Other blog dominating

Blogger insists on showing my posts and comments to others as my Books Blog, You can click on it to get here and vice versa....the Book blog is just that while this one, my first, original has miscellany

Friday, September 27, 2013

If these walls could talk.....


Spirit house at a Tsuchone Center in
Alaska
  Certain American Indian tribes practiced animism, the belief  that natural physical entities—including animals, plants, and even inanimate objects or phenomena—possess a spiritual essence.  Remember the song from Disney's film,  Pochahantas, "Paint with all the Colors of the Wind" and the lyrics...if not here is a link to one  you tube rendition  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=diQgSDWJL7o
 In particular, there is a verse:  
You think you own whatever land you land on
The Earth is just a dead thing you can claim
But I know every rock and tree and creature
Has a life, has a spirit, has a name

The photo we took in August of the Alaskan Tsuchone Indian spirit house to the left is one way that they honored that belief, by putting an array of items and belongings that the person enjoyed and cherished while alive into  the house, built  above ground so that the spirit of the deceased would be pleased and happy in the hereafter.

While animism is deemed primitive, I  say there are shades of  that mystique alive and around us today.  When my late Uncle Carl died, and I was selecting his casket and arranging the burial, I asked  the undertaker to  place some memorabilia into the casket, his old sling shot that  Carl used from his porch to chase squirrels from the bird feeders, a cap for his WWII Army Unit, a pin from the VFW and firemen' s insignia.  For my aunt it was a dust rag, no kidding because she was so very tidy and neat and clean as well as an old bracelet I ha given her as a child.  I suppose it  made me feel better, but I like to think their spirits appreciated the items.  

 Recently a friend in PA shared that  one day she was graced with a very unexpected visitor, a stranger driving by slowed down, turned and came back by the house.  When she stopped my friend, Pat, who was outside asked if she was lost and needed directions.  No, but the woman was in PA visiting  from MN where she too lives; she had grown up in Pat's house, the house Pat has owned for 40 years.  Pat asked if she would like to come in and see the house and the woman accepted, thrilled.  They had a wonderful visit that blessed them both and wove them together.  The woman had not been there in over 40 years and shared some tales about growing up in the home.  She may not return to that area again, but she left with great memories.  

This story and Pat's gracious generosity demonstrate how outreaching to someone casually can bring joy. (Entertaining strangers unawares who turn out to be angels in disguise.)  I  so related to that woman, because I have been there. I was fortunate when selling Uncle Carl's home in PA that relatives of a longtime school friend bought it, are doing lovely work landscaping and did the few cosmetic fix ups inside that were needed.  She  sent me photos last year and said,  "stop by" so gracious and really pleased me.  

My old PA home, hedges gone from along
 the side and back got this off Google.
Can't locate the ones I took of the house. 
On the other hand,  I doubt I will ever again see the inside of what was home, Mom' s house in PA even though I am back  there every year.  Sometimes I have driven by just to see it from the street.  I never see anyone there at  the home where I grew up in PA, lamentable because a nephew owns it and lives there with his wife whom I never met.  He is into his own world, I never hear "boo" from them.  So I think, "if the walls of the house could talk, what tales they could tell."  I suppose his father, my estranged (I say ex-brother) can relate some to him, but he cannot tell them about the backboards in the closet off what was my bedroom and the words that I carved there and why, nor about my crawling out my bedroom window onto the porch over the roof (window over the back porch was to my bedroom)  to toss crab apples at the neighbor hood boys, nor about what was once the coal cellar and many other tales.  They will never know because those walls cannot talk, but some how I believe those walls  have retained  some of our spirits from all that they saw over the years. 

Wistful yet perhaps sometimes it is  better not to look back but to keep memories of what was.  That's what I learned in CA when we were back there visiting and the man who bought our former ranch invited us to come by.  In that case, I would have been better off not to accept  his invitation, my  former gorgeous rose garden was filled with weeds and odd shrubs, the landscaping looked like a Sanford and Son junkyard.  No, that sight was not one I needed to see.  

The original owners who built our now home are elderly  but live in this town and have been here to see what changes we made.  They were thrilled that we love the house as much as they did.  I remember LaVerne said, "part of me lives in those floors and walls.."  Yes it is so. And we enjoy their  stopping by which  is infrequent because he is quite ill. We are blessed by all the stories  they can share about living here and the efforts they put into this home. They in turn are pleased that we have it; he remembers my husband when Jerry was a  little boy growing up here.  

In PA my old home from the street does not look the same, he painted what was white always a murky dark foreboding grey.  Planted a tree in the front yard; Mom's spirit must fuss because she was always sweeping away leaves that blew up the alley and stopped at the side door.  

Yes, if walls could talk, the stories they could share.

6 comments:

  1. It's funny though, how are memories of it can bring it all back to life as we know it. I really enjoy the thought of us owning all that we can gather, out and about in this lovely world of ours.... I think of that often when taking hikes, or just sitting by the water....it's free and it's ours, just for the enjoyment of it all.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh yes, as we recall it. Even though my old hometown is now a besieged area and the neigborhood has deteriorated, I still see it through my childhood eyes. Right about gathering just by taking it all itn.

      Delete
  2. EMAIL from Tom: Similar experience. On one of my visits to Oregon I drove out to look at Grandpa's old farm. I pulled into the drive, just off the county road, intending to turn around and got out to take a couple of photos. A man came out and asked if I needed help and I said, "No, just looking at the place. This used to be my grand dad's and we visited here often." He asked if I would like to see the house and I jumped at the thought. They had not changed the place much except to modernize the kitchen. The wood range was gone and the pitcher pump from the edge of the sink. Of course the hot water tank and piping from the old wood stove was gone too. Otherwise, it was pretty much the same. Made my day, though.

    ReplyDelete
  3. My mom still lives in my childhood home in Nj and when the time comes for my brother and I (sometimes also estranged) I will think of times growing up there! but not feel pangs of regret for it's future. Most likely a new owner would raze it and build a new home. The house is past it's prime and was also the home of my grandparents. I would not revisit the area on future visits to the state.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I loved this post, Pat, and could relate to so much, including the "ex-brother" and the nephew. I'll skip how the ex-brother could've cared less and much was lost. I started my blog because I've got two nieces who could care less about our family's deep history. Neither passes a mirror without pausing, if you get my drift. Kittie's a real nickname; Howard's just a name I thought matched. One day--if these girls ever grow up emotionally--my stories will be there (as they'll learn I'm Kittie Howard). When we lived in Kenya, Kiswahili gave me fits when I studied it because nouns are either living, dead, or neither, with an attachment for the noun, as animism drives all, still very much believed in there. I can't say that's a bad thing. (Oh, I joined your Google circle and some kind of chat thing because I thought that would lead me here. I'm such a computer dinosaur, yipes!)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh, Kittie that is what I love, linking with those who know where I am going with all this. I have not disguised my name, but you are clever to do so. I have not been blogging as much lately as so many other things interfere... I am still trying to figure out Google Circles myself...I think it must be something like Facebook, but sooner or later I'll get it.

      Delete