Yes

IMG_5718 IMG_5733 IMG_5775 IMG_5812 IMG_5832 IMG_5856 IMG_5887 IMG_5891 IMG_5907Jade and I went up the mountain one night, for no reason at all, except to see what we could see.  I had my camera along, because I always have my camera along, but we also packed a pair of puppies with us, some wool gear for when the air turned cold during the nightrise, and the good and comfortable company of each other.

I love Jade.  She’s one of my best friends and to make matters even more excellent, she and her husband (a smokejumper, also, and a true surrogate brother to Robert and I) bought the house exactly next door to ours here in Pocatello.  We call it the compound and it has been one of the most special experiences of my adult life to have good friends so near every moment of the day.  Most mornings, Jade and I have coffee together.  One of us brews a french press and strolls around, through two gates, through the raspberry patch, past the grapevines and into the companionship of the other.  We pour our cups of coffee, add our milk and when the weather was warmer, we would sit on porch steps in the sun and simply talk for a couple of hours.  It is such a glorious way to wake up to the day in the loving company of a best friend.  She is a painter and leatherworker, among other things, and shares my studio space with me.  We share dinners, watch movies, give each other seeds we have harvested from our gardens and lend or borrow a lawnmower back and forth.  There is an understanding between us that stems from being girls, creatives and fire wives.  Jade’s little family is an extension of our little family and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

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I was having some body work done by my massage therapist a couple of months ago and she asked me what my life mantra was.  The actual word “mantra” isn’t part of my daily lexicon so I was stumped for a moment and then I told her I didn’t think I had a mantra.  So she rephrased the question so I could better understand and find a true answer.  She asked me if there’s a phrase I live by on a daily basis.  Here’s what I said:

“Yes!”

That was my answer to her as well as the phrase I have been living by for the past year or so.  When I get asked to do something, to be involved in something, to go somewhere, to spend my time a certain way and if the situation will involve our friends or family or a really unique life opportunity, I try not to think too hard about it.  I let myself respond as reflexively as possible.  I simply say, “Yes.”  Then I do my best to make the commitment work.

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I realized something a few years ago after nearly working myself to death (which is relatively normal, small business takes your EVERYTHING — so does full time creative work) building The Noisy Plume: life is short.  It becomes more and more apparent to me as I watch my grandparents in the twilight of their wonderful lives, as I watch my parents age, as I see our siblings and friends having babies and growing the next generation, as I see the lines of a life well lived begin to pepper my face.  I’m not going to live forever.  Neither are you.  I am concerned that when I lay in the quiet of a failing heartbeat on my deathbed that I will regret how much time I spent worrying, how much time I spent on my computer hitting a “like” button, how many days I sacrificed making memories with the people I love on the land I adore for a small job I didn’t pour my heart and soul into.  When I realized all of this, I decided to say yes as often as possible to the people closest to me, even if there were 100 unanswered and festering emails in my inbox, even if I was straddling a deadline in the studio, even if I was running late on photo submissions for freelance work — I started setting those things aside and doing a better job of living for love, living for the love of life, living for the love of experiences.

More often than not, this makes me a terrible business woman, an incompetent emailer, and let’s face it, the volume of work coming out of my metal studio has slowed to a dribble — part of that has to do with an energy shift in my work.  I’m doing more freelancing than metalsmithing at the moment so the decrease in productivity in the studio makes perfect sense.  But I digress.  Let me tell you something, I have had such a wonderful year here.  I have traveled extensively.  I have explored and adventured.  I have spent time with my best friends, I have made new friends, I have learned so much about them, about myself, about the world, about nature.  More often than not, I have allowed myself to catapult in any direction on any given day and the freedom has changed who I am, taught me who I want to be, and fortified some of my relationships in wonderful ways.  This has been a year of living for me!  It has been grand.  I want to serve my friends and family as energetically and commitedly as I have served my small business over the years.  I want to pour myself into them and make memories so that when I walk towards the light at the end of the tunnel someday, I’ll walk in a soft cloak of assuredness that I lived this life well and served my people with a whole heart and my full attention.

My sister Caroline, on Robbie’s side of the family, pointed out the flip side of all this “yessing” I’ve been doing while we were with our family clan at Thanksgiving in San Diego last week.  She pointed out that no matter what, saying yes to something means saying no to something else, even if you don’t say the word.  And she’s right about that — no is a byproduct of yes; we had best make the word and the commitment count.

Make it worth it every time you say “Yes.”  I think it’s the best way to live without regret.

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When Jade and I went up the mountain that night, we went up the mountain for no reason at all (which is sometimes the best reason of all) except to be in the company of each other, to ride in a delightful 1966 Dodge Powerwagon, to laugh at the puppies with us and pet their soft ears, to talk, to enjoy the silence when we didn’t talk, to watch the sun set and the moon rise.  We went out of love for each other, love for life and love for the word “Yes.”

 

21 & 24

CANOEI arrived home late last night from Saskatoon via Bozeman after two long days of winter driving and was washing a dish at the kitchen sink when I looked up to see this image stuck to the wall with a magnet.  I took this photo with my film camera at a take-out after a canoe trip on the Churchill River System of Northern Saskatchewan when I was 21 and Robert was 24.  Two months later, we eloped in Reno, Nevada and the rest is history, as they say.  I mounted the image on card stock and mailed it to Robert at Wheaton College as a postcard when he was a student there and I was still living in Saskatoon attending the University of Saskatchewan.  Rob found it while I was away in a box of things his parents shipped up to us from California and no doubt, it touched him the way it touched me, and so he stuck it up on the wall.  There is a long missive written on the back of this postcard in a tiny, cramped hand.  The words take me back, root me in the present and make me dream about the future.

We were dreamers then.  We are dreamers now.  We never dream small.

Here’s what I think of when I look at this image:

Holy basil.  Robert is a looker.

We were doing things on rivers in wild places, catching fish, living beautiful lives in beautiful spaces at the genesis of our relationship.  We lived this way when we met in New Zealand.  How we make our way through this world has been unchanging.

Even then I was taking portraits of us with my camera and stylistically, my images have the same voice today which FASCINATES me — my images continue to look this way (but better) and my work continues to revolve around nature, portraits in nature, and self-portraiture in holy moments which really assures me that the way I take photos is my own, and always has been.  That feels good.

It is apparent that who we were at 21 and 24 is who we continue to be at 32 and 35.  This is who I want to be, forever.  I want to keep ironing out unpleasant kinks in my personality, keep divorcing the sins of the generations that haunt me (as they do all of us), keep existing courageously in wild spaces with an arm wrapped around my best friend.

And I want to always have a boat.

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To Robert:  I didn’t think I could love you more then.  I don’t think I can love you more than I do now.  Which means I’m sure to love you exponentially more in the future.  Thank you for staying by my side.

Hug The Biggest One

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May The Mountain Rise Up To Meet You

May the mountain rise up to meet you, as it is rising up to meet me.  Honestly, I have a mountain in my face.  There is nothing behind me but space.  The next razorsharp ridgeline rises up like a brick wall and the next and the next until the landscape is reduced and augmented, simultaneously, into a series of rugged spines that eventually fall into the lowest point in all of Idaho — Hells Canyon.  It’s hard to believe this is the low country of this state, the land is twisted, rugged and vertical but the peaks here top out at a wimpy 4500ft.  I am hiking directly up a mountain so steep in some sections that I can reach my hand out in front of my body to touch the face of the slope and steady myself.  I am not out of breath, I am not panting from exertion though this is hard work.  At home, in Pocatello, I run, hike and ski between 5000 and 9000ft.  The air here seems luxurious and thick.

It takes us less than an hour to hike less than a mile with a vertical gain of roughly 2500ft.  When we reach the top of our ridgeline I am hungry and I have sweat through my four top layers:  sports bra/tank top, wool baselayer, hooded sweatshirt and light down jacket.  When I remove my pack to grab my camera and my sandwich, the wind viciously slaps at the sweat stain on my back and I am instantly chilled.  I eat my sandwich as quickly as I can, snap a few photographs and dive back into my pack to put a layer of something between my wet jacket and the wind.

Gosh.  The wind.

The accordion of ridgelines lays brisk and bellowing in all directions.  This country is steep and unforgiving, rugged as a lanky cowboy leaning on a split rail fence, bristling like a coyote with raised hackles in a swaggering breeze that serves to test and refine.  The ridges cut the sky before plunging steeply into deep drainages.  There is no story here of glacial onslaught and retreat, no hanging valleys or truncated mountain slopes.  The land here has been carved away by wind and water over the years.  It’s cracked and creaking, like a thing that has only ever known opposites: dry and wet, hot and cold, light and dark.   It’s no country for old men.

We are here because this is a dry, inhospitable place littered with basalt.  We are here because this is where the chukar live.  We are here because our dogs live to hunt birds.  We are here because we are hungry and believe in getting our own meat.  We are here because the beauty of Idaho begs us to come.  We are here because each time we stop and look around at the world we feel our souls sing hymns of praise to the Creator.

How lucky we are to be alive and well.  How privileged we are to hunt for our own food.  How blessed we are to have dogs that will work for us like our dogs do.  I look at Rob and say, “This place is only for you and me.”  There is no one else around.  I reach up and wrap my arms around the sky and acknowledge a sense of homecoming.

I like to come hunting with Rob because I like to be responsible for the getting of my meat.  I eat meat.  I think it tastes better if I go out and get it myself, from a wild place.  It’s hard work.  Using a gun doesn’t make it easy, it just makes my arms tired when I’m hiking up a crazy mountain slope.  I like knowing that if something happened to Rob, I could go out and get my own food from a wild place.  I don’t want to depend on him that way, I want to be capable.  Hunting the way we hunt is a skill.  Sometimes we are successful because of our skills, sometimes we are lucky.  That said, I am learning this skill from my husband who is a patient teacher and a talented woodsman.  I am grateful for his lessons, even when I sass him or inform him that I cannot feel my hands or I ask to stop so I can pee in the sagebrush for the seventeenth time since we started out, I am learning how to hunt and I’m getting better at it.  I am also getting better at shooting.  Shooting and hunting are two different things, though they sometimes happen in the same place at the same time.

It’s also important to note that I go hunting because I sincerely like it.  It challenges me physically and mentally.  Sometimes it’s tremendously unpleasant and I want nothing more than to go home, take a hot bath and wear fuzzy slippers.  If I feel this way it is because I am cold, hungry and tired and I can barely get my hands to hold on to my shotgun because the steel plates are slowly freezing my fingers despite the fact I have on gloves and mittens and it’s nearly dark and I’m walking down a steep slope and praying I won’t trip and fall to my death.  I try not to complain because Robert never complains.  I complain only if death is imminent.  This is an unwritten law in our household:  COMPLAIN ONLY IF DEATH IS IMMINENT.  I am the only family member to ever break this law which isn’t saying much because our family consists of two people (if you discount all the livestock). Most of the time, I love every moment of hunting.  Robert says I do fine if I have lots of snacks, wool long johns and a good set of mittens.  He genuinely loves it when I come hunting with him.  He is very pure and does not tell lies.  But, to my own credit, I am physically capable of things the average human isn’t capable of.  This I know and this is why I make a good hunting partner for my husband.

Today, the ground is frozen, my boots fail to sink into the dirt and anchor my steps.  It’s hard walking.  Every other stride my foot scuttles off a frozen chunk of mud, a clump of gritty snow or a pocket of elk poop.  If those things fail to unsettle my gait, I stumble on loose chunks of basalt rock that, once kicked loose, tumble eternally down a steep mountain face until they disappear from sight.  Each time I kick a rock free, I think to myself, ” I could fall down this mountain just like that, gaining momentum with each roll and bounce.”  I keep moving as fast and carefully as I can.

Hunting chukar is a total body workout.  I walk uphill until I feel my quadriceps screaming.  When I hike downhill, my brakes in my legs start to give out, I think I can hear them squealing, smell them burning,  I get wishy washy noodle legs, sturdy as whips, wobbling like hospital jello.  When we take a break, it’s short.  It’s too cold to stop for very long and it’s hard to get the dogs to stand still with us.  We don’t ever truly stop to rest, resting is an inconvenience.  This is a sun up to sun down affair.  It’s quite exhausting.  If the dogs can’t find birds, or if we fail to get them one of the birds they have found, it’s utterly disheartening.

On the next ridgeline over, we see a herd of elk, I hoped we would.  They have come out of the mountains to lower ground where the snow is shallow and the forage is still in reach.  I’ve seen their sign as we have hiked, their hoof prints, their droppings like chocolate covered almonds coated in a thin, twinkling layer of frost.  They are standing broadside to us, heads up, testing wind with flaring nostrils, chewing their wild hay serenely.  Elk are beautiful.  Elk are big.

I say to Rob as we walk, “We are working as hard as elk for our food right now.  We might be working even harder, even with our swanky down jackets, gloves, shotguns, woollies and ridiculously talented bird dogs.

Rob says, “Yes, we are.”  He can be a man of few words when he is hunting.

My mouth is partly frozen by the wind and I reiterate clumsily, “No, really!  Look at them over there.  They get a bite of food for every step they take, maybe more.  How much energy will we spend today, you and I and the dogs, to get a few birds to take home for dinner?  The energy exchange here is horribly imbalanced!  We will never earn back what we have burned in calories today, hiking and shivering, stumbling and stuttering.  This is the hardest we could ever work for a chicken dinner!

Robert’s reply is simple and distracted, “Yup.  True.  Jillian, Tater Tot just hit scent.  Can you see the direction he is pointing?  Head over there and be ready, those birds are holding on the back side of that rock pile and they’ll go fast when they go.  Hurry up.

Apparently, hunting is not for the conversationalists.

When it’s all said and done, I hunt with Robert for three days and I outshoot him for the first time ever!  While I try not to feel too proud of that fact, I am, just a little bit, and the sweet thing is that Rob is proud too.  He drops me in Boise where we have staged our other truck at a friend’s house so I can head home and get back to work in the studio.  I am lonesome for him as soon as he leaves and Boise feels too big and full and loud.  The sky is far away from me in the city, the distances between streets and buildings are too measured, too organized.  The sidewalks are hard beneath my boots, every step on concrete feels like a small shock.  I get in the truck and start driving, country music on the radio, one dog keeping me company on the bench seat as the Snake River Plain rushes past.  I feel my heart beating in my chest and know that my pulse resembles the land I just spent three days knowing and walking — ascending and descending in tempo rubato, rugged, rough and ready, cut by a thousand rivers run dry, sun warmed and wild, seamlessly pressed to the sky.