Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Mourning the Rains of California

I am a child of rain, a child of storm and fog and thunder and the smell of a wet road, a wet garden, and oh my, the wet forest—fir trunk, bay trunk, oak trunk, duff. I remember, growing up, that when the rains came, I would dash out back and run around as the grass got muddy, reveling. I would do rain dances in the side garden with an old friend, invoking our own pantheon of water deities inspired by the Egyptian ones. (Once, it even worked!) When the sky started to get a little patch of blue showing through, I would feel upset— go away, blue, keep raining! Keep raining! 

Rain to me has never meant indoor weather, though certainly the book-worm in me delighted (and delights) in the warm evenings by the fireside with my various books (generally, at a young age, chronicling the adventures of various medieval herbalist-animal-speaking warrior-type girls...). It is weather that, for me, demands interaction. It makes me want to throw on my coat and pull up my boots and head straight for the hills. I love the sound of it pattering on the leaves of trees, on the dry grasses as they soak and soak and get ready to turn green again. I love it on the roof at night--few sounds comfort and delight me as much. I love it dripping down my nose and eyelashes out in the hills. It sparks something in me, some kind of fire that sends me dashing and whirling and leaping, perhaps like the roots underground in this drought-prone place, who must surely go into throes of ecstasy when that first big storm comes, who must positively sing as they drink, and drink, like my own soul does.

But this year, as you well know by now I am sure from all the News, no storm has come. 

The dry hills of Pfeiffer Ridge in Big Sur. Just south of this photo, a whole ridge was burned in a bad wildfire in late December. A winter wildfire is never a good sign.
The hills are caught in summertime, an aged summertime that has gone from gold to grey to old-bone grey-brown, ready to catch fire at any second. The air itself is dry, the sky so big and blue it unnerves me. I feel a palpable weight lift when we get cloud-cover for a morning or afternoon; it is winter, it is the time for muted gray skies, for slowness, for dark. As the News tells us, the reason for this drought in California and the Southwest has to do with a High Pressure Ridge larger than the Sierra Nevadas (2,000 miles long, 4 miles high) that has been clamped over the Pacific Ocean for the last 13 months, deflecting storms north and east of us. When the sky is blue and empty of clouds, I can almost feel that pressure-- or perhaps it is just a pressure system inside my own chest, clamoring for downpour, clamoring for release of rain from that silent, too-still sky.

Oh beauty, Oh Big Sur

I know that deep drought has touched California before (though not this deep since around the 1500's, according to geologists and those folk who study historical weather patterns and climate). I know that the seeds of the wildflowers in the ground are not dead, just dormant, even as the hills turn a darker and grayer dry brown than I have ever seen, a ravaged color. I know that heat can cleanse, like a fever. I know that an oak tree has deep tap roots that touch the dark cold waters of the ground.


But my animal body mourns the dry. My animal body craves the change of a season—and for you eastern folk, yes, California does have seasons, indeed, and they have to do with rain, and the blooming of different flowers, and fog, and the migrating of whales and of birds, and so many other things. My animal body has dreamt of running through rainstorms, only to wake and smell the air out the window and know that the sidewalks are dry. My animal body feels grief, it feels great unease that seems to leak into my all-too-human-mind, making anxiety rise more often, unbidden, like wildfire, able to catch light anywhere.


The plants are frozen in time, dry husks. They are wise, though. These chaparral and coastal scrub plants of Big Sur (and the rest of California), like the black sage below, know about droughts in their seeds, in their genetics, in their resinous hearts. They know how to keep water from transpiring off their leaves. They know how to go dormant into the dry times. They smell sweet, and strong, despite everything.


A part of me wants to run north, run toward the rain—some kind of wild and nomadic instinct, to follow the water, to run from drought. And without a doubt nomadic peoples of the past and present did and do just that. I've said to friends, laughing—I may need to take a train to Oregon and go lay down in a rainstorm, to be renewed, partly joking, partly serious. But another part of me, the part that is full of a grief beyond just the "soft animal of my body," as Mary Oliver would say, the part that feels, somewhere sick and sorrowful in my stomach, that this is our fault— that part of me knows that we have to stay with this. We have to stick with it, like the black sage, like the coyote brush, who cannot leave.


I think that it is only through our emotional bodies that we can really access the great environmental griefs of this era we are living through. And our emotional bodies are activated, at least in my experience, by those things which occur right around us, on the land we love, in the air we love, amidst the people and plants and trees and streets we love. Global warming and climate change have been horrifying, sad, frightening but somehow impersonal concepts to me until now. Until this dryness, this drought, which may, it's true, be "just another climate cycle," but really, honestly, let's just be straight with each other here—we've had a hand in this, we know we have. The really bad ramifications of a prolonged drought here— agricultural shortages, massive wildfires, eventual clean water scarcity—have yet to even set in, though I know that our local, small scale farmers are already panicking, and tapping into their ground water, and they, more than anyone, deserve their rain-prayers answered. I dearly hope we can avoid the worst of this. But even now, as I feel the scratchy dry air in my throat, it makes me want to yell. I can feel my rain-loving soul thrashing around, as I search the sky in the morning for clouds.


It has been believed through the ages that a drought was a sign that humankind had offended the deities of earth and sky. Whatever the "true" cause of this one, I think we might benefit from a healthy dose of this sort of humility, this kind of morality, remembering that our actions really do affect the great web of life, from ants to rainclouds, that we have a responsibility to this earth which nurtures us every day—the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat, the blood in our bodies. At this point, of course, I'm not sure a rain dance and offerings of sorrow left out on every roof would do the job. I think we're in a bit too deep. I'm not sure we deserve a mythic solar-hero to go and fight the dragon out over the Pacific who holds the rains in his stomach, and yet I so, so desperately wish he would come along. I think it is a lesson—that we have overreached, here in California, much of which is as arid as parts of Morocco.  That we have built up our civilization in a period of record wet, and while this drought is very likely much exacerbated by global warming, it is also part of California's character to go dry for periods of time.


Despite this calm rationality, I am writing these words because really, I am sad, because I am scared, because I am a lover of rain, because, like a good soft animal, I do not want these cycles of dryness to change the land I love, even though I know the land I love has many faces, and many phases, and part of learning to be fully human is to learn to ride through change, and adapt to it. I am writing this because I do not think we are given the space in this culture to grieve the changes we have wrought upon our landscapes, our air, our clouds, to express the anger and fear and helplessness that we often feel, or repress. After all, when we call most non-human beings "Resources" instead of "Kin," not much room is left for emotions such as sadness, such as loss and sorrow. You cannot mourn a resource. That's why I like the language used in many Native American cultures, such as the Yurok, who called all beings "people"— frog people, cloud people, human people. You can mourn the cloud people, after all, the rain people, the thirsty deer people, the newt people who have had no winter rains to spur on their mating season, the salmon people who can't make it upstream.




At the same time, as naturalist and herbalist Jolie pointed out to me this weekend, it's good to remember that while we may grieve, the plants do know about drought, like this Big Sur succulent above, which has dry and water-conservation and heat written all over it. And the native bunchgrasses may make a come-back this year, she said, pointing to the only tufts of green coming up under the dry grey-gold, which were, indeed, growing in those classic perennial bunches. At long last, perhaps they will have a chance to outgrow the invasive grasses.



In our own tangled and wild garden, the daffodils are already up, and the bees are busy gathering their pollen, and it is hard not to smile at a bee in a daffodil, with pollen on her legs, and the smell of that daffodil up to your nose. It is hard not to smile at the smell of the apple blossoms, so early, the magnolias on the street, the bright yellow faces of the sourgrass exploding everywhere along sidewalk edges.




It is hard not to smile at the sunny calendula, which hasn't missed a beat since we moved in at the start of November. And as my small 6-year old neighbor told me out in the garden as we searched the dirt for worms—if you spray the yellow flowers, and the lemons maybe too, with a little water at dusk, the fairies will come and collect the gold. Well, I thought, well. I do not know what our summer is going to look like, or even our spring, but now the flowers are coming out gold, today, this moment, and so there is always beauty, every day, everywhere. And so we adapt our hearts and our spirits, just a little bit, just enough, because that, also, is what animals do, in order to survive, in order to stave off sorrow. At once, we do not forget to sing out to the clouds, tell them how much we love their wetness when it is poured up us, how much we love the smell of mud, the sound of rain on our roofs, the taste of it on our tongues.  Whether or not it coaxes thunderstorms, perhaps such songs, such prayers, will douse our hearts with a little fairy-gold, will fill our own souls with enough rain to carry on, to make small changes, to look a warming world in the eye, to look our own guilt in the eye, and some make good of what we do, that it may be somehow in service to the land which holds us, even if that service is just a word of praise, said aloud, to a raincloud.



P.S. Nevertheless, Sir High Pressure Ridge out there beyond the clouds, if you are ready, and only in your own good time, perhaps it is time to let go. Perhaps you, too, would enjoy a big thunderous rainstorm come washing, at long last, through your high-pressure spine. 

17 comments:

  1. Another beautiful cry from humanity. You are a joy to read, Sylvia.

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    1. Thank you for your kind words, Tiff, and for stopping by! Many blessings to you.

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  2. A beautiful post, your response to the drought reminds me of how I felt when I lived through a 'rainy season with no rain' in Malawi.

    I wish we could send you some of our excess Scottish rain.....

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    1. Oh my, Scottish rain, now THAT sounds delicious beyond delicious. :)

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  3. "After all, when we call most non-human beings "Resources" instead of "Kin," not much room is left for emotions such as sadness, such as loss and sorrow. "

    YES. THIS. thank you...

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  4. I share your sadness. I feel that sickness and sadness in my stomach at the loss of our monarch butterflies, honeybees and native bees, whose world has changed through no fault of their own to one of asphalt, concrete, subdivisions and mowed roadsides. And at the wolf hunts, and the U.S. Wildlife Service that kills tens of thousands of native animals every year for convenience, and so many other things. It is a grievous thing to see the land you love be inexorably covered with strip malls, and experience weather so different from that you've known all your life, and know that your way of life has brought these changes. Everything else just seems like a distraction from that grief, sometimes. But I think that what you are doing IS helping, Sylvia...witnessing, grieving, blessing, calling, writing. Thank you, it is good to know that we who grieve are not alone. I wish you rain rain rain.

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    1. Beautifully said, Carmine.... there are so many things that clench my stomach with sadness too, it's hard to hold all of them. Thank you for your kind words, and for stopping by.

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  5. Sylvia, I know exactly how you feel. Rain has always been, to me, a rare blessing, something to pause for and thank. I was home just last week (http://www.smyeryu.com/wendy/seasonally-disoriented/) and felt the drought like a fever: disorienting, seductive (to the sun-starved part of me), incomprehensible and consuming. I had a hard time getting my mind to recognize (beyond just saying to everyone, "can you believe the weather, I sure wish it'd rain") what my body felt threatened by - the word 'drought' doesn't convey the feeling that "something is wrong!" Indeed, it is sorrowful.

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    1. Yes indeed, indeed. And thank you for sharing your own thoughts, from another California native. The sun is seductive, it's true, we can't help being a little bit drawn in by its balmy warmth I think!

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  6. We had our first "real" rain of January here in Western Washington just last night. I heaved a sigh of relief. I often think of California, and Big Sur. I used to spend weekends at a house not far from Pfeiffer Beach, and to think of that area being bone dry and at the mercy of any passing spark is unbearable. Every time it rains, or even drizzles here, I think "Drift south, drift south!" although I know it actually usually goes the other way 'round! I've watched our weather changing for the last ten years or so, becoming more like what once was the weather I knew from Monterey. Our winters are still wetter, but they begin later now. I live, as you do, in fear and grief, of the time when the winter rains don't come at all.

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    1. Oh, keep sending it south, do!! Yes, Pfeiffer Ridge is a magical magical place-- how lucky you spent weekends nearby. It was awful to see part of it blackened, but also, I know that fire has its regenerative power, despite the amount of unseasonal wildfires right now... I'm trying to see it all as part of a bigger cycle. Thank you for your kind thoughts and words.!

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  7. Here, down-weather from you, several years of drought is similarly stirring our hearts and bodies with discomfort, sorrow, longing. As ever, your words come forth from a deep source within, touching us all in those places we share.

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  8. I had no idea about your drought. Here in Britain, it won't STOP raining. I long for snow and frost this winter. Just about to start reading Grey Fox Epistle. Love the idea of Snow White entwined with Orpheus and Eurydice. Why did I never see that before?

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  9. Such beauty in your words, Sylvia. I feel your sorrow. I too am a child of rain, always have been. We finally had some rain here in the land of oz but I know other parts are still very dry and resemble your haunting pictures of the grey landscape. I wish you much rain and look forward to the grey fox epistle. Thank you for yet another beautiful post!

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    1. Thank you for your kind words, Monika, I'm glad you've had some rain over there. I know that our climates are similar.... It has finally rained today, only a quarter inch but it feels so so good. XO

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  10. Beautiful Sylvia. Your words never fail to make my heart sing! (even ballads of sorrow hold such healing, thank you for helping me to remember). xo Asia

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