The Zoey Blog: January 2016 FINAL - COVER UNIVERSE EXPLORERS ORDER


Friday, January 15, 2016

That place where there there is no sound...

I write when things get difficult, and so I have notebooks of scribbles from years of dealing with other peoples struggles, the kind that you shoulder whether you want to or not, and they then inspire your own struggles...to understand, to console, to offer hope...to help. Sometimes I go back through those books, and I read the notes, but mostly I don't. Today I accidentally found the words that I scribbled when I met a boy who barely had enough time to become a man before the demons caught up to him. Words have always helped. Not the rules that go along with them, I don't like those, no, just the feeling of scribbling them, of typing them, or of how they sound together...sometimes even how they look beside one another. Some people like numbers or sounds. I like words. They almost always make sense when other things don't.

Today I found these words from three years ago...about a boy I'd just met, a boy no longer with us. I share them here because the sharing feels good when everything else just feels bad, and because it feels important that they're out in the world filling the space that he's left. I struggled to find a way to honour someone who didn't honour himself, and that's when the words came...and the only way to make them honourable is to show them to others.

They looked better on paper, in messy cursive, but here they are nonetheless...

"Why do this," she said...a Mom, and justified in her concern for her son. Addiction is difficult to be anchored to, to be helplessly tied to. "Because it's the right thing to do," he said, "it's what he deserves, I think," he added. Still, nothing...no response, just quiet hesitation. "I think it's important just to be there," he urged, "to accept the discomfort of the situation, to lean into the helplessness and just choose to be there," he insisted. "That matters, doesn't it? It matters that I'm there when he can finally see, when he finally looks up and hopes that he recognizes something that doesn't remind him of what hurts. Don't you think?" The question was like heat lightning shooting across an empty sky. She blinked, and tried to speak but she struggled against the tears. Not unlike the storm that follows the lightning, when the sky opens up and begins to pour, her face darkened and something powerful pushed itself into that calm, quiet place. Her shoulders shuddered and she tried to restrain the deluge. It was no use. Her heart burst open like the sky and the tears flooded her flushed cheeks. "Thank you," she sputtered, "thank you so much." Then there was silence because in that place where truth and beauty intersect there is no sound. Where grace meets dignity there is often only the subdued silence of understanding. There was magic in that space between people he believed, and in that gentle moment he was certain that he was right. There...that feels better.

Sunday, January 10, 2016

...It Isn't Zoey

Buncha beauties - Point Edward Arena Jan 10, 2016
Maggie, June, and Mag's BFF, Keely, getting some ice time at the Point Edward Arena's public skate.


It seems that we've got one girl who likes to glide on one foot with the other extended out behind, and another who gets all smiley when she gets to knock someone over on the ice. So we may have a hockey player on our hands, and it isn't Zoey.

Zoey likes gymnastics. Maggie just stands there and judges everyone, refusing to even stretch.

Zoey checks her look out in the mirror most days. Maggie couldn't care less if she even has underwear on.

Zoey backs away from conflict. She's eager to diffuse situations that are uncomfortable. Maggie diffuses them too, but by diving in head first and making you regret flying that close to the sun.

A fight can bring Zoey to tears. A fight just gets Maggie all amped up.

Yup...I think we've got ourselves a hockey player...and it isn't Zoey.

Saturday, January 9, 2016

Where Sadness Lives

He had sadness living in places where sadness shouldn't live. It's easy enough to say, "he didn't deserve this," but then how many ever do? When Jacob (not his real name) first spoke with me I knew he was a boy who's story was going to get tragic. I never imagined it would happen so early, or with such finality.

Drugs are an awful thing. Don't ever let anyone romanticize them, ever. They're more often than not the building blocks of pain and lost potential. They're far, far too frequently the cloud that obscures not just the sun but the entire sky. They're unfair, and indiscriminate.

He was a boy with potential. Now he's just a memory with regrets all around it.

My words were mostly lost on him, I think. All of those times spent trying to convince him that he was allowed to take up space, or trying to explain to him what happiness looked like, when he had never known a day of it after the age of fourteen. It's hard to breathe when you don't think that you deserve air.

I'd be happy enough to never have to hug a grieving father again in my life.

Monday, January 4, 2016

So there's that scene...

So there's that scene in "You've Got Mail"...the scene where Meg Ryan is leaving her bookshop for the very last time and she turns to shut the lights out and oh so sadly reminisce, when she sees her mother and herself twirling...Yeah, that scene breaks my heart 1000 times over.



My favourite part..."all it really means is that something you didn't want to happen has happened..."

Given a series of "I wish I had a life like that" wishes, Meg Ryan's life as Kathleen Kelly, owner of "The Shop Around the Corner," the children's book store on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, a shop inherited from her mother, would rank embarrassingly high on my list. Closing it would shatter me. Watching it happen in a fictional movie breaks my heart into ten billion pieces.

See here's the thing, and it's quite a little thing, but it's my thing...

When you find a corner of the planet that is nearest perfection...safe, inspiring, where you know exactly what you're doing, and exactly how to do it...if you're lucky enough to stumble into that incredible place, that lovely place ('cause there's just no better word than lovely sometimes) where you never have to pretend or lie to yourself, where being who you are is easy...it's hard to give up. You're certain, and rightly so, perhaps, that you might never find it again. If you are lucky enough to love a place that deeply then, as Kathleen Kelly suggests, a part of you dies.

I tend to love that deeply.

I feel as though I've found that place eight, or nine, or ten times across the good fortune of my life, or I've come very close to it, and it strikes me that someday, maybe one day soon, I'll run out of luck...I won't ever find that place again. I found it on a bridge in Paris...on the edge of sea and sky in Big Sur, California...in the Hartwig Building at the University of Michigan...above El Camino Real in San Clemente...at a Boys and Girls Club on London, ON...at a beach house in Brights Grove...on Clinton Street in Carroll Gardens, Brooklyn...in so many places that I fear I've used up my allotment. These days I stumble through a career that feels an awful lot like that...and I get to trip over a game that I love, and I get to give it to a hundred or so tiny people, helping to make them big people, and it feels oh so transitory, so dangerously...perfect. I worry that soon all of those moments will all just be fleeting memories.

I have a hard time watching Kathleen Kelly and her Mom twirling...a really hard time. It's a beautiful scene, but one that stomps on my soul. You can say what you want about that film, about my affection for it, but that scene...oh, that painful, excruciating scene...heart breaking brilliance. BTW...how is it possible for Meg Ryan to look any better than she does in this movie? The quick answer...it's not.

Friday, January 1, 2016

You and Me Together...



We've sort of accidentally stumbled into a bit of a tradition...the annual Dave Matthews Band concert trip with our friends Jimmy and Kim and their son, Eli. Now that's it's 2016 the question looms...tour schedule? Where's the next road trip? In 2015 we met in Pittsburgh. The year before it was Cuyahoga Falls, OH. So...2016??

The crazy thing is that this year marks DMB's 25th Anniversary...kind of hard for my head to wrap itself around. We've been to about a million and a half shows it seems but these ones with Jimmy Whynot and family have become some of our favourites.

I dunno about Jimmy and Kim but I'm hoping for a Chicago show, or maybe Western New York. June wants to go the Gorge shows 'cause June doesn't F around. We always try to hit Toronto and Detroit shows, and maybe another in the mix, but are more than a little amped at the idea of a 25th Anniversary Tour. The fan club just emailed that 2016 tour dates will be released soon so...

It doesn't take much to make me happy, and Dave Matthews shows on green grass hills, in shorts and t-shirts, with friends, and a road trip thrown in just because...well, that makes me happy.

Thank God/Coach Harbaugh



Thank God we're good again.

That is all.

Go Blue!