Saturday, March 28, 2009

Yeehaw!! Ride 'em cowboys, cowgirls and cowkids!

My sister, Jackie, invited me to the rodeo with box seats!!!  Swank!  

You should have seen how fast everyone ran out when we heard the ice cream cart!  And, of course, it was served in a cowboy hat!

They start 'em young in Texas.  Imagine watching a bunch of kids running after sheep and tryin' to ride them!  One of the most adorable things I've ever seen!  Good thing this kid was wearing a helmet.  They all got up and waved to the crowd with big 'ol smiles no matter what the outcome.

I enjoyed the concert with the revolving circular stage.  He played some inspirational tunes in addition to standard country fare.  I became inspired and asked the waiter for pen and paper and scribbled down some lyrics for a new tune.

To my amusement and surprise, Bevo was there - the mascot of my college rival, T.U. (Texas University - known to the rest of the world as The University of Texas.  We, at Texas A&M, consider our school to be 'THE' University of Texas.)  In reality, I don't really buy into all that school fighting.  It was fun to tease my brother-in-law though who roots for the other side.  ("Was he barbecued? - I asked when he and Sherry told Jackie and I the steer was there.)  I am seen hissing as I recall doing in school.  I actually have a lot of friends who went to T.U. and had I known more where my interests would lead, I might have gone there.

Saturday, March 14, 2009

Beach Bum: Essay 2: March 13, 2009

Time to do my nature writing assignment again.

I just spent the last few minutes rummaging through my mobile storage unit, a.k.a. my truck, looking for this journal. With some frustration. With some resistance to the current state of my life. At least I found it in the cab and didn’t have the leave this truck oasis currently under attack by water hurtling down from the sky.

It is really interesting how a view of the world is tinted so dramatically by the lenses one wears. I currently don the ‘this is not what my life should look like’ lens and everything is a hassle and an inconvenience. Yet I recall loving the rain, sitting the in the meditation hall at Green Gulch Farm, allowing the sound to massage my aching knees. It felt like love. Now, I spurn ‘love’ and want it to go away.

Could be worse. I am reminded of a jalopy I drove in high school: a Pontiac J-2000 SE with a hatchback my Dad bought used for $2000. I learned a lot from that car. Rusts runs rampant here on the island. The internal mechanism allowing the driver’s side window to roll up and down corroded. So began a game whereby I would remove the side panel, lift the windowpane up to its highest position and replace the panel. It would slowly make its descent due to the vibrational energy of the car and gravity.  

Now, those who have grown up with little money and a desire to transport one’s self other than with one’s feet or public transit are familiar with the love and care necessary to keep a car performing, albeit at the minimum level. You have to pay attention, watch the gauges, listen. You know how to fix a flat, where to buy retread tires, how to start the car with a wrench and how to put out a carburetor fire. You know to turn on the heater when the engine starts overheating and how to add fluid when all the warnings and manuals say ‘DO NOT OPEN THE RADIATOR CAP WHEN ENGINE IS HOT’. That message is just for novices. You just need a towel and some patience. (Do not attempt to do this at home, please) So, I played the window game. It wasn’t such a big deal unless it rained. I began to hate the rain with a passion.

Comparatively, it’s not that bad in this moment. My truck is reliable and at the least the cab doesn’t leak (though the camper shell does a bit). I am dry although the cold is starting to creep in.

Back to the reason I am here. Nature writing. Which assumes one is in nature. Not sure if cowering in my truck counts. Somewhere in this truck is a pair of rain pants. I know where my umbrella, rain parka and floral garden boots are. All are in the back. Along with my gloves. Might be tricky to write out there and I’m definitely not setting my bum on the sand today!!

I’ve been questioning my decision to return home. What exactly am I doing here? It was more clear what I was doing out on the West Coast. My Mom is happy to have me here and hopes I stay – maybe I will, who knows? I am happy to have the opportunity to be helpful and provide some support as she still puts the pieces of her life back together after Hurricane Ike.  But is there a life for me here?

I see the high rise in the distance. I hear the pitter pat of the rain as it lessens its assault. A car drives through the parking lot and makes its way as close to the beach as it can. I hope it doesn’t get stuck.

Here comes more rain. An increasing crescendo. I find myself listening as I do at the symphony – trying to pick out the different parts of the orchestra as the rain plays different parts of my truck.

The little red car turns around and leaves. No one got out.

It’s hard to distinguish the Gulf from the off-white sky. A low, grayish stripe peeks out above and between the artificial dunes. Flashes of bright white can be seen as the waves curl and break.

A gull and friend fly toward me as a flock of their kin cruises the shoreline. I can make out part of the fence with the red ‘Do Not Enter’ signs I sat by last week and think ‘That’s where I should be!’ I hate it when I 'should' myself. ‘I shouldn’t hate either’ I think as I do it again.

A dark blue Chevy pulls up to my left. I wonder if they’ll get out.

I remember senior night at Astroworld in Houston when it started to rain. We loved it, staying to ride Texas Cyclone again and again, experiencing the added exhilaration of rain pelting us in the face. It was awesome! ‘One more time! One more time!’ we’d chant as we returned to the start. Have I become too old and too comfortable to play in the rain?

I hear a metronome as the rain attempts to keep the pitter-patter in time and is doing a lousy job of it because it keeps speeding up and slowing down. I can’t decipher which part of the truck is providing that backbeat.  

The frequency of sound increases and I lost all motivation for venturing forth. Instead, I study the patterns being made on my windows. I am reminded of wine tasting – swirling the chardonnay in the glass, analyzing the ‘legs’, the vertical patterns made as the wine descends to the bottom of the glass once the centripetal force decreases to zero newtons.

There’s surface tension as the water forms irregular mounds. When the sum of forces no longer equals zero, the water makes its way to the bottom of the window reminiscent of a shooting star, recruiting friends on the way.

I am also reminded of the video game I played as a child – one I loved more than Asteroids or Ms. Pacman – Centipede. I am moved to want to ‘shoot’ these drops before they make it to the ‘ground’. I gaze at the window and experience an old familiar feeling as I think ‘But there are too many – how can I shoot them all?’

The windshield makes a completely different pattern than the window. Due to the slope of the glass and its curvature, the drops of water immediately meld into one another becoming one slow-dripping cascade. A kind of water feature. Relaxing to watch. It looks a bit like dimples – ‘ooh, like cellulite ‘ I think in disgust, definitely not something even on my radar when dropping quarters into video games at the local arcade.

So far, no one has emerged from the Chevy with the tinted windows. I wonder if there are kids in there making out. My mind is all over the place today.

A black bird appears before me, perching on a fencepost. I must sadly admit that my birding skills are horrid and I can’t even say with confidence that this is a crow. Could it be a European starling? A friend joins him or her before they both fly off to my left, joining a group of them pecking on the ground. They pick up pieces of Styrofoam and other trash and I want to scream out ‘No, yucky, spit it out!’ like I would to my one year old nephew Jacob when he picks up pieces of grass or dead bugs from the ground.

The birds are gone now, but there’s still a two-liter bottle on its side with a blue label. The liquid is brown with hints of orange. Maybe next week, I will return with trash bags and clean up this place.

On my dashboard I spy a pile of sand and a thin, white shell. I picked it up last week, meaning to give it to my new friend, Dave, but I keep forgetting. It’s sitting next to a package of dried, pitted California dates, ‘local’ food picked when I was a California local. It’s my favorite kind of shell. I am drawn to the delicate ones, the fragile ones – a reminder of the transiency of life. I look up from my journal at the shell again. I smile and with a surge of adrenaline, put down my pen – quick, before I change my mind…

I leap out of the truck – no garden boots, no jacket, no hat – wearing blue jeans, Dansko clogs and a fleece shirt and I ran. I run over and on top of forbs, grasses and a toothbrush, squishing sand and splashing through puddles to the dunes. I stop, laughing and take off again for the water. I arrive at the edge and notice more patterns of rain in the sandy pools. I hear and see the waves, and wave myself. I spin around, arms extended and laugh out loud. And then I turn and book it back to the truck, rain pelting me in the face.

I rush back into the cab, slam the door, huffing and puffing, looking like the proverbial wet rat.
I am still alive!!! My nose runs, a trickle of water creeps down my neck and my jeans stick to the front of my legs. My hair is plastered to my head and my laugh is more genuine than it has been in days.  Another kiss and a shout out to the creator for reminding who I am.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Texas Two Steppin' on a Girls Night Out



Mom and I (she was born in Japan, but if you hear her twang, you'll know she's really Texan!)

We decided Mom was way overdue for a night out on the town so we got all dolled up and headed over to Big Texas.  It reminded me of a bar I went to a few times in college, Hurricane Harry's.  There was a big dance floor in the middle and the music switched from country to rock.  It had been years and years since I had tried a two step and thought I might just sit back and watch Mom have a good time, but before we knew it, we were both cutting a rug.  I started out stepping on toes, but by the end of the long night, I was not only two-steppin', but jitterbugging, doing the polka and waltzing in addition to some freestyle oldtime rock-n-roll.  




Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Rockin' my hometown with my new friends!



I saw an ad in the Galveston Daily News for a bar that wasn't around when I used to live here a dozen  years ago.  The name sounded awesome:  The Old Quarter Acoustic Cafe.  I checked out the website and when I saw the comment ' where lyrics still matter,' I knew I had found my place.  It was more awesome than I expected and I made a bunch of new friends, performing and appreciating other performers, at the Wednesday and Thursday night open mics.  This is my new favorite home away from home.

The owner, Wrecks Bell, starts off each show with some rockin' tunes.  He's a funny guy.

Reggie offered to accompany me as I sang some original tunes and some covers of Traci Chapman, the Indigo Girls and Dido.

Dave and Tom from Wisconsin here working to rebuild Galveston and sharing tunes from their fave Minnesota band Wookiefoot.

Lee bartends and belts out some original tunes.


The band, Fiel, will be headlining here soon - the passionate, dual language performance was amazing.

Keith Miller had the audience crackin' up with original tunes like the one about his cat.

I am very excited about my new friend, Dave.  We have an uncanny number of things in common like the same age, the same former profession (science teacher), similar spiritual trainings (Buddhist), same musical instrument, etc.  He's offered to do some guitar harmony with me, adding some needed spice to my strumming (i'm more a vocalist than a guitar player).

Saturday, March 7, 2009

Beach Bum: March 6, 2009

Copyright (c) 2009 Linda Daline Limbaugh 

I had been curious where I would stop. I didn’t imagine it like this. Not at all. Bum right on the sand. Where’s my blue-gray, weathered hunk of driftwood with branches and trunk curling up toward the sky? The one that so nicely would have supported me. The one I remember from my late teens and early twenties. When I still lived here. Mom doesn't even live here anymore.  Not since the hurricane.  Now I’m just one of those ones– the visitors, the ones who create all the crazy traffic. Spring break has begun. As I look around, I realize that the new – well, it could have gone up anytime in the last dozen years since I’ve been here – highrise must have eaten my beloved driftwood. The one where I would read when I wasn’t floating past the wavebreak, ears submerged, listening to the chatter of dolphins.

The sun begins to set behind me and to the right. A glowing orb, it casts a few buildings into sepia tone – one is the island hospital which may not reopen here, but move to the mainland instead, taking hundreds of jobs with it. The water may be gone, but the effects of Hurricane Ike still ripple through the community – the ones still here and the ones scattered around like fall leaves in all sorts of small towns and in the big city (Houston). But, back to here and now…

I notice a smile that won’t leave my face. They say that she who amuses herself never ceases to be amused.  This is such a familiar feeling – this dissatisfaction. I had a vision of the perfect spot in nature. Actually drove many miles South to look for it, the pristine, ‘right’ spot where I would be inspired, words spewing forth like popcorn – I’d barely be able to write fast enough. I’d be so empassioned, the force of my grip would break the pen and then I’d be trying to write holding onto the flimsy ink cartridge and I would write until the darkness made it impossible to see the page…

‘This isn’t that place’, I think and I laugh. Of course, I could have kept looking. Right now, I could walk back to my truck, drive to the west end of the island or maybe to the bayside park. I notice that I don’t move and find myself very amused to be here – apparently in the perfect place. I know myself – I have been studious – and I choose to get off the hamster wheel of perfection seeking to discover the perfection of what is all around me: the trash littering the beach; the people approaching to ‘invade’ my spot; the lack of a proper seat for my bum. I catch myself thinking, ‘Next week, I’ll bring my campchair and then it will be perfect.’ How critical the mind is, always searching for that which will keep it from peace.

The gulf breeze helpfully blows the hair from my face so that I can see the page, so I can see the beauty of where I am. While earlier, I saw birds flying by in formation, solitary gulls fish the seas before me now. A family walks by. There are two women, two men, two children, one stroller. I was wrong – two families walk by. A woman in the distace walks two dogs.  

I am sitting on the sand right in the middle of a set of tire tracks that leads straight into the water. I hear the baby express itself vocally without words, but not crying.

I turn to my right, hair flinging itself into my face and notice the orb is gone, replaced by a region of pink, diffuse with yellow hues above. A cloud passes through quickly from west to east.

Looking down, I notice a feather.  I also notice that I would appreciate a restroom, but a civilized one is not present. Will I bare my bum in front of strangers, I wonder. There is a line of artificially created sand dunes behind me. We’ll see…

To my left, I see a line of posts, barring vehicle passage. A tempting gap opens near the middle, posts on each side warning ‘Do Not Enter.’ I know they are not meant for me with my sandals, yet I wonder how I stop myself. How I bar myself from entering fully into my own life with other people’s stories, with the stories told by our culture, stories that are not for me.

I look forward and the first word that comes to mind is ‘ruffles.’ I see the grand dame, Gulf of Mexico, dancing in a large, straight skirt, rimmed with undulating white ruffles. The constant movement looks the same constantly. Does she never get tired?  

A couple in the distance looks also out toward the Gulf. The man raises his arm to point at something.

My attention returns to my body and I thank the earth for supporting my bum so solidly. My bladder says ‘Can we go now?’ And I laugh.

I look up – I don’t know what made me do that – and quickly, audibly take in breath as I notice the moon. A waxing gibbous. ‘Hello moon!’ I am not alone. Not by a longshot. I never am.

The smile is still stuck on my face, lips parted, teeth showing. A man jogs toward me from the left. Wish I had my running shoes. I look up and smile at him as he passes. He doesn’t smile back, yet I keep on smiling. I remember a time when I would have judged him for not being friendly and I would have dropped my smile. Now why would I do that to myself?

Lights begin to emerge from the dusky horizon. The breeze is delightful. I notice a paw print to my left. I wonder if I will be able to find my bumprint so that I can sit in exactly the same spot next week. I laugh as I realize I will sit in the perfect spot wherever it may be. Maybe in a camp chair. I’ll just have to wait and see.

‘Love you, world. See ya around.’ I am moved to bow to and from my spot, as if I am in the zendo of my former community and realize that now, the whole Earth is my zendo. Yay!!

I kiss my hand, raise it to the sky and wiggle my fingers, still smiling, grateful. A shout out to the creator.



Wednesday, March 4, 2009

The Next Right Thing


Before Jackie was born, Dad, Mom, Sherry and me.  Dad's been gone for eleven years now.

     Byron Katie says she doesn't make decisions anymore.  She just waits and then notices that she does certain things instead of other things.  I used to drive myself crazy over needing to make the 'right' decision, analyzing pro and cons, being pulled in multiple directions as if I'm being drawn and quartered, fearing I'd choose wrong.  Some of the themes studied at San Francisco Zen Center that have been helpful to me in this regard are as follows: 
  1. stay in the present (with a strong sitting meditation practice that grounds you in the body, helping to get you of of your deluded mind), 
  2. stay in "I don't know" mind - out of the 'I know terrible things are going to happen if I make the wrong decision and I'll suffer for the rest of my life' mind (oh, the drama!), 
  3. honor your own practice, your own path - staying out of comparing mind and just start continually right where you are with, as Cheri Huber (contemporary Zen teacher) says, 'conscious compassionate awareness.'  Study of the Genjo Koan has helped me with this concept.
     In mid-January, right before I went to Great Vow Zen Monastery near Portland for a retreat, Oregon, I received an email from my sister Sherry.  I had been traveling up and down the West Coast since I left Tassajara Zen Mountain Center in July due to the impending wildfires (which did indeed sweep through the complex which was saved thanks to the efforts of all beings).  I had planned when I left Tassajara, to move to Great Vow at the start of the New Year and live and practice there for one year.  I had interviewed with the abbot in October.   The good questions posed by Hogen Bays and the adventures and experiences that followed made me unsure what would be best for the 'me' that was actually showing up in January.  The Life Vows Sesshin or retreat was the last scheduled thing on my list.  I was compiling a list of options and continually harboring concern about my mother who was displaced by Hurricane Ike in late summer.  As I spoke with Kojun on my way up to Oregon, I was still considering residency there.  And then came the email.  It was an invitation to a birthday party for my newest nephew, Jacob, on February 7th in Houston.  And just like that - click - I thought, 'I'm going home.'  My body responded with a very calm, 'yes.'  No stress, no 'buts, and no real idea of what that would look like or how long I would stay.  No fearful knot in my stomach.  All I had to do, in the advice of my musician friend, Daniel Nahmod, was to do the next 'right' thing.

Me, Sherry and Jackie.  Mom made the dresses Sherry and I wore.  And I loved that bunny necklace with the bunny ears that moved.

    I left Great Vow with a list of vows and a peaceful heart and started driving home, arriving just in time for the birthday party.  I still don't really know what I am doing here or how long I will stay, yet I know this is where I am supposed to be right now and that's enough.  
   SFZC Abbot Steve Stuckey says family practice is advanced practice and I have definitely been diligently practicing.  A zen koan says 'Don't go home.  They will call you by your name.'  And sure enough, I am back to being Linda instead of the 'Daline' I've been since I was nineteen or the 'Chirin' I've been for the past year or so or the 'Pixie' that my friend Matteo has been calling me since October.  
      Who am I indeed?.  I certainly have ideas and concepts about who I am and how much I have grown in the last decade, especially the last five years.  And it is interesting to just come back home and be 'nothing special', just Linda.  Very humbling and also a bit of a relief.  For a long time, I believed a story that I would NEVER move back to Texas, that there was nothing there for me, no like-minded people.  I was afraid I would morph into some narrowminded, arrogant, overweight Texan and not even recycle anymore.  I was afraid I would lose something that I thought I had gained.  But I don't believe that anymore.  
    I am not interested in living in fear.  I am interested in living in vow.  I have noticed fear arising, especially around money since things have not worked out exactly as planned and I find myself in a hotel indefinitely.  And so, I thought this might be a good time to review the vows I elucidated while in retreat at Great Vow in January: 
  • I vow to stop holding myself back, to stop making excuses, to stop believing limiting thoughts that keep me small and timid:  I vow to be big and bold.  (That was my New Year's resolution crafted with the help of Claude Stein and the Natural Singers workshop participants at Esalen Institute in Big Sur, CA.)
  • I vow to be a vessel through which love flows freely.
  • I vow to scrutinize lovingly every aspect of my life so that I may bring all my actions fo body, speech and mind into alignment with Truth.
  • I vow to bear witness to the Earth, hear her cries for help, and respond appropriately.  Without hesitation.
  • I vow to cultivate a solid, consistent lay practice to anchor me so that I may withstand any storm fearlessly; so that I do not close  my heart to anyone or anything.
  • I vow to be of service:  this life is not mine.
  • I vow to love myself so completely, accepting everything past and present, so harmoniously that there is no fear to project onto the future and all I can see is LOVE.
  • I vow to be patient with myself and others, trusting that everything is unfolding exactly as it should, perfectly on time.
  • I vow to love like the wind...indiscriminately (the motto that arose for me during Byron Katie's School for the Work).  I vow to inquire deeply into my thoughts to find out what I am believing that is not true.  My job will not be done until I can look into the eyes of everyone and see Buddha, see God.
  • I vow to practice continuously, endlessly.
  • I vow to offer 'my' gifts to the world unselfishly.  They do not belong to me.
    In the spirit of Vow #1, I just signed up with Sonicbids to be able to enter music contests and maybe !?!? get some gigs.  Craziness!!!  Here's the info I posted about myself - those of you who know me, please offer feedback - especially those who have heard me sing!

Having crawled her way out of the depths of despair, the Pixie now bursts forth with songs of love lost and found, inner strength and humility, strumming her six string with a sparkle in her eye, a smile on her lips and a heart as big as Texas.

Born in Texas, the Pixie grew up on the 'South Coast', yet set out for the West early and is deeply influenced and inspired by the deserts and mountains as well as the wide open ocean. Having rejected country as a child, she now loves to sing with a twang as well as with soulful angst. Her influences include Edie Brickell, the Indigo Girls, Traci Chapman, India Arie, Alanis Morissette, Dido, the Eagles, John Denver, Pink, No Doubt and Daniel Nahmod. Through her soulful, honest, open heart, The Pixie shares her journey through the darkness and delusion into the light. In her song, Loud and Clear, you will see that journey take place before your very eyes. With nothing left to lose, and everything she needs, The Pixie sprinkles her pixiedust indiscriminately, loving like the wind. Be careful of looking deeply into her sparkling blue eyes; you just might fall in.

Original songs: Loud and Clear, Moon Over Mickey D's, In This Moment, We Tried, My Friend Paula, Living in my Truck, Baby Dragon Face Down in the Mud
Covers: Thank You by Dido, Kid Fears by the Indigo Girls, Behind the Wall by Traci Chapman



     Let the unfolding continue!!





Thursday, February 26, 2009

Everything and the Two Umbrellas

All clouds arise and pass away, even the darkest ones.

EVERYTHING AND THE TWO UMBRELLAS
Copyright (c) Linda Daline Limbaugh 2008

Two umbrellas outside the door,
A whirl of emotion,
What do I need?
Not him. Not for them not to be.
What do I need and who can give it to me but me?
What do I need?
To be whole? To be empty?
I gassho to the closed door with the two umbrellas and carry my selves forward.

What do I need?
Who is this I that needs?
The rain falls down.
On me. On who?
What looks up and who falls down?

Two umbrellas outside the door.
I enter the hot 108 degree water.
The steam rises.
No tear arises this time.
Just a dull ache. Heavy. Heaviness.
Where do I feel it? Can I feel my body?
Can I feel my breath? Whose breath?

Two umbrellas outside the door.
What do I need?
Not him. Not for them not to be.
What, then, do I need?
To be whole? To be empty?
What do I need and who can give it to me but me?
What do I need but the knowledge that I do not lack.

The rain falls down on my naked body.
I step into the warm pool.
The rain dances on my head, dances on the surface of the water.
Leaping. Can I leap?
Is there something beside the pain?
Can I find the one who is not hurting?
Can I find the joy?
Can I find the middle of this painjoy without losing my way?
What is there to lose?
What way and what was it that I was looking for?

Two umbrellas outside the door.
I step into the warm, dark room, water dripping slowly from the ceiling.
The air – does it embrace or does it oppress?
Same air – what changes?
I lie back on the wet, wooden bench.
A drop of water lands on my right eye, surprisingly, and I smile,
The thick, warm air covering me like a soft blanket.
What do I need that I do not have?

I walk down to the creek.
It rushes at me, roaring.
What do I need? I roar back.

It just keeps rushing.

I bow deeply.

The rain falls down on me.
I fall on the rain.
Who falls? What is rained on?
We fall down.
We meet.
We are.
We.

I plunge back into the 108 degree water,
leaving the glass door open to the rain,
to me,
to us.
I reach out my arm,
my hand is open.
The fingers curl naturally.
Can I feel the,
yes,
I can feel the rain falling,
feel falling,
feel.
I lean back, the sky is white.
Can I see – what can I see?
How far can my eyes reach?
The rain falls down on me,
It reaches me.

Two umbrellas still outside the door.
Something still stirs inside.
What do I need?
I gassho again, and, once inside my room, miss my watch.
Have to go back again,
past the two umbrellas still outside the door.

How many times down this same path?
Thoughts make deep trails in the ground.
What do I need?

May they have all the time they need to find out if they can meet,
they with their two umbrellas,
behind the closed door.
If they meet, the dharma filling their bodies and minds
– if they open each other’s way,
Then I am more than the everything I was before
– more joy in the world.
We are all more than the everything we already are.

Everything and the two umbrellas.