As usual, the sky was still dark when twelve paws enthusiastically woke me up. For a moment, in between two worlds, I didn’t remember. Then slowly, I did. Mitsu. Mitsu has been my faithful, comfortable, spacious, forgiving, strong, and ultra-reliable companion, since a few weeks after we arrived. She is the first car I ever drove in Mexico. She has been with me through countless adventures, water crossings, places in the jungle where I wasn’t sure cars could go, flooded country roads, mountain passes, the cobblestones of the village, and paved city streets too. She has moved all my stuff from the tiny cabin to my house and she has helped me move many friends’ things too. Plants, animals, she has always said yes. She has been my overnight shelter when the thunder got too loud to sleep in a tent and she has transported many construction materials in the months when Casa Sama was being built. She never once complained, hesitated nor left me stranded. I satisfied her hunger for ample amounts of motor oil and got help fixing her occasional popped tires. Last year she got a new suspension and a hard protective roof. She still has her pink striped seat covers. When I first got her, I asked her to please stay with me for three years. It felt like an eternity stretching in front of us. Last March, aware that we were passing the three-year mark I got bold and asked her for a seven-year extension. Two nights ago, with zero warning and in the most gentle way possible, she told me that she couldn’t give me that. That she was done. Mitsu had kept her commitment and now it was time for her to retire. She took care of me until the last minute, giving me her news before I started driving into the jungle at night, and during one of the only times when a girlfriend was following me home after an afternoon together in the city. It was so smooth, so sweet. An odd noise, a knowing of sorts. The transmission was acting strangely. I pulled into the last gas station before the huge trees and the dark curvy roads, made sure she would be safe overnight, and then climbed into my friend’s car to get home. Yesterday morning I made my way back to her where a tow truck was meeting us. We put her on the back, and I took this beautiful photo. So very her. Festive, strong, and looking pretty Mexican for a car who was born in New York. Perfect. Back through the jungle I left her into my mechanic’s hands. I went home and waited for a diagnosis. At 5 pm he texted me. “It’s the transmission," he confirmed. I went over there. Of course, I immediately talked about replacing the transmission. He advised me against it. “The motor is at the end of its life,” he said. He had been telling me this for a good while and I hadn’t wanted to believe him. I didn’t believe him but also… anytime I thought of going on a long road trip, my intuition made some noise of its own. Yes, she had never let me down. But also, I knew I shouldn’t push it. And I did want to go on road trips. Underneath the sadness, something felt right. Gentle was the word that kept coming back. We drove her home and here she sits. And now what? I don’t know how to buy a car. Also, I don’t have a lot of money to do so. Could I just … not have a car? Not having a car feels scary. I have never not had a car, as an adult. Having a car means Freedom to me. And god knows I love Freedom. Also, whereas it would be possible - although inconvenient - to be without a car if I lived in the village, living in the country this way feels much scarier, especially with the rain coming. I want to be able to make my way to the vet quickly if needed. I want to be able to cross the rivers without wading through them each time. I want, I want. I want my car to magically be well. Because at least with her, I know what’s wrong. A new-to-me car? It’s trickier. So, as I woke up to this new reality, and while it is not comfortable, there is a whole lot of gratitude that goes along with it. Also, a trust that something good is coming. Nothing lasts. No one lasts. Letting go is an art form, one that takes so much practice to do painlessly. We forget, we want to forget. We say things like “forever,” or “seven more years,” and the words feel so good. We say: “See you in the morning,” and “I’ll be there.” And we may, or we may not. I think one part surrender, one part awareness, and one part joy may be the perfect cocktail. Now I am thinking about gear shifting, about going from one speed to the next, one car to the other, smoothly. About reducing the grinding and enhancing the flow. Enjoying the ride. Inviting, receiving. Because even though Mitsu is retiring from the gear-shifting business, I am not. This life… It started pretty quietly, the way big waves often start. No big deal, just a morning message.
I was supposed to go spend a couple of hours with a friend, enjoying and hopefully contributing to her special project. Then, before I made my way to her place, something happened. Nothing big at first. For some reason, I read the summary about the updated guidelines for routine mammograms. Somewhere in there a sentence about “women over 74 who are healthy not needing yearly screening.” Again, no big deal. Except for my beloved, super-healthy friend who just died pretty darn fast days away from her 76th birthday. No one’s fault, these guidelines make plenty of sense I am sure. But my breathing changed. A door cracked. A door I had certainly not sealed nor slammed but a door which because it is now part of my forever house, I had been taking my time opening all the way. And today, this morning when I was about to go be with my other friend, the door flew open and well I just couldn’t leave the house. Grief had called and grief I knew had to be allowed its moment. Then it would go to sleep for a while until who knows what its next cue to wake up would be. I sent a message and I canceled. I hoped she would understand. I filled my kitchen sink with hot soapy water. I moved slowly. I let the grief boss do its thing and take over my head, my heart, my body, and my schedule. Of course, as I was taught a decade ago by a wise teacher: When we open The Grief Box, there are a lot of other grieves waiting for us in there. Indeed there were. But this is not an article about grief. It’s an article about priorities. Specifically about some questions about priority. Because after I canceled, even though I knew it had been the right thing to do, I felt bad. I felt as though I had not made my friend my priority. This, in my already sensitive state, turned into a whole bunch of swirly questions. WHO am I a priority for? WHO is a priority for me? And then Is it really important to be someone’s priority? Ooooo boy. I had my work cut out for me. What follows is much more of an exploration than a sharing of what I know. I know what it feels like to be someone’s priority. I have experienced it. It feels nice. The phone gets picked up, we are listened to, we are given to. Given time, energy, and yes, security. Or at the very least the illusion of security. Is this free? Sometimes yes and sometimes not. Sometimes it is part of an exchange, spoken or not, acknowledged or not. I know also what it feels like to make someone a priority. I have experienced it. Certainly with my children, especially in their early years. Part love and part biology guiding the process. I still experience it with my children, but differently. With boundaries. Maybe we could call it “Intentional Priorities.” Then there is the “Priority of the Moment” type of priorities, and those, I love recognizing. Because their clarity makes action simple, unquestioned. When I learned that the friend I mentioned earlier was a the very end of her life, being with her instantly became my priority. I canceled whatever was in front of me, I turned airmiles into a ticket and I got on a plane. This intensity of Priority of the Moment is powerful and clear. It’s the long-term, ongoing one that has me squirming. Who am I a priority for? I wondered this morning. Oddly enough, I could not come up with an answer. People who love me? Many. People who will take care of me if I need it? Several. But a priority? A “put me first each day every day” priority? I am not sure. Who is a priority for me? came next. Of course, my kids, still. My granddaughter, too. But then … why am Iiving in another country, huh? Answer this one, Laura. I can’t. Then there is the lovely option of being each other’s priority. That’s likely when being married or in a committed partnership comes in. You are my priority and I am yours. When it works, it’s pretty cool. Still bathed in my grief stew and with my sink full of soaking dishes, showed up the next question, kind of a big one: Why is it important to be someone’s priority? “Security” stood up, raised its hand, and presented a good case: “If you are someone’s priority, you will never go hungry or sad, or lay on the bathroom floor with a broken leg.” Then quickly another hand was raised: “ME!” said Ego. “Me, me, me. I LOVE being a priority. It feels soooo good.” Yes, I get this. I remember this. And I also remember how much I have occasionally paid for both Security’s and Ego’s answers. I shared my musings with someone I love. Someone who made me a priority for a time and someone who claimed I hadn’t made him one. We batted the word around. We explored. I went back to my dishes. I was feeling a mix of loneliness and the sense that I was getting closer. I would like it to be simpler. I would like to look at someone and know, for sure know that they are my priority, my number one, my no-doubt, my no-matter-what. But then, when I imagine this I wonder about my kids, my grandbaby, my furry girls, my friends, my work, and people who are hurting whom I have never met. What do I do with THAT? Maybe for me, my priority is more about an Essence - or two. Maybe it’s my intuition, my Guide. I don’t have a nice bow to tie on this topic. Yet. I think it’s coming. I hope your mind is quieter than mine, today. I hope your questions are more easily answered. I hope you are well 💛 This life… Lila and I were riding the quad through the country road on our way to the beach. I love these dusty roads. They give little indication that we are no longer in 1974 and this, from the first day, has hooked my heart. As we were getting closer to the village, we saw one of the vaqueros (cowboys) a few meters in front of us. This man, one of my neighbors, often leads a herd of a couple dozen cows and bulls from atop his horse, seven or eight dogs closing the parade. He too is one of the reasons I chose to build my home here. Like I say, 1974. Well, except for the times when he is on his cell phone. But yesterday, it was just him on his horse with, next to him trotting along … a tiny horse. A really small and almost heartachingly beautiful tiny horse. Perfect, really. Perfect and … something else. He was walking free, with no lead, next to the man and the grown-up horse. I slowed down wanting to be sure not to scare him with my engine and asked my neighbor how old the baby horse was. As I got even closer to the horse I could feel my heart start to fill up in an odd way. The cowboy held up three fingers. I, having grown up right outside of Paris and knowing very little about horses, nodded and repeated to him that the horse was three months old. Not even three weeks old, mind you. No, no. I offered three months. The vaquero without even blinking corrected me: Three days old. The baby horse was three DAYS old. I knew I had sounded ignorant and instead of saying nothing, I thought it would be good to comment about how amazing it was that he was already walking. Then ask if the other horse was his mama. Babbling, you know? She was. I couldn’t take my eyes off the animal. My chest was doing funny things, and I just wanted to ride alongside them, wherever they were going, until the end of the day or until I ran out of gas. Eventually, I tore myself away by pressing gently on the accelerator and that’s when I realized what had affected me so much. Three Days Old. I remember Three Days Old. I remember holding my baby granddaughter when she was three days old just a few weeks ago. I remember how simultaneously strong and fragile she was. I remember too how it had felt as though part of her was there with us and part of her was still in the other world, the one she had just arrived from. This baby horse felt the same way. Precious, sacred, so pure and new. Now riding through the village I was full of the Gifts of Life, the miracle of our baby’s oxygen mask having come off around day three, and the miracle of this perfect baby animal trotting along his mama in the dusty sunlight at the same age. I was so darn happy that my eyes started crying a little, releasing some of that fullness into warm tears of gratitude for all of it. For all the little lungs working on their own and for all the skinny little horse legs trotting healthily. And then, because I am human and sometimes humans can’t leave stuff alone, my brain started to ask some questions. “How many babies did she have?” I wondered. and then: ”How did she get pregnant?” I wondered some more. And just like that, before I could even begin to formulate an answer to either of my own questions, BAM. A memory. A terrible, awful, very bad memory. One I had been trying to forget for the last week. Riding home on the same road, I had passed a small farm on my left, as I do just about every day. In that farm, there are roosters in cages - most likely fighting roosters - and a horse. A big horse who lives under a tree, tied from his head to a branch up above. Every day as I pass by I invent in my mind ways to cut him loose. Every day I force myself to keep driving and step into neutrality, and humility. Possibly into chickenshitness. I tell myself, as I do very, very often here, that I don’t know. Which is correct. I tell myself that I have chosen to live in a culture that is different than mine, whatever mine is. Which is true. I tell myself that I am a guest here. I keep driving home over the river beds and into the open field where at least three animals are going to be very happy to see me, running around freely and making it easy for me to forget a little. Last week was harder. As I passed by the farm, instead of one horse there were two. There were also two men. And the two men, holding ropes and using loud voices were directing one of the horses to mount the other one. For a brief instant, I thought I didn’t understand what was happening. But I did. I think it’s called breeding and me seeing it as assisted rape wasn’t going to change anything. One of the horses was the one that was usually tied by its face to the tree. I kept driving and I cried. For so many reasons. And then I put it away. Until the baby horse. Once Lila and I made it to the beach, my mind was swirling around with words, each one crashing to the beat of the pristine foamy waves. Contrasts. Not knowing. Choosing what to celebrate. Humility, again. Living here. Being human. Complicated. The juxtaposition of this perfect baby animal and the way maybe he too had come to be in the world. My readiness to melt into gratitude for one end of the story and to be outraged by the other. How little I know. How little I often know. I tossed the word hypocrisy around and auditioned it for a few minutes. I let it go, it didn’t feel quite right. It’s something else. I think that living here makes all of this complexity, these contrasts much more “in your face.” In the States, there are layers in the way that soften a lot of the raw stuff. Interestingly enough, for me, these layers also soften the glory. I find myself gasping a whole lot more over here. Living a lot brighter. Crying more, too. And so, here I am, aware that while I am delighted by the new art stencils that arrived yesterday, I know that they happened to come from a company in China whose practices I have not researched. Here I am enjoying writing this story to you from the jungle using the super reliable internet service for which I send money to Elon Musk’s company each month (which is not very 1974 of me) Here I am celebrating a baby horse while rejecting breeding practices. Today, I invite us to be gentle with ourselves for the babbling and the bumbling we might do when realizing how complicated our integrity map is. I invite us to be aware that it’s often not all that simple and to decide how far in the complexity we dare to tiptoe or trot in. This life… |
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