Wednesday, May 9, 2007
By word of explanation
Dressing the dead
Monday, November 14, 2005
Dressing the dead My mother, as an elder of the tribe and a relative of Neetanah's, was asked by Neetanah's mother Beverly to be among those who dress Neetanah for burial. My mother and one other woman, Beverly's closest friend, were given the right to perform this duty. Many Indian peoples in Oklahoma still do things the old way, the Indian way. As a show of respect and love for the dead, we take care of the body--wash and dress the dead, sit with the dead for three days in someone's home, and we still dig the dead's grave by hand. I helped to dig my brother's grave. My hands had blisters on them because the ground was so hard. It is the ultimate sign of respect--to aid the dead in their journey from this world. Family, not strangers, accompany and prepare them for this journey. Neetanah will be given burial rites on Wednesday. |
Origami Spitball
Origami Spitball
Nov. 14, 2005
My 12 year-old cousin Neetanah (meaning "my daughter" in the Miami language) was struck by a car and killed on Saturday. I found out on Saturday night as I was walking into Momo's with several of my friends. Of course, I cried. A friend offered to take me home, but I decided that being alone with that kind of news after I had been drinking already (UT football at the Tavern) was not a good idea, so I decided that the best course of action was to get drunk. It didn't take much--a stiff Jameson and soda or two and I was there. I sat at one edge of the bar and ate some leftover Mexican food another friend had in her car until I was somewhat sober. Right before we left Momo's most all of my friends came and gave me great big hugs and told me how much they loved me and how very sorry they were about my cousin. Naturally, T was my rock and wound up with the wettest of shoulders. I appreciated the outpouring of love and concern. The rest of that night was filled with neverending two-stepping and crazy shenanigans underneath big, black monster trucks. It was good to get that dancing in now, as it will be the last dancing I will do for a while---according to our mourning customs.The next morning was super rough for me. I tried to go to the gym but it was closed (how many trips to a closed gym on Sundays will it take for me to learn this??!!), so I went to run around Town Lake. After I first hit the trail, I knew running was out of the question. I had no energy whatsoever and my desire was as strong as a wet paper towel. So, I walked. As I walked, I sensed I was folding into myself edge by edge, elbow by elbow, leg by leg until I was nothing more than an origami spitball. My head reeled over the events of the last year and a half of my life. My brother's death. My grandfather's death. Totalling my truck on ice. My mother's arterial surgery. My life in Spain. Getting run over by a horse in Prospect Park. The loss of a longterm relationship. Leaving New York. Coming to Austin. Entering and leaving another relationship in record speed. The tragedy of Neetanah's death. Her mother's grief. Wow.
As I walked and thought, I saw a little pug. I smiled for the first time that day. I was staring and smiling at the dog as its owner walked toward me rapidly. I finally looked up to see the woman at the other end of the leash and after a few moments of haze, I realized that I know this woman. She came right over and threw her arms around me, held me tightly and said she was so sorry to hear about what had happened and that she knows I'll get through all of this. I needed that hug.
Thoughts from Indian Territory
Wednesday, November 16, 2005
Thoughts from Indian Territory I arrived in Oklahoma at around 7pm yesterday evening. At around 10pm my parents and I went to the home where Neetanah was staying. There was lots of family there. The pine casket was in the living room. Her coffin is a beautiful (can a coffin be beautiful?) pine box lined with a pendleton blanket. Neetanah was laid out in her powwow dancing regalia and was holding her eagle feather and her dancing fan. Her sacred bundle was placed at the foot of her coffin. All dead bodies look only eerily similar to their live counterparts. She looked like Neetanah, but not. The reconstruction that had to be done on her due to her being hit by a car, was noticeable but well done. I won't go into details. At midnight the fire keeper performed the purification ceremony. It was the third day since her death and the third day at midnight is when the soul leaves the body. We had come into contact with the sacred and we needed to be purified by smoke from a fire that had been burning for 3 days. The fire keeper sprinkled tobacco and cedar on the coals for the smudging. Her mother was in shock. This morning we all went to the long house to have breakfast with Neetanah and the rest of the family. There were eggs, pancakes, and lots of meat. I hugged Beverly, Neetanah's mother, and she began to cry. I cried, too, as she whispered of how the sound of the coffin's lid shutting will be a sound that will resonate in her mind for the rest of her life and that she knew that at that moment she would not lay eyes on her again. I imagined the sound of the coffin lid shutting. The sound I imagined was that of a deep and mournful pine cabinet door shutting. I can't imagine not seeing my child again. At eleven, we went out to our tribal cemetery. The Miami drum played and sang. Many people shared stories of Neetanah. Then our second chief spoke. He also lost a daughter, so he was so full of emotion that his voice was no more than a whisper. After all the words, we tossed tobacco and dirt into the hole where Neetanah lay. The drum played again as the coffin was lowered into the ground and the people filed passed with handfuls of dirt and tobacco. I waited until the hole was filled before leaving the grave. Before we left the cemetery, my parents and I visited my brother Kevin. As our second chief said: "We bury our own." In our larger society we sanitize death. We are removed from the processes of death. There is some measure of comfort in this, no doubt. In Indian burials in this part of the country, death is a communal activity. Death is never easy. Accompanying Neetanah all the way to the grave--sharing part of that journey with her--made me feel better. She was not alone. I was not alone. She was part of our grieving and part of our celebration of her life. She was there...literally...every step of the way. We never left her side. I don't believe in god. I don't believe in heaven. I don't believe in predestination. I do believe in free will. I know we are born and we die--Everything in between is up to us. I look forward to processing all that I have experienced, thought, and felt not just over the last few days of my life, but over the last few years of my life. Change is never easy. Death is change. Moving is change. Love in its various evolutions is change. Happiness is about how well we negotiate that change. Or, at least peace of mind is about how well we negotiate that change. I'm ready to find that peace of mind and that happiness....that will be a change I welcome. |
Maybe a day like today
Wednesday, October 18, 2006
Maybe a day like today On certain days, maybe like a day like today--grey and cloudy--one, perhaps someone like me, feels the tug of the unknown. From the dim light peering in from the window, it looks cold outside, but in reality it is hot and so muggy that you could chug the air like a beer. Sitting at my desk, I dream that it is cold and windy. Forgetting the computer in front of me, I imagine that I am sitting in the middle of a large, cavernous room bordered with walls hung with voluminous tapestries illustrating the art of the hunt. In front of me is a large unlined book. The paper has its own disposition--not smooth and created by the confluence of a multitude of rags beat, literally, to a pulp and mixed with water. This slurry is reformed on a mould with a wire-mesh bottom and laid lovingly to dry. The end result is the paper lying anxiously before me. The paper, this paper, has a life of its own. Within this fallow sheet, resides all. This sheet--unseeded, unplowed, unplanted--is the benefactor of everything: hope, adventure, possibility, reinvention, omnipotence. It only awaits the seductive hand--the hand that can give it meaning; to draw upon it the word; to draw upon it the world. |
snakes and cockroaches: pesky problems? or, signs from god?
Sunday, July 23, 2006
snakes and cockroaches: pesky problems? or, signs from god? |