The Things We Come To Know

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Grandma Johanna on her wedding day, November 5, 1924

In late winter, I sift through cupboards and closets for items to give away, and tackle indoor projects I can finish before the garden calls (and doesn’t end the call till September). This past month, I completed a project I’d put off, both because of its immensity and because of the hours of exercise and rest I was forced to give my healing knee. I know, too, that I’d delayed facing this task because of the emotional journey it would invite, the memories I’d encounter, and the long hours of reflection such experiences deserve. These weren’t sad or painful memories, but when we travel to the past we never who will be there waiting …the older I get, the more the winnowing projects that entangle my emotions become a gathering of ghosts, and our time together is bittersweet. I miss the lived presence of these people in my life. It’s easier at times, to avoid the journey.

I don’t mean that going through my clothes or household items is challenging or drama-laden, but when it comes to sorting through family bits and pieces–in this case, boxes of my childhood dolls and the finely-crafted clothing my Grandma Hannah made for them (and a few dresses she made for me)–the winnowing accrues layers and layers of meaning. Considering beginning such jobs is sometimes too much of a muchness. So I postpone and focus on simple chores that I can cross off the endless list.

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But my younger brother has a new granddaughter, and girls are rare in our family. I knew it was time to pass on these lovely pieces of our family heritage, to gather them, clean and press and mend them, and to likewise gather photos and write their stories down for my sweet grand-niece to one day (I hope) know and cherish.

I was able to locate photos of dresses Grandma Hannah had made for my mother and her sister: the wedding dress they shared, the maid and matron-of-honor dresses they wore for each other’s weddings and in the wedding party of their elder brother…and then I took photos showing how all those fabrics had been used in later years to create these beautiful doll dresses, too.

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This doll is wearing a dress made from the soft green silk dresses Hannah made for Mama and her sister to wear in their older brother’s wedding.
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Grandma Hannah made these beautiful doll dresses from the velvet dress and wedding gown she made for her daughters years before. Mama looks so darling in her velvet dress!

When I was about 8, I also received a handmade quilt from Grandma, who used the pattern called Sunbonnet Girl, and it features so many other fabrics I recall seeing in Grandma’s creations over the years that studying it is like walking through a hall of memories. My mother wisely stored the quilt till I was grown, and now it decorates our guest bed. I sent its story on to baby Abigail Joyce and her parents, too, but–for now–I’m keeping the quilt with me. Just for now.

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And my original Raggedy Ann is also staying with me. Grandma and sweet Pa Louie gave her to me when I was a newborn, and that was the day Hannah suggested my parents call me Kitty. My mother had to give Raggedy so many new faces and yarn-hair makeovers over the years that there’s not too much left of the original doll, but the “I Love You” stamped over her heart. My favorite dress for Raggedy Ann was too faded and worn to send on to Abigail, but I patched the tears, and dressed Raggedy in it once again (with the original matching pantaloons), and my first darling will stay with me. No more facelifts; she’s perfect just as she is. We’ll both be 67 in a couple of months, so I think we’ll accept our faces for what they are and be glad that our hearts still share mutual love for each other. We share one story; how could we ever part?

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So, off went the boxes of carefully wrapped dolls and dresses, and my handmade clothes with all their stories. I felt like I was dropping my childhood off at the Post Office. But I also felt relieved that the job was completed and that Grandma’s Hannah’s artistry and story are safely in the hands of those who I know will cherish and protect them.

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Me, in all my bald brilliance, with my Raggedy Ann, and in one of the dresses I sent to Abigail.

What I did not expect to derive from this project was such a deep resonance of the love Hannah must have felt for me. Now that I’m older than my grandmother was when she created these works of art, I’m stunned to realize how amazingly beautiful and detailed they are. The stitching, embroidery, trim, puffed sleeves, smocking, crocheted lace for edging hems and pantaloons, tiny buttons and snaps…it really left me in awe of the time and care she put into these. And then I found photos of the dresses she made for me, too. My goodness, they were beautiful; the photos don’t do them justice.

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This looking back with new eyes is a gift of aging. Of course, I objectively knew I was loved by my grandparents and I appreciated their gifts, but what a revelation to witness the talent and expertise Hannah evidenced in making all of these doll clothes, to imagine her delight at my own joy in receiving them, and to recall the years I played with them developing my own creativity and imagination. This longer view gave me such deep pleasure and summoned a far greater gratitude than I likely offered her as a child. What does a child know of hours sacrificed in love? How can a child perceive the value of handmade treasures?

I felt my grandmother’s love so profoundly during the days I worked to restore her handiwork and get all of my childhood dolls ready to share. I felt her presence with every piece I mended and pressed. And, in preparing these gifts for Hannah’s great-great-granddaughter, I felt the ties that bind me to my mother, my grandmother, and further back, through all the creative, loving women I follow in my time, and how my life leads to Abigail’s, and beyond. A procession of women trailing their gifts and love through time.

A chore that seemed daunting became a lesson about the things we come to know as we age and sift through memories in the company of ghosts. When we come to know again, and with greater understanding and wisdom, how deeply we’ve been loved by others, it reignites that love’s power and light for us, no matter how old we are. And then we know our one important task is to pass it on.

© Copyright of all visual and written materials on The Daily Round belongs solely to Catherine M. O’Meara, 2011-Present. Unauthorized use is strictly prohibited, without the author’s written approval. No one is authorized to use Catherine O’Meara’s copyrighted material for material gain without the author’s engagement and written permission. All other visual, written, and linked materials are credited to their authors. Thank you, and gentle peace

When Things I’ve Missed Return

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The sandhill cranes returned this week,
in graceful formations that cut through the fog
and gray skies. Surprised, I heard their muted
trumpet calls and turned to welcome them.
The sandhill cranes returned, and robins, rain,
and willow green, too, and tulips poking through,
and like one who waits for the sight of a soldier
descending the hill towards home, when things
I’ve missed return again, the sharp pain of yearning
releases a thousand blossoms of something like hope
to bloom in the world I still imagine possible: peace,
perhaps–families sure of their footing, and safe,
the integrity of justice clean and certain as breath.
I bow to our Earth, that still takes time to renew
love’s promises, delivering old friends, flying back
like memories of better days, sounding good news
to hold in my heart against the coming storms.

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© Copyright of all visual and written materials on The Daily Round belongs solely to Catherine M. O’Meara, 2011-Present. Unauthorized use is strictly prohibited, without the author’s written approval. No one is authorized to use Catherine O’Meara’s copyrighted material for material gain without the author’s engagement and written permission. All other visual, written, and linked materials are credited to their authors. Thank you, and gentle peace.

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The Rare, Tiny Flower, by Kitty O’Meara, with illustrations by Quim Torres, arriving (we hope) June 14

The Beautiful and True

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Traveling a weary week to Poland,
backpacks stuffed with the necessary
and absurd. (Logic is too much to expect
when the world has gone mad.) Homes
destroyed, the roads gone, too, and the
neighbors? Who can say? “I don’t know
where I live anymore,” wept one old man
trudging through debris to nothing he wanted,
or knows, or chose; still, plodding on and away,
through the freezing night, into dark mystery.

Mothers and children, crammed in bright
stations, on benches and floors; looking
back towards yesterday, their holy ground,
and forward to questions without answers,
looking to their phones, staring into nothing,
looking to bear what they cannot bear to see.
Yet holding her child close to her heart, a woman says,
“I’m uncertain what is next, but I know we will return.”

Here were communities, watered and thriving, now
uprooted, connections left to desiccate, unearthed,
drying in the heat of depravity’s flames. Husbands,
fathers, brothers, sons. Men who owned their lives
and wore them comfortably, as students, engineers,
teachers, doctors, farmers, (only just preparing spring’s
planting), have stayed behind to fight for that which
they are, and will not yield, the beautiful and true.

A boy in soldier’s clothes comforts a child,
then bandages a woman’s head. He fumbles,
embarrassed by a camera sharing his clumsiness
5000 miles away, but he takes such gentle care in this
moment and the next. On Valentine’s Day, a month and
a lifetime past, he walked to classes and wondered if
the one he loved might love him, too. Today, an AK-47
hangs from his shoulder and he wears a helmet too large
for his adolescent head. How do the beautiful and true survive?

A tiny grandmother, babushkaed and bold, safe in Krakow,
smiled into the camera, “The bombs were everywhere;
the enemy shooting from behind every tree. But I am here!
I am alive! And that is good! Yes, that is very good!”

Where do these people find such strength,
the courage to leave; to part; to stay? People who
hug, and grieve, and stand to face the enemy,
unarmed except with brave defiance and wit; who
are these people of such fierce fire, too strong
to surrender their hope or joy? Too wise to believe
any despoiler could own their beauty and truth?

“He may destroy our homes;” one said,
“he may steal our land and believe
himself rich, but he would be deluded.
He will never possess our hearts or our
spirits. His evil only makes them stronger.
They will endure; they will remain and rise,
green and wild, beautiful and true;
they will grow and live forever.”

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Dedicated, with all my love, to the people of Ukraine.

© Copyright of all visual and written materials on The Daily Round belongs solely to Catherine M. O’Meara, 2011-Present. Unauthorized use is strictly prohibited, without the author’s written approval. No one is authorized to use Catherine O’Meara’s copyrighted material for material gain without the author’s engagement and written permission. All other visual, written, and linked materials are credited to their authors. Thank you, and gentle peace.

We, the People

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Where I was two years ago.

Looking at the world today, it seems clear that choosing the co-creative and healing path feeds life; choosing to ignore these invitations, to live from one’s shadow and to deny what impedes our ability to connect and love, leads to destruction and death.

I’ve been encouraged by, and am grateful for, the many people who agreed with the choices and actions I suggested as paths we could follow during our time of isolation, and have used their pandemic years (!) to dig deeper, evolve, and create. We, the people, are the miracle the Earth needs; ours is the love that can save it.

Gentle Peace to the world and to your hearts. May our leaders listen; may they be wise, calm, co-creative, and constructive. May they think differently and lead us to peace.

May we heal.

May we heal.

May we heal.

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© Copyright of all visual and written materials on The Daily Round belongs solely to Catherine M. O’Meara, 2011-Present. Unauthorized use is strictly prohibited, without the author’s written approval. No one is authorized to use Catherine O’Meara’s copyrighted material for material gain without the author’s engagement and written permission. All other visual, written, and linked materials are credited to their authors. Thank you, and gentle peace.

The Power to Witness

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In times of crisis and loss, when some humans behave as monsters and most humans are powerless to effect change, it is natural, comforting, and–for many reasons–imperative that we return to our ancient stories of love and transformation. The Lenten Journey, the path from the soul’s winter to its utterly opposite flowering in spring, is one such story; it is the Christian story many of us have been steeped in since our childhoods, but other belief systems teach from similar journeys of the spiritual cycle flowing from death to new life.

The tragedy facing Ukrainians and Russians confronts each of us with questions we have to answer before we may pass through the door to transformation: Who are we to each other? Why are we here? What do we do when evil challenges our better natures? How do we respond to suffering? Does love have boundaries?

The answers may differ; there is never only one course of action with which to respond, but we know in our bones that to regress to our first impulse of returning violence, to answer murder with murder, to initiate vengeance upon the perpetrators of such horror is not the choice that alters the course of history for the better, or that corresponds to our hearts’ commitment to healing and the evolution of our spirits.

When times are peaceful, it’s easy to say, “Love is the answer,” but it’s quite a different pronouncement when we witness suffering at this level and feel powerless to help.

I think of the Lenten story, of the absolute innocence and peace-filled heart of the hero, and how his light challenged the dark hearts of those in power. “Oh, no,” they must have thought, “if everyone accepted that all are equal and all are welcomed, the entire hierarchical empire would collapse!” The Prophet shook their lies into the open air; he called forth the truth of their greed and cruelty into the collective consciousness, exposing them for the charlatans and unmitigated oppressors they really were. He pulled aside the curtains and revealed how their silken splendor cloaked the brittle pillowed thrones of puny thugs.

He had to be killed not because he was evil, but because he was pure goodness. And because he spoke the brilliant, simple truth, upsetting the shoddy scaffolding of ornamented lies that supported the power of men dedicated to their own egos’ desires and nothing else.

Ukraine poses such a threat to Putin’s tiny, dark heart, and he cannot see for the light these people shine in his eyes, which is often the case for one who has chosen to live his life in darkness.

And us? What can we do in this time of such magnificent technology that we’re all instantly and continuously brought to the foot of this cross?

In the Lenten Story, the Innocent Victim’s beloveds were powerless to stop his suffering. Some fled from the scene or betrayed their friendship, which means their love. (Friend is derived from the Old English word meaning to love, to favor. Despots are friendless. Bowing sycophants are not friends.)

But those who allowed Love to lead them beyond their urges to flee, deny, hate, or despair, stood; they just stood and witnessed the suffering, loved the victim through his dying, watched the violence and cruelty done to his body, heard his cries of pain, remained through his final out-breath, carried and entombed his tortured body, and went home, broken in spirit, to grieve.

That is not the story’s ending, but it is where we are now, standing in the Suffering, witnessing the expanse of misery that hate-filled humans can cause. Indeed, in our time, one unloved, unchecked human can destroy the planet with his hatred.

And I, with my love-filled life, feel powerless, powerless to alter this.

And then I consider the spiraling path from Advent to Easter, from birth through death to wider rebirth, and am mindful that this road will always, always take us through suffering on our way to transformation, if we seek the wisdom every part of the journey offers.

The word witness comes from the idea that to observe a thing and understand it deeply allows us to “testify” to its existence and substance. We saw this; we were there; we remained present and learned again what humans steeped in hatred can do to other humans. And how love resists.

We don’t like this part of the journey. We often reject it and so add to our shadow’s burden. Advent requires such intolerable patience and Lent forces our soul to confront itself. “Ummm, no,” we think. “Please, let’s just jump to presents, to flowers and feasts and chocolate.”

Christmas and Easter are fun and delicious, filled with light and delight. But their real gifts have to be earned. Our flaws and destructive habits can be named and detached from our egos. We can sacrifice desire on behalf of our own and others’ well-being. “Look at yourself,” is Lent’s rugged–and deepening–invitation. “Look again.” First, we change; then we see that Christmas and Easter are always here. Transformation allows deeper and clearer vision; it lifts veils of delusion.

To evolve, we need to be awake through every lesson, every moment of the cycle, and develop the powers that guide us through those times that are dark and frightening, those times that bring the mirror too close. We must bear self-scrutiny; we must witness our weaknesses as well as our strengths. How will we heal if we can’t identify our wounds?

In this moment, there is the need for us to summon our power to witness the reality of hate, which exists in each of us and can only be healed through our choice to surrender it to the greater power of love, or there will be no Easter, no transformation, no rebirth.

The entire Lenten Story would lose such depth without those few who stayed beside the Transforming One and witnessed.

We can choose to be present and witness the evil; witness the suffering, the courage, the strength of those in the path of Putin’s dark storm of self-hatred. Witness those who do not surrender to this hatred and fear; witness those leaders whose clarity and resolve withstand the urge to lash out and instead guide the world through this time of dark suffering and back to balance. Stand and witness; suffer beside the victims in spirit; offer love and any possible aid; offer support to our leaders; offer the loving-kindness and the balance of our own spirit, but witness and do not turn away.

We’re told that Love works together in all things for our good, if we love fully. And that means that when we are powerless to stop others from suffering, our power is to remain present in love, to witness and remember what we have seen, and to testify, sharing all the ways love brought us through to a new and fragile Easter.

Take great and gentle care of yourselves. Feed your spirits. Create. Never surrender your hope. Be kind. Witness. Love.

Ways to help Ukraine.

Also, we can help those in our community who cannot withstand rising energy costs: Ride-share. Bike. Walk. Work from home. Donate to food banks and resale shops. Volunteer. Contact lawmakers to renew green energy commitments and funding rather than rush to more fracking and drilling: NOW is the time to transform how we treat the Earth as well as each other. Fight for better public transportation. Convert to solar power. Advocate for affordable electric vehicles. Reduce consumption of energy. Reduce consumption of anything mindlessly purchased to fill holes that can only be filled by love-in-action. Wear a damn sweater. (Jimmy Carter was right. About most things.) Be safe and well. 💕🌸💕

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© Copyright of all visual and written materials on The Daily Round belongs solely to Catherine M. O’Meara, 2011-Present. Unauthorized use is strictly prohibited, without the author’s written approval. No one is authorized to use Catherine O’Meara’s copyrighted material for material gain without the author’s engagement and written permission. All other visual, written, and linked materials are credited to their authors. Thank you, and gentle peace.