers) and the burgeoning feminist movement, tired of government corruption, a cynical Republican president fighting an unpopular and unwinnable, costly war, rising costs of fuel.  And little two and a half year old me, too young to have heard “Let It Be,” unless it had been piped it into the supermarket where we shopped (doubtful—I think 1970 was strictly Muzakland in places like supermarkets). Then I thought about letting it be; how that’s after all become something of a mantra to me. I thought about music, and how it saves me every time, and how grateful I am to be a conduit for music; as grateful as I am to be a conduit of this baby boy in my belly; this two-year-old on my lap.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2008/05/let-it-be.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-1375702072586497497</guid><pubDate>Mon, 21 Apr 2008 23:28:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2008-04-21T19:28:29.679-04:00</atom:updated><title>Another Pregnancy Blog</title><description>It’s that time of year again.  The crocuses have wilted, like sad balloons after a kid’s birthday party, and I find myself overdressed by noon, stripping off layers, deeply regretting the wool socks. The red bud is out on the trees and the forsythia is stark yellow against the still brown branches—no green has come yet to soften it.  This time two years ago, I was eight months pregnant with my daughter, Lila: full of anticipation, wondering who this new person would be, excited, scared, tired, impatient.  Today, I’m pregnant again, and full of the same emotions, but this time around, it would not be a welcome surprise to meet my new child as the lilacs bloom.  This time around, my due date is late August, not late May.  &lt;br /&gt;This pregnancy has not been easy.  I had terrible nausea for the first trimester, and the lift in energy that often happens after about week 14 has yet to arrive for me.  I am generally tired at all times during the day, and I seem to require about 10 hours of sleep per night.  Perhaps this is because I am usually chasing a toddler around; perhaps it’s because we are trying to cram a year’s worth of gigs into a nine-month period; perhaps it’s because my second book is coming out in two weeks.  But the bottom line is: this body can no longer keep up with the dictates of its mind, and recently I’ve lost the ability to walk across the street.  I have such bad lower back pain that I am confined to the house and have to ask my husband to lift and carry anything heavier than my dinner plates.  &lt;br /&gt;Still, I feel as though I’ve had a meeting of sorts.  Last Friday, I had my 20 week ultrasound, and when my ultra-stenographer asked if I wanted to know the baby’s gender, I said, “No, but you can write it down for me and put it in an envelope.”  We did this for Lila, and though no one believes us, we really didn’t peek until after she was born.  Not knowing whether she was going to be a girl or boy was part of the fun: finding out she was a girl at the moment of her delivery was one of the best moments of my whole life.  I wanted that experience again.  &lt;br /&gt;However, from the moment my ultra-stenographer put that jelly covered probe on my belly and we turned our attention to the screen above, I was completely unwilling to take my eyes off the little figure wiggling and dancing in front of me.  So when she said, “I’m moving down to the legs; you might want to avert your eyes,” I said, “Ehn, no worries.  I won’t be able to recognize anything.”&lt;br /&gt;But I did.  I was pretty sure I saw the appendage that women don’t have.  Still, I thought there had been a penis sighting at this stage of the game two years ago, and Lila is definitely penis-free (something she’s a little sad about right now, but that’s a different story.)  The ultra-stenographer said, “Would you like a picture of the genitals along with the information I’m going to put in your envelope?”&lt;br /&gt;“Nah,” I said.  “In fact, forget it.  I don’t need you to write it down.  We can just wait till the baby’s born.”&lt;br /&gt;She nodded.  A few minutes later, she was focused on the baby’s hands, which were being waved about by their owner.  “This is good,” she told me pointing to the screen.  “The hands are open.  Closed hands is a soft-marker for Down’s.”&lt;br /&gt;“Mmmm,” I murmured, transfixed.  “Can you get a profile picture of the baby’s face?”&lt;br /&gt;“I’ll try,” she said, but the hands kept flying by the baby’s head, blocking our shot.  “He sure loves those hands,” she noted.&lt;br /&gt;He!  So it was a he!  My first reaction was one of deep disappointment.  No baby sister for Lila who had been insisting it was a baby sister inside me and not a baby brother.  No sequel to the Nerissa and Katryna Show I’d grown up with.  Boys have tantrums!  Boys tease! Boys play with guns, and if you don’t give them a gun they make the arm of their sisters doll a gun!  Boys drive souped up cars and pass you at eighty miles an hour on two lane roads! Boys stop talking to their moms for years at a time! Boys don’t get to wear pink flowery dresses!  And for some reason, this was the thing that was making me most disappointed: I wouldn’t get to reuse all those cute baby girl clothes I’d been handed down by my two nieces.  Those little pink Mary Janes would leave the family!  Oh no!&lt;br /&gt;I pause here to mention that I have been on a huge anti-consumer kick for the past year or so.  I buy almost nothing, preferring second-hand everything to putting more money into the system, which manufactures new stuff at alarming rates –much of it from sweat shops in Third World countries; much of it composed of petroleum products.  I have been wanting desperately to live off of that particular grid, so it strikes me as hilarious that my focus went to the piles and piles of balled up too-small baby clothes resting in boxes in my attic.  Really?&lt;br /&gt;The ultra-stenographer left me to get the doctor.  She was gone a long time.  I lay on my side and stared at the profile we’d finally taken of the baby’s face.  His face.  He looks a little more like Tom than Lila did in her US profile.  Even then, she looked exactly like me.  This baby has longer cheek-bones, like his father’s. He is beautiful, and as I stared, I thought of all the men I love.  Tom.  My father.  Jesus.  Gandhi. The Buddha. Martin Luther King, Jr.  John Lennon. Bob Dylan.  Barack Obama.  Not to mention my brothers-in-law and my nephews.  And I thought of this one little boy in HooteNanny whom I adore.  He sings all the words to all the songs and has a little guitar, which he made Katyrna and me both sign.  Having another girl would have been easy: I have two sisters, four aunts and a grandmother.  I worked for six years in a girls dorm. Even my pets have been mostly female. But having a boy will stretch me. It will be rich with discovery, a delicious plunge into the unknown.&lt;br /&gt;Disappointment faded and changed to joy, as subtly yet insistently as the browns and grays of March change to the greens and yellows of April.  I felt the baby move inside me and I put my hand on my stomach above where I felt him.  &lt;br /&gt;“Hello, baby boy,” I whispered.  “You’ve got a lot to teach me.  I can’t wait to learn.”</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2008/04/another-pregnancy-blog.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-6977835028535131723</guid><pubDate>Mon, 31 Mar 2008 23:48:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2008-03-31T19:49:28.698-04:00</atom:updated><title>Aphrodite, Spring, and My Media Fast</title><description>As a former Virginian, I find springtime in New England to be not just disappointing (in its lack of flowers, green and warmth) but also violent.  And I’m not talking about the snowstorm that’s supposed to come tonight, nor about the way the ice on the river cracks as loudly as a thunderstorm, nor the way the water rushes down from the Green and White Mountains and floods our Connecticut River banks.  I’m talking about the deeper forces that caused the Greeks to name this particular sun cycle after Aries, the Ram (temper, temper) and to associate this zodiacal sign with infants and toddlers.  (The Greeks also, I just found out, named the month of April after Aphrodite, who was, by turns, charming and aloof.) Stravinsky must have known something about New England springs, because there is nothing gentle and flower-like about his wonderful, terrifying Rites of Spring.  It’s more like a rowdy college keg party, with plenty of Bacchanalian madness thrown in.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Perhaps because it’s spring; perhaps because I’m pregnant, or perhaps because of where we are in this prematurely intense election cycle, but I’ve felt like a frayed nerve for the past few weeks.  I cry at the drop of at hat; predictably at that manipulated point in every movie where director hope you will cry, but at other times too: when my father calls to say hi; when my almost two-year-old asks for tomatoes and then spits them out in a glob on the table, and also when she says, “I need cuddle you,” and puts her arms around my neck.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But mostly, I’m a wreck about this election.  I’ve been following it fanatically since the Iowa caucus, when I first began to believe that Barack Obama might actually pull off a win.  I argued fiercely with fellow lefties who said the country was too backwards and racist to embrace an African American with a foreign name. It’s not about race, I said.  This is a visionary, a leader who comes along once in a hundred years!  And look!  He reaches across party lines!   I stayed up way too late most Tuesdays in February watching results come in, mourning when we lost Massachusetts, high-fiving strangers with Obama buttons the day after Wisconsin. I spent every lunch hour pouring over the latest polls on RealClearPolitics.com.  I have had many dreams about hanging out with Obama in coffee shops, just chatting about the issues and commiserating about life on the road, and also asking him questions about his church.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Which brings us, of course, to THE issue.  Up until the point where Reverend Jeremiah Wright became a YouTube star for his God Damn America moment, Obama was leading both Clinton and McCain in the national polls. In every theoretical match-up, he beat McCain while Clinton just barely lost.  And then the endless looping of what I saw as a not untypical African-American preacher doing what many theatrical preachers of all races and political persuasions do: saying things to wake their congregation up and remind their congregation (and perhaps those outside it as well) that our nation is on a dangerous and wrong path.  Pat Robertson and Jerry Falwell both said our nation got what it deserved after 911. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Though I wasn’t bothered at all by what Rev. Wright said, I was very bothered by the reaction to him.  And I was thrilled and amazed by Obama’s speech on Building a More Perfect Union.  (Predictably, I cried through much of it, but again, that seems to be par for the course these days.)  Like many who have written much more eloquently and extensively than I, I believed this to be a transformational speech; one long overdue.  I was raised and educated to believe that racism was the number one problem this country faced, and that until we addressed it and vanquished it, our nation would suffer greatly. It’s an incredibly complex problem, and the solutions require all of us to practice understanding and work harder to put ourselves in the shoes of others.  I figured once Barack finished saying what needed to be said, we’d all shake ourselves awake and get to work—start practicing understanding, start talking honestly with one another, start recognizing that we need to put our money where our mouths are, and all that.&lt;br /&gt;That’s not exactly what seemed to happen.  Instead, I heard more strange insinuations that Obama wasn’t a real patriot, had issues that were distracting the American people from the crises at hand.  The poll numbers didn’t move. My best friend called me to tell me her step-father had told racist jokes at their Pennsylvania Easter table.  And the media seemed only interested in how the speech played out politically, not that something important had finally been said.  I spent our cold, way-too-early Easter in tears, despairing for our country, despairing for my African American friends, heartbroken and furious.&lt;br /&gt;I did my work on this anger, because I have learned that I can’t live with it, and what I came up with was this: I want the world to be about 100 years ahead of where it is now.  I bet a hundred years from now we will not be talking about the first woman president, the first Latino president, the first Asian American president or the first African American president.  Maybe we won’t even be talking about the first homosexual president.  These will all be benchmarks long passed.  I’m hopeful too that in a hundred years, we will have solved many of the problems that plague us today.  If I look back a hundred years, I see Jim Crow.  If I look back 200 years, I see slavery.  I hope this ugly period we’re in right now seems as antiquated and backwards as those do.&lt;br /&gt;The morning after Easter, I put myself on a strict diet: no more NPR, no more New York Times, no more RealClearPolitics, no more arguing.  My prescriptions include reading Thich Nhat Hanh and Mary Oliver and going outside for walks with my daughter: the kind of walks where your heart rate never goes over 75 bpm because your companion is running up and down the knoll, kicking around dead leaves and collecting pine cones and doesn’t care a whit about getting anywhere fast.  And wouldn’t you know it?  I feel a lot better.  I am still sad and disappointed, but I can see myself and my friends who are working for peace and justice as cogs in the wheel, just as the suffragettes were in the early part of the 20th Century, just as the abolitionists were in the 1840s, just as the feminists and black power leaders were in the ‘60s and just as the advocates for gay rights were in the ‘70s, ‘80s and today.  &lt;br /&gt;I know that spring will come.  It always does, sooner or later.  And I know this as a musician:  a great song is one that has great substance—music with integrity, melody and rhythm plus lyrics that lend themselves to many listens, many ponderings, sometimes many interpretations.  Those songs might not crack the top ten, but they will be listened to for decades (maybe even centuries) afterwards.  What Barack Obama said on March 18, 2008 was akin to a great song.  Whether or not he wins or loses, we will look back on that moment as one in which a brave man told the truth in a way that was meaningful, eloquent and provocative.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2008/03/aphrodite-spring-and-my-media-fast.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-2957497635773123443</guid><pubDate>Sun, 09 Mar 2008 19:32:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2008-03-09T15:33:22.245-04:00</atom:updated><title>National Album Writing Month</title><description>On January 31, our friend Anne-Marie Strohman emailed us from Mountain View CA to tell us that February was National Album Writing Month. Since nothing compels me to write songs more effectively than a deadline, we decided that in between finishing How To Be An Adult and painting its cover, running HooteNanny, shoveling snow, playing all over western NY state and raising Amelia, William and Lila (and taking copious pregnancy induced naps-Nerissa, that is) we would take on this challenge.  We recorded these songs on our Macs using the Garage Band program and Katryna’s Blue Snowball mic. They are rough demos, done in one take, so we apologize for the flubbed chords and missed pitches.  We plan to record some of these for future projects, like our new family CD, Rock all Day, Rock all Night, and the soundtrack for my novel The Big Idea.  Some might end up as part of a HooteNanny curriculum. There seems to be a theme to these songs. Anne Lamott says there are two major metaphors in literature: The River and The Garden.  I say there’s a third: The Road.  Below is a run down of all fourteen songs.  You can hear them at http://www.nerissanields.com/FEb08NAWM.html.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;1. Who Are You Not To Shine &lt;br /&gt;I took as my prompt for this song the wonderful passage by Marianne Williamson, which is often erroneously attributed to Nelson Mandela.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;    “Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. Your playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I wanted to write a song for my children and my nieces and nephews about being yourself no matter what. Here are the lyrics:&lt;br /&gt;Who Are You Not To Shine&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Sometimes you wish you were someone different&lt;br /&gt;Sometimes you want to start all over again&lt;br /&gt;Sometimes you want to go back to being a baby&lt;br /&gt;Sometimes you want to jump ahead to the end&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Maybe you could start to see it different&lt;br /&gt;Maybe you could sit down here and rest&lt;br /&gt;Maybe you could hear it once from my side&lt;br /&gt;I think you are the best, the best, the best&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Who are you not to shine?&lt;br /&gt;Who are you not to glow?&lt;br /&gt;Who are you not to be your own best self?&lt;br /&gt;You can be who you are&lt;br /&gt;You can change as you grow&lt;br /&gt;But be you, don’t be anybody else&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If you weren’t you then who would tell your stories&lt;br /&gt;If you weren’t you then who would walk your miles?&lt;br /&gt;If you weren’t you then who would help your sisters?&lt;br /&gt;If you weren’t you then who would smile your smile?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Chorus&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; Nerissa Nields&lt;br /&gt;©Peter Quince Publishing&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;2. Thank You&lt;br /&gt;I wrote this backstage at Kripalu on Feb. 2.  I love Kripalu. I first went there in 2001 when my first marriage was in its last months. Since then, I’ve seen it as a haven and a refuge. Nestled in the Berkshires, it’s known mostly as a yoga sanctuary, but I’ve also used it as a personal writing retreat.  I studied with Julia Cameron there, and taken a meditation workshop with Sharon Saltzburg. It’s sort of like Falcon Ridge to me; I know I will find members of my tribe there.  &lt;br /&gt;Here are the lyrics:&lt;br /&gt;Thank You All The Time&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Thank you for the earth&lt;br /&gt;Thank you for the sun&lt;br /&gt;Thank you for my family&lt;br /&gt;Thank you for the fun&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;All I ask is this: &lt;br /&gt;That some one down the line&lt;br /&gt;Finds the same old simple bliss&lt;br /&gt;And thank you all the time&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Thank you for the moon&lt;br /&gt;Thank you for the sea&lt;br /&gt;Thank for the different folks&lt;br /&gt;Who share the world with me.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;All I ask is this: &lt;br /&gt;That some one down the line&lt;br /&gt;Finds the same old simple bliss&lt;br /&gt;And thank you all the time&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields&lt;br /&gt;Feb. 2, 2008 &lt;br /&gt;©Peter Quince Publishing&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;3. ABC &lt;br /&gt;I wrote the first verse of this song last year for HooteNanny as an a cappella number, but this February, Katryna suggested I expand it and give it extra verses and a Sesame Street beat.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;4. Seasons&lt;br /&gt;I wrote this one in my Thursday writing group, though I found the first four lines in a notebook I was using during the writing of the Sister Holler songs.  (I think it was an early draft of “This Train.”)  We plan to put this song on our double family CD Rock All Day, Rock All Night.  It’ll be on the Night CD.&lt;br /&gt;Lyrics:&lt;br /&gt;Seasons&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One field is ploughed&lt;br /&gt;One field is fallow&lt;br /&gt;One field’s on the way to harvest&lt;br /&gt;Though the confidence is shallow&lt;br /&gt;We go round and round&lt;br /&gt;We go up and down&lt;br /&gt;As we pass through the seasons of our life.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One road is new&lt;br /&gt;One road’s well traveled&lt;br /&gt;One road’s wide and comfortable&lt;br /&gt;While another one is narrow&lt;br /&gt;We go round and round&lt;br /&gt;We go up and down&lt;br /&gt;As we pass through the seasons of our life.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When I think I cannot take the snowstorms anymore&lt;br /&gt;I see that crocus poking up through the leaves on the forest floor&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One child is fast&lt;br /&gt;One child is funny&lt;br /&gt;One child likes the rainy days&lt;br /&gt;While another likes it sunny&lt;br /&gt;We go round and round&lt;br /&gt;We go up and down&lt;br /&gt;As we pass through the seasons of our life.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa  Nields&lt;br /&gt;Feb. 7, 2007&lt;br /&gt;©Peter Quince Publishing, ASCAP &lt;br /&gt;All Rights Reserved&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;5. Last Train Home&lt;br /&gt;I started to write this song last May, but didn’t get very far. I finished it during another Thursday writing group.  &lt;br /&gt;Lyrics:&lt;br /&gt;Last Train Home&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Riding riding riding on the last train home&lt;br /&gt;Got to get to my baby anyway any how&lt;br /&gt;And if the wheels stop turning, gonna jump out and run&lt;br /&gt;I’m gonna flag another train&lt;br /&gt;I’m gonna steal a tired car&lt;br /&gt;I’m gonna show the country what it means&lt;br /&gt;To get to where you are&lt;br /&gt;I’m gonna show the country what it means to find you &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Many months of Mondays I have had my way&lt;br /&gt;Basking in the sun of your compassion&lt;br /&gt;Scheming all the time for something more, more, more&lt;br /&gt;Never happy with my handsome ration&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Chorus&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I could never read you right when you were mine&lt;br /&gt;I thought you would stick around forever&lt;br /&gt;You gave everything you had, I asked for more&lt;br /&gt;Thinking that you lived to give me pleasure&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Chorus&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Beautiful for spacious skies, waves of amber grain&lt;br /&gt;Can you find it somewhere to forgive me?&lt;br /&gt;If not me, then could you see a way to grant&lt;br /&gt;Clemency for those who will outlive me&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Chorus&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields&lt;br /&gt;May 31, 2007 and Feb. 4, 2008&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;6. Percy On Pluto&lt;br /&gt;Katryna asked me to write this song.  She wanted a sequel to Aikendrum, a song about a guy who lives on the moon and wears food for clothes.  Percy is his younger sister, and this song is about how she deals with the news that her planet is no longer considered a planet.&lt;br /&gt;Percy On Pluto&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Percy lived on Pluto where the sun was far away&lt;br /&gt;And that means you can’t really tell the nighttime from the day&lt;br /&gt;Her older brother Aikendrum, well, he lived on the moon&lt;br /&gt;He played upon a ladle and Percy played on a spoon&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yodelayeeee Yodalayeee Yodalayeee&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Aikendrum wore food for clothes while Percy wore a dress. &lt;br /&gt;She also wore long underwear, a hat, a scarf a vest&lt;br /&gt;Two pairs of woolen socks, a coat, some mittens and warm shoes&lt;br /&gt;At four hundred degrees below, you’d probably bundle up too.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yodelayeeee Yodalayeee Yodalayeee&lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;Aikendrum told Percy, “Your planet’s smaller than my moon&lt;br /&gt;And since the moon’s not a planet, and I bet yours won’t be soon”&lt;br /&gt;Percy said, “Dear brother, does your moon have its own satellite?&lt;br /&gt;I can see my Charon, if it’s day or if it’s night”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yodelayeeee Yodalayeee Yodalayeee&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One day six light years from now, she got this strange report:&lt;br /&gt;“Pluto’s not a planet anymore, you see it came up short.  &lt;br /&gt;It’s really pretty tiny and its orbit’s way off course&lt;br /&gt;You can’t really call it a planet anymore, but you can call it Planet Dwarf.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yodelayeeee Yodalayeee Yodalayeee&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Well, Percy was very tiny too, smaller than a mouse.&lt;br /&gt;If you saw where she lived you would mistake it for a dollhouse&lt;br /&gt;When she heard that her planet was not a planet anymore&lt;br /&gt;She took a breath of CO2, said, “I am Plutette, hear me roar!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yodelayeeee Yodalayeee Yodalayeee&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“It doesn’t really matter what you call it it’s the same:&lt;br /&gt;A rose is still a rose, after all, by any other name.&lt;br /&gt;And those of us who are little, we matter equally&lt;br /&gt;In fact that’s why they passed the laws of mass and density.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yodelayeeee Yodalayeee Yodalayeee&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields © Peter Quince Publishing&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;7. Molly the Donkey&lt;br /&gt;This is our version of “There was a farmer had a dog and Bingo was his name o.”  We live near a vocational agricultural school that has a number of animals, including a herd of cows and sheep, three huge Clydesdale horses and one tiny burro-like donkey named Molly.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I have a donkey&lt;br /&gt;Her name is Molly &lt;br /&gt;And she says “Hee Haw” all the time.&lt;br /&gt;M-O-L-L-Y &lt;br /&gt;M-O-L-L-Y&lt;br /&gt;M-O-L-L-Y&lt;br /&gt;Molly, mine.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields ©Peter Quince Publishing&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;8. Good Times Are Here&lt;br /&gt;This song is for my wonderful father.  When Katryna was in her last year of college, she said, “Daddy, how old were you when you became disillusioned?”&lt;br /&gt;He thought about it.  “I don’t know. I don’t think that’s ever happened.”&lt;br /&gt;He is the most optimistic person I’ve ever met.  I want to be like him when I grow up.  In this day and age, we need hope more than ever.  By “hope” I mean that quality that fuels our actions; the thing with feathers, as Emily Dickinson so famously said.  We must have the kind of hope that leads to positive, loving actions towards ourselves and our communities if the human race is to survive.&lt;br /&gt;Good Times Are Here&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It’s been so long since we had room to laugh&lt;br /&gt;It’s been so long we’ve been traveling the narrow path&lt;br /&gt;It’s been so long since hope had a season&lt;br /&gt;Always trading sentiment for reason&lt;br /&gt;And now you’re showing me the sunrise&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Oh, good times are here, Johnny &lt;br /&gt;Good times are here&lt;br /&gt;You were right, you were right all along&lt;br /&gt;Oh, good times are here, Johnny &lt;br /&gt;Good times are here&lt;br /&gt;You were right, you were right all along&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I though your love was too good to trust&lt;br /&gt;You had enough dreams for the both of us &lt;br /&gt;And so I let you dream while I worried&lt;br /&gt;Always gave you love in a hurry&lt;br /&gt;And now you’re showing me the greatest surprise&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Good times are here, Johnny&lt;br /&gt;Good times are here&lt;br /&gt;You were right, you were right all along&lt;br /&gt;Oh, good times are here, Johnny &lt;br /&gt;Good times are here&lt;br /&gt;You were right, you were right all along&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We ate our fear like the noble men&lt;br /&gt;We built our walls to keep the children in&lt;br /&gt;And every year our tribe became smaller&lt;br /&gt;Trading in our heritage for dollars &lt;br /&gt;And now you’re telling me to turn it around&lt;br /&gt;You’re telling me to tear those walls down&lt;br /&gt;That everything I lost can be found&lt;br /&gt;It was there all along in the ground&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Good times are here, Johnny&lt;br /&gt;Good times are here&lt;br /&gt;You were right, you were right all along&lt;br /&gt;Oh, good times are here, Johnny &lt;br /&gt;Good times are here&lt;br /&gt;I am glad, I’m so glad I was wrong.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields&lt;br /&gt;Feb. 21, 2008&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;9. Dresses&lt;br /&gt;Katryna wrote this song as a sequel to “The Enemy Called Pants.”  When Amelia was between the ages of three and four, she refused to wear pants. Ever.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;10. I See Me Walking&lt;br /&gt;Katryna called me up and said, “I just went for a walk and wrote these lines.”  She sang the first four lines of this song into my voicemail. That night was a Monday, and I had a writing group, so I listened to her tune and finished the song.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;11. This Is My Life&lt;br /&gt;Veteran Nields fans will recognize this as a metamorphosis of a song I wrote in 1993 by the same title, and with mostly the same tune and chord progression (although back then it was in E.  Fifteen years later, it’s in the more forgiving key of D.)  While driving home from Ithaca on Feb. 23, Katryna said, “Why don’t you rewrite ‘This Is My Life’? I always loved the chorus of that song.”  The old lyrics were pretty mean.  I’ve mellowed, and I wanted to write a love song to my husband.&lt;br /&gt;This Is My Life (2008)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I never thought I’d be&lt;br /&gt;A person with a history&lt;br /&gt;I always thought I’d be racing to&lt;br /&gt;Uncharted territory&lt;br /&gt;How was I to know&lt;br /&gt;That you would be so awfully slow&lt;br /&gt;Taking your sweet time to get it right&lt;br /&gt;And now I can’t believe this is my life&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So who made you kind?&lt;br /&gt;And who made you bold?&lt;br /&gt;And who made you someone&lt;br /&gt;Who knows how to dress in the cold?&lt;br /&gt;All of our wrong turns &lt;br /&gt;Became the moves we had to learn&lt;br /&gt;Stumbling though the dark with one flashlight&lt;br /&gt;And now I can’t believe this is my life&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Now my racing days are over, We can argue over who lost&lt;br /&gt;Though I loved the speed I traveled &lt;br /&gt;I just couldn’t pay the cost&lt;br /&gt;Wouldn’t pay the cost&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And now I spend my time&lt;br /&gt;Watching your face shine&lt;br /&gt;Watching our love grow&lt;br /&gt;And knowing nothing’s mine&lt;br /&gt;I just get to be&lt;br /&gt;A witness to our destiny&lt;br /&gt;All our disappointments and delights&lt;br /&gt;And now I can’t believe this is my life&lt;br /&gt;I can’t believe this is my life!&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields &lt;br /&gt;Feb. 27, 2008&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;12. For All The Love &lt;br /&gt;This was the second to last song I wrote. Again, I found part of it (the second verse) in a songwriting notebook from 2000.  This is a love song to all the people who chose a righteous path to walk, sacrificing ease for integrity.  No small feat in this day and age.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For All The Love&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Now and then there is a calling&lt;br /&gt;You don’t always want to take&lt;br /&gt;You drag your feet and get distracted&lt;br /&gt;Until you start for your own sake&lt;br /&gt;Cause sometimes staying feels like dying&lt;br /&gt;And though you know you have to die&lt;br /&gt;You want to live a bit before then&lt;br /&gt;And so you pack, you go, you try&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;No one said it would be easy&lt;br /&gt;No one said it would be straight&lt;br /&gt;But if you go and keep on going&lt;br /&gt;You’ll find your way to that holy gate&lt;br /&gt;And on the way are other travelers&lt;br /&gt;Some are wise and some are mean&lt;br /&gt;But they’re all bound to teach you something&lt;br /&gt;Something you have never seen&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And as you go, you’ll find companions &lt;br /&gt;Brothers, sisters, of the way&lt;br /&gt;Friends to laugh with friends to dance with&lt;br /&gt;Friends to comfort , friends to say&lt;br /&gt;That this road’s been a little harder&lt;br /&gt;But we would chose it again&lt;br /&gt;For all the love we made together&lt;br /&gt;All the life that we packed in.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa  Nields&lt;br /&gt;Feb. 28, 2008&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;13. Lilalu&lt;br /&gt;A lullaby to my daughter.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;14. Ode To Underpants&lt;br /&gt;Katryna wrote this when I called her in a panic and said “We need one more song!”  She promptly came up with this. William, her three year old, laughed hysterically when she sang it to him.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2008/03/national-album-writing-month.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-6334734804404424277</guid><pubDate>Wed, 16 Jan 2008 17:57:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2008-01-16T13:14:00.658-05:00</atom:updated><title>Primary Thoughts</title><description>Writing songs is a little like raising kids.  The idea seems to impregnate itself inside you and pretty soon has a life of its own, letting you know, by poking at you, that it exists and wants to be born.  Some songs are born quickly; some incubate a lot longer.  But eventually, they come out, and there's no way to know whether you've got a sleeper or a screamer until that point.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;What's been amazing about our career is getting to watch "the kids" grow up.  I just had a writing retreat at my house, and as is the custom, after two days of writing, I make everyone dinner and then we sit around and sing folk songs.  My husband, Tom, for a Christmas present, organized all the sing-a-long books, which is to say, made me new sing-a-long books, with the help of Katryna.  So armed with hundreds of songs and guitar chords, we proceeded to hootenanny.  At some point, someone asked if it would be OK to request a Nields song.  "Sure," I said.  "I actually know those."  But then the request turned out to be "The King Is Falling", which I mostly remembered.  That song was our "big hit" on the first CD we ever made, 66 Hoxsey Street, an album I am glad we made, but one I never ever need to listen to again.  (For me, it's like looking at those photographs of adolescence--awkward and geeky and pimply.  I fondly remember myself then, but that doesn't mean I'd hang up a picture from that era.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;"The King Is Falling" was about the first George Bush and how the tide began to turn on him a few months after we "won" the first Gulf war.  At the time, I had this idea that performing musicians were like school teachers and needed to keep their political positions to themselves, so we rarely introduced the song to make its subject clear.  I don't know why I thought I needed to keep my mouth shut about politics; after all, my heros were Pete Seeger, John Lennon, Arlo Guthrie and Bob Dylan--hardly demure. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And yet, I feel a little tongue tied right now about the national election.  Never have I felt so positively towards a candidate or believed a unique individual had the power-or maybe opportunity is a better word- to take the presidency and bring this country to a safer,better,sweeter place .  (Well, actually, I think this is true of any of the Democrats and maybe even John McCain-we can't do much worse than George Bush II.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I will be thrilled to vote for Hillary Clinton if she is the nominee--she's smart, experienced and how cool would it be to have a woman president?  I will be ecstatic to vote for John Edwards if he is the Democrat running in the national election--he's really tough on corporations and very brave and honest about how money and corporate greed is poisoning this country.  But the candidate I will be voting for in the primary, the one I think could actually bring this country together, and effect (sorry to use the overused) CHANGE--by shaking us out of our party ruts, by making peace, both domestically and abroad, is Barack Obama.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt; I think he’s the real deal.  I have never in my entire life been so excited and hopeful about a candidate.  My sister, Abigail, gave me his book, &lt;span style="font-style:italic;"&gt;Dreams from my Father&lt;/span&gt;, and first of all, the guy can write.  He is literate, sensitive, and the book was written way before his political career started.  It’s not one of those “Here’s the story of my life and aren’t I great” Born To Lead kinds of books. Instead, it’s a journey of identity, a deep and personal odyssey, brave and honest.  He is full of real values, like honesty, kindness,  self-respect, respect, perseverance.  Also, he is about unification and not division.  I, as a lefty Democrat, like what John Edwards has to say.  I hate corporations as much as the next progressive.  But I fear John Edwards will perpetuate the "us vs them" mentality that’s gotten us to the election of 2000 which to my mind, was the descent into Hell.  Barack Obama, while being plenty progressive , is about building bridges and making peace (he alone, besides Kucinich, was against the useless and damaging Iraq war from the start, and he alone, besides Kucinich, is against the death penalty).  The man IS peace—just watch him.  He carries himself with serene majesty.  I also maintain that even if he hadn’t won my heart, my brain would say he is the best—and perhaps only-choice when it comes to rebuilding our integrity and trustworthiness in the eyes of the international community.  He actually understands the rest of the world, because he lived in it.  His father was Kenyan, his stepfather raised him in Indonesia, and he has a deep sense of the US in the context of the rest of the world. This book, which I highly recommend as a good read no matter what your politics, explores his past, his upbringing, his mistakes along the way with remarkable candor and courage, writing about race clearly and unapologetically.  As a writer, I was deeply impressed with his ability and insight.  "He's one of us," I thought.  A seeker, an artist, a deep thinker."  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I like the guy.  I'd have him over for dinner.  I want to talk to him about the problems in this country and hear his ideas.  I want him to be our figurehead--to  give the yearly state of the union in that smooth, smart voice of his, reassuring in its calm and authority.  I want him to represent us in the Middle East, the European Union, Russia, China, Africa and Australia.  I am proud of him, and he makes me proud to be an American.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I can't wait to see what kind of cabinet he puts together.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I think he's our best chance for healing what the Bush administration has done, to repair our reputation in the eyes of the international community.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I think he's our best chance for healing four hundred years of racial division and pain, which, arguably, is the most shameful aspect of our collective history (along with the genocide of Native Americans).&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I've never felt this way about a politician before.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Sorry to get all gushy, but this is what's on my mind.  Oh, by the way, I just found out Dennis Kucinich was pro-life up until his presidential run.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Happy January and happy voting!</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2008/01/primary-thoughts.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-3871298314022641162</guid><pubDate>Mon, 10 Dec 2007 21:14:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-12-10T16:41:46.545-05:00</atom:updated><title>Green Grinchy Christmas</title><description>How does one be a good American consumer, enjoy Christmas and be good to the planet, all at the same time?  I don't know but here are my Christmas suggestions for this year:&lt;br /&gt;1. give everyone a twenty dollar bill scotch taped to a stick&lt;br /&gt;2. drink a lot of eggnog and eat a lot of chocolate and otherwise numb yourself to the proceedings.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Just kidding.  After reading my essays for the past year, it should come as no shock that I am not exactly the biggest fan of our consumer culture.  Someone asked me today if I’d “done” Black Friday.”  I can’t begin to convey how unlikely it would be to find me anywhere near a place of purchasing the day after Thanksgiving.  I am severely allergic to traffic, lines of any sort, excess packaging, schlepping and any version of extra stuff coming into my house (my rule, not well followed, is if something comes in, something else has to go out.)  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We are a people who want more.  It used to be you would buy one television and if it broke, someone had an ongoing job of fixing it. Remember that 20 year old commercial about the MayTag repair guy sitting glumly around because the MayTag appliances never broke?  The truth now is we don’t fix things; we throw them away (or stash them in our attics, garages and basements) and buy a new one.  A good friend of mine said, “I just can’t wait for my dishwasher to break so I can have an excuse to buy a new one.”  I can’t tell you how many hands free headsets I’ve gone through since getting a cell phone—I think maybe 32.  We buy new things, like car seats, shoes, carrot peelers, coolers for our food, pedometers, little jackets for our cell phones, stuffed animals, exercise equipment, and forget about the fact that someday, that thing will no longer be welcome in our house.  It will end up in a landfill somewhere where it will last for thousands of years; or else, in the case of plastics, it might end up as part of that great ever growing plastic raft floating in the Pacific Ocean.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So I am not crazy about the consumer aspect of Christmas.  It reminds me of eating unhealthy food—fun for the anticipation and the first bite, and then not fun afterwards.  Every once in awhile, I hit it just right and find the perfect present for someone I love; that makes it all worth while.  Or, less commonly, I am truly surprised and delighted by something someone gives me, though more often, I get lovely things that I really didn’t need.  Nevertheless, the holiday season can be the best time of the year, if I take everything with fifty thousand grains of salt and try to have fun, get in the spirit and all that.  And my job as a blogger is to give you good ideas, not be a PC environmentalchik wet blanket.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My big truth about the holidays is that I only seem to get inspired, gift-wise, in the last few days of Sagittarius, when the clock is ticking down and all the best selling gifts have been sold.  Christmas become Christmas when I personally get into the spirit, and that usually begins with the music.  I have a box full of Christmas in my basement, and when I pull it up somewhere around Dec. 1, the first thing I do is put five Revels CDs on my CD changer (www.revels.org.)  (Revels is a yearly pageant, born in Cambridge, MA and now celebrated all over the country.  It’s a combination of medieval music, ritual and ceremony performed mostly by a large chorus who act as citizens of a medieval Great Hall.  It pure joy, as far as I am concerned.)  We get a tree (yes, a real tree.  Environmental sin #476); I put my holiday candles out and I take out the gift giving journal I keep (LCDP Weekly exercise number 45) and see what I’ve jotted down all year.   &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Some ideas for my loved ones that will help the earth and keep me out of the mall:&lt;br /&gt;1. Sigg water bottles.  I can’t say enough about this product!  The water tastes delicious; you can wash them in the dishwasher; the cap is cool,a nd you can put stickers all over yours.&lt;br /&gt;2. Homemade handkerchiefs.  Now that was a great invention!  Why waste paper when you can have your own soft cloth with your initials on it with which to blow your nose?  Do what your granddad did—keep a couple of clean ones in your shirt pocket.  With all that eating in the car that we Americans now do, you’ll always have a napkin.&lt;br /&gt;3. Scrapbooks for other family members: this could be a great future gift: ask your sister for all those pieces of paper and photos and Bruce Springsteen tickets she’s been saving and make the scrapbook for her.&lt;br /&gt;4. Homemade soaps.  Why use plastic soap dispensers?  Also, I didn’t say I was the maker of said soaps.  But my friend, Pat makes fabulous homemade soaps, and I plan on supporting her buy buying a bunch.&lt;br /&gt;5. I made my mother a version of the Day Planner last year, which she loved so much she insists I replicate it for her this year.  It’s a weekly calendar with pictures from our family adventures plus quotations to go with the pictures and family members birthdays.&lt;br /&gt;6. Dan Zanes CDs.  Dan Zanes is the most innovative and restorative musician I can think of.  Plus, our whole family loves him.&lt;br /&gt;7. Anything hand knit.&lt;br /&gt;8. A poem, story or song about a loved one, especially if you can perform it, read it or recite it to a crowd&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Our family motto for Christmas is "take it down a thousand."  My sisters and I have a deal to spend even less on each other this year than we did the year before (I think we’re down to an upper limit of $10.)  I am planning to send an email to everyone in my family begging them not to give me anything, and to please, please not give Lila any plastic toys from China, or anywhere else. My husband and I will make a big batch of biscotti and put it in baskets for our friends, along with some Fair Trade coffee or tea.  I am learning a few carols on the guitar.  I might plan a party.  I will take long walks in the low December sun.  I will recite Luke 2: 10-15.  I will find a photo of my daughter and make cheap black and white Xeroxed cards and send them to all my old friends.  I will wrap presents in old newspaper and new ribbons.  I will bake winter squash with cinnamon and cloves.  I will frantically knit my husband’s scarf.  I will sit with people who are intentionally silent and join them with my own silence. I will look around the Christmas table at the people I love most and give thanks for another year well lived.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Happy holidays to you and yours!</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/12/green-grinchy-christmas.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-843980405773150914</guid><pubDate>Mon, 12 Nov 2007 21:23:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-11-12T16:24:48.074-05:00</atom:updated><title>How I Know I Need Clutterers Anonymous</title><description>People often ask me how I am able to do so many things. The answer is: I almost never clean my house. As they say, something has to give, and in the Nields-Duffy house, it’s housework.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Don’t get me wrong. We only have a few ant colonies and the rats only show their faces at night. So far, the toys from the playroom haven’t migrated so far into the other rooms that doors can’t open, and so far no one has killed him or herself tripping over things, but it’s pretty bad. My friend and co-Day Planner inventor, Bonnie, made a suggestion to the group at one point that, “when things get kind of whacky, I sometimes take all the papers and loose ends and just put them in a box to file later.” I took that suggestion, only my box keeps growing—in fact I just added a second box—and I keep them both under the futon in my office. Lord knows what manner of important papers are in there.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I just paused to Google Clutterers Anonymous. I took their test: How Do I Know I’m A Clutterer? Twenty Questions. If I answered three or more as yes, I was probably a clutterer. I answered 15. Uh oh.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I have a closet overflowing with clothes. Old maternity things hanging hopefully (OK, not hanging—perhaps “crammed” would be a more accurate term), clothes from when I was ten pounds lighter than I am now; winter clothes, summer clothes, shoes in a heap. Piles of clothes, halfheartedly semi-sorted at one point to go to Good Will, get filched from regularly. I have a box in my bedroom marked “off-season clothes” that at one time was organized; now, it’s a dumping ground for the outfits I try on and reject when I’m actually getting dressed up to go somewhere. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I didn’t use to be this way. Honest. I went through a long phase where I studied Feng Shui and decluttered accordingly. In Feng Shui, there is a concept called a Bagua, which is a nine-celled map of your living space. You overlay it onto your home or apartment according to where the front door is and it makes a kind of grid. Each of the nine areas of your home has a corresponding point on the Bagua—areas such as Fame, Money, Children, Romance, Health, etc. The theory is, wherever you let clutter build up, there you will find problems and be stuck; the chi cannot flow freely in your home, and therefore you life, if you have clutter in any section. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Since I had clutter everywhere, I went to it. I decluttered my whole house, room by room, drawer by drawer, surface by surface. I sold excess and refrained from buying anything unless I simultaneously got rid of something else. It helped that I was going through a divorce and could pawn off lots of stuff onto my ex-husband, who LOVES clutter. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I got to like the new decluttered me. I liked leaving the house completely clean before going to bed. I kept my desk neat and my papers filed. I got a thrill from throwing things out.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So what happened? How did I fall off the wagon? Well, first of all, like a person who was overweight as a child but lost the baby fat at puberty, I was always one toss-of-a-sweater-onto-the-end-of-the-bed away from regressing. Conditions had been pretty perfect during my days of grace in the de-slobbing department. Rock the boat a little, and the sleeping monster would surely be woken.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It’s certainly a cop-out to blame a person who isn’t even yet three feet tall, but I point to my 18 month old daughter and cry, “J’accuse!” Here’s a typical day: she wakes up just when I am rushing to make my morning phone calls, so I juggle her on one hip while I or her father makes her eggs and toast and applesauce. These she generally throws on the floor, though occasionally some of the above makes it into her mouth. But not until she’s thoroughly wiped applesauce into her hair, which won’t be washed until evening. Then we do the dishes. As we put plates into the dishwasher, she methodically takes out the utensils and bangs them on the floor, spraying bits of food all over. (As I type this, I notice there are small red drops on my screen—remnants of yesterday’s new discovery: pomegranate seeds.) I take her into the playroom to start cleaning up her toys. Before I can say, “Picasso” she has dumped her basket of mangled crayons all over the floor.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Don’t get me started on the time one of those crayons found its way into the laundry. It was dark blue. Dryers and crayons do not like each other.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;It’s not really Lila’s fault. The bigger problem is that I have a negative time balance that greatly interferes with my already shaky ability to throw things out. Plus, just when I have convinced myself that I don’t really need that shirt, that old piece of wrapping paper, that Yoga Journal from 1999, I suddenly come up with a purpose for it, and I renounce my renunciation. True clutterer that I am, I have the notion that that box the Lands End stuff came in might someday be useful. I could be creative and crafty. Really. It’s happened. So I don’t throw it out, nor do I throw out the ribbons from the gifts I get, or the gifts themselves, even though I know I will never use them. I have stacks of random things that might someday be part of as yet unmapped creative project.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Last Friday morning, I was frantically cleaning up Lila’s bedroom because a new babysitter was coming over, and I didn’t want her to see the real me yet. I wanted her to see the me I was ten years ago; the me who would have folded and sorted all Lila’s hand-me-downs in some kind of clever color-coded seasonally appropriate way. As I cleaned, Lila toddled off to my office (I will spare you the details of my office). I vaguely heard her shaking something. I figured it was my bottle of Advil, which makes a great shaker, and fretted not, thanks to childproofing. I heard Tom come up the stairs, enter my office, saying, “Hi, sweetie, oh, look at you, uh AH AAAAAHHHHHH!!!! OH MY GOD!!!” I raced in, to find Lila sitting in the middle of a circle of Advil tablets and an open container in her hand.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We raced her to the emergency room, which she found delightful, played with the Johnny they gave her to wear and she ate her first chocolate in the form of pudding used to disguise the sweetened charcoal the doctors gave her to absorb any of the Advil she might have ingested (which appeared, after all, to be none.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So much for cleaning! We returned home, and I dug around in a big pile of miscellaneous clutter until I found a medium-sized square box. I drew four circles at the top, cut a door out of the side and labeled it Lila’s Oven. She’s been calling it her “Kitzen” ever since. Clutterers Anonymous will have to wait.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/11/how-i-know-i-need-clutterers-anonymous.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-8233557678961449917</guid><pubDate>Tue, 11 Sep 2007 19:29:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-09-11T15:30:39.953-04:00</atom:updated><title>About Food, Again</title><description>I recently heard a talk by a wonderful meditation teacher named James Barez.   He said:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“In the Buddha’s teaching called Transcendental Dependent Arising, he lays out how suffering can lead to a joyful heart. The list (what’s a Buddhist teaching without a list?) starts by showing how suffering, when held in the light of wisdom and compassion, can be a causative factor for faith. Our hearts crack open as we see we have no control over life. Surrendering our imagined control, we learn to trust that we can meet what is here with wise attention. This is the birth of faith. Faith then leads to gladness, and gladness flowers into joy. So suffering, in the light of dharmic understanding, is actually a precursor to joy. We can choose whether or not to let our suffering lead us into a downward spiral or open our hearts to life, allowing the goodness to shine through.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course this makes me think about food.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Backstage at the Winnipeg Folk Festival, there was a sign reading, “Thank you to the farmers who provided much of this food.”  Logos appeared under the words, identifying which of the many Manitoba farms had donated produce and livestock so that we musicians could eat.  Later, at the Fairmont hotel in downtown Winnipeg, I asked the waitress if the chicken in my salad was organic and free range.  “Oh, yes,” she said.  “Our chef won’t work with any meat that isn’t. And all of the vegetables are local too.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As we drove into Northampton, on our way back from the airport, I noticed in several of the town restaurants those big yellow and green signs saying, “We support local farms.”  “Local heroes,” others read.  Am I just opening my eyes to these signs, or is a subtle but crucial cultural revolution occurring right now?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I choose to believe the latter, though it’s also true that I have had my consciousness raised recently by two wonderful books: Animal Vegetable Miracle by Barbara Kingsolver, in which the well-known novelist chronicles her family’s year long experiment with eating locally, growing much of their own food, eschewing bananas and hewing closely to their farmer’s market.  And The Omnivore’s Dilemma, Michael Pollan’s wonderful account of four meals he serves to his family and how each one of them came to be.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My love for organic farms has its origin in my first summer as a professional musician.  Katryna and I had moved to Williamstown in 1991 to take that little town of 8000 by storm (our motto: first Spring Street, then THE WORLD!)  Coincidentally, my great aunt Sally, an eighty year old Taoist and gardener, chose that same summer to move back to Williamstown, her girlhood home.  She invited us over to tea and said, “I’ve just joined a local organic CSA (Community Supported Agricultural Farm) but I won’t be able to eat even a third of the vegetables.  Why don’t you girls come with my on Tuesday and help me pick?  I promise I’ll let you have all the sugar snap peas.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;That was the deal of the century.  For the next few years, every Tuesday we drove Aunt Sally to Caretaker Farm, nestled in a valley of the Berkshires, and she sat in a rocking chair in the shade of the old barn and knit while Katryna and I picked green beans, peas, raspberries, strawberries, tomatoes and took home more fresh, delicious vegetables per week than we were used to eating in a year.   Thus began my love affair with summer squash.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’ve joined other CSAs over the years, and slowly learned the value of real, homegrown  food.  I began to get it that commercially grown food costs a lot more than the price tag would indicate: there are environmental and social costs the consumer pays in the form of taxes (subsidies for corn, wheat and soybean farmers) and in the form of environmental degradation (commercial fertilizers are literally killing the soil in the Midwest; age old methods such as crop rotation and the manures of local animals which used to protect the soil have been replaced by synthetic fertilizers which reduce the complex balance of elements in the soil to three: phosphorus, nitrogen and potassium.)  In other countries, food costs more, and people generally budget for that, choosing nutrients over a new cell phone every year, and an entirely new wardrobe every season.  Is this a bad thing?  Certainly, no other country has the obesity epidemic we have, and perhaps a part of that is due to the cheap availability of calories here, many of them derived from soy and corn, turned into junk foods and soda.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When I buy a commercially raised chicken at Stop &amp; Shop, it costs me $2.50 a pound.  This chicken has probably spent its entire short sad life living in a room the size of my bathroom in a crate with 1200 other chickens, each in their own crate, stacked up one on top of another.  Its beak has probably been removed so it won’t peck its neighbor in the tail feathers, a common occurrence among birds caged in this manner.  As this isn’t the most supportive environment for the chicken, it needs supplements of antibiotics to keep it healthy.  On the other hand, if I buy my chicken from a local farmer, or even at Whole Foods, and it’s been certified organic, or at least free range, that chicken will set me back more like $4 a lb, but I will know that my chicken pecked grubs and nibbled on grass and maybe even sat on eggs and knew its mother for few weeks of its chicken life.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As I am writing this, I have the same strange mixture of anger, shame and hope that I always have when I write about the places where my desire to be a good citizen of the planet collides with my desire to be accepted as one among many fallen humans, normal people who just want to live a good life, who want to enjoy the occasional chicken McNugget and not have that moment ruined for them by a Climate Change Cassandra campaigning against junk food.  In other words I feel the need to apologize.   There is no issue that divides people as quickly as food, and this makes sense, of course.  Do you know anyone on the planet who likes and hates all the same foods you like and hate?  Every mother I know tells me serving dinner to her family of three, four or five is almost impossible: someone’s not going to like something.  Why should it be any different with our food politics?  These issues are complex.  My current belief that it’s more virtuous to eat locally means I no longer buy my weekly box of mangos from Tran, the owner of a wonderful local Asian market because that box was shipped from Haiti and cost who knows how much fossil fuel not to mention the mango pickers might not have been paid a fair wage.  But where does that leave Tran?  Michael Pollan writes about how monocultures-the growing of just one crop on a given plot—is one of the root problems in our agricultural system, and the solution is to support small, local farms who provide many types of plants and livestock, rotating fields, using the manure of the animals to nourish the crops, and using the grass of the fields to nourish the animals.  But in our global economy, we now have farmers in third world countries committed to growing monocultures to feed our curious and growing appetites for exotic fruits and vegetables, which we’d like to have available all year long, and not merely when they’re in season.  Do we pull the rug out from under them?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;At Winnipeg, we ran into an old friend, and got to talking about the OTHER big concert happening that day.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“Can you believe Madonna?” he scoffed as we watched the Manitoba sunset at 10:15pm.  “Doing this Live Earth benefit, pretending to be all holier than thou, and here she is flying her own jet to get to her stage.  Some carbon footprint!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“Yeah,” said my sister Katryna.  “But don’t let the perfect be the enemy of the good.”  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This has been our mantra recently.  Also, “It’s not easy being green.”  My mother just called to tell me she was eating nothing but local food, and the seventeen-year-old in me wanted to point out that her rice had come from China, her peach from California, her chicken from God knows where and her coffee from Indonesia.  But good for you, Mom, for your zucchini and tomato!  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Where does that get me?  Into a cranky, aversive judgmental place.  Glass houses.  We all have plenty of environmental sins; no one’s hands are clean.  The problem is there are too many of us using the slim resources the earth has to give us, and by that logic, we are guilty for just being alive.  But where’s the hope in that?  Thinking along these lines—judging my mother, looking at anyone’s plate besides my own, for that matter--just brings me to a place of despair.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Here’s what I like better: I like to think of the changes I feel called to make as challenges, sort of like the challenges I faced when I was starting my music career.  Or the challenges I like to think I would take on if I were ever crazy enough to train for a triathlon.  Eat locally?  Sure!  That’ll be fun!  I’ll find some farmers and get to know them; ask why they make the choices they make, put a face behind the food on my dinner plate.  Feel good knowing that my dollars are going into the pockets of those neighbors with the red barn and the big fields so that their kids can go to college or take over the business when the time comes.  Use less fuel?  Hey!  What a good way to get more exercise, burn some calories, see my town from the vantage point of a bike or on foot.  And when I’m on foot, I run into more people I know.  Spend less money on the various plastic things I buy, the cheap clothes and ingenious gadgets (like the new iPhone I covet)?  Great!  I’ll save money and find other ways to spend my time (which is not exactly one of my problems.)  If I can take the Buddha’s precept about suffering turning to joy, it’s easy to make these small sacrifices, and I do always find the surrender a gift, that when I give something up, my pack becomes lighter and my journey therefore more easy and pleasant.  But that’s my journey—not anyone else’s.  So above all, I get to be gentle with all the other six billion humans stalking the planet, and be gentle with myself, treading as lightly as I can and knowing that even with the best of intentions, I’m still going to make an impact.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/09/about-food-again.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-1041663508973094537</guid><pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2007 20:22:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-09-10T16:25:49.226-04:00</atom:updated><title>In Defense of Reading Harry Potter</title><description>One day in early August, our babysitter arrived at the usual time, and as I was handing Lila to her, along with Lila’s tofu, wild rice and cheese, she said, “I hope Tom told you I have to leave at 3:30 today. Doctor’s appointment. I told him last week.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Suffice it to say Tom had not told me, nor did he remember being told even when I pressed him on it. As I had two clients after 3:30, I had to scramble to switch them. Though it all worked out, I felt like a victim of my own mess of systems—the unsynchronized palm pilot, the colorful calendar on my computer, the scrawled To Do list which my sister inadvertently took with her to the Adirondacks, and the non-existent family calendar we keep meaning to create. And the results of my disorganization are manifold—the kitchen floor covered with bits of tofu, wild rice and cheese; the dirty diapers in mid-cycle in the washing machine; my not yet unpacked suitcase from last weekend’s gigs; the manuscripts to all three of my current book projects in my office (not to mention penultimate printouts which may or may not be in boxes in the attic); the DVD of the HBO Drama Big Love half-played in my computer; the leggy runners keeping my roses from blooming. But at least I finished Harry Potter.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’m only kind of kidding. That day, I did something I almost never do: I lay in bed after lunch and read 200 pages of a novel. The day was sunny and too hot even in the shade, but my bedroom was cool and I had a mason jar full of water and a gripping story to dwell within. I laughed and cried and cheered and felt when I had finished that there was no better way I could have spent my time.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;For me, this is progress. Some of my dear friends have pointed out that I am something of a workaholic. “It’s your Capricorn rising,” say my astrology pals. “You can’t bear to let people down.” &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;While this is true, it’s not the whole story. Fear of disappointing people is not the motor that drives me to work. I like to work because my work is mesmerizing, compelling and rewarding. Right now I am making little movies of my band to put on YouTube. I am touring our new CD Sister Holler. I am editing The Big Idea to release as a serial, and I am writing songs to go with it. I get to coach fascinating people, people whose calls I look forward to taking. And I get to participate in writing groups in my own living room. What’s not to love? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But as I’ve said before, the problem with loving your work (be careful what you wish for) is that if you wade too deeply into it, you risk being pulled out by one of the strongest undertows known to man—the undertow of success. As my astrology pal recognized, one of the pitfalls of success is that it says, “See how important you are? All these people are waiting for you to do the next successful thing. They need you! They are counting on you!” And while this sometimes might appear true—people might even write you letters and tell you just this—it’s really not. You are somewhat replaceable. I say “somewhat” because I also believe that each of us is a unique channel and all that Martha Graham blah blah blah that I’m constantly quoting.* __The other pitfall is the way in which the best, most delicious, fun “work” takes you away from your feelings, from any kind of pain you might be in and might need to address. When I am feeling restless, irritable and discontented in any way, my favorite diversion is to start planning how I am going to fill up my time with useful and productive Things To Do. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But ultimately, when it comes down to a choice between your work and what for lack of a better word I will call your equanimity, I would hope to chose equanimity every time. By equanimity, I mean that sense of rightness within yourself. That sense of balance. I know I have it when I pass my reflection in the mirror and have the thought, “She looks like a nice person. I trust her.” I know I have it when I don’t feel like I’m on speed. I might be full of energy and able to handle the diapers, the manuscripts and my daily jog, but the energy seems to be coming from deep within; not the fleeting caffeinated high I often settle for. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And if you live with people you love, equanimity is about sharing the best parts of yourself with them, and not hoping they will settle for the half-asleep remnants of what is left of you when you spend your day racing from one flaming bush to the next. It’s about getting down on the carpet or the lawn and playing with your child. It’s about asking your partner how his or her day was and really listening for the follow up. It’s about looking those people in the eye and holding contact.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And most importantly, it’s about giving yourself—your dear, worn, imperfect, trying-her-best self-- a break; a break that won’t break you, like going on a shopping spree you can’t afford, or eating a tray full of spice cake. Rather, it’s about pretending for a second that you are the absolutely, uniquely, perfect mother for you; and given that, what would be the kindest, most helpful thing you could do with your time? Perhaps paying attention to your food as you eat a nutritious lunch. Perhaps going for a slow walk by the river. Perhaps riding your bike to an art museum. Perhaps browsing in a book store. Maybe it’s actually tackling that closet full of clothes that don’t fit and packing them off to Good Will. For me, yesterday, it was letting the tofu and cheese remain on the floor for a few hours while I finished a fun novel with my feet up while Lila was downstairs playing with a babysitter. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Even writing those words, I feel a twinge of guilt. The army of “I shoulds!” comes marching out of my ears and I expect thousands of “good” mothers and fiscally responsible householders to condemn me for my sloth and extravagance. Also, I expect that all of you reading this are wondering how I, self-proclaimed time management guru, could possibly schedule such an activity during the peak productivity hours of the day. (I have a lot to say about so called peak productivity hours, but I’ll save that for later.) What I’ll say now is that in the simple act of writing what I have just written, I no longer feel like the victim of my mess of time management systems, but rather the conqueror. For I see that I’ve achieved exactly what all those systems hope to promote, and that is a happy balanced life. Who ever said dirty diapers have no place in a happy balanced life? Who ever said a happy balanced life never left a residue of cheese on a kitchen’s wood floor? These artifacts are ample evidence of the life we are all craving, because they are proof that we are living fully, richly, messily, creatively. My daughter has a big bucket of blocks which are, most of the time, not encased in their bucket but dumped out all over the floor. What purpose do the blocks serve? They are not the kind of blocks that make building meant to last for more than five minutes. From a certain perspective, one could imagine their purpose is to cover the carpet. But I see Lila playing with the blocks. She loves to dump them on the floor, yes, but she also loves to put them back one by one, singing her “Put It Back” song which goes, “Ba---Ba,” to the tune of “Sol-Do.” She also loves to pick one block out and cradle it to her chest and carry it with her all over the house, leaving it finally in some incongruous place like my desk or the toilet. This is part of what she needs to do to learn how the world works. Life is inherently messy. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Because I took a long delicious break in the middle of the day yesterday to enjoy Harry Potter, I was cheerful and present today. I felt spoiled, as though I’d gotten a massage. I felt like someone whose job it was to take care of me exquisitely succeeded. Who knows? Tonight I might even unpack my suitcase.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;*FYI, the Martha Graham quote: _"There is a vitality, a life force, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique, and if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium; and be lost. The world will not have it. It is not your business to determine how good it is, not how it compares with other expression. It is your business to keep it yours clearly and directly, to keep the channel open. You do not even have to believe in yourself or your work. You have to keep open and aware directly to the urges that motivate you. Keep the channel open."-Martha Graham</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/09/in-defense-of-reading-harry-potter.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-7044180512601339963</guid><pubDate>Wed, 11 Jul 2007 18:59:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-07-11T15:00:38.150-04:00</atom:updated><title>On Turning Forty, Sgt. Pepper and the Tao</title><description>tao te ching&lt;br /&gt;verse 65&lt;br /&gt;the ancient masters&lt;br /&gt;didn't try to educate the people&lt;br /&gt;but kindly taught them to not-know&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;when they think that they know the answers&lt;br /&gt;people are difficult to guide&lt;br /&gt;when they know that they don't know&lt;br /&gt;people can find their own way&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;if you want to learn how to govern&lt;br /&gt;avoid being clever or rich&lt;br /&gt;the simplest pattern is the clearest&lt;br /&gt;content with an ordinary life&lt;br /&gt;you can show all people the way&lt;br /&gt;back to their own true nature&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;(trans. Stephen Mitchell)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I turned forty last month. I share this birthday with my favorite album of all time: Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band. In the Summer of Love, 1967, both of us were released in the US on June 2. I didn’t know the Beatles until the spring of 1977, when we were both about to turn ten—my first big round birthday where the odometer flipped the second digit. Though my best friend, Leila Corcoran shared with me every Beatles album in existence, the songs that most appealed to me were the colorful, psychedelic tapestry-like ones from Sgt. Pepper (those, and “Hello, Goodbye,” a single that was released a few months after SPLHCB). As Aimee Mann said in her recent Op Ed piece in the NYTimes, Sgt. Pepper was made particularly for children.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I spent my birthday weekend “working,” if by that participle one means “playing shows.” I never know, before a show, whether it’s going to be a “working” show or a “playing” show. One show was for children and families in Philadelphia at the World Café, and the other a festival in Herndon, VA. On the way home from our weekend of gigs, Katryna swiped a copy of USA Today from the front desk of the Comfort Inn in Newark DE and read a list of “things that have all but vanished” in the last 25 years. These included indoor smoking, typewriters, the rhinoceros, pay phones, Oldsmobiles, the Baltimore Colts, Michael Jackson, videos on MTV, checker cabs and service stations. At our Herndon festival, Carol Welsh, a girl who was a freshman when I was a big senior, showed up; she’d been my “new girl”-an important tradition and designation at my high school. When she mentioned that she is now thirty-seven, I couldn’t believe it. Yes, I knew I was forty; yes, I can do math, but somehow her being thirty-seven was much more indicative of how much time has gone by than my nice round odometric numbers. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’m kind of in denial about the whole thing. Isn’t forty the new twenty? That’s what my mother said when I came down dressed to go out for dinner on June 2. She said, “You don’t look a day over twenty.” Thank God I’m not twenty, is all I could think. I remember my twentieth birthday. Carol’s older sister Elizabeth, one of my best friends, and fellow Beatles fanatics, gave me a poster of the cover of Sgt Pepper. We were all flipped out because our favorite record was 20 years old (“It was 20 years ago today…”). Meanwhile, I was depressed, lost, 15 pounds overweight, fighting constantly with my soon-to-be-ex-boyfriend, clueless about what I was going to major in for college, despairing about the Reagan administration, angry at my parents and sad that it was raining. It was truly a low point of my life. I spent the entire 90’s thinking “I hope I never see another 1987 again.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If I had a list like USA Today’s for just myself and my inner thought parade, here are some of the rhinoceri:&lt;br /&gt;1. Fear of dying in a plane crash&lt;br /&gt;2. Fear of gaining 15 pounds&lt;br /&gt;3. Perms&lt;br /&gt;4. Obsessive thoughts about my ex-boyfriend and the idea that it was his (or anyone’s) job to make me feel good about myself, specifically to answer the question: “Does this make me look fat?”&lt;br /&gt;5. The band Heart (sadly. I really love them, but I cannot listen to them anymore.)&lt;br /&gt;6. Blue jean mini skirts&lt;br /&gt;7. Gigantic bran muffins the size of my current mug of Starbucks coffee&lt;br /&gt;8. TV&lt;br /&gt;9. The belief that it matters where one went to college&lt;br /&gt;10. Fear of being too revealing in my writing.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I used to think there were two kinds of musicians: the kind who were cryptically silent about the meaning of their songs, their processes, their inner lives, their personal lives; they emanated a cool through their dark glasses and silence; they dragged on cigarettes and regarded the reporter (and therefore, you) with a mixture of pity and contempt and mild curiosity. The other kind were completely forthcoming, blabbing about their latest therapist/colonic/girlfriend/boyfriend and of course how each strand of a creative idea came to them. Bob Dylan was the quintessential first kind of musician while John Lennon and Paul McCartney were famous blabbers. (If you don’t believe me, read Jann Wenner’s Lennon Remembers and Mark Lewisohn’s The Beatles Recording Sessions.) I always aspired to be like Dylan, and for a whole year and a half kept my age top secret by orders of my then manager. (That was from 1996 through about, oh, June 1997 when I turned thirty). Somewhere in my DNA lurks the idea that if I don’t say it in public, the world will not be able to handle the loss of the information. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Lao-Tzu, the great Chinese teacher and sage, says that the wisest among us cultivate don’t know mind. That the older and wiser we get, the more we understand how little we know, and the more we are glad of it. I wrote once “I’d rather live expecting the best though if you gave me the choice I’d like to know the rest/A figure in the distance always running.” I wanted to know the answers. I wanted to know, for instance, that I’d never have to feel as depressed as I did in 1987. I wanted to know FOR SURE that I wouldn’t die in an airplane crash, or of cancer, or that anyone I loved would die of cancer, or that anything bad would happen to anyone I knew. Yes, I knew we all had to die, but I didn’t want any of us to die in any way you could propose to me. I pushed it away. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;But we all have to die. We all age. I now have compassion for people who get plastic surgery. Just last month, I noticed that my neck has taken on the cast of tissue-paper; that the bags that were only occasionally under my eyes after all nighters have now, excuse the pun, unpacked, as it were and are here to stay. The aging process is bad enough; the fact that it signifies the actual decrepitude of my dear beloved body is horrifying. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My “new girl,” Carol, has been battling a rare brain tumor, Adult Ependymoma for seven years. She has written bravely about her experiences on her website, and can tell her story better than I (http://home.earthlink.net/~mswelsh/adultependymoma/index.html). I have watched her face the worst with humor and love and courage, and I am amazed at the resilience of some of us humans when confronted with that which we fear most. There is nothing like the very real possibility of death to make one put into perspective one’s complaints about one’s neck, or the numbers of CDs one sells. Standing in the rain together after the festival, Carol told me about the Paul McCartney article in last week’s issue of the New Yorker, and we all marveled at his ability to continue making music, showing up for his fans, his muse, his calling even though he has every reason on earth to retire and spend his old age with his little three year old daughter Bea and his four older children. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Someone recently pointed out to me that we all kill to eat. Even those of us who are vegans are guilty of murdering insects, microbes, animals (by destroying their habitats, which unless you eat completely off the commercial grid, is impossible to avoid) and of course, plants. It’s the nature of life; in order to live, one being sacrifices its life for another. And around and around we go. Death is a part of life; as integral as the yin yang symbol makes it out to be, with the little dot of white amidst the black and the dot of black amidst the white. I hold my gorgeous little 13 month old baby up to the mirror and we put our faces together and grin at ourselves. I am shocked at how much older I am than she is. Next to her brand new face (which people in the know will quickly agree looks remarkably like my own) my every wrinkle and age spot comes forth. And I rejoice at my years, at my aging face, at my surgery-free parts and most of all at all the baggage I’ve long ago left at the terminal. Someone else can claim it if they need it. I’m looking forward to forgetting more and more and achieving less and less and spending my remaining days finding my way back to my own true nature. I just hope that includes the Beatles.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Posted by Nerissa at 6:41 AM 0 comments</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/07/on-turning-forty-sgt-pepper-and-tao.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-8116047355070827384</guid><pubDate>Mon, 11 Jun 2007 13:29:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-06-11T09:29:47.432-04:00</atom:updated><title>Cultivez Votre Jardin</title><description>Recently, at a meet and greet for a benefit, a young woman approached me and said, “I’m from your past.  You might not remember me, but I was an actor in your ex-husband’s play.”  She was wrong—I not only remembered her, I remembered the play, the way I felt back then, the way the theatre smelled and the kind of summer it had been. I sat down and had a wonderful conversation with her, grateful to have someone to get me off my feet and take me back twenty years to a time when I believed my whole life was in front of me.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This young woman, convinced she would be a famous actress, had gone through college, followed her star to Hollywood and spent most of her twenties on both sides of the camera.  She decided eventually that the sacrifices necessary to pursue the often heartbreaking career of a performer were not worth it, and instead went to law school and is now making a difference, saving the world, fighting and righting one injustice at a time.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I admired her. I also envied her.  And I began to think, “Maybe I should go to law school and be a public defender.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Jack Kornfield, a wonderful writer and meditation teacher, would call this thought “number one on my hit parade.”  By this he means that we all have perpetual, repetitive, compulsive, obsessive thoughts to which our minds return over and over, forgetting that we’ve solved the problem (or pronounced it unsolvable) countless times. It’s sort of like that joke on The Simpsons where Montgomery Burns inevitably points out Homer and asks Smithers who he is.  “That’s Homer Simpson, Sir,” Smithers says each time.  “Simpson, eh?” Burns mutters, scratching his chin.  I might as well say, “Law School, eh?”  Except that my “Simpson” comes in myriad disguises.  Sometimes it’s Divinity School.  Sometimes it’s getting an MFA in writing.  Sometimes it’s getting an MA in psychology; sometimes it’s teaching high school English.  Recently it was becoming a yoga teacher. I went through a phase where I thought I should become a poet—because that’s where the money is, naturally.  Today I was on the phone with a friend who started to tell me about her teen age daughter’s amazing guidance counselor and I don’t know what she said next because I was off on my thought, “maybe I should be a guidance counselor.”  If I’m reading a book to Lila, I think I should write children’s books.  If I’m cooking dinner, I fantasize about opening a restaurant.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The common ingredient here, pardon the pun, is an obsession with being great.  When I started my music career, I wanted to be the next Beatles.  By this I mean, I wanted to be so famous, so successful, so influential that I would steer the zeitgeist my generation.  If that meant sacrificing all semblance of a normal life, so be it.  I felt sorry for Tracy Chapman and Billy Bragg, because they were just kind of famous.  I wanted to be SUPER famous.  As the years went along, I decided I would settle for “critically acclaimed.”  I didn’t need the money.  I just wanted to be adored by people with big brains and opinions.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Instead, I have built a sturdy little career as a folk musician.  With my sister and the band we formed in 1991, I have released 13 CDs (going on 14 as of this July) and we continue to tour internationally.  We have a lovely and loyal audience and have made friends all over the country through our music.  Through the music, I now also have careers as a writer, novelist and life coach, and most of the time, I have more than enough to do, more creative projects and joyful experiences than any one person deserves to have.  When I am spiritually centered, I know this. Then there are the other days.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;One day, while on tour, I was staying with an old high school friend who was living in Mill Valley, a town in the Bay Area.  She was six months pregnant and about to quit her six figure income job to be a full time Mommy.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“I don’t know if I can do it,” I said.  &lt;br /&gt;“Why?  She said.  “Nothing’s better than motherhood.”&lt;br /&gt;“That’s what I’m afraid of,” I said.  “I am scared that if I have a baby, I’ll love it so much I won’t care anymore about my writing, about my audience, about advancing my career.  I’ll just fall in love with the baby and drift into a kind of happy ever after stupor.”&lt;br /&gt;She looked at me with confusion.  “But if you’re happy—then isn’t that the point?  If you’re happy, you won’t care about your career.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;What I was embarrassed to admit then—and it’s actually embarrassing to admit now, too—is that I thought, “but the WORLD will not have me, then!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I so want the world to want me.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Don’t ever let anyone tell you that Starbucks hasn’t done its part to raise the dialogue.  This from a Starbucks cup two days ago:&lt;br /&gt;"A person's pursuit of goodness leads to greatness, but the pursuit of greatness leads to ruin.  Pursue goodness and you will achieve great things."-John E. Kramer, VP of communication, Institute for Justice.  From Starbucks The Way I See It #245.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I have come to peace with the greatness issue, most of the time.  I no longer strive to wear a size 2.  I no longer detest everyone who gets reviewed in the New York Times Book Review. I no longer get depressed when Entertainment Weekly chooses not to review our new album.  I have what the Buddhists call Sympathetic Joy for my friends in the arts who have achieved a higher profile and accompanying bank account.  But I have to work at it, because I was born with a supersized ego, and I suspect that my life’s work—this go round anyway—is about deflation.  I have been deeply blessed to have found a spiritual path and to live the life of an artist, to sustain a career doing what I love.  I have been deeply blessed to share the journey with others—to be trusted with stories and problems and to witness metamorphoses. As a result of winning the husband-and-child lottery, most of the time I would rather be cuddled up with the two of them, or pureeing some organic chicken, or making scrapbooks of digital photos than doing battle with the ever more baffling media to try to Get Known. On Friday, I got off the phone with a client and made dinner for my husband and daughter, and felt so full, so grateful, that I didn’t even think, “Maybe I could be the world’s greatest life coach.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Voltaire at the end of Candide concludes that the object of life, “in the best of all possible worlds,” is to cultivate one’s own garden.   My husband is on vacation from grad school, and it’s springtime.  He spends every free moment out in the garden, growing basil from seeds, moving plants to better locations, our half acre plot his canvas.  Except it’s not just his canvas.  “My favorite part,” he says.  “Is transplanting little seedlings into their spots and patting them down. It’s like tucking them in at night.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’ve often thought that gardening is a man’s way of nurturing, of getting to be a mother. Gardening can be a practice divorced from the concerns about what the world thinks.  One’s creation unfolds in a natural manner, partly divine, partly mid-wifed by our own attention and love and creative impulses, but not something one holds up to the world to judge as one does one’s career.  (Of course there are some people who hold up their children or gardens to the world’s gaze as if they were accomplishments, but those people are very bad.) &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And the truth is, my new old friend, the public defender, said, “I am so envious of you for making it.”  I need these reminders from outsiders (and by outsiders I mean anyone who isn’t me).  I need to remember that “making it” is always relative.  That the real satisfaction, as I’ve said many times before, is in the creative moments when I am in the stream of songwriting, or onstage in the moment with my sister, or at my computer typing a new thought, or handwriting a page of dialogue, or on the phone with a client and listening to the story and seeing a new angle that might be helpful.  These are the moments when I am not striving for greatness, but merely doing the next right thing; the “good” thing that’s right in front of my nose.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Last night, Tom and Lila and I sat on the floor of her bedroom reading her favorite book, Doggies by Sandra Boynton, and yes, I did think, “Maybe I would be a great children’s book writer.”  But mostly, I gloried in my one year old’s newfound obsession.  She can now point to the different dogs and say, “Duh!” And “Ar ar  ar!” We got to the second to last page, where all the dogs howl a the moon. The precise text is, “A-a-a-a-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o.”  And when we get to that part, Tom and I throw back our heads and howl like werewolves.  For the first time, Lila looked up at us while we did this, very excited, and went, “A-a-a-a-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o-o.” too.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This isn’t just great.  This is greatness.  I have made it.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/06/cultivez-votre-jardin.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-5328906596258973206</guid><pubDate>Tue, 22 May 2007 17:36:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-05-22T13:43:45.318-04:00</atom:updated><title>The Beach, oh WHY the Beach?</title><description>After spending the first fifteen years of my life being what all my teachers euphemistically called “an underachiever” and what my mother and father called “a lazy slug” I have preceded to reinvent myself as the opposite. When, at my first job, (assistant Dean of Students at a prep school for girls) the school psychologist said in a meeting, “Nerissa, you couldn’t possibly understand Student X because you’re such a natural overachiever,” I almost wheezed in indignation. “I am NOT!” I wanted to shout at her, while stamping my little feet. I say I’m not an overachiever because the truth much of the time is that the reason I do so much is in order to avoid that horrible feeling of being called a lazy slug. (Not that I blame my flawless parents, mind you.) And because I’m proficient at doing a lot of things and, more to the point, I’m good at doing a lot of things at the same time, or at least I think I am, I indulge in that fine American art of Busyness/Multitasking/Overproducing. What gets lost, though, when I juggle as fast as I can is actually noticing the fun of the activity. It becomes something to check off my “to do” list, and the only hit I get is the action of checking it off. And we’re talking fun things, here, like writing you this paragraph; like going for a walk with my daughter; like sending my mother in law a present. Why not take a moment to enjoy the task? Well, because I can’t afford to take that moment, or so I think. Until I stop, breath, relax, and do that most sacred of rituals, practice gratitude. Which by the way is The Secret, in case you haven’t seen the DVD or read the book or watched Oprah or read People Magazine. I ‘m here to spoil the ending. Practice gratitude, cultivate good feelings. That doesn’t mean whitewash, fake it, squash sadness, anger or fear down; it just means that each of us is infinitely blessed, if we can but just recognize it and take a small moment (OK, I just timed it: less than one second) to say “Thank you.” If you don’t believe in God, thank the trees, the grass, the clouds, your mother, yourself, your dog, your child, your partner, your hands, your feet.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And now, on to our regularly scheduled essay:&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My sister’s ex-boyfriend once said to her, “I bet you’re the kind of person who couldn’t just go to the beach and watch the horizon. “ When she told me this story, I pointed a finger at my head like a gun and said, “J’accuse!” It runs in our family. How on earth could anyone possibly hang out and stare at the horizon? How mind numbingly boring. I have never been able to understand the appeal of the beach. What does one do? One splashes in the water. One fishes around in the sand. One slathers oneself with sunscreen. In short, one lolls. A loller I am not.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I don’t get it. I could get it if I still liked getting a suntan, which was once a part of my identity, a part of my uniform. As a teen, I scheduled “Lie by the pool from 10am-2pm” into my day planner on Saturdays in April and May. If I used any skin protection, which was rare, it would have been a tube of baby oil, but in any event I spent the summer with a nice almond colored tan. Nowadays, you need to apply oily sticky sunscreen from hairline to bikini line to top of the foot or suffer at least the fear of melanoma if not the real thing. As a person who doesn’t even bother with moisturizer after a bath (OK—full disclosure--a person who bypasses the luxurious pause of a bath for the 3.5 minute shower) I really can’t get with the sunscreen. I can’t get with the sand in the shoes. I can’t get with the water, which is too cold. I don’t like to swim, even in a heated pool. I don’t like looking at other people in their bathing suits, and I don’t really want to be seen in one. Throw into the mix my aversive givens, which are an integral part of my profession (soon-to-be-rock star): driving long distances, parking, hauling gear—that leaves one thing I might like about the beach: reading. But now we’re back to the sunscreen. Why apply sunscreen just to sit out on an uncomfortable plastic chair where it might be hot, you might get splashed only to do something which I could do from the comfort of my bed or couch?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;See what I’m dealing with here? &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Tuesday of this last week, I got a call from my life coach ten minutes into what was supposed to be our session. I’d gotten overwhelmed as usual, playing catch up from the weekend. I’d had two shows and then hosted a book group for my church, given a speech at the VA hospital for Women’s History Month, and continued to do all the other things I do: mother, wife, life coach, writing group leader, writer, yogini , daily jogger, etc. I had just sent an email to the other judges of a local poetry contest to let them know that I would have to withdraw from my position as the packet of poems I was supposed to read and judge was still sitting shamefully unopened on my desk. When my life coach called. I burst into tears. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“I can’t do all these things!” I sobbed. “I need a Sabbath!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;She did that annoying thing that life coaches do—she didn’t tell me what to do but instead said, “And how would you go about giving yourself a Sabbath?”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This is where time consciousness comes in. Instead of filling up all the blank spaces in my calendar, a little trick I use to keep myself busy or as my cruel life coach says, to keep myself from having to feel all my feelings, I would need to leave down time. I would need to say no. I would need to accept imperfections; need to accept that for now anyway, I may set goals, but I probably won’t meet them. I may want to be in super physical shape, and I can be if I don’t also want to be an adequate mother and wife and get some writing done and earn enough money to keep us in our lovely house. I may want to be a famous folksinger, and I can be if I don’t also want a full-time presence in my home and town, my community. Also to be sane and healthy.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In short, I may need to stare at the horizon.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My life coach said something wise and helpful: recognize that when you say yes to one thing you are saying no to something else. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I hate that.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;However, through my struggles with food, I understand this. I may want to eat an appetizer, a main course, a salad with bleu cheese, dessert and bread with olive oil and two glasses of Cabernet, and to fit into my favorite jeans—but I have to choose. Of course, I could run six miles a day or make myself puke it all up, but that was not a solution the Buddha would have chosen. It’s the same way today. On the plane, I wrote down a list of Sabbathy things I wanted from my four day vacation to Florida.&lt;br /&gt;1. Be with my family&lt;br /&gt;2. Get some gentle exercise&lt;br /&gt;3. Read Anne Lamott’s and Liz Gilbert’s new books&lt;br /&gt;4. Write in my journal&lt;br /&gt;5. Take Lila to the beach (not for me, you understand, but under the rubric of “being an adequate mother and witnessing key moments in the life of my child.”)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When the collective pulse started its post-caffeine/high-impact-aerobics-class beat the first morning, and we had to agree on a schedule, I forewent my jog in favor of a trip to the detested beach to see if in fact I could stare at the horizon. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We slathered on the appropriate amount of sunscreen and headed off, hauling our gear and parking and the whole nine yards. Once there, I had a moment of panic. Id’ forgotten a book! Oh, yeah—I had a child and my whole purpose was to be in the moment with her, to watch her first experience with horseshoe crabs and conch shells and not miss her childhood. Let’s see if I can just be with her and see the beach from her perspective. So I did the work of slowing down, which to me feels almost like shedding my skin. Have you ever seen a snake do that, by the way? They go very still and seem almost dead. That should have been a tip off for me.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I got behind my eyes. I held Lila and stood next to my mother, a fellow Type A overachiever and together we let our feet sink into the sand, getting buried a little more each time the waves passed over. It felt delicious. I’d forgotten how lovely it is to feel the wet sand between your toes. The Gulf of Mexico is the perfect shade of blue green and the water in the low 70’s. I had the pleasure of watching my husband go tearing into the waves, swimming and splashing like a golden retriever. Lila watched and squealed but was too scared and still too cold to touch the water herself. Tom took her for a little walk and I squatted down in the place where the sand gets covered by maybe every fourth wave. I built a little dyke and watched the water overcome it. I dug my fingers into the sand and got lost in the sea shells, the bits of rock. I noticed that my mother (who earlier had been jonesing for a jog worse that I was, even) was now sitting in her beach chair facing the horizon. I turned from where I was and sat, too, my legs sticking out towards the water in staff pose. And just took in the view. Pelicans were diving, delighted, a hundred yards off. Older kids were hauling a green blow up sea turtle. The air was soft and moist and benign. The water felt warmer. Tom came over with Lila in his arms and I reached for her. He put her in my lap and proceeded to slather me with still more sunscreen. I promptly dropped my resistance to sunscreen. What exactly is wrong with having someone you love slather you with cream?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Lila didn’t seem afraid anymore. She laughed at every incoming wave which splashed up into our laps and even when a big one got us both in the face, she didn’t seem to mind. “This is the beach, Littley-Lou,” I said. “This is where we come to just sit and be with the water.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Now I can’t wait to go back.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/05/beach-oh-why-beach_22.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-117450896090979224</guid><pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2007 21:27:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-03-21T17:29:20.926-04:00</atom:updated><title>Environmental Indulgences</title><description>Trying to be a good environmentalist is at least as difficult as trying to be a good Catholic.  Or Buddhist or WWJD Christian or, I suspect, Jew or Muslim.  I catch myself wanting to confess my sins to my organic-food-eating, hemp-wearing friends. Bless me, righteous ones, for I have sinned, in thought word and deed; by what I have done and by what I have left undone.&lt;br /&gt;-I still drink bottled water (instead of Brita filtered) &lt;br /&gt;-I eat mangoes (which are imported, since so far they haven’t figured out how to grow them in Western MA)&lt;br /&gt;-Though I am in the process of replacing all my incandescent bulbs with compact fluorescent ones, and I haven’t bought any new clothing since 2003, I still eat Atlantic Salmon (sometimes) and keep my heat turned up to 69 (I use the excuse that I have a baby who needs the heat, but in truth, I don’t feel like wearing my hat and scarf around the house.  Yet.)  I have looked lustfully upon SUVs and sinned in my heart by contemplating central air conditioning.  I am truly sorry and I humbly repent.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Of course, I want them to grant me absolution, send me off to pick up some litter as penance.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Speaking of penance, there’s a website called TerraPass where you can pay money to offset your yearly carbon usage for everything from your car to your home to your recent plane trip to Florida (and maybe even the air conditioning you enjoy while you’re there).  Tom calls it “buying indulgences.”  Remember how in the Middle Ages your local parish priest would accept a little wad of cash (or perhaps hot crossed buns) to pray for you and insure your spot in Heaven?  Kings and barons who’d carried on a little too loosely in those Chaucerian days were especially quick to open their pocketbooks and shed some guilt.  In the case of TerraPass, the money doesn’t go just to assuage your guilt, though I can attest that it works really well for this, but to enrich companies dedicated to exploring green energy sources: solar, wind, water, etc.  The site insists “these projects result in verified reductions in greenhouse gas pollution. And these reductions counterbalance your own emissions.”  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I don’t argue.  I click some icons and spend about $150 and for the year anyway, my carbon footprint is balanced out and I can sleep at night.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Until, that is, I roll over in bed and wonder why I seem to be more upset about climate change than almost anyone I know.  What’s with me?  Am I just wired to react to powerful belief systems?  In my zeal for environmental correctness, I remind myself of a, well, zealot.  I read the New York Times, Yoga Journal, Mothering Magazine, all the usual leftie green suspects, and, like a Bible thumper, I see the evidence in the text!  It’s right here, in black and white, and in the case of the Internet and An Inconvenient Truth, technicolor!  We are going to severely harm our species if we don’t take action now!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Notice how I didn’t say, “The Earth.”  I said “our species.”  I’ve been thinking, recently, the Earth is going to get through this just fine.  It has its ways.  I think something like five new movies are coming out this summer where the climate is the bad guy instead of Arnold Schwarzenegger or Anthony Hopkins.  The earth will overcome whatever poisons we inflict upon it.  It’s we who are expendable, or as my minister, Steve Philbrick likes to say, “we’re expensive. The Earth may not be able to afford us for much longer.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Before having Lila, I heard these dire warnings and rolled my eyes in annoyance at our collective greed and ignorance and kept driving my fossil fuel belching car, kept tossing my plastic bottles in whatever bin was handy. I bought many a canvas bag, and fully intended to remember to bring them to the supermarket, but inevitably I’d leave them by my front door and have to ask for a paper or plastic one at the check out counter.  The demise of the human race was sad, but darn it, we kind of deserved it.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nothing like a baby to turn a misanthrope into a zealous compassionate people lover.  I heart people now!  I puppy heart them!  I want the human race to overcome its wicked ways, to see the (compact fluorescent) light and to change!  I want them all to join me when I get up to sing hearty folk songs to get the environmental mojo happening.  I want them all to agree that we should boycott all clothing stores except ones that sell hemp.  I regard it as a personal affront when people bring beverages made by the Coca Cola company into my house.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And then, I am stopped short in my tracks when some stranger shouts at me across the Whole Foods parking lot, “Nice bumper sticker, lady!  Your pal Deval Patrick sure has padded the pockets of all his fat cat corporate buddies!”  I was lifting Lila into one of those little car shopping carts, the ones where the kid gets to pretend she’s controlling the trajectory of the vehicle, kind of like life here on earth, but that’s another essay topic.  Anyway, I stared at this person who, after yelling at me, beat a hasty retreat into Whole Foods.  I followed him slowly, seething and making up clever retorts in case I ran into him again.  Though really, I just wanted to say, “Why are you so mean and judgmental?”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Why indeed?  Why do I get so judgmental?  If you do accept the premise that we humans are responsible for the future of our environment, and therefore our species, that our grandchildren if not ourselves are going to burn in hell (on earth) by our actions and inactions, very few of us get off the hook, carbon-neutrally-speaking.  But in what ways exactly do I differ from the religious zealots I spend so much time arguing with in my head?  They believe what they believe because a book said so (the Bible, the Koran.)  I believe what I believe because the New York Times, some scientists and Al Gore said so.  I put my faith in science, and they’ve put theirs in the wisdom of the ages.  I believe with all my heart that I am right, but the same can be said for them.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Maybe there are two kinds of people in the world: zealots and normal people, and I am just a zealot.  Zealots are fine when they’re with their own kind—for awhile, until one of them turns to the other and says something mean about the progressive candidate for governor you supported and you realize that it’s ok to support a progressive candidate until he becomes The Man, and then you must rip off your bumper sticker and denounce him as a corrupt fat cat.  Meet the new boss same as the old boss and all that.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Here’s what I do know from my long 40 years on the planet.  I know that I am a being who needs to worship something, who needs to put something above herself in order to feel sane and happy and grateful everyday.  People who need to perform rituals may be zealots, or they may just be wired a little differently.  For today, I know that changing my incandescent bulbs to compact fluorescents made me feel really happy, the way my Catholic friend Mary tells me she feels when she’s said a few Hail Marys using her rosary beads or the way Jonah, my Buddhist friend feels when he’s hung his prayer flags.  Someone said to me this morning, “I don’t know whether or not I believe in God.  Sometimes I do, sometimes I don’t.  But I definitely feel better when I believe in God, so I figure, why not?”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;People have been making up their own gods since time immemorial.  That’s just plain fact; every culture has some kind of higher power, and there are several books on the best seller list currently discussing the various reasons why people are compelled to have faith in something.  My feeling is: there’s something cool out there that’s bigger than us, even if it’s just the life force that propels a crocus up from the ground in spring or causes a river to flow from the north to the south.  That’s the God we all worship, when you come right down to it.  The different masks of that god—Gaia, Jehovah, Allah, Jesus, Krishnu, the Bible, the Secret, the practice of mindfulness, the practice of good stewardship, whatever—are just personal interfaces to help individuals connect with that force.  Interfaces are useful as long as we don’t insist that everyone use our interface.  When you get behind the interface, that’s when the really good stuff happens—that’s when we get to see that this force is connecting us all.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/03/environmental-indulgences.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-117077731106643880</guid><pubDate>Tue, 06 Feb 2007 15:54:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-02-06T10:55:11.073-05:00</atom:updated><title>The Cranky Buddhist</title><description>I should call my blog The Cranky Buddhist. At this rate, I will never attain enlightenment.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;On Friday, my husband Tom and I along with our baby daughter. Lila and my sister, Katryna who is my singing partner, got up at the crack of dawn to warm up the biodiesel Jetta and drive to the airport to catch a plane to St. Louis where we were to be performing in the St Louis Folk Festival at the beautiful downtown Sheldon Theatre (an almost perfect replica of Cambridge's Sanders Hall, by the way).  On the way, pining for coffee and watching the gorgeous southern sky as the sun began its ascent, we listened to NPR and the latest findings from the report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (the IPCC) that assembled in Paris under the aegis of the UN. What they discovered, as you probably know, is that there is almost no doubt anymore that human beings are directly contributing to the rise in temperatures we've been experiencing, along with the unusual number of hurricanes and tsunamis and floods that have been plaguing the world as of late. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;"I am a scientist," the woman from the panel said to the NPR interviewer when asked what should be done about this, since sea levels are now expected to rise between 1-2 feet by 2100, which will threaten low lying cities everywhere—what happened in New Orleans might happen in New York by the time Lila is my age. "I am not a policy maker. We are not politicians.  Our work is to tell the world what is going on, not how to stop it." She went on to say that global warming may not be stoppable at this point, but it can be arrested and the worst won't happen IF we mobilize now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I thought, again, about all the work it would take for us humans to save ourselves.  We need to do big things and little things.  Big things include voting for politicians who fully understand this issue and are willing to pass legislation that will change the way we all live.  Politicians with tremendous courage who will raise taxes on the usage of fossil fuels; lawmakers who will fund the exploration of alternate fuels.  That will affect our pocketbooks, all of us.  We need to be willing to sacrifice, maybe in a big way now so that we’re not perpetrating the ultimate sacrifice on our children and grandchildren and great-grandchildren (should the human race survive that long.)  And each of us also needs to make small daily sacrifices: I need, for example to give up my love affair with the incandescent lightbulb and switch to the detestable compact fluorescent bulbs that cast my office in a depressing glow.  I need to be better about turning off the lights in all the rooms of the house, turning the heat down at night, unplugging unused appliances, not using plastic wrap on leftovers, buying organic fruits, vegetables, meats and yogurt, and even (heaven help me) eschewing my beloved imported mangoes because of the huge amounts of oil and gas it takes to get them here from Haiti.  I took a deep sigh and nodded, looking back at my daughter playing in her carseat, slapping the dangling toys that amuse her and babbling her “rah rah’s” and “buh buhs.”  Recently, she’s been squealing with delight when her father or I pick her up, kicking those little chubby legs and waving her hands up and down, wriggling her whole body with glee.  A little sacrifice never killed anyone.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;At the airport, we gratefully unloaded our checkable bags and moved our posse to the coffee bar at the airport hotel, where I breastfed Lila and watched ESPN, which was on the overhanging TV at the bar. Now, as many of you know, I don't usually watch TV. It's not exactly a moral choice; I just don't have time, and once you get out of the habit of watching TV, it loses its appeal.  (I used to watch lots of TV, back in the 90's, and I don't have any judgments about those who indulge, and as you will soon see, I am a person replete with judgments.) But now, whenever I turn on the TV, I get the heebeejeebees, and my internal artist, who is an incredibly sensitive 8 year old, freaks out and wants to hide under the covers of her bed with a hunk of cheddar cheese.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;On Friday, as I was watching at the airport, a commercial came on for Hooters. Lila pulled off to watch too, fascinated, as a young woman with thin arms and big breasts who apparently works at Hooters, said, "I'm not supposed to tell you this…but you can take me home." She then looks secretively right and left and goes on. "Well, sort of.” You see, she tells us, Hooters is giving away a flat screen TV as some kind of Superbowl promotion. In fact, as the camera pulls out, you could see that the woman was IN the TV! You could see the background of a friendly neighborhood Hooters, both inside and OUTSIDE the TV! How amazing!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The camera then shifted to seductive shots of various kinds of Superbowly Hooters food, like hoagies and cheese fries, the cheese melting luxuriously over the ham. Next frame was a couple of All-American men (by which I mean—and I say this with all due respect-white blond guys with buzz cuts who weigh at least 250 pounds), placing their hoagies in a Hooter’s take-out bag on top of the flat screen TV and then lifting it up with the woman looking back and forth at both of them, pleased and surprised, a la Barbara Eden in the bottle in I Dream of Jeannie.  Next frame, they were in their car.  The flat screen TV had been placed in the back, with the woman in the TV still looking a bit delighted albeit bewildered, peering back and forth from between the two men who are in the driver’s seat and shotgun, respectively.  They opened their bags of Hooters food and took a bite of cheese fries.  One of them dangled a fry in front of the woman.  She reached for it, but of course couldn’t get to it, being as she was on TV.  “Aw, no fair!” she pouted.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;That’s when I almost lost my mind.  What hope can the planet possibly have when we have this to contend with?  I am expecting something as flimsy and feeble as a Democracy to vote their conscience?  Just as the Bush administration responded to the findings of the IPCC by rejecting unilateral limits on emission, saying, “We are a small contributor to the overall, when you look at the rest of the world, so it’s really got to be a global solution,” so I thought, “Why should I give up my mangoes when there’s no chance in hell this culture will ever look up from its rampant addiction to soft porn, big cars, mindless television and junk food to make the necessary changes to prolong our species?  I give up.  Until they change, why should I?  I want a dictatorship!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Then, as I covered Lila’s eyes, I had this other thought, from the other side of my pinbally ricocheting mind: “I am way to serious.  Why can’t I relax and join the Superbowl culture and not be so judgmental and angry and self-righteous and all those other words they throw at liberals?  By judging (prejudging) everyone I am just as close-minded and contemptible as those I wish would change.  Hypocrite!  Cranky Buddhist!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As a Buddhist, I am supposed to be embracing the four brahma viharas; loving kindness, compassion, equanimity and sympathetic joy.  I’m pretty sure that precludes my indulging in detesting white blond football-loving Hooter patrons.  Also, I think it precludes my wishing that we had a dictatorship that would tax the usage of fossil fuels at a rate of 200%, and while at it, ban football, Hooters, cheese fries and flat screen TVs.  I’m pretty sure that falls under the category of “worshiping a God who hates all the same people you do probably means you have created God in your own image,” as Father Tom Weston says, by way of Anne Lamott.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Rats.  And I don’t really want to live in a dictatorship, by the way.  Even if (especially if) I were the dictator.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Humor is a torch we bring with us down into the darkness, into hell itself.  Without humor, we are damned, even as we try to damn others.  And there can be no peace when the peacemakers are so angry their faces and hearts are as contorted as those of their oppressors.  These are serious times, and sometimes I need someone a little more rational to explain to me that when someone is joking about how global warming will give them beachfront property in a few years, I shouldn’t react by screaming at them about how my daughter will never see a play on Broadway because it will be underwater by the year 2026.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We are now entering a new phase of life on this planet, one in which we can no longer pretend that what John Donne said isn’t true, about no man being an island entire of itself.  We are all a piece of the continent, just as many of us are already integrally a part of a family, either the one we were born into or the one we are creating with a partner and children, or a creative family of our own choosing, or a mix of these.  And just as I work to bring balance to the individual me and the me who is a wife/mother/daughter and sister, so we need to work at bringing a balance between the self with her unique needs and the citizen of the world who is a giving and taking part, one who breathes CO2 out and takes O2 in.  How can we bring our awareness of these roles to our daily practices?  What did we do for the Earth today?  Did we take too much?  Did we dance lightly?  Did we pass on our understanding to another?  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And yet we need to do this gently, if we are going to break what President Bush has called our “addiction” to fossil fuel. Jane Aikin, law professor at Washington University in St. Louis gave the keynote speech at our Arts and Activism panel yesterday.  In speaking about violence against women, she made the point that there is a lot of ignorance out there.  “Never assume that your friends know what you know,” she said.  “Don’t be shy about educating them.  Share what you know!  That’s how we learn.”  The same is true for us.  We need to create a climate of support, of modeling good stewardship of the earth.  I ask my husband to remind me to pack the canvas bags when I am making the weekly trip to the supermarket. (In Ireland, and perhaps in other European countries, they charge you if you don’t bring your own bags back). He asks me to nag him if he’s spaced out in the shower and overusing the hot water.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;If my experience as a veteran dieter teaches me anything, it’s that you have to do it with love, patience, compassion, gentleness, humor and tolerance for others.  Just as I couldn’t give up junk food because someone told me too—it had to come from a deep inner desire—so I won’t give up driving the mile to the Stop &amp; Shop because someone’s trying to shame me into walking.  I will walk to the Stop &amp; Shop because I want to do my part for the earth, out of love and not out of guilt.  Feeling like I am an environmentalist, that this is my issue, that I have a relationship with the earth that is personal and private will make me walk instead of drive, buy organic rather than saving 75¢, and yes, changing my incandescent bulbs for compact fluorescent. As always, the solution starts with us, and part of that solution is seeing the greedy Hummer-loving, energy wasting, junk food consumer in ourselves and forgiving that someone.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;*If you want to see a really funny piece on how to respond to global warming, check out this link from Monday’s New York Times: &lt;br /&gt;http://www.rickmoranis.com/news.aspx?pid=627</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/02/cranky-buddhist_06.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-117000136198092445</guid><pubDate>Sun, 28 Jan 2007 16:21:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2007-01-28T11:22:41.996-05:00</atom:updated><title>Three Poems</title><description>1&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Why his liver?  &lt;br /&gt;That’s what I want to know.  &lt;br /&gt;If it had been me, I feel sure&lt;br /&gt;That God would’ve taken my voice.&lt;br /&gt;And it wouldn’t have been a violent desecration, either, with the mysterious restoration &lt;br /&gt;In the night while the victim slept, wiped out, from the brutal operation&lt;br /&gt;No, more like a borrowing—a book from the library, slyly&lt;br /&gt;Returned with a different page dog eared each day.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;2.&lt;br /&gt;Surely I came from the fire&lt;br /&gt;Of their newly minted love, &lt;br /&gt;One piece hot from the furnaces of Hephaestus, &lt;br /&gt;Another wet and glistening&lt;br /&gt;Via a conch shell, &lt;br /&gt;Like my mother, naked and ridiculous in my unabashed joy.&lt;br /&gt;And we together, in the blessed moments at sea&lt;br /&gt;Still had no clue that once she washed to shore, &lt;br /&gt;The marriage would be forced&lt;br /&gt;Arranged&lt;br /&gt;Cobbled, even-&lt;br /&gt;a beauty not even pretending to love a kind hardworking hunchback.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And now we leave pieces of ourselves all over the earth.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;3. &lt;br /&gt;In the sill of the window&lt;br /&gt;In the frame of the door where you’ve been hanging&lt;br /&gt;By the tips of your fingers&lt;br /&gt;Casually&lt;br /&gt;For minutes now&lt;br /&gt;Neither in nor out&lt;br /&gt;In the almost silence of the passing cars.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nerissa Nields&lt;br /&gt;Jan. 28, 2007</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2007/01/three-poems.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-116396364443442891</guid><pubDate>Sun, 19 Nov 2006 19:13:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-11-19T14:14:04.470-05:00</atom:updated><title>When God Comes for Tea</title><description>When I was eight years old, I loved to read the same books over and over again.  “Try this one,” my frustrated librarian would say, pushing forward a copy of A Wrinkle in Time or one of the Chronicles of Narnia with some urgency.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“No thanks,” I’d say, handing her instead the card for On the Banks of Plum Creek for the fifth time that fall.  I was already anticipating my pleasure at going home to my bed in the corner of my room with a two-inch cube of cheddar cheese which I would nibble slowly, making it last until my mother called us for dinner.  The books I was drawn to were all about girls growing up a long time ago, girls growing up in little underground sod houses, or Brooklyn tenement apartments, or snow-covered wooden structures buried in a New England blizzard.  I liked stories about girls watching their mothers measure out the coffee, precious spoonful by precious spoonful.  Girls who knew what scarcity was.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I knew no such lack, or at least that’s what I thought until recently.  I grew up in the seventies, and though it’s true that I sometimes had to ford a bridgeless creek to get to school in the Virginia winter, taking off my brown oxfords and shrieking as my bare feet hit the freezing water, I always had shoes.  And, truth be told, my mother could have driven us; she just liked the idea of us fording a creek once in awhile.  I always had meat on my dinner plate; I slept in a well-heated house, and as far as I know, my parents never measured the coffee, though in those days it came in these horrible tins and was freeze dried.  I am sure today’s Starbucks generation cannot even imagine the horror.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Today as I was going for my morning run, I noticed a mother and son waiting, I assume, for the school bus.  The mother was just hanging out with her kid—he’s probably eight or so.  And she was laughing with him.  He was laughing and she was laughing.  That was all.  But I felt a pang; the same pang I used to feel when I read about Laura Ingalls or Jo March or Francie Nolan, those poor little girls who slept in unheated homes and waited until Christmas to have even a taste of sugar.  I felt a twang of deprivation.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My parents gave us everything we needed, but not everything we wanted.  We were not poor little rich kids; they were careful not to spoil us.  But, like most Americans, they were hungry to improve our lot; not hungry to buy new cars or have us wear the latest fashions—my parents didn’t go out to a restaurant until we were all in our teens, and we rarely went on vacations.  What they were desperately hungry for was for us to be well educated.  They chose a school that had a fantastic music department and made sure they could pay the tuition, three times over for their three daughters.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And the additional price they paid, again like many Americans, was with their time.  I don’t remember ever just hanging out with my parents.  I think if asked, they would have called “hanging out” “killing time.”  And time was more than money; time was love in the form of hard work, which translated to tuition for the school, which translated to a better life for their kids.  I think my parents saw the cultural upheaval of the 60s with mixed feelings.  Though they were liberal Democrats, they were not hippies.  Though they were passionately in favor of the separation of church and state, they simultaneously mourned the fact that Christmas carols were no longer allowed to be sung at our local public school.  And so they both worked from six am until 10pm most days so that we could go to a school and learn Christmas carols.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I woke up at seven am most mornings to find my mother furiously red-lining 9th graders’ term papers, planning her morning lesson and throwing together peanut butter and jelly sandwiches.  I braided my baby sister’s hair and emptied the dishwasher with the Today show chirping the day’s cold war news in the background.  We slurped our orange juice and grabbed our books and tumbled into the station wagon to pick up the kids in our carpool, always late to school.  My mother was usually not home in the afternoons—either playing tennis or teaching or working for the League of Women Voters –and thus I found an alternate universe in the prairie or turn of the century Brooklyn.  My father came home, usually after dinner and he’d kiss me goodnight.  For many years, my mother referred to their relationship as “the 19 and a half minute per day marriage.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Killing time was a real homicide in my family.  When my mother found out I was reading the same books over and over again, she yelled at me.  “Why don’t you go out and play?” she’d shout on a cloudless crisp October day.  “Soon it’s going to be winter!”  I still have pangs of guilt if I don’t get out on crisp cloudless days.  Thus my morning run.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And yet, here was this woman, hanging out with her son waiting for the school bus.  It’s not a dangerous neighborhood.  Her son is not that small.  Surely he could spend those moments alone while his mother could be getting some work done, or maybe going for a run herself.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’ve been working all fall on the content for my new Life Composition Creative Day Planners, and I’ve been thinking a lot about time management, a topic I am fascinated with, although I’ve come to prefer the term “time consciousness,” but that’s for a later entry.  At one time, I prided myself on having my life scheduled down to the second.  Then I became a mother, at the ripe age of 38, and my whole notion of time management—of hanging out, of killing time—became transformed.  When my six month old daughter calls me from her position under the elephant which dangles above her head while she’s lying on her Gymini play mat, I stop what I’m doing.  I look over at her and watch her face crumple into a squinty eyed grin, her whole body wriggling like a puppy’s, her feet kicking in eloquent joy.  I lean over and pick her up and hold her, smell her ears, run my hand gently over that miraculous head, kiss her soft little peach cheeks and look her deeply in the eyes.  And I sigh.  And I forget about trying to get anything done; I forget about trying to save my pennies for her future education (well--for the moment—it is kind of an obsession for me).  But I know that if the income column falls short of the expenses column, I can always sing to her.  I can read to her and find her books—new ones as well as old familiar ones.  I can let her choose what she wants to read and notice if she’s going back to the same old ones over and over again, and perhaps ask why.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My parents, I should add, have learned how to kill time as they’ve grown up.  The Thanksgiving when my nephew William was born was a veritable massacre of time.  We did nothing but hang out on my sofas, go for the occasional stroll in the neighborhood, comment on how huge my sister’s belly was and eat turkey.  And it remains one of the very happiest weekends of my life.  Being an older mom, I am acutely aware of how little time I have with Lila.  When she graduates from college, I will be 60.  When I went to college, my mother had just turned forty.  I don’t have the kind of time my mother had to learn how to relax and hang out.  I need to learn at warp speed.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So part of what I’ve come to learn about time management goes to a wonderful proverb that I’ve found in cultures across the world.  In Arabic, it’s translated: “Trust Allah but tie your camel.” In Russia it’s “Pray to God but continue to row to shore.”   I would reverse it for myself: “Hoard your time like sweet cream, but don’t be afraid to pour lavishly when God comes for tea.”  When my husband tells me he loves me, that he’s proud of me, or when he tells a joke and makes me laugh; when my daughter coos and chants “ma ma ma”; when we’re all sitting around the breakfast table in the morning watching the sun illuminate the late November clouds, God has come for tea.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/11/when-god-comes-for-tea.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-115999336875658440</guid><pubDate>Wed, 04 Oct 2006 20:22:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-10-04T16:22:48.773-04:00</atom:updated><title>HooteNanny</title><description>I grew up with folk music.  My parents' first date was going to see Harry Belafonte when he was the darling of the Greenwich Village set.  Their second date was a Pete Seeger concert.  Early in their courtship, my mother taught my father how to play the guitar, and my earliest memories have to do with them harmonizing around the dinner table to "Banks of the Ohio."   The first record I remember playing was Peter, Paul and Mommy.  And though I eventually rebelled and started listening to the Clash (oh, OK, Captain &amp; Tennille), my first musical love will always be folk music.  REAL folk music: not the pabulum served up in the late fifties (Mitch Mitchell, Burl Ives) but muscular leftist populist folk music, dark murder ballads, passionate gospel.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As you know, this led to creating a five-piece rock band with my sister, that at one point in time lived in a van and played in clubs all over the country.  Now we tour more regionally and more frequently as a duo, but we still put out a new CD every year and a half and have not yet given away our black motorcycle jackets.  We rode the line between the shiny hopeful music of the American left's folk tradition and the alternative rock of the 1990's, trying hard not to be sentimental without being too cynical.  "When I am a mother," I thought.  "My children will love music.  They will not listen to Baby Einstein.  They will not have toys that sound like Casio keyboards.  They will have authentic instruments and learn songs from all over the world.  They will learn about hope from music.  And if they can't sing on key, that's AOK."&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Moreover (Katryna and I plotted), music shall save the world!  If all the kids were busy singing, maybe they wouldn't hit each other!  If only George W. Bush had done more of the hokey pokey as a child, maybe he wouldn't be so obsessed with his nasty, unwinnable wars!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;To this end, HooteNanny was born.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;HooteNanny is Katryna's and my answer to Music Together, (www.musictogether.com) a national franchise whose theory is that your child's favorite voice is your voice; that the best way for children to have music in their lives in a positive way is for parents and children to experience it…together.  So classes begin when children are pre-verbal and continue until they are five.  There are lots of call and response songs, lots of international songs, lots of made- up-in-the-moment songs.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;On Thursday mornings, I put Lila in the jogging stroller and we walk a mile and a quarter into town on a crisp fall morning. I stop by Starbucks and get the requisite coffee bevies for Katryna and me (a 5 shot Americano for yours truly, a mostly milk iced coffee for her, with 2 sugars.)  We meet in front of the building that houses the Northampton Quaker Meeting Center and unlock the front door.  Upstairs, the room is still cluttered with chairs for big people.  We move these out of the way to the periphery and sit down next to the wall with the outlet, plug in Katryna's boom box.  I take out the guitar, tune up and place my capo and picks behind my back and safely out of the reach of curious two year olds.  And then the parents and kids begin to arrive: mothers of all ages carry their babies, or hold the hands of their toddlers.  Some of the kids are older—up to five years old—and these are the kids we keep an eye on.  When we get to the parts of the songs that require participation, here's where most of the good ideas will come from.  Like finding out what Aikendrum's clothes are made of (Aikendrum lives on the moon, you see, and naturally, all his clothes are made of food.  His hat is made of cream cheese.  Depending on the whims of the children in the group, his shirt could be made of spaghetti, his tie could be made of dino-nuggets.  Once his entire outfit was made from yogurt.  You get to find out what kids had for breakfast by how Aikendrum is clothed.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We begin each group with a good morning song:  Good morning, Lila, how did you sleep last night? Going through and greeting every parent and child there.  During the forty-five minute class, we do some movement (like dance around the room to Dan Zanes's wonderful "Pata Pata"), play with shaker eggs, tambourines, sing some lullabies while babies nurse in their mothers' laps.  We have given each family a CD and songbook with the music for the ten-week session, and part of the program is about spending time outside of class listening to the CD with your child to develop familiarity with the music.  The idea is that the more the kids and parents sing the songs at home, the better integrated the experience becomes.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We end the class with a version of the old folk song "Sweet Rosyanne," whose refrain, "Bye Bye My Rosyanna" gets turned into "Bye bye Lila, bye bye William, bye bye Amy and Zoe,"  etc.  So far, I can attest that five-month old Lila loves the class, spending it looking around at the other moms, dads and babies and sucking on her hand with a big wet grin.  William, Katryna's almost 2 year old spins around in a circle, suggests we sing about fire trucks most of the time and sings the songs on his own in the car when Katryna plays the CD.  Emails from the other moms in the group reflect this, too.  And the best endorsement of all, from the mother of 6 month old twins:  "They always nap so well in the afternoons after HooteNanny!"  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We pack up our shaker eggs, boom box, guitar, children, stroller, leftover iced coffees and head out into the noonday.  I help Katryna load the van, and then I walk home with happy Lila, who is a complete lovey-loo after her infusion of folk music.  And even though she is still preverbal and toothless, I could swear she was trying to sing the chorus to "Allee Allee O" as we passed under the falling maple leaves.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/10/hootenanny_04.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-115711920932672218</guid><pubDate>Fri, 01 Sep 2006 13:57:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-09-01T16:01:08.193-04:00</atom:updated><title>Giant of the Valley</title><description>&lt;a href="http://www.nields.com/blog/uploaded_images/N&amp;L 0n Giant 2-731281.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://www.nields.com/blog/uploaded_images/N&amp;L 0n Giant 2-795807.jpg" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When I was a kid, I read a biography of John F. Kennedy; one of those youth bios, cleaned up, Marilyn Monroe-free, which focused instead on his huge, friendly family, his speed-reading of five newspapers a day, and his heroics as a World War II purple heart recipient.  When the author remarked on how competitive the Kennedy family was, especially in touch football games and politics, I thought, “What’s weird about that?  Isn’t that the way all families are?”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In my family, we play tennis, Scrabble, Trivial Pursuits, golf.  We argue about politics, even though we all fall roughly on a demographic between very left of center and extremely left of center.  And in August, we climb mountains in the Adirondacks—a New York state nature preserve where there are forty-six peaks over 4000 feet.  These forty-six peaks-known colloquially as “Forty-Sixers”(or, cutely, “46rs”)- range in difficulty from an hour and a half’s fairly easy hike (Cascade) to a sixteen-hour day’s bushwhack to bag a viewless mosquito-infested peak (Allen).  I climbed my first forty-sixer at age 8 and finished at age 26, along with my sisters.  We were fairly incongruous members of the forty-sixer club, most of whom are the kind of outdoorsmen and –women whose idea of a vacation is careening down white water rivers in those little boats that tip over, and then cramponing up glaciers in January.  Me, I wear old running shoes to hike and eat my lunch with a knife and fork at the summit.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Nevertheless, in case it hasn’t become clear to you by now, I did not completely escape the competition virus with which everyone in my family is infected.  Like Anne Lamott, when I brought home a B+, my parents wondered why I couldn’t have worked just a little harder to get an A-.  Though I was a fair athlete as a child-a pretty good field hockey and tennis player, an average but competent dancer—my parents were practically professionals (both are nationally ranked in tennis; my mother was her high school’s star of track and field; my father is actually listed as the 189th forty-sixer in the world).  So I have a pretty weird relationship with my own athleticism, which mostly translates to thinking that either I am a disappointment as an athlete, or I am not an athlete at all.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In reality, I am just average.   But average athletes can still have a really good time being in their bodies and learning from that unique experience.  As a lifelong yoga practitioner, I know that “yoking” body and mind as one does (or can do) in any athletic endeavor brings a oneness and presence that’s incredibly wonderful when achieved.  Still, when I compare myself to my one sister who can run a seven-minute mile or my other sister whose serve absolutely devastates her opponents (especially me), I wonder why I even bother to use my body for anything other than loading the dishwasher.  Since Lila was born, I have resumed my daily running, something I did in the days when I lived in a sixteen passenger van and considered myself perpetually in training.  But then as now, my fastest speed was about a 13 minute mile. Honestly, I am really more of a plodder than a runner.  My special talent is that I actually show up and do it every day.  Like the proverbial turtle or his new 21st C cousin the Energizer bunny, I keep going and going, even if my speed is glacial.  (When I came back from my run just now and moped to Tom, “I run only a 13 minute mile,” he looked up from feeding Lila and said, “Um…did you have fun?”)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My existential sherpa says I have the disease of comparing.  Comparisons are odious, goes the 15th century saying, but they sure are fun when you’re winning.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Anyway, I found myself spending a day of my August vacation on Giant Mountain in St. Huberts, NY, following my very athletic husband up the three-mile Ridge Trail.  Tom was carrying 9-pound Lila on a front pack plus ten pounds of water, sweaters, a first aid kit, bananas and gorp on his back.  Nevertheless, I lagged behind, traveling only as fast as my unenergetic heart and weak knees would allow.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Two years ago to the day, Tom and I had climbed a small, gentle shoulder of this very mountain, a shoulder called Nubble, which took us maybe 45 minutes and gave us a pretty great view, albeit from a low altitude.  On top of Nubble, Tom had pulled a box out of his backpack—one of those boxes that won’t open unless you spin it on a flat surface.  The flat surface he provided was an old copy of Rubber Soul. Inside the box was a beautiful antique diamond engagement ring.  We shouted to the opposing peaks, “We’re getting married!”  We kissed, we shrieked with delight, we ran down the mountain to tell my family and we celebrated for the rest of our vacation.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;a href="http://www.nields.com/blog/uploaded_images/T&amp;Non Indian Head2004-773791.jpg"&gt;&lt;img style="display:block; margin:0px auto 10px; text-align:center;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://www.nields.com/blog/uploaded_images/T&amp;Non Indian Head2004-763172.jpg" border="0" alt="" /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;  This is the photo of Tom and me when we got engaged in 2004.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Having grown up climbing these peaks every August, I have always known that mountain climbing is the great metaphor for life, itself.   It’s the ultimate meditative practice, and by coincidence (perhaps) this very mountain-Giant of the Valley—is the one I visualize when practicing Jon Kabat-Zinn’s “mountain meditation”—the one where you’re supposed to imagine yourself as a mountain, calmly watching the weather go by, watching the people crawl all over you, sitting impassively for thousands and thousands of years, losing a tree here, gaining some rock face there.  And so, midway through the ascent, I was certain we’d made a terrible parenting mistake and were surely scarring our child for life.  Moreover, I got to watch my mind react in all sorts of predictable ways: “why are we doing this?” “I hate mountain climbing!”  “I’m starving” “What’s the point? I’ve seen this view three times before!” (Aversion)  “This is dangerous!”  “The baby’s going to fall out of the pack/Tom’s going to trip/she’s going to freeze/we didn’t bring enough clean outfits/diapers.” (Fear).  And “Wow!  This is amazing!  How can we make time to come up here for more than 5 days a year so Tom can become a 46r too?” (Greed).  And finally, ‘”God, I’m bored.  This is the most boring thing ever.  When will it be over?  When will we get to the top?” (Restlessness.)  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We had some external voices in our heads too, in the form of an older woman, most certainly a professional mother, who glared at Tom and said, “How old is that baby?  You’re going to the TOP?? Don’t you know there are places where you’re going to need both of your HANDS?”  Even my father, who had recommended the climb and the route, said, with a pained look as we drove off with his granddaughter in her car seat, “Be very careful with her!  She’s only three months old!”  And then there were the voices who said to Tom, “Wow!  She’s only three months old?  Cool! And her mother’s climbing too?  You got yourself a couple of sturdy ones!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Maybe, but I sure didn’t feel sturdy on the way down, when my knees and hips went on strike and refused to work anymore.  For two hours and forty-five minutes, I made my way down, sometimes on my rear end, other times on the backs of my hands like a kid playing a game of crab.  I fell a lot (Tom is NOT a fan of my wearing of old running shoes on rock face, just for the record).  At one point the skies opened up, and it poured on us. Lila wailed for fifteen minutes straight and we felt like DSS should come and take away our child and permanently eradicate our right to be parents.  I sat in the middle of the wet trail and let Lila breast-feed, and stared miserably straight down (I think the trail was at a 60 degree angle at that point) and watched a pack of college freshmen from SUNY Cortland zip up past us.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“This is so selfish of us,” I said to Tom, my aversive and judgmental mind hard at work.  “What right do we have to stick our child in a pack for six hours just so we can say we climbed a gigantic mountain?”  In my mind, I added, “This disease of comparing and competition could kill me and my baby girl!  I am the worst person EVER!”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Tom shrugged.  “Maybe,” he said.  I pulled the waterproof shell over my head and Lila’s body and listened to her hum as she fed, which is this totally adorable new thing she does.  She actually seemed really happy in that moment.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;“I guess the work is to see this incredibly sucky moment at just as noble and worthwhile as the one where we got engaged,” I grumbled.&lt;br /&gt; &lt;br /&gt;“Yes,” my existential sherpa nodded.  “Because this moment is the only one you have.  Two years ago doesn’t exist.  It’s a memory.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We got up and continued to trudge downward.  I inched along, scooting on my butt, grabbing onto small trees.  Behind me, Tom made up a poem for Lila, telling her how he would take her up again when she could walk herself; describing how the trail rose like an upside down stream.  He told her the story of how she was born.  She stopped crying and, like her mother, listened, captivated.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;She was fine at the bottom, when I took her into my arms and snuggled her and fed her again.  We drove home, stopping by the vegetable stand for corn on the cob.  That evening, I iced my knees and Lila nursed and hummed; Tom cooked dinner.  The mountain, no longer real, seemed a benevolent giant, rising calmly above our town. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So how do I feel now, a week later?  Still a little sore, but my knees do work again.  I found out that formally pregnant people go through a phase where their joints and ligaments don’t work so well and heavy hiking isn’t exactly advised.  But I’m fine, and my daily two-mile run seems like a breeze now.  NOT that I’m competitive or anything.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/09/giant-of-valley.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-115504888900150710</guid><pubDate>Tue, 08 Aug 2006 14:53:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-08-08T10:54:49.020-04:00</atom:updated><title>All This Intensive Labor Just So I Get My Heart Broken?</title><description>In the proverbial village in which I live, one of my elders gave me a book when Lila was born.  The book is called Oneness and Separateness: From Infant to Individual and it’s by Louise J. Kaplan.  That’s about all I know, since I’ve read very little beyond babycenter.com and the New York Times since Lila was born, but this much I did manage to glean in my bleary eyed 2am post-nursing readings:  the baby and the mother start out as one and, from the moment of conception on, begin a process of individuation.  In other words, or from my occasional perspective, breaking up is hard to do.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Lila turned 3 months last week, and after a blissful honeymoon in which she snuggled with us in bed every night, traveled with us everywhere in her Baby Bjorn, Guatamala wrap or hand-me-down sling, happily sleeping on our bodies for hours at a time (attachment parenting experts call this “baby wearing” and we wore our baby with joy!)  she began to exhibit very clear signs of wanting some more independence.  Now, other mothers and child experts might take issue with me (in fact, I know some who would hang me out to dry for what I’m about to say), but what Tom and I noticed in our child was a distinct unhappiness with the status quo.  Where she used to like taking naps on our bodies, she was growing quickly discontent, squirming and fussing after only a ten minute catnap.  And yet, when we tried to put her down to sleep in a more independent place (like our bed, her crib, the sofa, a swing, the car seat) she seemed unable to fall asleep, almost as if she didn’t know how.  She whimpered and cried and scratched her face and Tom and I looked at each other with the uncatagorizable misery every parent feels when his or her child is unhappy.  Moreover, we began to notice that nighttimes weren’t quite so cuddly.  By about 2am, she began kicking off her wrap, boxing me in the breasts and generally raising a ruckus.  She seemed tired all day long, and yet unable to sleep.  What gave?&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;We talked to every parent we knew, past and present; to our lactation consultant, to our childbirth expert, to our pediatrician. And we got all sorts of advice: your baby’s too young for a schedule; your baby should have had a schedule weeks ago.  Your baby needs to sleep with you; keeping your baby in bed COULD KILL THE BABY AND THE MARRIAGE!  Etc. Etc.  Etc.  Why is it that child rearing brings out such strong passions in us?  Hmmmm.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The best advice, and the advice we finally took, was this: every baby is an individual and every parent is too.  Love your baby, watch your baby, tune in to yourself and make choices in the moment that seem like the next right step.  Ah!  Familiar advice, finally.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And so, last week, we began to try to “teach” Lila how to sleep.  We did whatever it took.  We sang to her, we read her books, we held her and rocked her, we lay her in her crib, we let her suck on our little fingers.  Once or twice, I even crawled with her into the crib, stroking her back until she fell asleep.  Quite early on, we had success with morning and afternoon naps. And then, a few nights ago, for the very first time, Lila went to sleep in her own crib at 8pm.  Tom sang her ten verses of “High Ho the Rattlin’ Bog” and she was out.  When he came back to our bedroom without the baby, I sat up and cried and cried and cried.  I just missed her so much.  All this intensive labor just so I’d get my heart broken?  Is this the parenting deal? (Don’t answer that.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When Lila was born, I felt a kind of completeness, a wholeness, I’ve never experienced before.  I thought, “all my problems are solved.”  It was not unlike the feeling of falling in love, come to think of it.  And we all know the end of that story.  Healthy or not healthy, soul mate or big mistake, sooner or later a blissful couple who seemed uncannily alike, who seemed like twins separated at birth, eventually find out that one of them likes organic half and half and the other secretly prefers Coffeemate.  Or that some beloved in-law is completely impossible for the one not related to her.  Or that the perfect guy is actually married (see Grey’s Anatomy, the end of the first season.  Can you tell I’ve been completely dependent on Netflix this summer?)  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So far, mothering has been somewhat similar.  I am madly in love with my child; I believe her to be perfect in every way; I want to spend my whole life staring at her little eyelashes…and I can’t wait for her next nap so I can go do something for myself, like practice yoga, go for a run, write in my journal, cook a meal, take a shower, call a friend and not be interrupted.  And then, ten minutes after she’s down, I miss her so terribly my heart feels like her two tiny hands are wringing it.  I steal into her room and stare at her sleeping body—is there anything cuter?- and watch as she sucks on an invisible breast, wiggles her toes, her chest rising and falling so steadily.  I want to give up my whole life for her.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And I know (from past experience) that that’s not necessarily the best thing I could do for her.  When I see families that seem to do it right, I see moms and dads who spend lots of time with their kids AND they have interesting lives outside the house.  They go on playdates AND they hire a babysitter to have grown up dates.  They listen to Dan Zanes and his Rocket Ship Review AND watch Margaret Cho DVDs.  So I practice my yoga and meditation; I (try to) write in my journal (and not always about Lila) I go on dates with my husband and I think about the books I am writing, the songs I am singing, the albums I am working on, the environmental choices I am making.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And I try to savor every single moment I get with this amazing little girl who changes so much from one day to the next.  I hold her in my arms and let her nurse, watching as she pulls away to give me one of her half crooked, slightly drunken grins. We are two different people, from two different generations who will have two totally different experiences walking on planet earth.  But for now, we’re together.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/08/all-this-intensive-labor-just-so-i-get.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-115317011901943249</guid><pubDate>Mon, 17 Jul 2006 20:48:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-07-17T17:01:59.083-04:00</atom:updated><title>Our Vegetable Sipping Car</title><description>If one defines “religion” as a way of viewing the universe in terms of cause and effect, right and wrong, and involving a set of practices and devotions, then environmentalism is a religion, as much as Christianity, Capitalism or even the beliefs and commitments shared by rabid fans of Star Trek The Next Generation.  I grew up among both Christians and environmentalists, and I have to say, I think from a “fundamentalist” or “extreme guilt inducing” aspect, the environmentalists I knew win hands down.  My mother worked for the League of Women Voters throughout my childhood, focusing her attention on alternative fuel sources.  (Also sludge, but that’s not the point of this blog.)  My aunt gives us yearly subscriptions to Co-op America and has been advising me against using anti-perspirant since I was too young to perspire.  We bought small cars before small cars were cool (or even that small), and my grandmother referred to RVs as “stink pots.”  (Ditto all boats that weren’t powered by wind or muscle.)  We composted.  We recycled tea bags and aluminum foil, even when they had been used, respectively, as many as fourteen times.  I regard recycling as a spiritual path of mindfulness equally profound as sitting meditation or yoga or saying the rosary.  We use cloth diapers on our baby, Lila (and gdiapers!  They work great!  See previous post.)  So it’s no surprise that I liked the Al Gore film, An Inconvenient Truth.  It is a little more surprising that my husband and I have just cashed in all our savings to buy a 2005 diesel with the intention of converting it into what those in the know affectionately term a Grease Car.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A grease car runs on vegetable oil.  Yep, the kind you can buy at the Stop &amp; Shop. The kind you put in salad dressing or deep-fry your chicken in.  Soybean oil, safflower oil, even olive oil will do.  (We’re naming our new car Olivia, by the way; not so much for the oil nor the Popeye reference as for Olivia Newton John from the movie….Grease.)  In order to do this sleight-of-pump, one must buy and install (or in our case, have installed) a second tank; the Grease Tank if you will.  This tank rests in the well where the spare tire usually is. Then, a fuel line is run into the something or other and you have to operate a switch.  You start your car using the diesel tank, and once the vegetable oil is warmed up (a gauge confirms this) you switch over to the grease tank.   How do you get the grease, you might ask.  If you want it for free (which is part of the point of the whole grease car culture), simply visit a local restaurant, preferably a Chinese restaurant or clam shack where they do a lot of artery clogging deep-frying.  Ask the owner if you might have the leftover fryolator oil. They will generally be happy to give it to you since it often costs them to have it disposed of.  Then, take home the grease and filter it, since there will be pesky bits of leftover tempura and clam.  The filtering situation is a whole other problem, requiring yet another kind of tank. Once you’ve filtered, pour your grease into empty milk jugs.  Now, when your grease tank is empty, fill ‘er up. You can even take the milk jugs with you on the road, dispensing with the need to stop at Mobil to refuel; in fact, you can have your rest stop at Starbucks or Whole Foods or Aunt Nancy’s now.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;  If you haven’t gotten the point already, let me make it for you: this is not for the fastidious.  Grease car owners are probably going to get greasy at some point, and even with the best of intentions, so will their car.  Said car, when running, will smell like French fries.  This is why it’s so incongruous that I of all people am hopping on this particular board.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’m a girly girl.  I like to be clean.  Not that you’d know it from the interior of my car, but in theory anyway, I like my car to be clean.  Moreover, I know nothing about cars.  When I was sixteen, I read Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, and while I thought it was a really cool idea—not to mention zen- to get to know your vehicle the way Phaedrus does, I still don’t know the difference between a carburetor and an alternator (I don’t even know what they do, or even whether or not they are in that part of the car that’s under the hood thingy.)  I have never changed a spare tire.  I kind of know what a transmission is and that it’s bad if it breaks—very bad—but that’s only because I lived for four years in a van that went thorough three of them in rapid succession.  In short, I am not handy, especially when it comes to cars.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;And, like all good liberals who were brought up to question authority, I notice my passionate authority-busting inner teenager itching to challenge at every turn as I travel this particular spiritual path.  So what if I’m using gdiapers?  So what, in fact, if thousands of us weirdos are using gdiapers?  Landfills are still getting filled at atrocious speeds.  So what if I drive on soybeans?  If everyone drove on soybeans, we’d run out of arable land in a matter of weeks and the planet would starve to death.  And besides, the Chinese are now driving at record numbers which are only climbing; the world’s population is going to be 9 billion in a few minutes.  Rather than invent clever ways to get better gas mileage, it remains best to reduce, reuse, recycle—to slow down and do less, drive less, use less, take up less space in the land fills as well as on the freeways.  A few weeks ago the New York Times ran a story in their Science Times section called “How To Cool A Planet (Maybe)” about all these crazy ideas of how to stop global warming, including a kind of Star Wars-esque space mirror and a plan to infuse the atmosphere with sulpheric clouds.  When are we going to stop overthinking this?  When are we going to learn that it’s about doing less, not doing more?  So what if I can drive for free, getting 50 mpg?  It would still be better to walk into town, ride my bike to Amherst and leave the car at home. Consume less.  Live simply so that others may simply live, tread lightly on Mother Earth and all that.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When I am angry and/or exhausted, feeling like my 2 month old in melt-down mode, I want to shut myself in the one air conditioned room in our house and read a magazine.  (Not the New Republic either; something really trashing like Shape or People) I have a kind of, “I deserve” mentality that reminds me of the way I used to say “I deserve to eat that sundae since I’ve had such a hard time” when I was an overeater. It’s an adolescent cry of frustration.  What I’m really saying is, “Mom, take care of me.”  Mom is food; mom is mother earth.  To consume is to consume, whether it be food or our precious natural resources.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;After we saw An Inconvenient Truth, my husband, Tom said, “We can’t just do things because they’re convenient anymore.  That no longer cuts it.”  In Walden, Thoreau says, “To affect the quality of the day—that is the highest of the arts.”  The reason I’ve always thought recycling was a spiritual path is largely because it forces me to be mindful in a very quotidian way.  I don’t put my fruit into plastic bags at the supermarket because I know that if I do, I will eventually have to throw away a piece of plastic, so I’m mindful at the supermarket.  When I’ve eaten the fruit, I compost the skin and the pit. This brings me down from my habitual home way up in my thoughts (where I’m doing any one of the following: writing a song, obsessing about my weight, thinking about a client, wondering when I can get back to the novel I’m reading or griping about the messiness of the kitchen sink) and connects me to the earth, literally and figuratively.  I pour my water into a glass instead of using a plastic bottle because otherwise, I’m going to have to sort that bottle from the trash into the containers bin.  It’s a wonderful way to live, to live deliberately instead of mindlessly.  To spend my nest egg on a car, however foolhardy, is to impose a new limit on my finances, reminding me to reduce, reuse and recycle for personal as well as political/global reasons.  I can’t think of a better use of my money.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/07/our-vegetable-sipping-car.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-114847154362008212</guid><pubDate>Wed, 24 May 2006 11:51:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-06-28T08:17:31.163-04:00</atom:updated><title>Breaking the waters</title><description>The fact that Lila’s birth began with the very unexpected breaking of my waters seems like an apt metaphor for what I have so far (in my grand total of two whole weeks) come to understand about parenthood. I had been hoping to avoid what I grew up seeing all around me: parents blaming their children for ruining their lives and children blaming their parents for the same.  Parents complaining that the children fed off of them like parasites and that they no longer had any time for themselves; children claiming the parents never really paid attention to them.  One big blame game.  But here I was with the facts: the amniotic sack ruptured.  An act of God if ever there was one.  Not my fault.  Not Lila’s fault either, even though some people sent sweet notes saying, “She must have really wanted to be with you guys to come so early.” I myself thought she was eager enough to attend the shower that was scheduled for May 6, she might make her entrance early.  But given that she had so much trouble breathing once she arrived on the scene, I quickly came to doubt that her early arrival was her own doing.  It’s not like she had a Swiss Army knife in there, or even fingernails.  No one’s fault; no one’s plan, exactly.  It just was.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Lila arrived and immediately, my life turned inside out, like one of those silk scarves magicians use, with one color inside and the other outside.  I felt then and continue to feel completely skinless, as if there is no amniotic sack protecting me from the incredible joy and incredible pain of the world.  I look down at her lovely little face and the tears well up in my eyes at the thought that she and I won’t be together forever and ever, that I will die, that my parents will die, that she will grow up and have to go through the seventh grade, that she’ll get too heavy for me to hold in one arm, the way I can now (she’s just five pounds.)  In short, I don’t want anything to change from this moment of pure perfection.  And, as Anne Lamott stated so potently (and accurately) in her memoir of her son’s first year of life (Operating Instructions), if anything were to happen to her, “I would be f-cked unto the Lord.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A daughter!  A little girl!  I have to say, I’m relieved. As all my psychic friends plus the majority of the old wives tales insisted me I was having a boy, I prepared accordingly, buying a blue rug with dinosaurs and eschewing anything pink.  I love boys, and was looking forward to raising one, but a girl was what I always wanted, especially as my first child.  I have two sisters, no brothers, four aunts and no biological uncles.  Even my dogs were all females up until Cody.  I went to two all girls’ schools, worked in two different girls dorms, taught mostly girls, wrote songs about mostly girls.  I know girls.  I figure with all the other curveballs parenthood will surely toss my way, it will be nice to be ahead of the game in this one respect.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;What I was not prepared for was the overwhelming, physical love for my child which gripped me from the moment I set eyes upon her.  She was placed in my hands and I instantly felt my heart grow at least three sizes, like the Grinch’s.  Then she was whisked away and placed under oxygen to help her little lungs adjust to the world outside her watery womb.  I didn’t hold her again for thirty-six hours, but once I did I haven’t let go, much.  Tom gets to hold her (though we fight over whose turn it is constantly) but no one else.  Hey, I never said I wasn’t selfish. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;My friend Melany is a neo-natal nurse, and she explained the motherhood gig like this:  you take in, you take on, you take over.  I liked the sound of that, especially the take over part.  So I diligently tried to learn everything the nurses told me to do, particularly in the breastfeeding department.  As I was resting in the post partum room, one of the post labor nurses informed me that I was anemic following the delivery and needed to eat more foods with iron.  “Beef, spinach and yams,” she said, and of course, wanting everyone to like me and think I’m a good little patient, I immediately began my iron rich regimen, complete with an iron supplement.  Another nurse, whom Tom swore was an ex-nun, wielded her authority cleverly, by first telling you that all the other nurses were incorrect and/or liars, and only she really cared enough about you to give you the straight truth. Then she terrified you with the consequences of your doing anything other than what she recommended.  Her method of making sure Lila was awake enough to breastfeed properly (an issue as Lila was 4 lbs 13 oz at the time) was to vigorously pinch her tiny ears and rub her head so forcefully that I was afraid she’d give my daughter whiplash.  Initially. I took this in, and then tried to take it on once home, only to find that there were other more humane ways of getting Lila awake enough to eat.   This same nurse also said the reason Lila was gassy was because of all the spinach I ate.  “Iron,” she sighed, shaking her head.  “Babies just don’t like it.”  And again, I had to remember, no one’s fault; this is just one of those situations. And here’s where the parental transformation reveals itself: I immediately stopped taking the iron supplements (though I continue to eat spinach.  The idea that spinach has a lot of iron is a conspiracy perpetuated by the creators of Popeye.)&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’d like to veer off topic for a moment to mention that my whole life is about breastfeeding these days.  No one really tells you that your body completely stops being your body once you have an infant.  I eagerly signed up for breastfeeding when I heard that breastfed babies have way fewer colds, flus, have lower obesity rates as adults, are more likely to be young Einsteins and Michael Jordans, can leap tall buildings in a single bound, etc. etc.  Plus, the idea of spending thousands of dollars on formula didn’t appeal when the good Lord gave me plenty of what my child needs for free.  But I somehow slept through the part about how you breast feed for a good half hour at a time and have to do a feeding every two hours, three max.  Figuring into this equation the fact that premature babies don’t really want to do anything passionately besides sleep, there’s a good fifteen minutes devoted to rousing our teeny child for each feeding.  This means, I really am spending more than half my life focused on feeding my baby these days.  Once she is latched on and grooving at the job, I have huge impulses to multitask.  I want to talk on the phone, check my email, read my Dr. Sears Baby book, have a meal, get Tom to entertain me, watch TV, listen to the new Bruce Springsteen Seeger Sessions CD (a blog topic in and of itself!)  and fantasize about doing the laundry and rearranging all the furniture in my house.  But if I do these things, I inevitably fail to notice that my baby has fall off the breast and is dangling, half asleep from her little nursing cushion (marketed as-I kid you not-“My Brest Friend.”) Yet another annoying lesson in the virtues of mindfulness.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;In the novel I wrote called The Big Idea, there is a character named Rhodie Becket who has a baby named Margarita.  Every time Rhodie, a member of a folk band, tried to pick up her guitar and practice a little, Margarita would wail, as if uncannily knowing that the guitar was her main competition for her mother’s attention. Sitting in my customary spot on the sofa with Lila at my breast, I gazed across the room at my own little Martin, once the apple of my eye, standing forlornly on its stand, completely neglected.  Once or twice last week, I tried to pick it up.  I got as far as tuning it when Lila began crying from her basket where I’d hoped she would take a nap.  I had two songs written for her in the womb, which I wanted to sing for her, but she would have none of it.  Until today.  Today, Tom held her and I sang.  I’d like to report that my child awoke, opened her almond shaped blue eyes and gazed at me with sudden recognition and devotion:  “That’s the voice and sound I heard so close to my head for all those months in my watery warm little world, the world I inhabited, I thought, alone. But no!  She was with me all along!”  Nope.  Lila just fussed and squiggled around as usual.  Her mother, on the other hand, wept big old tears, fusing finally the song with the intended audience.  She’ll hear it properly one day, when the time is right.  I can wait till then.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/05/breaking-waters.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-114608488684802937</guid><pubDate>Wed, 26 Apr 2006 20:53:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-04-26T16:54:46.863-04:00</atom:updated><title>On Easter, Being Two Places at Once and Global Warming</title><description>On Easter, I wanted to be two places at once. I wanted to be in Long Island with my father’s three sisters and their families. I grew up with these three women, and each one of them is a glorious, lovable and admirable person from whom I’ve learned much and who makes me laugh and think. Their children (I have six cousins) are interesting, funny, delightful people as well, and I don’t see them nearly enough anymore.  Holidays with them are more and more rare: we used to spend every Thanksgiving and Christmas together, up until about the year 2000.  Since then, marriages, new children, schedules and the general feeling that there are just too many people in the room at cocktail hour have conspired to keep us in different states for many of the holidays. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I also wanted to be with my sisters and their families, who were not into traveling to Long Island on Easter weekend, and I wanted to preach a sermon at my church. Our minister, Stephen Philbrick, is on a four month sabbatical, and we in the congregation are taking turns in the pulpit while he is away.  In early March, when trying to make a decision about where to spend this particularly confusing and strange holiday, I realized that if I volunteered to preach on Easter Sunday, my parents would most likely be lured up from Virginia: a pregnant daughter preaching plus the promise of an Easter egg hunt with four grandchildren under the age of five was a sure-fire combination.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The word “Easter” comes from Eostre or Eastre, who was the Great Mother Goddess of the Saxon people in Northern Europe.  Thank you, early Roman conquerors for utilizing pre-existing pagan holidays and incorporating the new Christian ones.  Knowing this,  makes me love Easter more than thinking of it as the painful, difficult story (to me) of Christ’s murder and resurrection.  I’m a big fan of infusing Goddess energy into my Christianity. And, being nine months pregnant now, I appreciate the metaphor of early spring as Great Fertility season.  I also had spent the Palm Sunday weekend at Kripalu, at a meditation workshop with Sharon Saltzberg. She had said, paraphrasing the Buddha, “When you put a teaspoon of salt into a glass of water, you will have to enlarge the container to dilute the salt.” So I had on my mind this idea of the need to NOT pack a whole lot of salt into my little container, but perhaps instead work on enlarging.  Or, to jump traditions, to honor my loved ones, the salt of the earth, but recognize that too much salt overwhelms.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;So I stayed, I preached, (sermon is at http://www.nields.com/blog/writing/) we had a fabulous Easter brunch at Katryna’s house, we took lots of pictures of adorable children, and I had one of those days I will never forget.   It was certainly the right decision.  Nevertheless, I missed my aunts.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Just now, I stood on the porch and watched the creeping green work its way into the trees in our backyard; everything is now green but the forlorn black branched cherry tree. Two years ago it was blooming, but last year nothing came at all; it was as leafless in June as it was in December. Still, it’s very beautiful, and it made me sad to watch Tom cutting it down.  I am thinking about the two-places-at-once problem.  We want to have a vegetable garden, and cutting down the tree will give us both the space and the sun we need to grow one.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When I called my aunt to tell her I wasn’t coming for Easter, I said, “I miss you.  I miss all those years we spent having holidays with you.  But I need to make time for my new family now.” With the birth of my two nieces and two nephews, not to mention the two brothers-in-law and my husband, my immediate family has grown by 240%.   That’s a lot more salt, and none of us has a house that’s 240% bigger. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I’m the kind of person who hates to make a decision, hates to throw out old clothes, shoes, books, records (what DOES one do with those old, beloved, unplayable LPs?). I hate losing touch with friends; I hate the feeling that I’m not able to see people as much as I want to; I hate wasting food; I hate that fear that I might not have enough.  I have four careers, and am contemplating starting a fifth one. My life, as a result, is stuffed; too salty.   And I hate the feeling of too salty more than almost anything. &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As I’m sure you’ve noticed, the notion of Global Warming has, as yesterday’s New York Times “Week in Review” section noted, “the feel of breaking news” all of a sudden.  I’m not new to this issue; I’ve been one of those nervous Nellies who has felt guilty about using air conditioning, eating seafood and having a lawn since 1989.  The article I read yesterday pointed out that it’s very difficult to make people change their actions unless the threat of punishment, retribution and/or disaster is looming in their faces. Another point the article made is that it’s becoming clear that the main source of the green house gasses, which contribute to global warming is not one simple factor.  Our six million bodies, in addition to our cars, the heat we use to keep our homes warm, the cows who fart, and the fact that the destruction of the world’s trees and forests lowers the O2 to CO2 ratio, all contribute to this phenomenon.  The sheer number of us and our many kinds of emissions; our huge appetite for consumption.  And yet, it’s really hard for me to get my head around the notion that if I buy this one tube of lipstick instead of wearing my last tube (with a not nearly as exciting color) down to the nub, I am contributing to global warming.  Harder still to think that if I choose to have a child, biologically, which I seem to be doing (5 weeks and counting to the due date), I am adding yet another being to this planet.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;As a meditation practitioner, I am also not new to this idea that the wanting mind is at the root of my (and the planet’s) affliction.  The Buddha said there were three types of people: grasping (wanting, consumption), aversive (fearful, hateful) and deluded (clueless).  I have aspects of all three, but I most identify with the grasping/wanting types. When you get right down to it, I absolutely love life and I want more. Last night as I was driving home, I watched the rain fall, and noticed how it is both visible and invisible at the same time, and I noticed the forsythia in bloom next to the fuchsia rhododendron bushes that line my street, and I felt such joy that my baby is going to know this gorgeous, mysterious, marvelous earth.  I immediately thought, “I hope there will be springs when he or she is my age.  I hope there will be springs when his or her children are my age.” I want more springs!  And I want them forever and ever!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;When it comes right down to it, the underbelly of the wanting mind is the desire to avoid loss and grief. I want a vegetable garden AND I want a cherry tree, even if it’s a dead one. I want to keep my two huge crates of old LPs AND I want to use that space in my music room for a bookshelf to keep all my books, and the books my child will surely accumulate.  I want the earth to keep on producing beautiful cool springs, AND I want to stay cool on hot summer drives in my car AND I want to eat Chilean sea bass, AND I want to have a lawn, even though to do so is clearly not what my land desires.  I let myself get too salty because the coolness and space of the flavorless water frightens me sometimes, leaving me face to face with an emptiness that demands my full attention.  But letting the emptiness in—enlarging the container, accepting a little less salt—has always proved, over and over, when I am willing to do so, the most peaceful result. I want to spend Easter with my aunts because I love them and because I don’t want to lose them.  It is really, honestly sad that I can’t be two places at once, can’t be with all the people I love at the same time, and that fact creates grief.  Sometimes the right answer is just to accept that grief and feel it deeply.  To feel the space they once occupied and honor it with presence and emotion.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/04/on-easter-being-two-places-at-once-and_26.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-114261016852699688</guid><pubDate>Fri, 17 Mar 2006 15:41:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-03-19T15:41:21.123-05:00</atom:updated><title>Thoughts on Brokeback Mountain</title><description>Warning: May be something of a spoiler if you haven't seen the movie!&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Being pregnant reminds me of swimming in the pond when I was a kid.  Back then, my family lived at the top of a hill.  At the bottom of the hill was a large pond-or a small lake-that the residents of the hill came to swim in, or later in my childhood, row the communal boat on.    I loved the pond and ran splashingly into it in my pink and orange checkered bikini; it was alternating muddy and clear, with soft squishy sand on its bottom.  I was allowed to swim all the way to the middle if one of my parents were nearby. &lt;br /&gt;What reminds me of my pregnancy is the way the pond would become suddenly cold, suddenly hot, with no warning at all as I swam towards the middle.  Later, I discovered this sensation was caused by hot springs.  Some days I loved the surprise, seeing the whole swimming event as an adventure.  Other days I wished I could just stay all warm or all cold.  A swimming pool had the same water temperature throughout, and some days I just craved the sensation of uniformity.  That’s still pretty much the way I feel.&lt;br /&gt; Tom and I went to see Brokeback Mountain a few weeks ago, and yesterday I read the short story by Annie Proulx on which the movie is based.  What struck me about the movie (though not the story) was not so much the homophobia, nor the tale of love.  What struck me was the misogyny of the late twentieth century Wyoming culture. &lt;br /&gt;When I was growing up, my sisters and I had the good fortune to attend the same church as the groundbreaking sex educator, Mary Lee Tatum.  Mary Lee had been married to a gay man and had two daughters with him.  When he came out to her, and admitted there was a man in his life whom he loved, they divorced, though they remained best friends.  Ten years later, when he died in a hospital bed of AIDS, Mary Lee held one of his hands and his lover the other.  &lt;br /&gt;Mary Lee taught the most frank brand of sex ed, and volunteered to lead a class for us lucky church teens.  &lt;br /&gt;“Homophobia and misogyny,” she said.  “Are two sides of the same coin.  Hating the feminine in a man is no different from hating the feminine in a woman.  It’s all the same fear and hatred: fear of the soft, the gentle, the emotional: the parts of ourselves that feel things deeply.  It’s a mistrust of the heart; a ceding of all power to the head.  And really it boils down to fear more than hatred.  For the feminine is the most powerful life force on earth, obviously.  We’re the ones who make life, who give life.  When a man is homophobic, he is ultimately afraid of his own ability to give life.”&lt;br /&gt;As I watched Ang Lee’s movie, I couldn’t help but see how right she was. Also, I had to notice the women in the film, who are largely absent as characters from Proulx’s narrative.  In the movie, the women were flesh and blood, beautiful and oddly powerful, even in their powerlessness over Ennis’s and Jack’s affections.  I thought Ennis (in the film version) was more crippled by his own inability to speak and communicate than he was by his homosexuality.  To be a man in the American West is to be a man with extremely narrow choices.  In terms of communication, these choices include simple, uncomplicated utterances, and the language of fists and tire irons: that’s about it.  When Ennis and Jack say goodbye at the end of their first summer together, they barely acknowledge their parting. Yet five minutes after they split, Ennis finds himself puking in an alley, as if what’s inside of him needs to come out in whatever way it will.  When a passerby sees him, Ennis threatens him with violence.  Similarly, when his ex-wife, Alma, finally confronts him about Jack—and refers to Jack Twist as “Jack Nasty,” Ennis yells at her, gives her a “bruised bracelet” and stalks out of the Thanksgiving dinner to pick a fight at the local bar.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;To be a woman, I am finding out, apparently means to feel things deeply.  I always knew this; after all, one obviously does not need to be pregnant in order to be fully female.  Yet being pregnant is a non-negotiable situation (at least at my hormonal stage of the game) and the issue of one’s biology overpowering one’s sociology is fairly undeniable.  I swim through these invisible currents of hot and cold without a clue as to what the next sensation will be; I go from pouring rain to dazzling sunshine in the blink of an eye (although one could argue that that’s just the actual weather we’ve been having in New England this spring.).  Watching and reading Brokeback Mountain, observing these two characters being plunged ignorantly into a relationship that is much more powerful than either of them ever could have expected, resonates with me.  Love is like this, isn’t it?  Before I met Tom, I really doubted that I could ever be a good girlfriend.  I just didn’t believe I had the kind of time and heart-space I knew people are supposed to have for potential partners.  I thought I was too selfish, too wrapped up in my music, my writing, my friends, my relationship with the Connecticut River.  But then I met him and I fell head over heels in love.  “For you,” I recall saying (obnoxiously) after our first date, “I’ll make time.”  &lt;br /&gt;And I’m assuming it’s going to be the same way with this little one who at the moment is kicking my right side.  It’s hard for me to imagine any more space in my heart these days: my heart’s pretty full right now.  So is my time.  I think I wasn’t the only one in the movie theatre who wanted to slap the Ennis character when Jack drove fourteen hours overnight to be with him after Ennis’s divorce.  Ennis wouldn’t make enough time for anyone, choosing to work and live in solitude over letting his older daughter move in with him; choosing to hide rather than make a life with Jack.  &lt;br /&gt;I think part of the reason I’ve felt like I’m swimming through currents of hot springs these days is that this lesson--that our time really is limited, that our time really is best spent loving the people we love-- is hitting me hard.  That paradigm goes directly against the illusion that we are individuals, powerful enough to protect ourselves if only we work hard enough, do the right thing, make the right choices and marry the right people.  But those are notions of the head; what I got from Brokeback was that we’ll never get any satisfaction that way.  We need to cede our time to the heart, to the simple rhythms and laws of the body; to take off our watches and hand them to the ones we love and say, “Here.  From now on you can tell me what time it is.”  Because they will, anyway.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/03/thoughts-on-brokeback-mountain.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-114108230139960932</guid><pubDate>Mon, 27 Feb 2006 23:17:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-02-27T18:18:48.700-05:00</atom:updated><title>Ain't Too Proud To Beg</title><description>“Whatever your worst demons are,” said my friend Phila, “They will present themselves while you are in labor.”&lt;br /&gt;Labor. Can’t they call it something else?  It sounds so, well, laborious.  I am in my twenty-eighth week of pregnancy, and if things go on schedule, I won’t have to worry about labor for another twelve weeks or so, give or take.  I shouldn’t be thinking about this now.  I should put up my feet and sing “Que Sera Sera,” eat grapes and bon bons and fantasize about the nursery.  But instead, for the past couple of weeks, I can’t seem to think about anything other than my birth plan.&lt;br /&gt;Of course, the very term “birth plan” makes seasoned mothers cackle with amusement. “I had a birth plan all right,” said my friend Isabelle.  “And I don’t think we or anyone at the hospital took one look at it.  Nothing went as expected.  And the more I talk to other mothers, the more I think that’s the rule not the exception.”&lt;br /&gt;For those of you new initiates, a birth plan is a woman’s idea on paper of what her labor and deliver experience should be like.  Right away, this is a set up.  If you want to make God laugh, goes the famous saying, tell Her your plans. And nothing in the labor and delivery contract has any kind of teeth to make it stick.  That baby didn’t sign on the dotted line, and neither did the woman’s body.&lt;br /&gt;Also, experience has taught me that expectations are premeditated regrets.  Expecting a nice home delivery?  Sometimes it works great.  If pregnancy is a natural event, which it’s purported to be, why not have your baby in your own comfy bed with your favorite CDs lined up on the changer?  Hospitals, schmospitals.  On the other hand, my friend Sara had the special birthing tub rented, a midwife on hand and ended up in the hospital with an emergency C section.  The really tragic part is that she’s never forgiven herself for being deprived of the joy of witnessing her first child’s birth.&lt;br /&gt;Rarely has a woman told me the story of her labor and delivery without saying at least once, “The one thing I regret is…” Some regrets are bigger than others, but so far I’ve heard few experiences that have been regret-free.  And why not?  This is an intense physical process.  One of the two big ones in life.  Why would we expect it to be uniformly glorious?  And is it actually something a woman does, or it is something that a woman experiences?&lt;br /&gt;I have dreaded giving birth since I was six years old, watching my own mother’s belly growing bigger and bigger.  “How does the baby come out?” I’d asked.  “Through your toes?”  When I found out where the baby made her exit, and found out the answer to “does it hurt?” I vowed then and there to adopt.  Either that or substitute kittens for children.  &lt;br /&gt;It doesn’t comfort me much to think I could just have an epidural, either.  An epidural (once again, for the uninitiated) is a needle that has to be very carefully threaded into the mother’s spine.  I suppose compared to the pain of childbirth, a little shot in the back is nothing, but then again, I’ve had a shot before and I haven’t had childbirth.  Besides which, there’s the matter of all the bad-ass young mothers I’ve been hanging out with in my prenatal yoga class. (The class should be called “Spa Pampering for Pregnant Ladies with a Tiny Bit of Movement—But Only If You Feel Like It!”  For the first twenty minutes, we lie on an elaborate set up of bolsters and blankets while the yoga teacher swaddles our bare feet to keep us warm.  Then we chat about how our pregnancies are going, which takes another 20 minutes.  All the women there are due in about a month, which makes me really nervous, because I suffer from abandonment issues and really don’t want them to go away and join the Post Natal class which meets 15 minutes after Pre Natal ends.  Also, all the women have incredibly large bellies, which leaves me feeling completely inadequate and like a fraud.  I know size doesn’t matter, but…)&lt;br /&gt; “Don’t even TELL them you’ll CONSIDER an epidural!” they shout, practically raising their fists in a power salute.  “You’ll give in!  Just go in there and HANDLE IT!”&lt;br /&gt;“The pains of childbirth are all in the mind,” says my friend Cindy, nine months pregnant and counting.  She and her husband are planning a home birth and working with a hypno-therapist. “Once you recognize the difference between ‘good’ pain and ‘bad’ pain, you really can get through it.”&lt;br /&gt;“But,” I said,  “Maybe some women experience pain more intensely than others.  And I think I’m probably one of them.”&lt;br /&gt;“That’s a story you’re telling yourself!” says Cindy.&lt;br /&gt;“No one experienced any birth pains before Christianity,” said a second friend, Lucy. “It just a cultural construct.  Woman read that because of Eve’s fall we’re all supposed to feel pain, so we do.  No one feels pain in non-Christian cultures.”&lt;br /&gt;“But,” I argued.  “One in two women used to die in childbirth in the Victorian era.”&lt;br /&gt;“That’s only because of unsanitary hospital conditions,” says Lucy.  “Childbirth is a totally natural process!  Woman have been having babies in the bush since the beginning of time.”&lt;br /&gt;This is true.  But according to the Saving Women’s Lives website (http://www.savingwomenslives.org/Countdownmaternal.htm), one in sixteen of those women (in sub-Saharan Africa, anyway) still die in childbirth, whereas the statistic in western Europe is one in four thousand.  I shut up though.  I like these bad-assed women and I want them to have their home births and not be thinking about fearful things like something going wrong.  We all have enough to worry about.  They have delightful visions of grand epiphanies during labor, of mystical experiences, or possibly, as Alice Walker suggests in Possessing the Secret of Joy, orgasmic ones.  At any rate, they are loyal to the sisterhood, and I love them for that, even as I feel somewhat out of that particular club at times.&lt;br /&gt;Even though I’m scared of shots, I am more scared of pain, and most of all I am perplexed by the thought that this roiling little baby who is currently behaving like a pinball inside my uterus will someday come out of me.  Honestly, I don’t care how it comes out.  If I need a C section, that’s just fine, though I would prefer to be awake for it.  If I have it the good old pre-Caesar way, I hope its exit from my nether parts will not cause too much hard feeling between the two of us over the years. Either way, I have come out of my denial of the facts, and am now ready to consider alternatives.  So.  An epidural it was going to be.  Plenty of wonderful women I know had epidurals and had managed to stay bad-assed.  It was settled.  I would take the advice of my sister-in-law who said she marched into the hospital to register and said, between contractions, “My name is Mary Epidural McNamara.”&lt;br /&gt;But then, one day last week, as I was practicing my prenatal yoga, I found myself in the classic squatting position.  “This,” said the instructor.  “Is the famous birthing position known the world over.”&lt;br /&gt;And suddenly I saw myself, in the middle of labor (well, actually towards the very end of it) in this glorious posture, feeling like an Amazonian goddess, dancing on my tiptoes and giving birth to my beloved baby, joining a sisterhood the world over.  “I think I’d like to try this,” I thought.  And—word to the uninitiated—the epidural is not just one of those shots they stick you with and you’re done, like a shot of heroin.  Epidurals are connected to an IV.  Also, your legs go numb.  No squatting for the pain-free.&lt;br /&gt;For the first time I got bitten by the expectation bug.  I got why so many of my friends want to have their babies at home, or at least in a birthing center like the one at our hospital, complete with horizontal poles to hang from while in the squatting position, birth pools to relax those weary laboring muscles in, giant balls to roll around on, or toss back and forth with your husband.  &lt;br /&gt;Furthermore, I read about how from 1850-1950 mothers used to be routinely anesthetized—totally knocked out—to have their kids.  This isn’t done so much anymore because first off, moms tend to like to be present if not pain-free to witness the birth; and second, the drugs aren’t good for the baby.  But what this fact of medical history made me realize is that when the mothers were knocked out, even though their minds were asleep, their bodies weren’t.  Their bodies knew exactly what to do: they had contractions, and they pushed, and the baby came out.  Therefore it’s the mind that gets in the way—epidural or no epidural.  If I could truly see the birth process as one where my body is active but my mind is passive (present, but passive) I might be able to see the whole experience differently.  I could see that it had nothing to do with my labor technique or mastery over my fear.  I could just keep reminding myself that the ongoing commentary in my head was not really required. So maybe I could postpone the epidural.  But maybe they could give me a little Advil to dull the pain?&lt;br /&gt;I called my friend Phila, who had had her baby girl at home, and whom I’d been avoiding as a “Home Birth Nazi” for the past few months.  I told her I thought I might have changed my mind. “I could have natural childbirth,” I said.  “I want to squat. I want to really go for it.  But the thing I really want to avoid is this idea that it’s about me and my achievements.  If the birth is easy, it’s easy.  If it’s hard, it’s hard.  It won’t be about me and how well I planned or how pure I was or how much yoga I did or how Zen I got or how bad-assed I am.  I just don’t want to feel like a failure if the pain is too much and I have to ask for an epidural.”&lt;br /&gt;“You know,” said Phila after a moment.  “I felt like a failure after the birth of my baby.”&lt;br /&gt;“You?” I said incredulously.  “Why?  You had a home birth!  You squatted!  You let the baby tear you!  You totally did what you set out to do!  You were the queen of bad-ass!”&lt;br /&gt;“Yeah, but I fell apart completely afterwards.  I was terrified and an emotional wreck while it was going on.  I saw my fear and I couldn’t stand up to it.”&lt;br /&gt;We were silent for a few moments, together on the phone.  She sighed.  “I’m a perfectionist.  And that was the demon I met in the middle of labor.”&lt;br /&gt;“And I’m competitive,” I said.  “I’m going to want to turn this into how tough I am, how well I did this.  And it’s not about that.  It’s about two people having an experience with each other.  And we all know how unpredictable that can be.”&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I went for a walk later that afternoon.  I was listening to my iPod; to Bob Dylan, the Beatles, Bob Marley and Michelle Shocked.  Stevie Wonder’s “Isn’t She Lovely” popped on (as my friend, Sheila says, “I love it when God plays DJ!”).  That’s the song he wrote for his baby girl right before she was born. It’s the song that my sister was listening to as her first baby came into the world. “Music will get me through labor,” I whispered to myself as I circled the park.  “Bob and Bob, John, Paul, George and Ringo; Michelle and Stevie.  They’ll be my birth coaches.”  &lt;br /&gt;And believe me, if that’s not enough, I’ll be singing “Ain’t Too Proud to Beg.”  For an epidural, that is.</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/02/aint-too-proud-to-beg.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item><item><guid isPermaLink='false'>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8418939.post-113699132663583889</guid><pubDate>Wed, 11 Jan 2006 14:51:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2006-01-11T09:55:26.650-05:00</atom:updated><title>I'm Still Pregnant</title><description>Right now, the gender of our baby is written on a little slip of paper in an envelop in a wooden box on a shelf in our bedroom.  Even though I want to be surprised on the baby’s birthday (“it’s the best prize in the Cracker Jack box you’ll ever get,” says my friend Andrea), I couldn’t resist having the information. Just in case.  You know, in case someone holds a gun to my head and insists on knowing if it’s a boy or a girl.&lt;br /&gt;I can’t decide if I want it to be a boy or a girl, not that it matters at this point what I want.  I can see pros and cons to each.  I wanted a girl at first.  I’ve got two sisters and no brothers, 4 aunts and no biological uncles.  Until I was fifteen I was kind of unsure that boys were actually human, what with their hairiness and seeming inability to put down the toilet seat.  Now I like them fine, but it took me awhile.  So at first I wanted a girl, the kind who liked pink and ballet and barrettes and Laura Ingalls Wilder.  But then my friend Sandy said, “I had my daughter when I was thirty-seven.  Do you know what that meant?  It meant she hit puberty exactly when I hit menopause!  Man, was our house a hormone haven for awhile there.”&lt;br /&gt;So then, being 38, I decided I wanted a boy.  Boys like their mothers for longer, or at least they seem to have a shorter window of that mid-adolescent rampant disgust where they insult your fashion choices and your favorite bands. But then again, if I have a son, he will have to worry about balding.  My father is bald, and baldness is inherited through the mother, so my poor son will most definitely have that to contend with.  And according to this week’s New Yorker, baldness will be completely obsolete by 2036 when my son starts to lose his hair.  He will have to get a transplant in the same way kids today have to wear braces.  &lt;br /&gt;Also, the more pressing issue is that whole gun problem.  Naturally, you can guess that I won’t be one of those parents giving my kid a gun, even a toy one.  But from what I’ve witnessed, at a certain age, boys make guns out of really anything handy; a bread knife, a stick, their penis.  The toy elephant.  &lt;br /&gt;It’s good that we are still a few years away from letting people chose the gender of their baby.  And I think we will keep the little slip of paper in the box.  I can wait.&lt;br /&gt;Pregnancy is a long wait.  Then again, if I were an elephant, I’d have to wait two years.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I have had what the doctors call a “high risk pregnancy.”  This is because I am of advanced maternal age (38), have had fertility problems for 10 years, have had a miscarriage and have had a lot of bleeding and spotting.  For these reasons, I was told not to exercise—at all—until given further direction.  &lt;br /&gt; “What does no exercise mean?” this old addict asks.  “No bungee jumping?”&lt;br /&gt;My kind midwife, Pam, a lovely woman with soft skin and smooth dark hair, says, “No walking, except when necessary, and try to park your car in the closest parking spot at the supermarket.  No calisthenics or lifting things.”&lt;br /&gt;“Can I do yoga?” I say, desperately.&lt;br /&gt;She smiles.  “Maybe a couple of minutes of very mild stretching, but if you are still bleeding, you’ll need to stop. Just enjoy this time of being still.  Think of yourself as hibernating.”&lt;br /&gt;And so, from mid October to mid December, I hadn’t so much as walked around our small city park.  My husband brought the grocery bags in from the car.  I reached for glasses on tall shelves and surreptitiously got a good stretch along my obliques, but other than that, I eschewed exercise, taking this abstinence on as a spiritual practice.  &lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;What I missed most was the sky.  I missed going for my morning and afternoon walks and smelling the way the air changes, depending on the weather and the season.  I missed watching the clouds form and change, watching the way the sun interacts with them.  Whenever I was outside during my two-month spiritual practice (which was rare) I stopped and just smelled.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I am now in my second trimester, which, as you know if you’ve been close to a pregnant woman, is purported to be the trimester of joy and laughter, where food tastes great, sex is unbelievable and your energy returns in spades. &lt;br /&gt;“The second trimester is one long celebration,” my friend Julie says. &lt;br /&gt; “What do you mean?” I say. Julie is now the mother of an eight month old.  I call her periodically, clinging to her every word as though she is an oracle.  First time pregnant women are like this: they drill their friends with detailed questions.  Usually the response from the friend, who is of course now a mother, and therefore somewhat preoccupied, is “Hmmm. I don’t really remember if I felt mild tuggings in my uterus at week 15,” or, “No I can’t recall the exact moment when I stopped feeling nauseated.”&lt;br /&gt;What Julie does say is, “I just felt great about myself, hopeful about the future, everything fell right into place.”  &lt;br /&gt;I’ve been experiencing this too. At about fifteen weeks, my nausea went away—just like that.  Poof!  No more nausea.  I couldn’t believe it.  I felt so good, which made me amazed at how bad I must have felt before.  My energy returned in a surge and I wrote, and sang and made phone calls and generally felt like a great Colossus striding about the earth.  Not only that, by week sixteen I was given the go ahead to walk and do yoga, after my two month kibosh.  My body began to feel like my body again, only with a gigantic annex.  My appetite returned with a vengeance, although it’s still mostly for weird things like mustard, vinegar and pickles.  Best of all, the week before Christmas I felt the baby move for the first time. It felt like someone with tiny fingers drumming on the underside of my belly.&lt;br /&gt;I am full of joy these days.  My baby thumps at me regularly, reminding me that he or she is there, a compassionate witness to my journey perhaps, or maybe just a bored passenger.  Either way, I have company.  I am reminded of this so often that finally, the pregnancy seems real to me.  And what a wonderful unique moment of life, to be so utterly in love with another being, and not even know if it’s male or female.  Aside from God, who else do we love like that?</description><link>http://www.nields.com/blog/2006/01/im-still-pregnant.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Nerissa and Katryna Nields)</author></item></channel></rss>