Autumn is whispering to me. It reached 92 today and 100 is forecast for tomorrow, but regardless of the coming temperatures, the seasonal change is beginning around here with burnished colors. Last week I camped–in a tent–and woke early with the temperature a brisk 46 degrees. Unfortunately, campfires aren’t allowed now in Oregon parks because of the risk of wildfires. The woods near the Clackamas River smelled of the coming season, musty and earthy. The night sky impossibly dark, the quiet deep.
Yesterday I listened to Maura Conlon’s new podcast, Orginal Belonging. Specifically I listened to Episode 4, Primal Belongings and I simply need to recommend it to writers and creatives everywhere. Conlon is the author of the marvelous memoir, FBI Girl, How I Learned to Crack My Father’s Code…With Love about growing up in a family where her father was an FBI agent. It’s also been turned into a screenplay. She’s fascinated with the primal nature of our creativity and holds a doctorate in Depth Psychology. In this six-part series she poses the question: What made you come alive in your first 14 years that reveals the essence of who you are?
The episode begins with the whistle of a tea kettle–a sound I hear every morning. Conlon imgines it’s a sound her grandmother heard in County Clare, Ireland more than a century ago. She explains that she’s passionate about the primal nature of our creativity which allows us to connect with ourselves and the sacred web of life.
The episode then launches into an origin story, tracing her creativity when she’s 14 or 15 and discovers sewing as a creative outlet and early feminine sovereignty. But first she tracks when she got her period, the awkwardness of her changing body, and an uncomfortable conversation and show-and-tell with her mother. I was brought back to my own memories of being 13 and my own encounter with my mother into this passage into womanhood.
Conlon is urging listeners to search out their early life-defining experiences which offer timeless inspiration, resilience, and a through-thread for their lives. A key to their truest potential. She said, “We’re born to be creative. We’re born to play. We’re hardwired.”
I was called to this particular episode when I learned author Kristin Kaye was going to be her guest. Kristin is a former student and client and a magical being. I can still remember when I first met her in a workshop group I was leading. Maybe you’ve met women who have that goddess quality and mystique including a rare wisdom and depth. I’ve never forgotten her–or her profound connection to trees.
Kaye was first introduced as an author, meditation teacher, founder of Story Alchemy an online writing lab, conduit. She’s a ghostwriter and author of Iron Maidens: The Most Awesome Female Muscle in the World and a novel, the award-winning Tree Dreams.
It was delightful to hear her voice as she traced her childhood memories from her suburban wanderings near a small creek to a family cabin amid wooded landscapes. Recollections of a step-grandfather who wrote poetry on birch bark and left the poems for her grandmother. Kaye always had an active imagination, including completing her Saturday cleaning chores against background music which turned into a natural inclination to perform and love of theater.
As for Tree Dreams, it’s a coming-of-age story with a 17-year-old protagonist torn between two realities–with old growth trees at its center. While researching her novel, Kaye took part in a ‘tree sit’ in a giant redwood tree for four days with the help of Earth First members, the environmental activist organization. They were tree sitting to save a grove of ancient redwoods. She describes how she climbed 100 feet up a rope–no easy feat– especially since she was encouraged not to touch the tree as she hoisted her body upward. She went on to describe the small platform she occuped along with supplies and a kind of dream catcher–a net between two branches (10 stories up or more). She slept in this net as the tree swayed and waved and felt the constant motion of the tree and world. Needless to say it was life-changing.
The sounds of the forest permeate the episode as it concludes and I want to quote Kristin: Stories are like life rafts. They sustain us, allow us to hope and remember inspiration. And sharing them, sharing stories, sharing poems, sharing visions, sharing experiences, we’re giving each other gifts in ways that we don’t fully understand.
Keep writing, keep dreaming, have heart