Courage
“Courage!”—said a customer to me, as she left the shop today
Greetings Dear Ones!
You haven’t heard from me much lately because I have been struggling. Mud Season has not been debilitatingly muddy however Timing, energy, the alignment of purpose and resources—these have all felt distractingly “off” these days. I’ve been having the kind of days where you spend twenty-nine minutes on hold waiting to speak to the customer service representative, then realize that consuming endless cups of tea has created consequences you urgently need to manage but you can’t hang up now, you’ve waited too long in the cyber queue, so you hit the “mute” button, sneak down hall and just as you pull down your pants and commit to doing something nasty in the woodshed, a cheerful Indian voice clicks on the line and asks how he can be of service today. Suddenly Life is full of awkward choices. Do you hang up? Do you un-mute? Do you sit there, pants at ankles, trying to behave normally, unable to flush until you have (literally) simultaneously conducted all your business in as dignified (and silent!) a manner as possible?
I notice others struggling too. Emotions are as frayed as the elbows on a beloved sweater. As a professional seamstress, there’s one thing that really gets my knickers in a twist: It’s when women (yes, it’s always women) stand in front of the dressing room mirror and pout and pinch and pull at their own nipples until they make an utter mess of the delicate fabric that is attempting to cover them. There’s a seam that often runs right over the center of each breast, and since the fabric is cut on a curve, and since no human body is ever perfectly symmetrical, often there is a little gap or glitch or pucker of some kind in this area. Picking at it (since it is cut on the bias) just makes a bad fit so much worse.
And they cannot stop doing it. Even when I ask them nicely. They keep frowning and picking, in a slow-motion tantrum with themselves, instead of smoothing or lifting or leaving everything alone once they have demonstrated their dissatisfaction. As I try to pin and measure, they cannot help wriggling and pulling and yanking on their busts until they resemble the torpedo boobs of the 1950’s. I’ve had a few of these ladies lately. Impending proms and wedding parties are filling my rack with chiffon problems to solve. (‘Tis the Season!) Sometimes a seam needs to be reworked, which is tricky because it often contains multiple layers of lining and boning. Sometimes one just needs to add a small tuck or dart in the armpit area to reduce the problem. Sometimes the dress needs to be returned to the manufacturer for a different size altogether. Sometimes the owner of the garment just needs to be encouraged to cheer the heck up and not be so, well, Picky! Sometimes the seamstress has to remind herself that chugging adult beverages during working hours is NOT an option. Neither is going outside to lie down in traffic. Somehow we all survive the initial consultation and get on with our regularly scheduled programming. They leave to pick at other things that bother them and I am left to take a razor to the offending bust-lines in peace.
There’s no doubt: bust lines are tricky! The problem with the way a sewing machine is laid out is that one finds it challenging to sew both sides of a dress bust from the same directions—i.e. top to bottom or bottom to top. It’s easier to sew one from top to bottom, the other from bottom to top in order to orient all the excess fabric to the left of the machine. Even when you do manage to sew both sides the same direction, the results are skewed because the fabric pieces are reversed—one is upside down from the other. A Left is a mirror of a Right—which means reversed and backwards. You can treat them both equally but not samely.
“’Samely’ isn’t even a word,” interrupts Prudence, picking.
“I know, but it expresses my point exactly,” I protest.
We humans have curves. We are not even or symmetrical. We have inconvenient needs and tempers. Things that exist in any sort of Wholeness possess a left, a right, a top, a bottom. It’s sometimes difficult to get them synchronized, unified, harmonized. “Equal” isn’t always “same.” What is true for a country is true for the average bosom. We make everything worse by picking and complaining.
Prudence is always tempted to ask “Why did you buy this thing if it fits you so badly to start with? Do you think we have a magic wand? We perform tailoring, not major surgery!” I try to rein her in.
Last week was the 7th year anniversary of this blog and all I can do is pick at it myself. I am torpedo-boobing it. It’s been a fun flop. The fact is that I am boiled alive in angst and guilt over it on a weekly basis and it is breaking my heart. I am trying to fit something that simply doesn’t fit me. Seven years ago, I was so hopeful, nervous, and excited to try to “put myself out there” as a writer, with the idea that I would someday “BE” a writer. The truth is, I AM a writer and I always have been, since I was nine years old and sending long tattling letters to my grandparents. A writer writes. I write. I always have and I always will. It doesn’t have to get bigger or better than that. Except that every now and then, a writer wants to get published. The ego gets involved.
“Why isn’t this working?” I wonder. I am not a cook but people keep asking me to cook. I am not a designer but people keep asking me to design. I am a seamstress only as a last resort—to eke out survival using the hand skills I developed in more prosperous times—but there is a constant demand for my work. I am not a real farmer or a real musician but the folks in those worlds embrace me as one of their own. Writers don’t. Writers are among the most self-absorbed, insecure, and socially awkward people I know. (I would fit in beautifully!) But no… Because of this blog, I have gotten a lot of sewing work, absolutely NO writing work. I have applied to get a masters in writing and been denied. I have submitted articles for publication and been rejected. Incessantly. Three times I have paid hard-earned cash to editors whose comments have not enlightened me in any way.
What I really want to do is WRITE. When I mention this, I get told sweet reassurances by those attempting to be helpful “Don’t despair; nobody reads anymore…” in the same way that customers always tell me “No one carries cash anymore…” when they find out the credit card machine is not functioning. What an impoverished nation we are when the average person does not have fifteen bucks in his pocket and “no one reads anymore”! I am constantly told that “nobody sews anymore” too, but that’s beside the point. There are plenty of us Menders out here doing the stuff that “nobody” does but needs to be done.
And…..
My father is dying, my last dog died in December, my dear friend died last June and now it feels as though my dreams too are dying. I am immersed in intense mourning on many levels. I am finding it impossible to sleep or play music. I go to the shop daily and function as peacefully as I can to satisfy the demands of others. There is no end to the need for Mending.
My plan is to meet this pain head on and see what it has to teach me. I will plant a new garden (literally) and also literaturely, and spend as much time as I can outside, reading everything I can from the weather to my favorite poets. I will keep my thoughts to myself for a little while, and see which seeds grow strong enough to bloom. For seven years, I have been watering a little plant that has refused to grow. Perhaps it was the wrong kind of seed. Cilantro is not an oak. How was I to know?
I do know that the right things have a way of finding us without us having to force ourselves upon them. As the Scots say “What’s for us canny get past us.” And I know that my best work has always come from alignment with and openness to the Spirit of Wonder, of Delight, of Amusement. It’s hard to do that when one is grieving. So I am going to free myself to be Sad, knowing that sometimes only by going into something can one get out of it. I have met my agreement with myself to keep a blog for seven years and “see what happens.” I remember thinking “surely I will be a published Author by then, or at least taller, thinner, and wryly wiser by then.” I couldn’t wait. I had no idea then that I would leave the Enchanted Forest, buy fifteen acres of rock, bramble, and mud with the daily challenge of keeping livestock out of the house; start a business in which women pick at their boobs so much; or that we would all endure a global pandemic followed so much destructive political animosity, upheaval and economic despair. My personal losses have been coming too swift and hard recently to be processed properly in the way I have been living. I cannot do it all. I will make space in the Faith that after this season of sorrow, a new season will arise.
I will meet you there, in that New Season. This is merely a pause, Dear One, though of an unknown duration. Sometimes the greatest thing we can mend is our own heart. I’m not sure how long such a thing takes—it seems a messy business and there might be horrifying amounts of glitter or horsehair in there. Who knows? Thanks for reading (despite the fact that no one reads anymore!) and thanks for your Good Work. I wish us all the Courage we crave to live truly from our hearts.
With more Love & Gratitude than you can imagine,
Yours aye,
Nancy
P.S. I miss you already!