Posted by: Banta | April 16, 2013

A Godmother’s Legacy

Tita. Pronounced Ti-tah’. My toddler translation of Sistah, the deep South nickname for my grandmother’s older, and only, sister. I called her Ti-tah’, and the name stuck. Tita was my godmother, and from my child’s-eye view, she was also the strongest woman in a family tribe dominated by females.

Tita took the role of godmother seriously. A devout Episcopalian, she crocheted countless cinctures for her priests, and painstakingly stitched enough needlepoint prayer cushions to line dozens of parish altar rail kneelers. She took me to church every chance she could, and filled me with the holy mysteries of the 1928 Book of Common Prayer. If the church had deigned to ordain women in her day, Tita would have arm-wrestled God for a calling to the priesthood. Instead, she practiced a servant ministry of her own, loving her priests with a pure heart, and adorning them and their altars with her gifts of needle and thread.

Born in 1902, Elise Bailey Turnbull (aka Tita) attended Florida State College for Women (now FSU) in the early 1920s, when women on campus were forbidden from dancing or riding in cars with men. At 22, college degree in hand, she married Clarence Jordan Stokes (aka Honey), and for several decades they co-owned and managed their own insurance business in Sarasota, FL. When I was a child in the 1950s, Tita was the only adult female I knew who worked full time outside of the home. That caught my attention. She and Honey wanted children, but after Tita suffered a number of late pregnancy miscarriages, they embraced other investments of the heart – most especially my mother and me. My mother’s first marriage was brief and ended in divorce. In Ozzie-and-Harriet’s 1953, a divorced woman with a child did not fit in.

While my mom immersed herself in art school and community theatre, she and I lived with Tita and Honey in Sarasota for a time. Though I was just a toddler, I already carried inside me this given: Tita was a namer of houses. Her Sarasota home, a cedar shake rambling ranch with breezeways and porches and a tiny beach on the Gulf of Mexico, she called Whitecap. I learned to swim there, made shell mosaics, tangled with the blue crabs that wanted to eat my chubby little toes for breakfast, picked guavas for jam, arranged bouquets of sea grapes and honeysuckle for the dinner table. I also fell in love with the summer sounds of baseball on Honey’s radio. In my child-sized world, Whitecap had a personality unique unto itself, quirks of mood and fits of temper. She (don’t ask me how I knew the house was female) could feel proud of her new shutters or a fresh coat of paint, or lonely if we left her empty too long. She sheltered us from the big September blows (now we call these hurricanes), shaded us from the brutal south Florida sun, and lulled us to sleep at night with the cross-breezes between Gulf and bayou.

To escape the hot summers, Tita retreated to the other house I knew and loved as a child, called Sunledge. Nestled halfway between Cashiers and Highlands in the mountains of western North Carolina, down a steep drive off Highway 64, Sunledge was my doorway into the sacred nature of place. A weathered gray two-story clapboard  house with a big kitchen, Sunledge opened onto a spacious flagstone terrace bordered by a wisteria-draped arbor and white picket fence. Just beyond the fence stretched a mountain view that took my breath away with every sunrise. The closest peak was the broad bald of Whiteside Mountain, looming so large to the right of the terrace as to seem just yards away. Down the slope from the house rambled tiered vegetable gardens, a freshwater mountain stream, and the occasional bear. Inside the house, my great-grandmother taught me three kinds of solitaire and listened to soap operas on the radio. Uncle Billy introduced me to fresh strawberry-rhubarb pie, and I tucked in at night under a quilt hand-stitched by Hazel, a wizened old neighbor woman down the road.

Tita spent most of her summers here, joined by Honey when he could close up their Florida office. My great-grandmother Carrie Belle (aka Bam, for reasons I cannot now remember) lived at Sunledge from April through October, along with her older brother and his friend from New York. In hindsight, I realize that Uncle Billy and Uncle Buddy were the first gay couple in my young experience. They doted on me and on each other, and this was all just as natural as rain.

Summers between the ages of perhaps ten to fourteen, when my school friends disappeared to camp, my mom put me on the Silver Meteor train for the eight hour ride from Jacksonville to Sarasota. I know, you would never put a 10-year old on a train by herself now, but back then it did not occur to any of the adults in my world that such an extraordinary adventure might be unsafe. I took myself to lunch in the dining car – a grilled cheese sandwich and a coke – and let the hours of orange groves put me into an afternoon trance.

Tita met me at the train station, and for a lazy week or more, I read Nancy Drew mysteries on the porch at Whitecap, or scoured the beach for star fish, or hit tennis balls against the side of the house, or “helped” Tita at her office. The time in Sarasota marked the waiting time, until we packed the car for our two-day road trip to the mountains and Sunledge.

Riding shotgun with Tita, we snaked our way along the legendary Woodpecker Trail, through tiny Georgia and South Carolina towns with names like Blackshear, Santa Claus, Wrens, Walhalla. We ate peanut butter crackers and drank cokes in thick green bottles. We adopted the spider who took up residence on the dash, and called her Cordele. We stayed overnight in a motel, but only if it had a swimming pool. And we talked for hours. Tita did not coddle or preach at me; she assumed I had good sense and ideas of my own, and she counted on me to hold up my end of a grown-up conversation.

At Sunledge my bedroom had a window overlooking the terrace and the mountains beyond. After I unpacked, I ran down the path to the garden to find Uncle Billy and see what vegetables he was picking for dinner. Beans and summer squash, tomatoes and basil for the salad. Fresh raspberries with ice cream for dessert. Well fed and road weary, I let the crickets and tree frogs lull me to sleep.

In the days that followed, summer upon summer, Tita took me under her wing. She channeled my pre-teen and adolescent energy into swimming outings at Thorpe Reservoir (now Lake Glenville), trail rides on horseback, gem mining in Franklin, and movie dates with distant cousins. She took me to nearby Cherokee Village to see the outdoor play Unto These Hills. She gave me a few dollars to spend at Hank Conkle’s Carolina Mountain Shop, where I overdosed on balsam sachet and Ice Blue mint coolers. And on the hottest of days, she showed me the secret treasure known only to the locals: Sliding Rock.

Not to be confused with the popular 60’ outcropping of rock near Pisgah Forest, that still draws summer tourists by the thousands, “little Sliding Rock” near Cashiers was marked only by a well hidden trail head off Whiteside Cove Road. We parked on the shoulder and walked the short distance to the water. Canopied in gnarled rhododendrons and towering hemlocks, this narrow stretch of the Chattooga River was friendly enough in the summer months, but wild and dangerous during the spring snow melt. Wearing cutoff jeans to protect the backside, we waded barefoot along the shallows to the 10’ rock face, pockmarked with potholes and swirling eddies. My first time, Tita pointed me to the wet rock. “Sit, push off, and slide. Try not to get stuck in a hole. I’ll meet you at the bottom.” Ok. Ready, set, slide! Squealing in terror and delight, I remembered to pull up my knees just before I hit the water, and cannonballed into the freezing mountain pool. “Again?” she asked from her knee-deep spectator spot. I nodded vigorously. Again and again and again.

Decades later, when our own daughter was about ten, we found our way back to Cashiers and little Sliding Rock. With memories awash in nostalgia, I wanted her to experience some of the magic I had felt there as a child. We all took turns sliding and squealing and dashing back up the trail to do it again. The magic remains.

Tita left me a precious legacy. From the time I was a toddler, she shared her love of the mountains with me, opening that love like a jewelry box, one sparkling gem at a time. She taught me the history of the area, identified the native flowers and trees, and set me free to wander the woods on my own. From Tita I learned that a place can have a soul, that a house can have a name.

In her honor, I, too have become a namer of houses. Our home in Black Mountain is the most recent incarnation of Sunledge. Perched atop a steep rock ledge, the house faces southeast and we wake each morning to the spectacular colors of sunrise. The name feels right. I think Tita would approve.

                                                                                      Sunrise 2

Posted by: Banta | April 2, 2013

Walking the Land

Long before we broke ground on the mountain house, Bruce and I walked the land over and over again. Some days we bushwhacked our way through one dense thicket after another. Other days, we just sat on the earth and waited for a sign. We tried to listen to the mountain, past the chatter of chickadees and tree frogs, past the howling January winds and the roar of the spring after a hard rain. We wanted her to tell us, show us where to nestle the house. Even more than that, we wanted her permission to make a homestead on her breathtaking ridge. These few wild acres only belonged to us by virtue of a sales contract and a deed filed with Buncombe County. The paperwork may have conferred our legal right to build here, but what we craved, what we listened for, was the voice of the mountain herself. Would she give us the nod, take us in as co-creators of something that so compromised her very wildness?

Maybe it sounds crazy, but we talked to the mountain about these things. Out loud. We assured her that we would tame only what we needed for the house and garden, that we would not poison her water or her soil, that we would protect her terrain as much as we could, and we would never forget that she was here first.

When the day arrived for the well-digger to bring in his big machine, Bruce and I got up to the property early. We knew intuitively that we needed to tell the mountain what was coming that morning. We asked her forgiveness for this initial violation of her deep places, and expressed our gratitude for her (albeit involuntary) gift of this piece of herself. Yes, our spontaneous ritual got out of hand a bit: we thanked the trees we would soon fell for their long service, and promised to recycle and repurpose them as mulch and firewood and perhaps some furniture and trim. We thanked the bedrock for its support of the house’s foundation. We made all kinds of promises about being good stewards of the land, walking lightly on the earth, honoring the wild nature of these mountain acres.

We intend to keep those promises insofar as we are able. On that morning before the well drilling began, and every day since, we touch the ground and give thanks. Without knowing exactly when she said yes, we know in our bones that she did. Our mountain has invited us home.

Posted by: Banta | March 26, 2013

Resistance is futile

Fog makes me antsy. Especially the kind of fog that wanders in and surrounds you before you can get your bearings. On Sunday, we woke to a dense fog that took custody of the house while we slept. It masked the movement of the light across the sky, leaving us disoriented about the time of day. It slathered us in wet cloudness, suspended the house in gray-white space, and took away the mountain under our feet. Weightless, timeless, we hung there in the sky, unable to break free.

Fog insists on introspection. When out there loses shape and form, in here sharpens its focus. I had just spent most of sunny Saturday working outdoors, sleeves rolled up, gloves muddy from moving stone and outlining garden beds. Those hours in the garden whetted my appetite for more. Yet now I was hostage to the fog, and her sidekicks – freezing rain, snow flurries, blustery damp winds. The kind of weather that chills you to the bone and beyond.

I don’t do antsy very well. Days like Sunday, there is no grace in me. I get irritable, I pace around, dabble at odds and ends. I move in fits and starts, ever a little grumbly just under the surface. By early afternoon, with no let up in the weather, I realized that all of my antsy-ness was wrapped in my resistance to what is. I had a plan for the day and the fog had derailed me. Only when I remembered that I was the author of my own antsy-ness, my own irritability, could I let go of my plan and relax. Cup of steaming tea in hand, I curled up in a corner of the couch and let the fog speak to me.

She reminded me that sabbath time is crucial for rest and renewal. She invited me to stop all the doing and just be for a while. And she helped me take a necessary pause, ungoverned by the need to be productive or finish anything. I could sit and read, or nap (not likely) or wander my own internal landscape. In her wisdom, the fog held up a mirror. She jolted me out of a fuzzy-thinking brain fog place and helped me back to my Angel Card word: Clarity.

Later in the afternoon, I drove down the mountain on an errand into Asheville. For the first several miles, the fog was so thick I could not see more than thirty feet in front of the car. Take care. Slow down. Focus. Trust your memory of the curves in the road. Stay the course. Just outside of Black Mountain, I came out of the fog and into a simple misty rain on a Sunday afternoon. What a difference a few miles make.

Posted by: Banta | February 22, 2013

Clarity

A very wise young woman recently shared with me the eight items on her list of “What I Need in a Relationship.” I want to put those needs in writing here, because they do a remarkable job of articulating the qualities that make for a healthy partnership, whether that partnership is a brand new connection or a life long love. Honest communication, emotional availability, play/fun/spontaneity, great sex, compromise and balance, challenge and inspiration, intimacy to grow in love with someone who wants to grow in love with me, commitment and trust.

Clarity about one’s needs does not come easily. I just sat with a client who stopped dead in his voluble tracks when I interrupted the anxious rant about his partner to ask, “What do you need?” He was quiet for a time, then shook his head, “I have no idea.” The shocking realization that he did not know his own needs helped him refocus his energy and engage more fully in this exploration. When we are not clear about what we need, we risk allowing someone else to define that for us, or project their needs onto us, or run roughshod over us in their eagerness to get their own needs met. Lacking clarity about what we need, we lose track of our personal boundaries. Perhaps we fall into bad habits: letting our partner make all the decisions, call all the shots in the relationship – from the bank to the bedroom to the restaurant or movie choice. Perhaps we withdraw from potential conflicts, choosing instead to cede ground to avoid an unpleasant argument. Perhaps, in not knowing our needs, we give up too much of ourselves.

Posted by: Banta | February 16, 2013

On the move

Fast forward four months. We’ve taken another step, albeit a circuitous one, toward grounding ourselves in North Carolina. We traded homes with a dear friend in Jacksonville. When our lease came up for renewal, she moved into our second floor river front apartment in the 180-year old house; we took up temporary residence in her historic-district bungalow. Another round of down-sizing, culling more books, more clothes, more kitchen goods. We have no lease, and no commitment beyond the proper “staging” of her bungalow until it sells. Now what?

This much I know. Our intentions have taken on a momentum of their own. We got the transition started during a period of very uncomfortable chaos nearly three years ago. Remember the Great Recession? Like so many others, we found ourselves unexpectedly on shaky financial ground. My husband was between jobs for several months, we had too much house debt, and we had lost our joy. The shakedown took some time, but here we are on the other side of that particular crisis. Nearly out of debt and looking retirement in the face. Our green-built timberframe home in Black Mountain, North Carolina, is finished and furnished. We “commute” back and forth to Jacksonville for work commitments and to spend time with friends and extended family there. But more and more, our hearts are in the mountains of western North Carolina.

My Angel Card word for 2013 is Clarity. I trust that every small insight, every ‘aha’ moment, every acknowledged message from the universe, is contributing to a larger sense of clarity in answer to the “Now what?” question. Bit by bit, inch by inch, in every ordinary and extraordinary present moment, we live a little deeper into that question.

Posted by: Banta | October 6, 2012

Lessons

Note to self: Experience is only the best teacher if we remember the lessons we’ve learned.

Posted by: Banta | October 6, 2012

Getting Started

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Despite the fact that I’ve jotted notes in journal books for more than five decades, drafted a novel, published a book (This Congruent Life: A Spiritual Ecology Practice) and a handful of poems, and (I’m embarrassed to admit) often conjure haikus in my sleep, this is my first blog. Why now? Because I need the support of this imaginary, invisible community to get me through the enormous transition from here to that elusive third half of life called “retirement.” The thing is: I don’t picture myself “retiring,” certainly not in any traditional sense. I intend to be far more active and spend far more time outdoors than my current working life allows. But those who know me well would describe me as “change averse.” I need your help to take this leap.

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