Journals

“To bear responsibility without complaint” – Hayes Crapo when asked what it is to be a man

By on August 23, 2017
Thank you Great Aunt Connie for urging this old man to jot down a memory or two.

Another treasured find from summer travels back to my paternal family’s homeland – an actual journal entry made BY MY GRANDFATHER! Remember back when I gave him a journal to spill his stories into? Only to find it years later completely blank? Little did I know he had already exhausted himself way back in 1986 in two delicious pages.

Quite a writer herself, Great Aunt Connie composed a wonderfully inciting plea on the inside cover. 

Two years later, Grandpa began writing.

New details of his youth were not revealed here, but his familiar scratch was a blast of warm nostalgia and gratitude. The language and phrasing he uses create such a clear voice in my mind.

“The house where I was born – a two room house with a bare attic, the walls were papered with pages from magazines – especially the Saturday Evening Post – vestiges of which still remain after 60 odd years.”

Examining the Saturday Evening Post on the walls of his childhood home.

“The memories of life there are wonderful. The house was in a small canyon with vertical rock walls nearby, which provided a wealth of climbing and exploration for a boy my age. Since my brothers were at least 4 years younger or older then I, a great deal of my time was spent playing alone. This perhaps accounts for my tendency to be less than outgoing.”

The nearby vertical rock walls and a view of them through a pane-less window.

Having heard (and listened to!) grandfather’s stories throughout my life, it occurs to me now that there is part of his narrative that we share – solitude.

His was mostly unwanted, but it conditioned him to learn. He filled it with curiosity and adventure. His memory was strong and rich with detail, possibly from having the space and time to let experiences soak deeply into his subconscious. He admitted once that he didn’t prefer that life of isolation. It drove him to get out of the vast openness and onto college, the Navy, and finally engineering. He found a partner who perfectly matched his need for company and they created a marriage spanning 70 years, ending isolation in both their lives.

I crave solitude like water but get it far less than my appetite demands. The opportunity for long periods of solitude – isolation – aloneness – is difficult to come by when raising a child, but there are pools of rejuvenating seclusion if I can defer judgement of them for being too small.

My childhood imagination game was to think of what it would be like to fix up some little abandoned house tucked in the mountains somewhere and live there alone. Later, when I would drive across country for one reason or another (or none at all…) I would day dream about residing in a town population 123, or renovating one of the little Texas town squares and starting all over. Dove Creek, Colorado has made it into those fantasies many times. Moving there by myself and living in the town my Grandfather spent another chapter of his life in, and where I still have family. Surely those day dreams were fed by the stories I grew up with.

Who am I kidding. I live in the country now and find the isolation a bit much at times. I don’t need a life of solitude, but rather a practice of solitude. The same kind of practice my Grandfather used to build a life around numbers and deep thinking.

I reluctantly accept that for all my Grandfather was, he was not a writer. I’m fairly certain I won’t find my father’s longhand descriptions of his life experiences either. As much as I admire and aspire to be more like them in many ways, I gladly stand apart from them in this one. Thank you Grandpa – for your life of overcoming, moving through, working hard, playing plenty, shouldering your own responsibilities, and not complaining.

Two adults and four young boys lived in this tiny home.
Little house in the rugged west.

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Journals

“We should all have one person who knows how to bless us despite the evidence, Grandmother was that person to me.” –  Phyllis Theroux

By on April 26, 2017
Eye watering Japanese silk and paper journal from Kozo Arts (sadly now gone).

It doesn’t take much to turn my head when it comes to beautiful paper. The day I found myself drooling over hand made journals I truly didn’t need was the day I decided my grandparents definitely DID need them. Who wouldn’t want to fill a journal for their earnest granddaughter in their spare time?

I chose a handsome but simple leather journal for my grandpa and this lovely Kozo Arts journal for my grandmother. I found them last summer after the passing of my grandmother. Turns out they weren’t the journaling type. My grandpa didn’t write a word, and my grandmother made one entry. But it’s lovely and her loops of ink warm me up.

If you have ever been called ‘My Dearest Wonderful’ by your grandmother, then you know what it is to experience the sweetest feelings of love. I had the great fortune of enjoying many years of bonafide friendship with my grandmother. She spoke lovingly about her grandmother, and she infused her with a sense of self worth while growing up.

Before I knew my grandparents wouldn’t be filling books for me, I dedicated my first hand made journal to grandma as well. I was so thrilled to have actually made something both useful and beautiful, I had to give it to someone who would make it more precious.

The idea behind this journal was more of an exchange. I would write in it, send it to her and she would write back. The exchange only went one way though. I wrote several entries, mailed it, then picked it up on my next visit. I only did that a couple times before my new little family eventually became neighbors with she and grandpa. No need for journals when I could come over for coffee instead.

I’m finally at an age where I look forward to being a grandmother one day. I hope I can fill the petite but mighty shoes that came before me, offering guidance, humor, wisdom, friendship.

I think I’ll do one thing differently though. If asked to share my inner workings I’ll write and write and write.

 

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