low tide
by bam
at the dawn of this new year, i am drawn into a particular quiet, the quiet of entering in slowly, and deliberately. i am turning pages, pulling taut the threads of a thick new wrap, stirring onions and garlics and soups on the stove. i am looking out windows, with little inclination to step into the misty fog of the morning. i am content. content to be quiet. content to be still.
i am, you might say, at low tide.
and i’ve no desire to barge in on your own quietudes and stillness. and so i am simply leaving a few traces here, gatherings this week has brought me. i find myself more inclined these days to bring you the wisdom of others. i am holding this space for the days when i will have something worth saying, but for now, my offerings come from the wonders of others. it’s my hope and my prayer that you find here a little nourishment for the week. i’m inclined to think that my most generous offerings these days come not from my own well, but from reading and looking and living through the days with an eye toward deep curiosity and a never-ending sense of the wonder that always seems to find its way in to our most closely-held nooks and our crannies…
i begin with a book, a book mailed to me by my oldest best friend in the world, the one who long ago all but scooped me off the floor and propped me up, and spooned goodness into me, and shone sunlight on me till i ripened and pinkened, and has never ever let go. she’s the one i call when my heart hurts, and when i can barely breathe. over the years we’ve woven a lifeline that stretches from here on the shores of lake michigan to her house along the pacific coast. she and i share a love for quirky artists and writers and painters of marvelous colors. and she sent me this week maira kalman’s latest: women holding things, described as “a love song to women and the many things they hold, literally and metaphorically.” maira kalman is the madcap artist and illustrator who lights up pages of the new yorker, and lately has been making books so bright and beautiful and hilarious and heart-melting you might want to devote a whole shelf just to maira. you almost might wish to invite her to tea. but it would have to be tea in a room with armchairs covered in eye-popping colors. and you’d need to wear leggings in vivacious stripes and a skirt made of patchworks of peacock-hued threads. and you might serve pomegranates sprinkled on white peaches in winter. because maira seems like a someone who would like the most exotic fruit you could find. and if you served petit fours they would come swirled with coils of sugary buttercream in rose-petal colors. because maira seems like someone who has never colored inside the lines, and never turns down a dollop of whimsy.
and what i love so very much about maira is that you are merrily turning pages, pages so bright and colorful you almost need sunglasses, and then you come to a page that just about stops your heart for a second. a page like this:
but maira is always maira, so page after page is simply marvelous to look at, and absorb in all its whimsy. pages like these (woman holding a pink ukulele under a giant cherry tree, woman holding shears, woman holding red balloons, fruits and jam):




Don’t think the garden loses its ecstasy in winter.
It’s quiet, but the roots are down there riotous.
Rumi
and then, in a maria popova posting about how to beat back a sense of helplessness in a world of so much suffering, i ran across this from the musician nick cave:
The everyday human gesture is always a heartbeat away from the miraculous — [remember] that ultimately we make things happen through our actions, way beyond our understanding or intention; that our seemingly small ordinary human acts have untold consequences; that what we do in this world means something; that we are not nothing; and that our most quotidian human actions by their nature burst the seams of our intent and spill meaningfully and radically through time and space, changing everything… Our deeds, no matter how insignificant they may feel, are replete with meaning, and of vast consequence, and… they constantly impact upon the unfolding story of the world, whether we know it or not.
i found it a profound burst of a reminder that every little move we make matters. every little one. only nick cave says it beautifully: “the everyday human gesture is always a heartbeat away from the miraculous.” it’s a very good thing to tuck in your front pocket at the start of the year, to remember that every single day we hold the possibility of being makers of the miraculous. all it takes is a whole lot of love, and a wheelbarrow full of humility, enough to be willing to turn the other cheek, and love as you would be loved…
and, finally, a friend i love sent me this, and it took my breath away, and i am leaving it here, in case you needed to read this very thing. and maybe it will take your breath away, too.

i studied lots and lots of elisabeth kubler-ross in nursing school, but i don’t think i ever came across this. and it’s so true, and so beautiful. “beautiful people do not just happen.” bless the beautiful people who populate our every day with their everyday gestures that hold the possibility of becoming the miraculous.
who’s inspiring you in your new year?
p.s. there are a bevy of birthdays upon us here at the end of the year’s first week: dear friends of the chair mary jo and mary beth, may your days be bursting with the miraculous, large and small….
and i’m reminded that today, january 6, is epiphany, which in ireland is sometimes celebrated as Women’s Christmas, a tradition we’d be wise to take up. it’s described by the brilliant artist Jan Richardson thusly: “some folks celebrate Epiphany (January 6) as Women’s Christmas. Originating in Ireland, where it is known as Nollaig na mBan, Women’s Christmas began as a day when the women set aside time to enjoy a break and celebrate together at the end of the holidays.” you can find your own copy of her wonderful at-home retreat PDF by clicking to her “sanctuary of women” webpage here. it’s free but her artistry and her soulfulness might stir you to drop a figurative dime in her coffer.
merry blessed women’s christmas, and holy new year….
What a gift, one I am promptly sharing with my two daughters. Your blessing arrived with perfect timing; your words a gentle invitation to settle into this day. Thank you dear friend! Joannie
tis a gift to me to imagine a mother sharing with her daughters. blessed, gentle new year, dear dear joannie. xox
❤️🩹
What a wonderful gathering of musings. Thank you for this lovely gift to start the day!
i seem to love to gather things. i tuck away morsels all week. it reminds me how when i was little i made “newspapers” for our neighbors, up and down our winding little street through the trees….as an artist — though she works in a whole different palette — you might already be entranced by maira’s rainbow of color and her whimsical capture of the soul of her subjects….
I love Maira Kalman’s work. Have to go looking for that latest book.
BAM, I bless ‘the beautiful people who populate my life’ including YOU! And thanks for the birthday shout-out, fellow Capricorn! xo
happy birthday eve, doll!!!!!!! singing you into the night…..
First of all, a belated Happy Birthday to you, my dear friend and amazing woman! So blessed to have you back in my life again and to share the same birthday month! Each Friday I look forward to reading about what’s been on your mind and to what I may learn from you. Last week you introduced me to preparing a roux, an important part of creating a unique mac and cheese recipe that I’ll soon be preparing for my grandkids. This week you introduced me to Maira Kalman. Is it just me, or do you agree that the “Woman Holding Things” looks a lot like your mama? A woman who is sophisticated, or maybe classy is a better word, as well as quietly observant, intelligent and self confident? It also struck me that the Elisabeth Kubler-Ross poem could have been written about you, Barbie. And I’ll bet that the friend who sent it to you feels the same way. Many blessings to you throughout the year ahead, beautiful woman that you are!
dearest KIH, i don’t know that i saw the resemblance in my mama and maira’s woman holding things, but i shall look again! delighted you’re finding little morsels in my gatherings. i’m thinking your bd is in the 20s but you have to give me another clue. hope FL is being kind, the winds warm but not too warm, the sands soothing to your toes. and i too am glad for our 45-year reunion. oh lordy. don’t do the math!!!
Good memory recalling the 20’s! It’s 1/23. Florida is delightful these days-high 60’s and low 70’s temperature wise and hardly any humidity. We’re flying north to Chicago tomorrow to attend the Cubs Convention, something we’ve been doing for about 15 years. I’d invite Teddy to join us if he happened to be in town because he’d love it! I’ll send you some photos to pass on to him.
soooo sweet! they must treat you like royalty at that all-weekend, all-Cub convention! TK says thanks so so much for even thinking of him! and have a blast!
I was in nursing school in the mid 70’s. A brand spanking new RN to be, with high ideals of what nursing would be. White uniforms, with caps, of course, professional relationships with all of my colleagues, perfect outcomes for all of my patients. Then one day, the “Death and Dying” nurse came to speak. From that day forward, I was changed forever. I became one to stand up for myself and especially my patients. One who would buck the system at every turn to make changes that were needed. It costs me a job over the 45 years of nursing, but I felt empowered by this woman who was willing to do anything for her patients. Anything to make their last days on this earth as spectacular as she could. Her writings continue to inspire me, even after I’ve hung up my nursing cap.
PS, I wore that cap on my last day of work, as I retired in 2020 amidst the start of Covid 19. Lucky I could find it after all of those years in scrubs.
Thank you for your insights!!
wow. i was in nursing school in the mid to late 70s and EKR was a superstar. i can only imagine the impact it would have made to see her in person. where were you in nursing school? i love that you wore your cap the day you retired!!!! i wonder where in the world my old cap is. i know i never threw it out…….(i do still have my stethoscope, which i pulled out every time my boys were sick, to gain a little cred!!!)
Was born and raised in York, PA and went to nursing school there as well.
Once a nurse always a nurse!
that’s what i say! only the licensing board thinks otherwise!!! i went to school in milwaukee, practiced in chicago. children’s. sigh. will love it forever. xox