A Watched Pot Does Boil

I know this because I just witnessed it while boiling water for tea a couple of days ago. I walked up to the stove just in time to feel these life lessons were meant for me at that exact moments.

  1. In order for the substance in the container to boil, consistent energy must be applied.
  2. The substance in the pot is not affected at the onset of the energy, in this case the water can still be touched by the finger without burning.
  3. This is where the old adage comes from: A watch pot never boils. In reality it only feels like that, because we are impatient. We want to see the end result without acknowledging the transition of the water in the pot, has already begun.
  4. Soon, at the places in closest contact with the energy source, small circles of air are forming, one at first then multiplying exponentially. Meanwhile, on the surface, it appears as if nothing is happening, the water appears unaffected.
  5. In time, with the energy source remaining consistent, the floor of the vessel is covered with bubbles, some even begin crawling up the sides.
  6. There is still an appearance that nothing is happening on the surface, but if you were to touch it, or able to see through the top layer, the activity that is about to take place would be evident. Certainly, if you were in that pot you would know a huge transformation is about to occur.
  7. In time, with the correct amount of time required given the heat/energy applied to the vessel and it’s contents, the first bubble releases from the bottom and floats the surface, exploding. It’s release touches another bubble next to it and it too leaves the bottom, rising to the top. The domino affect begins and shortly the vessel is alive and bubbling and transforming.
  8. If at any point you remove the vessel from it’s energy source, the process is halted, the transformation stinted. The longer it is away from the energy source, the longer it will take to return to where it was.
  9. The now boiling water is producing steam, which affects whatever is near it. The boiling water is able to transform whatever it comes into contact with, like tealeaves, pulling from them fragrance and flavor.

Silly thing to feel like I learned something while watching a pot of water boil. But it reminded me to stay with the energy that is being applied to right now. There is so much happening below the surface.

Slack Jaw

By Michelle Raskey – A Dream. A short story start? You tell me.

At first glance I thought she had tried to unsuccessfully swallow a mouthful of coffee grounds. Brown crumbs fell out her parted lips, her mouth too small to hold everything. Then I realized that her jaw was detached, lower mandible slack, held in place by flesh that looked stretched to capacity. She tried to speak, I tried to look away. I was sure my expression was at the very least shock veiled in horror. I peered, staring at the grotesqueness of the beautiful girl. I can’t remember if I spoke out loud or thought it, “Does it hurt? How does it work?”

“This is the only way to keep my face together,” she mumbled, tufts of soil falling out her mouth. Black , rich, fertile soil. She swung back on her neck, gaped open, eyes rolling back in her head in death or ecstasy, revealing her contents. A forest floor was in her mouth. An orchard’s worth of roots, all tangled together, were keeping the earth and her jaw intact, just enough. She quickly shut it, a puff of dust escaping in time with her eyes rolling back into their place.

“You should only open your mouth when you absolutely have to,” I thought to her.

She looked out the window of our taxi, waiting for her stop.

Little Horse Trail

By Michelle Raskey

Traversing the path through your crests and curves
Stepping farther into your mystic land,
Watched by ancient ghosts.
At each crunch of my boot I shed
Layers of accumulated fabrics, growing smaller:
First mule deer, now coyote, next badger –
Until I disrobe completely, a snake.
Rusty red blood carries me and I
Slither across your rocks and truth.
My sacred pilgrimage complete I open my eyes,
Wet wings unfold,
I take flight and hunt.

The Little Horse Trail, Sedona, Arizona May 2020

Preserves

My mom loved to can. In the summer we would drive to the farms near the delta to buy flats of tomatoes, cucumbers, peppers, and all manner of fruit. I would watch as she transformed the kitchen into a factory filled with steam from the boiling water and the smells of cinnamon, dill and vinegar. She was amazing. Quart jar after quart jar would color our garage pantry shelf. Red, greens, oranges, yellows and deep purple for our family favorite: prune butter. By the end of the summer our shelves were filled and it was a source of pride for her survey her efforts reflected back in the glass of those beautiful jars.

My mom was a nurse. She went back to school to finish her nursing degree when my youngest brother went to to Kindergarten. I was around 12 and her determination to fulfill her dreams was my first glimpse at feminism; how a woman can have family and career and rock them both. She was so smart and my whole family wanted her help. There isn’t a person I can think of who did not call my mom at some point to ask about a rash or a pain or the color of baby poop to see what it all meant. And she loved it. She loved helping and healing people. She revealed to me an inner strength that I would not see or know I would need until years later. Picking up the pieces of my life after my divorce I frequently repeated the mantra, “My mom did this; so can I”. And I did. And I know the roots any success I have lead back to my mom.

My mom was a singer. She loved to sing. She sang in chorus in high school. She sang in church choirs, at masonic functions, weddings and parties. She closed her eyes while she sang and you could hear in her voice the smile spread across her lips. She made a song for each of my girls when they were born. She sang them that song so often that even when I sing it now she will join me, though she cannot form complex sentences. Her favorite songs were for the Lord and her conviction and faith were as vibrant as her notes. I believe she was closest to God during those choruses of Halellujah.

My mom was a seamstress. In almost every photo I have of me as a little girl I am wearing a dress my mother made me right up until Jr. High when I started to feel the peer pressure of labels. She made me beautiful formal gowns for Rainbow girls. She made my dad silk shirts and Pendleton coats. She made all of us (dad, her, me and my two brothers) matching turtle tank tops that we wore on vacation to the Grand Canyon.We proudly posed for a family photo in them. She made my daughters dress after dress for them and their dollies. She could sew anything. She sewed because we didn’t have money and it was cheaper to make clothes back then, but I know that when someone complimented our outfits she was proud to say,”Oh, I made that.”

My mom began to die about 10 years ago. At first everyone thought she was just tired or stressed. Her words were mixed up frequently and sometimes she would be right in the middle of a sentence and look at you with blank eyes and say, “I have no idea what I am going to say”. A year later she was forgetting dates and times, forgetting to pick up her grandchildren for babysitting. Forgetting to set the car in park. She was diagnosed with early on-set Alzheimers. All the books I read made me so angry. Nothing was good. There was no cure. There is no treatment besides mild prolongation. It has been what I call, ‘A 10-year Funeral’ and every few years I breakdown completely as my dad and our family mourn another piece robbed by this hellborn disease. I hate what I know will come. I hate how she knows what is happening to her still. I hate that she was robbed of her words and her songs. I hate being helpless to do anything. I hate that each Mother’s Day I can’t help but reflect back to who my mother was.

My mother is a nurse, a singer, a chef and wife. She is a healer, counselor, friend and partner. She is a Nana, a seamstress, a PTA president, a carpool driver, a water-skier, a bologna sandwich roll-up maker and a prayer warrior. I won’t forget that. I won’t let anyone forget that. Just like her famous tomato sauce and apricot jam. I promise you that mom. I promise you that.

The Drain

The girl’s dreadlocked hair looks like the shower spray it has never seen;

shooting out of the spicket of scalp.

Her left armpit hair spells out the letters, F and U;

I guess the other two letters are under her right.

She asks for spare change, plays three chords on her guitar, sings a song I have never heard before. I think she has wasted her life, let it go down the drain.

She could really make something of herself, if she just cleaned up a bit

And, every time I spread the foam and shave, I look closely to see what I might have cut off

that now moves in circles towards the grate that will separate us, where I picture it riding the shit like a ship.

All the hair I sheer, all the DNA of me that rides in the sewers, surfing that internet,

shouldn’t it by now have evolved to some newer, better me?

 

But I stand naked in the spray of chlorinated clarity staring into thousands of pores,

and follicles, hoping to see a daisy push through,

which can be a weed,

but seeing instead a Monet, or is it a Manet? When it doesn’t matter because the woman in the steamed mirror, waiting for me to get out of the shower so we can talk is someone I have never seen before. So I dress in the dark, already feeling the prickles of hair under my arms that wait for me to send them too, down the drain.

(2008)

Walmart Sonnet for Denise

Oh Walmart I see you above all stores;

All my needs fulfilled on your every aisle.

Traversing a short-cut across waxed floors,

the smells in pet-care fill my mouth with bile.

Your customers are varied as your crap;

Rich, poor, pre-teen and the geriatric.

They buy cucumbers, fleece sheets and roach traps.

PTA Presidents, truckers, addicts;

People of Walmart live in every town.

Styling in mesh crop tops or pajamas,

Maybe a queen in a full length ball gown,

Will be shopping for her ripe bananas.

Excavations one thousand years from now,

Unveil Slim-Jims as sacred, and bow.

 

 

 

The Hollow

The Hollow by Michelle Raskey

His hands,five chubby caterpillers
stuffed into his mouth,
a greedy swallow.
They grab all they touch,
reacting like tentacles of the sea anemone.
Everything goes in his mouth
where his tongue will be
his eyes.

His hands,
five long river reeds
float on my breast,
a dreaming wren.
They cup the hearth of me
holding back the sieve of years.
I take them to my mouth and
my tongue will taste
our love.

His hands,
five knobby tree twigs
grasp the aluminum rails,
a waiting owl.
They argue with the spoon and jello
disobey the nerves commands.
He palsies them to his mouth
but his tongue will taste
only steel.

May 1, 2018

Last night’s dream was a real whizbanger of weirdness:

I was in some sort of Western cafeteria-type place that was a cross between a restaurant and post-apocalyptic survival center. People seemed in varying degrees of panic. There was a large trough like area with several levels where people could have food (looked like some sort of veal or meat type product) squished through these cylinders where it would come out the other side as milk for babies. People had their babies at the troughs and would put their bottles under the cylinders to be filled up, sort of like we fill up a drink at a fast food place. I saw a couple with twins who were only feeding one baby and I became enraged about the other baby they had seemed to ignore. I went over (without asking) and picked up the other baby but found they had given him or her only a bottle nipple hooked up to a long tube that should have gone to milk but instead the baby was frantically slurping up the air. The baby’s belly was getting huge with air and I tried to gently push on the baby’s stomach to make it fart the air out. It wasn’t working. I could not get the bottle top out of the babies mouth and realized this baby was going to burst from all the air if I didn’t get it something to drink. So I started pushing people to get the end of the tube into that weird milk. I woke up to Frank’s alarm wondering what in the world?!

Feel free to leave your interpretation of my dream in a comment. I am always fascinated by the interpretation of dreams from the silly to the psychoanalysis. I won’t put my stock in any of it, but it’s fun to read!

A Tech Week Prayer

A prayer for my boys as they head off to Tech Sunday:

Oh Saint Shakespeare, may you look down (or up) with pity on my boys who begin the dreary marks of tech week. Protect them from the hell that awaits them as they hurry up and wait. May they be blessed with remembrance of lines, unbroken props, and doors that open. Keep them from the fall into the pit which results in injury. May you gift them with the art of the ad lib just enough to keep the show going but not so much as to have the title of “mugger”. May the director be blessed with patience to deal with the divas and the stage manager with a plethora of shushes. And may the zippers always be up. Amen.

Feel free to add your own prayers for tech week in the comments below.