A Woman of Profound Faith - Haiku - For my Great-Grandmother, written on her birthday

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My great-grandmother
A woman of profound faith
And great compassion

I was quite fortunate as a child, for although both of my father's parents, and theirs, had died long before I was born, my mother's parents, and her maternal grandmother, were alive and well, and living in New Mexico.

We lived in Monterey Park at the time, a hilly inland suburb of Los Angeles that had once been rolling farmland, and so most summers, my mom drove us to the train station in nearby Pasadena, gave us a last hug as we boarded our beloved El Capitan, and we made the overnight journey to Gallup, where my grandparents lived.

Occasionally our grandparents would pick us up along their own travels, and drive us there, especially when I was little, which allowed us more of a chance to get to know the people and businesses along Route 66, which was quite an adventure for us as children.

My grandparents were great travelers, and intelligent about it, as they fully embodied the Scout's motto, "Be Prepared;" one of the first things they grabbed, before setting off on any trip across the desert, was a ten-pound bag of crushed ice, which they kept well insulated on the floor behind the driver's seat.

This was in addition to several gallons of bottled water.

Along their travels, they not infrequently encountered fellow travelers who had not prepared as well before entering the desert, and found their cars overheated to the point of incapacity, with few or no drinks in the car; clearly a hazardous situation in the summer, in the middle of the desert.

I remember one such occasion, when Carol and I were with them, when they came across a stranded young couple with two young children, one of which was a very young infant. The young mother was quietly frantic, trying to keep her children as cool as possible in the hot shade beside their steaming car, but it was clear that she was distraught, and had been crying.

My grandparents immediately sprang into action. After providing the young mother with a folding chair from the trunk, my grandfather took out a gallon of water, and, using heavy gloves, helped the young father get the radiator cap off, so that they could begin the arduous task of v-e-r-y slowly adding water to the still-steaming radiator.

Meanwhile, my grandmother quickly escorted my sister and I out of the car, got a shallow bowl out of the trunk, and scooped some of the crushed ice and water from the bag in the car. Then she handed us a stack of bandannas, and instructed us to dip them into the ice water, while instructing the young mom to use them to wipe her children's faces, and her own, and then to place them behind their necks, to help them cool off.

Finally, our grandmother got out a stack of cups, scooped ice into them, and poured water for the whole family.

She showed the young mom how she could use one corner of a bandanna as a makeshift nipple, dipping it into the water, and then allowing her infant to suck out the water as she squeezed. I, as a young kid, had never even heard of that before, though I'm certain that my sister, older and wiser, must certainly have already known. ;-)

Needless to say, these were clean bandannas, and possibly new, as she bought them by the dozen. My grandparents were both of the opinion that no well-stocked car should be without a decent stack of clean bandannas. You never know when you might need them in a pinch.

Within a short time, the radiator was no longer steaming, and the men topped it off. They checked and double checked to make certain that no water lines had popped off, then tried the car, which sprang to life and ran smoothly.

After a quick check that they had more than enough fuel to make the next town, my grandfather left the young man with advice on which particular gas station he should take it to, to endure that there were no further problems, and to use his name with the owner, which would ensure that they were not treated like tourists.

My grandfather also gave them a small tarp, and instructions on how to use it for shade in a pinch, just in case they broke down again.

My grandmother gave them a couple of gallons of water, just in case, along with the bowl refilled with crushed ice, and assured them that yes, indeed, the cups and bandannas were theirs to keep. She advised them that if ever they crossed the desert again, to take several gallons of water and a bag of crushed ice, along with cups and bandannas, to make sure it would be a pleasant journey.

The only thing my grandparents took back was the folding camp chair, as it was part of a matched set, which they had used for camping for many years, and which we all had many fond memories of using.

What an amazing lesson, and example, in how we should treat our fellow humans.

And, truth be told, as I was maybe seven or eight at the time, I may well be condensing more than one such encounter into the memory, as memories do tend to telescope through time. Unfortunately, no one who was there is still available to ask.

But I can say without question that, as kids, one of our favorite things about going back and forth to New Mexico via car was that bag of crushed ice on the floor.

Since we both sat in the back seat, and more rarely three of us, when our eldest sister was there as well, we all dearly loved scooping out the cups of crushed ice that we sipped as we watched the magnificent landscape roll past our windows.

Somehow, ice water never tasted so good.

But we also adored traveling by train, and we were treated wonderfully by the folks who recognized us as regular travelers, such as Mr. Christmas, an impossibly old and kind black porter, who treated us as though we were his own grandchildren. We all adored him, and we felt completely safe in his charge.

There were two Santa Fe trains at the time that traveled that route, from Los Angeles to Chicago, and back: the Super Chief, which left in the morning and arrived that same evening, which was the train you wanted if you wanted to see the grandeur of the desert and the red rocks as you passed through California and Arizona, roughly paralleling Route 66 en route to Gallup; and the El Capitan, our own train of choice, which left late in the afternoon and arrived the next morning.

For young kids with enforced bed times, this was the best, as we could sit up all night in the club car playing games, often by ourselves, but also frequently with fellow passengers.

And it was a chance to visit and converse with people from all over the country, and occasionally from other countries, which was not only a wonderful experience in itself, but I think went a long way toward making us more tolerant and open-minded toward others as we matured.

This was back in the day when traveling by train was a special treat, and was considered a truly deluxe mode of transportation, almost akin to taking a cruise.

The dining cars were noted for their excellent food and service, there was a less expensive snack bar with sandwiches and similar fare downstairs, which was happily open all night, and the train's staff really watched out for the kids who were traveling on board without adult accompaniment.

There was also a credentialed nurse aboard every train, in case of any medical emergencies, putting our parents' minds at further rest, particularly since I was frequently sick as a child. Though, looking back, I can't recall any incidents where we went to her with anything more serious than needing a Bandaid.

One of our favorite places to hang out from time to time was in the baggage car, where we would talk to any porters around at the time. They were always nice, occasionally hilarious, and it was a good way to spend some time.

We were pretty much given the run of the train, with the obvious exception of the engines, as long as we behaved ourselves, which we always did. We knew if we didn't that our parents and grandparents would be informed, which was part of it, but mostly we were simply taught from early childhood to always behave well in public, and to be respectful of others, so we were.

So what does all this have to do with my great-grandmother?

This was how we traveled back and forth from California each summer to see her, by car or by train, because seeing her was one of the primary reasons why my mother wanted us to go to New Mexico in the first place; to spend time and make memories with the woman who had cared for her during her own early childhood.

My sisters and I called her GranNatt.

My grandmother and her first husband, my mother's biological father, divorced when my mom was an infant, and so she returned home to New Mexico, with my mother in tow, and left her in the capable hands of her parents, while she went to work as a social worker.

So yes, our grandfather was my mom's stepfather, but that never mattered to anyone. He adore her and her grandparents, he was the dad who helped to raise her, he was the only grandfather we ever knew, and we all adored him.

My grandmother's parents owned and ran the general store in Mescalero, on the Mescalero Apache reservation, having recently moved their business from the nearby small town of Bent, just down the highway, in 1928.

The store was quite a large adobe building, built in the 1870s or 1880s, complete with massive vigas supporting the roof, which was naturally cool in the summer and warm in the winter, as all properly built adobe structures are.

The large store and a small post office were downstairs, which were run by my great-grandfather and great-grandmother respectively, and the ample living quarters were upstairs.

We all fell in love with the place as kids. Both the store and the living quarters had gorgeous wide-planked wood floors, huge fireplaces in the living room and master bedroom, and their extensive collection of Native American pottery, rugs, baskets and other artifacts displayed throughout.

Which made us feel quite at home, as my mother had her own lovely collection, which were displayed in our childhood home, and ultimately given little by little to my sisters and me.

There was also a lovely screened porch leading out to the back yard, which was heaven during the cool nights, a small creek that ran along the bottom of the hill, and the hill itself, which rose steeply out of their yard, and was covered in Ponderosa and big cone pines, with a steep horse trail leading up to a small cemetery and beyond.

We used to ride our cousins horses there, as kids, which was a big part of the magic of visiting there each summer.

By the time we came along, the store and post office were run respectively by my grandmother's younger brother and his wife, and my great-grandmother had "retired" to a small home in nearby Tularosa, where she kept a large and productive garden, numerous fruit trees, and a flock of bantam chickens; hence the photo of my own chickens at the top of this post.

It was my great-grandmother, and her flock, that made me want a flock of my own.

I have "retired" in quotation marks because, although my great-grandmother did retire from being the Mescalero postmistress, she never stopped working, in one way or another, and constantly volunteered with her church.

When I was maybe nine or ten years old, she began caring for an "older" woman from church who was infirm, who was actually many years younger than she was. But, because she was still spry and capable, she helped the woman with the daily tasks she had trouble doing herself, and took pleasure in doing so.

There is much more that I could write about her, as she led a fascinating life: at six months of age, which would have been the spring of 1883, her family traveled to California by covered wagon, where her mother had been born.

She then lived to see men walk on the moon, marveling along with the rest of us, and humbled by the prospect.

She was very devoutly religious, and yet fairly open-minded, long subscribing to both the Christian Science Monitor (she belonged to the Church of Christ) and National Geographic.

Ultimately, she died at eighty-eight years of age, when I was twelve years old, and was active to the last, though she had finally agreed to move to Gallup to live with my grandparents a year or so earlier.

According to my grandmother, one morning after breakfast, GranNatt washed the morning dishes, went outside to play with the dog, and then came inside after a short while, exclaiming, "John Galt, you're just too rough!"

She then sat at the dining table, looked at my grandmother, said "I don't feel well," and fell to the floor. She apparently died almost instantly. Now that's the way to go.

So I will close with one further haiku, in her honor:

Abbie Ann Ealy
Clayton McNatt; a woman
of fierce devotion

Happy Birthday, GranNatt.

Thank you for being our family's matriarch. Thank you for everything.

#family #earthtribe #tribevibes #naturalmedicine #tribegloballove #poetsunited #isleofwrite #tarc #yah #ecotrain #smg #ghsc #spunkeemonkee #thirtydayhaikuchallenge #teamgood #steemsugars #teamgirlpowa #womenofsteemit #steemusa #qurator #steemitbasicincome #bethechange #chooselove #photography #beauty #love #culture #peacemaking #peacemaker #friendship, #warmth #self-respect #respect #allowing #animals #community #unity

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This made me sob. It's funny how you miss those you never got to know as much as you would have liked. I feel the same way about my grandmother, as I didn't know my great grandparents. I think @ginnyannette and @walkerland would both appreciate this post. You write it so evocatively - I can see the whole thing from the eyes of the young girl in the back of the car with crushed ice at her feet. You have so many wonderful stories, and so many great ways of telling them.

Thanks so much, @riverflows, this means a lot to me.

I'm so lucky to have clear memories of her, and along with sharing our birth month, I wound having precisely her color hazel eyes, which no one else in the family did; my grandmother, mother and sister Carol all had dark blue eyes, as does my eldest sister.

I just wish I'd gotten her long, thick, gorgeous auburn hair. Damn. ;-)

I also wish I'd had the interest at the time in herbs and natural medicine, but that didn't come until a couple of years after she died.

But I did learn from her, the hard way, that a deep gash can be quickly cauterized by pouring lots of sugar on it, followed by turpentine. It hurts like hell, but it works, and fast!

Your GranNatt is an amazing woman, as she lives on in you!
I wouldn't have thought of this: if driving across the desert again, take several gallons of water and a bag of crushed ice, along with cups and bandannas.
What a guardian angel - good Samaritan - kind soul - resourceful woman. And your grandpa. And it's so clear that their legacy is alive and well in you.

You really take us back with you to the old adobe building, the cousins's horses, the people you met, the childhood that formed you.

If only people like you were the majority, and not so rare, but then you wouldn't be quite so extraordinary.

(Yes. I was trying to turn that last line into a haiku but I gave up.)
If people like you were the majority,
and not so rare,
you'd be no less extraordinary.

Eh. Maybe you could appropriate the sentiment and hammer a haiku out of it?

I actually think it works quite well as a short form poem as-is.

Not everything lends itself to haiku. ;-)

Although, I may have told you already, but one of the things I fell in love with when we visited Ukiah, California, was the realization that Ukiah is haiku spelled backward.

What can I say, goofiness comes naturally to me.

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Ukiah, California, is haiku spelled backward - love it!
But not a palindrome. Offhand I cannot think of a single word...mom, dad, madam, but nothing longer than that comes to mind.

My favorite palindrome is tacocat. ;-)

Someone sent it to me on FB years ago, complete with a photo of a cat wrapped up in a fabric soft taco, and I couldn't stop laughing.

And I owe it to Ukiah Brewery that I realized Ukiah and Haiku mirrored one another . . . we were sitting having dinner there, which I highly recommend if you're ever out that way, and their name in lights reflected on the windows from outside was what clued me in.

Ukiah is in Mendocino County, the first county in California (and I think possibly in the nation) to outlaw GMO crops within its borders, and Ukiah Brewery was the very first 100% certified organic brewery in the U.S.

Fabulous beers, food, people and service. Home run!!!

Thank you so much, @carolkean, that's really sweet of you to say, and means a lot to me.

Yeah, GranNatt was an inspiration to us all, as she just kept on going no matter what, despite all the odds.

Interestingly, she had a heart murmur from childhood, and her doctor told her parents that she likely wouldn't live a long life. Ha!

Well, she made it to eighty-eight, and being a tad contrary, I'd love to know by how much she outlived the doctor in question. ;-)

I'm actually leaning toward taking a bunch of my posts and re-editing them into book format, say something along the lines of "100 Days of Haiku and the Essays They Inspired."

What say you?

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"100 Days of Haiku and the Essays They Inspired" -I'll buy it!
And how about an anthology full of your replies? :)
I had a heart murmur from early in childhood but nobody ever said it was life threatening - but then the dentist said people with murmurs need to take antibiotics before dental procedures and cleanings, but by then I was in my 30s. In my 40, the doctor said "Murmur? What murmur?" so I quit taking the antibiotics before the annual dental exam.
Your grandma would have known to ignore it in the first place!

My great-grandmother's parents took the heart murmur seriously, but since there wasn't a lot they could do about it in the 1890s, they allowed nature to take its course, which, obviously, was the right thing to do.

She was born 6 October 1882, and died in August 1971, raising two healthy children in the process, living to eighty-eight, healthy up until the end. So murmur schmurmur. ;-)

As for the book, you wouldn't consider helping me edit it, would you?

I have some ideas on how I want to do it, but as you know my essays can touch on myriad subjects within one post, so I'm not certain as yet what is the best way to go about compiling them together.

Self-editing is sooo much harder than writing, but I'd be honored to take a look at any possible ways to organize the information and see if a pattern emerges... your sister Carol is one theme; your musician friends; the Holocaust survivors in your neighborhood, in childhood; your herbal lore; your endless ideas and people you've met, books you read. I'd love to see it! My only suggestion: #memoir is a genre I avoid, so I'd avoid calling it one, but other people might love memoirs. (I might read one written by a space alien... )
One theme I like seeing you tackle is that you find kindness and compassion wherever you go, even though the world is so full of hatred and injustice. Somehow, you gravitate toward the good, and/or the good finds you!

I've thought of separating by subject matter as well, but a side of me is strongly leaning toward just keeping it simple, taking the first hundred days of haiku posts I wrote, presenting them in order, and allowing the patterns to emerge more naturally and organically.

I've always gravitated toward certain themes, so I don't think that it would be so radically "out there" as to defy at least a decent index, but I also think that it might be more interesting, to follow the chronology of what occurred to me when, in light of what was going on at the time.

And I agree, memoir as a genre is currently overused, especially by first-time authors whom no one knows from Adam, which would obviously at this point include me.

Which is why I'm more inclined to start with the haiku, and the essays they inspired, as writing haiku for (initially) thirty days straight did indeed inspire me, and I found that it also honed my thinking and helped me to focus, even when I wound up writing something entirely unrelated to the haiku that I started off with.

I'm with you: follow the chronology.
The editor in me has a knee-jerk reaction to sort by theme, but "organic" and "as it happens" vs #structured if fine by me.

Thanks. Marek thinks I'm nuts.

He's right of course, but in this instance, I think I'm on the right track.
;-)

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This would be another great theme: because her heart murmur began in the 1890s, "they allowed nature to take its course, which, obviously, was the right thing to do." A whole chapter, a whole section, just on nature taking its own (not man-led) course!

Yes, that has played a great role in my own life as well, as I'm fabulous at building obstacles and getting in my own way, whereas when I just allow things to unfold as they will, they tend to do so far more gracefully than when I am busily trying to guide them. ;-)

That's usually the best - if we get of our own way and "just allow things to unfold as they will" -
For me it's hard to discern what level of chaos could have been prevented by me simply being on the ball, aware, organizing, planning, plotting things on calendars and above all remembering to LOOK AT THE CALENDAR every day. And set reminders in phones to go off.
So often as a writer, I've heard my prose is meandering and discursive. I lost faith in myself. Read books on Three-Part Structure, archetypes, outlining and planning... and ran away to duck my head in the sand.
You can do it though!!! You have an innate sense of order and balance. )

Yeah, well, as a reader, many of my favorite novels could easily be described as "meandering and discursive," particularly those of Robertson Davies.

If you don't know his work, he was a Canadian university professor and linguist, and my absolute favorite book of his is "Murther and Wandering Spirits," which is brilliant, poignant, moving, and frequently hilarious.

I've written about it, and him, before. The basic plot is that it begins when a man walks into his bedroom, catches his wife in bed with a stranger, and the stranger violently murders him.

Suddenly, not immediately realizing that he has died, he finds himself sitting in a cinema, being shown scenes from his own life, and those of his ancestors.

Even more oddly, his only companion is the man who has just murdered him, who is now quietly watching the scenes with him.

This is arguably my favorite novel, and one that I keep buying, because, like "The Mind's Sky," by mathematician and physicist Timothy Ferriss, I keep lending it out and not getting it back.

Davies is an author for those of us who love words and the inner workings of the English language. An expert in both, he frequently forces me to my dictionary regularly, sometimes multiple times on one page, which I love.

And, even though the basic meaning of the words could be inferred from usage, invariably, I have found additional meaning and nuance when I take the time to look them up.

He knew what he was doing.

I'm looking forward to reading your books. I love your essays.

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Excellent history, I indeficate, I was able to remember my grandmother and her most wastituits

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Lovely write-up and great memories. I Loved my paternal grandmother but she passed much too soon when I was 12.

I enjoyed the account of how your grandparents helped the young mother and her children in the desert. 😊

Yes, sadly, my paternal grandmother died when my father was only eight months old, so unfortunately, I never got to know her, and he had no memories of her.

She seems to have been a lovely person, according to those who did know her, and devoted to her young son. We did know her younger sister, his Aunt Frances, and she was able to tell us a lot.

And at least you had your grandmother until age twelve. That's gone too soon, no doubt, but at least you have wonderful memories of her, and the love you shared will remain with you always.

Thanks so much for your lovely comment.

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Your grandparents were super heroes in the desert! Smart always being prepared and the bandanna thing? Think I may have to add a pile in my truck😎🤠

The suckers come in handy, whether you need to wipe your face, or staunch a bleeding cut.

Can't have too many clean bandannas. ;-)

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What an amazing account full of family history and history in general. A real time travel and a very nice read up.
I was about to jokingly ask if your family were chickens ( not meant as an insult ) and then you explained why you used the chicken picture above your post.

A hug from Portugal

Lolol! No, we're not chickens, but I have been accused of being a space alien more than once.

And have you heard Eddie Izzard's discourse on chickens?

His claim is that, when regarding an animal who can have its head cut off, and still run around, we should consider chickens with the utmost respect, entirely worthy of a salute. ;-)

Of course, the only video clip I can locate at the moment is his one on jazz chickens, not quite the same obviously, but still hilarious. ;-)

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