hummingbird wisdom, continued
by bam
six months ago, my dear and longtime friend mary ellen sullivan died. she was a writer, a chronicler of joy, i called her when i sat down to write her obituary, trying to distill her essence into a few short sentences and paragraphs that swept across the arc of a life too short. a month or so after she died, i found out she’d written me into her will, appointed me the keeper of her “creative work.” it’s a mantle i accept with heavy heart. a week ago, on a hot august afternoon, i met her brother in her emptied-out apartment, and he handed me boxes and boxes and boxes, her creative work, in all its iterations. it was perhaps the heaviest load of papers i’ve ever tried to lift. i didn’t wait long to open the lid of one of the boxes, to lift pages, to begin to read, to inhale the story of a life i knew well, a story told this time in mary ellen’s own words. i all but felt her beside me, or sitting across the table. i knew the intonations, the emphases of every single sentence. i knew she’d tiptoe into my dreams. i knew she’d left wisdom that i was to unearth, to not let die along with her.
night after night, i pulled up to the kitchen table, not far from the screen door, where the breeze blew in, not far from the night sounds, the buzzsaw of cicada, the chirp of the crickets. i’d pile a stack of journals and notebooks and paper-clipped papers to my left, papers lifted from the boxes that waited in the dark of another room, the load of mary ellen’s boxes.
it was, i tell you, like sitting down with a dear friend, pulling in close enough to brush knees against knees. it was as if i’d said, “so tell me your story,” and thus she began, in whispers. i’d known these chapters in real time, and here i was, reading, hearing the whole of it in details sometimes so intimate i closed the book and tucked it aside. i promise you my tender heart is guiding me through what’s mine to shepherd to light, and what’s best tucked away.
i read page after page from the writing classes she’d take, from the book about africa she’d long hoped to write, to publish.
and then i picked up this: two stapled pages, curled and yellowed at the edges, typed in a font from computers of long ago, early HP perhaps. i read the first sentence, and started to tremble. i had a hard time reading through tears, but this is what i began to read…
“If I were to die in five minutes, I would miss sleeping, and the warm wood of my apartment floor. I would miss talking to Barbie on the phone on Saturday mornings with a cup of coffee in my hands. I would miss running errands in the neighborhood and going for long hard runs after work when the air is clean and cool and gives you the shivers when your sweat starts to dry. I would miss the ocean most of all. Any ocean, any beach. The feel of wet sand between my toes and the waves breaking over my body and the sand going from warm to cool in the early evening when the sun starts to set and everyone but me and my family leave the beach and we just sit there and talk and read and watch the sand turn purple and the water a deep blue and the sky orange and very beautiful. I will miss running in the water and splashing so much that you might as well go swimming so you do.
“I’ll miss kissing a man for the first time…..”
and then, i tell you, i could barely read, the tears were falling so hard, so fast. (they are now, truth be told….) so i waited, and breathed, and wiped away the tears, and i looked back at the page, the page trembling in my hands by then, and i read the litany of things my friend would miss, if she were to die in five minutes, five minutes from the moment she wrote all those words. in fact, she died on march 13, 2016, far sooner than she’d ever imagined. she never thought the ovarian cancer would kill her. she fully intended to vanquish the cancer. to become someone who had had cancer.
but my friend who died, who wrote this litany in a writing class, an exercise titled, “death is the name,” who wrote this thinking death was the last thing that would ever happen to her (yes, i see the unintended word play, and i’m ignoring it), whose words i now inhaled half a year after she had died, she wrote that she’d miss her down comforter, and staying up late by herself and “the freedom the night gives.” she wrote that she’d miss the first taste of an expensive dinner, and the last gritty drop of a bottle of red wine. she wrote that she’d miss hot baths and getting lost in paperbacks.
her sentences grew more and more beautiful, the deeper she sank into the exercise, wrapping herself in the velvet cloak of worldly magnificence.
i was struck, hard and deep, by the simplicity of the litany. the depth and dimension of each pulsing joy, now taken away.
she made me think hard about how our lives are stitched of thin but mighty threads, glimmering delicate threads, threads we’d be wise to notice, to run our fingers across, again and again, for they’re what’s woven into the beautiful whole.
our lives, she made me realize once again, are a textured tapestry of heartache and joy, of blessing and softness and shadow and light, of everyday wonders that awake us to the moment, so the moments slow to a pause, so we behold each blessed minute of our awareness, our awakeness, so each hour is relished for the gift that it is. so not an hour goes by unnoticed.
“if i were to die in five minutes,” she wrote. and i read those words six months after she did. and thus, each word came to me as if shouted through a megaphone: be awake. pay attention. savor the blessed, the beautiful.
the warmth of the mug you hold in your palms? notice it. bless it. you’ll so miss it when it’s gone, when you’re gone.
a question and a challenge: what would you miss, what blessing upon blessing across the quotidian arc of your day? make a list, compile your litany. and then, pay closest attention today. and tomorrow. and the day after. my friend mary ellen would love you for that.
i titled this “hummingbird wisdom, continued,” because my friend mary ellen was all about the hummingbird. she wrote a blog called, on the wings of the hummingbird. and she once wrote these words explaining her captivation with the hover-winged bird:
“My favorite description of the hummingbird magic comes from Ted Andrews, who wrote the seminal book on animal totems called ‘Animal Speak.’ He says, ‘There is something inside the soul of all of us that wants to soar through sunbeams, then dance midair in a delicate mist, then take a simple bath on a leaf. There is something in our souls that wants to hover at beautiful moments in our lives, making them freeze in time. There is something in us that wants to fly backwards and savor once more the beautiful past. Some of us are just hummingbird people.’
“Guilty as charged.” — Mary Ellen Sullivan, May 30, 2012
Thank you for sharing your friend & your incredible gift of love Judy
Sent from Judy’s iPad
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you are so welcome…..the gift is all hers……
xoxo kisses
Sent from my iPhone
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xoxox hugs.
Dear Bam,
I’m so sorry to hear of the passing of your beautiful friend, Mary Ellen Sullivan. I love the title of her blog: On the Wings of the Hummingbird. She was a Gift to the world, sharing her beautiful outlook on finding joy every day.
I was deeply moved by Mary Ellen’s favorite description of hummingbird magic by Ted Andrews. “There is something in us that wants to fly backwards and savor once more the beautiful past. Some of us are just hummingbird people.” An angel’s voice has been silenced, but her words remain stitched in my heart.
dear ellen, yes, i too love that line. i can barely read it right now, without brimming over…..”savor once more the beautiful past.” oh, i pray she can see it all from where she is now….xoxoxo
I think of Mary Ellen as she was about this time last year. She was in-between-times of her illness and she was so blissfully happy. She was savoring every moment of her days. She glowed. She appreciated “time”, every second. It makes me smile to know she had that end of summer and glowing fall before cancer returned and altered time again.
Recently, someone gifted me with a CD called Einstein’s Dreams by Randall Williams. It is based on the book of same name by Alan Lightman. One song makes me think of Mary Ellen and I am posting it here for you all ~ The World Will End. We will, it will and there is lesson there, one that Mary Ellen knew by heart and in her words. Thanks as always for sharing Bam. Your gift for wording gratitude is a blessing I savor. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hFmUcNNdihg
ohhhhhhh, honey, i love this. i am soaking it in, over and over. spoken word. you have just handed me an idea: mary ellen’s words over music. oh, if i could borrow her voice — one more time.
the words of “the world will end” remind me vividly of the day after sept. 11, 2001, when we all oozed kindness because we didn’t know what was coming next, and we knew it was the only lifeline. and by the way, “the world will end” is about sept. 26; mary ellen’s birthday was sept. 27…..just a little coincidence…..
There are no coincidences! Love that bit of minutia. And yes….her words and music would be so perfect.
Hi, Bammy … I’m wordless. But you know my heart. xoxo
i do know your heart. which is one of the great joys — blessings — of my life. i was standing outside tonight (grilling in the dark, which is more of a challenge than you might imagine) and i looked up at the brightest star, and i whispered you a prayer. i love that wherever we are under heaven’s dome, we can look up, and find that spark of light that connects us…..xoxox
She was so wise to leave that great legacy to a kindred spirit and true friend.
Fifteen minutes after I posted that, sitting on the deck, I heard a buzzing sound around my head. As God is my witness, it was a hummingbird. The very first I ever saw in our yard.
she does that, i swear. (and thinking about it has me in tears….one of those days, i think, just one of those days….)
[…] it’s all this reading i’ve been reading of late. words from my dear friend, now gone. as i read her passages of hopes and dreams, i’d be a fool for not figuring out […]
Thank you…I lost a friend to breast cancer at the age of 58 last August. We had been high school friends, and I still can’t believe she is gone from the world. As the oldest girl in our cluster of neighboring homes, she was our leader, but none of us wanted her to lead the way for us in passing into the next world. Remembering good things about those who are gone is both sweet and sad, and does help me remember to more fully experience all the joyful moments of my day. Thank you.
i still can’t believe my two close friends who died last year are gone. their loss permeates my every day, hours and hours of every day. and i hear their insistent message to savor what is here now in the palm of my hands. i am so sorry you had to lose a friend you’d always turned to. and i thank you for coming by and sharing a bit of your heart. bless you.