The trees
“What do you think about all
this, this coming and going of people, their arguments and fights?” I ask the
big tree. I sit in her lap far above the ground and up here such calmness comes
over me. Momma Fig, heart of the Trico-ops, consecrated again and again
throughout the years by co-opers who felt the special power in the dappled
shade of her canopy. The cool afternoon light and the scent of figs. She
whispers her answers into the rustling leaves. This constant flux of people,
that divide themselves up into ‘generations’, or ‘houses’, and then again ‘individuals’,
and then they’re a ‘community’... They redraw the lines at their convenience,
to back a point, to take a stance. The Fig Tree doesn’t see those lines,
doesn’t recognize the individuals who return to take refuge in her arms. She
just is there. Unwaveringly, unendingly, she receives the life that seeks her
out, and gives of her shelter, shade, and fruit. Such a blessing trees are, to
remind us little humans with our petty whirlwind lives of stillness.
“What is time like for you? Up
here I hardly feel it at all,” I ask the soft hairy branches of the big
redwood. Dozens of feet above the ground, this is an incredible spot. A
well-kept secret, because it’s quite a journey to get up here. It’s one of my
favorite places in Davis, and I had been looking forward for weeks to visit the
redwood again. When you trace the lines and crinkles in its furry reddish bark,
you can tell the tremendous force with which it’s shooting up out of the
ground, towering higher and higher, spiraling upward. And yet trees seem
suspended, unchanging, because they don’t share our sense of time. Up here it
works differently, and I can almost pretend I never left this place. What a
blessing these trees are, calm and steady, to come to and forget all this frantic
time travelling for a while.
Finding my new role
I originally thought, naively,
that I was coming back to reaffirm all my relationships here. Instead, as it
turns out, my return breathed them back to life, and they continue to evolve
within the current circumstances. The web of relations has rearranged itself
around my absence. Everyone welcomes me with the old love, but my old life here
is gone, and the role I played in people’s lives in a few rare cases just
doesn’t fit anymore. A very humbling experience. This dance is tricky and
unending, a perpetual positioning and repositioning of ourselves to each other.
Back and forth, back and forth,
between feeling so uprooted, holding the shattered pieces of my precious old
life in my hands, to doing my thing like I could be doing it anywhere in the
world. It took me a good week to finally figure out my new temporary role here.
I found it on the Pierce Haus trip to Lake Tahoe, in the snowy hills and Jared’s
cabin, amid the Douglas firs and Ponderosa pines. For three days straight I felt
so in place. Pierce is a fine home, and I am very grateful to the current
Piercians – known and new – for welcoming me so fondly in their midst. Since
then, I been chillin. Simple enjoyment, lighthearted and happy to see so many
friends and familiar places. Drinking IPAs, eating kale salads, still not
understanding the traffic rules around here, inserting ‘hella’ in my sentences,
Seventh Generation dish soap and food sampling in stores and farmers market
stands, potlucks, sleepovers, long boarding, stargazing, camp fires, road trips,
scampering up back country hills*, peeing with the door open, ahh I know it
here!
* (I actually got lost for an
hour in a redwood forest, it was really scary, it would start getting dark
soon, no one could hear me and I could hear nothing, and I had absolutely no
clue which way was left or right. Cole and Gordon rescued me, a chance for them
to repay me after me saving their asses last year on the Lost Coast.)
The magic
But even as I’m chillin, I still don’t
want to belittle the momentousness of being here. Moments in the tree branches remind
me of what I returned for. I’m here for the magic. I know it’s there, profoundly
influencing me subconsciously, even when I don’t readily notice it all the time
(thankfully). That’s the reason I’m so aware, so intentional, about my being
back here. Some places hold undeniably powerful magic, like the Fig Tree, and
the Pierce porch: Palm gliding up the banisters, worn down by so many hands
full of love for it, the smell of old wood, the feel of the cold metal doorknob, the sound
of its creaky turn and the door opening to a true home, hallowed by many many
souls. “Your absence has gone through me
like thread through a needle. Everything I do is stitched with its color”,
some anonymous hand wrote by the door. How supported and surrounded those two
lines made me feel in the last weeks before leaving last year. And how they
still echo in me now.
I planned this whole trip around
Co-op Thanksgiving, the annual reunion, which is an event of some awesomely
powerful magic. It is the night when the hallowed walls hum with life upon the
gathering of generations who poured their souls into them. Last year the event
was the absolute pinnacle of my Davis year. This year was different, the
Thanksgiving celebration the focal point of some radical and polarizing
political criticism from within the community. The night itself was fine of
course, but as a result of the intense Facebook discussions the turnout was
rather low. A pity, I had hoped to see more people and feel that co-op magic come
to life. But a traveler must stay flexible. I am at the mercy of people’s
availability and hospitality this whole time here, and nothing ever works out
as planned anyway. If anything, this year’s reunion was a good test of
character: those ready to take charge of their own experience showed up to have
a good time regardless of the circumstances.
Home
Unexpectedly, during this trip I’ve
also realized that after being back in the Netherlands for some time, my dominant
life is back there now. I’ve even caught myself missing my chilly northern
country and its people. Who would have thought… Not me, I thought I would never
fit back in. But humans are so adaptive. Though I have relished the chance to
reconnect to the Californian pieces of me and the cherished friends and places
here, I’m looking forward to going home in the other direction, too.