Sleigh Ride, Sleigh Ride, Sleigh Ride …

YES it’s winter AND that holiday feeling is indeed coming my way. If you’re more or less my age, you may even remember all the lyrics to the opening words posted above. And I have to say that not only are they remembered each December, but yes, I still love Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gorme. Madly.

It all started when I was a young girl and has lasted prolifically as an old(er) girl. And yes, I still have a few of those albums that were sold at Firestone for decades. In fact, one day not long ago, I dragged my husband over to Firestone to ask if the albums were still for sale there. It was a long shot, sure, but I was hopeful and keen for nostalgia. The man heading the shop lifted his head toward the skies, mulled a bit while rubbing his three days of scruffle, then looked at us and said … “Nineteen … Sixty … Seven …. ” We all laughed, but I would surely have loved to hear those old vinyls again.

For me, it will always be “Our cheeks are nice and rosy and comfy cozy are we, We’re snuggled up together like birds of a feather should be. Let’s take that road before us and sing a chorus or two, Come on it’s lovely weather for a sleigh ride together with you!

P.S. In the early 60’s Firestone sold Christmas albums to help tire sales. I’m sure Steve and Eydie helped too.

Plumbing the Depths

This is the third post I’ve tried to write.

I have a friend who tosses fabulousness here and there every time she has an urge, and let me tell you, those little urges materialize often and keep her sane. Me? I tend to scribble my deepest thoughts on random pieces of paper that will never see the light again. I save them, sure, but they’re a tad elusive nevertheless.

Isn’t that the description of life?

I love writing. It takes me to a place outside of everyday life, and the truth is that a lot of me lives in there. It’s not an escapist thing — it’s more like plumbing the depths. Finding peace. Finding light. Finding home and sharing it.

Life around us is changing, and I’ve decided to move backwards a bit so that I can move forward in a more purposeful way. Frankly, it isn’t easy when you’re dealing with hyperbolic changes in our country. I know I’ve said it before, but ….

I think this is the shortest post I’ve written in many moons. And the long and short of it is that life has changed rather suddenly and in many, many ways. And though I haven’t yet found the secret to holding on, I’m doing what I can.

And that’s a start.

The World is Not Much With Us Now

I’m in a large room surrounded by people I recognize on occasion but don’t actually know. It’s nice, I suppose. I have personal space. Time to reflect. The potential for growth. Free reign to write.

Still the churning in my gut won’t stop. Knowing that everything has changed won’t stop. No matter where I am. No matter.

“The world is too much with us” they say … but this isn’t really the truth I know. I know a truth where we keep to ourselves. Hide our love. Turn away from possibility. Turn away from anything that has the potential to hurt us — and there is plenty of that now. More than plenty.

Passing glances, gazing at floors, spending time in malls because no one knows us there and distance has become what we seek most. Need most.

These days I’ve seen women fleeing from a country they’ve loved and nurtured and believed in — often through their entire lives. And we all know why — because the alternative is a wicked loss of women’s rights that will last a minimum of four years.

On the male side, yesterday a man went ballistic because he wasn’t allowed to spend forty-five minutes chatting up a stunned young girl. I haven’t seen a single person who doesn’t seem antsy.

Is this our world now? Standing just outside the door until the preschool bell rings and we gasp to see our children safe and sound? Keeping my head down because a local man keeps his eye on my every move? Living with women because we think we’ll be safer? Know we’ll be safer?

Is this our world now?

______________________________________________________________________________________________

Note: The World is Too Much With Us Now by William Wordsworth, 1807, has been slightly edited to fit present times.



Hope / Fear

There are, in life,
so many moments that feed us —
learning who we are, our gifts and our pleasures,
a sudden call at the door.
I think today — this place — this time — this unknown tomorrow
is a glaring mish-mash that haunts my brain
and surely won’t let go until
tomorrow,
next week,
forever,
if then.

And even if we acquiesce and work to re-learn joy,
will we believe again? Accept again? Exhale again?

Life isn’t made for comfort — we’ve all learned that —
and still my soul
watches and waits and sighs and grasps and hopes and tries
(again)
to believe.

Staring Into Space

This morning I knew exactly what I wanted to say. What I needed to say. It was clear and concise — a mix of horror and loss.

This afternoon, I can’t tell my front from my back. I can’t complete a sentence. I can’t remember where I was headed when I left the house. Maybe I just don’t want to remember — to lose these feelings of safety, sharing, and creativity — these days of love and laughter that held much of my life before this morning. It was a good life — filled with happiness, joy, women working together, and love.

And then this morning my husband misread the clock and accidentally trotted downstairs an hour early. I did the same an hour later and by then hell had already broken loose — at least in my house and my heart and the hearts and souls of so many. I’m accustomed to waiting and waiting and waiting for the election results, usually taking a day and a half or so. When have the polls ever been ready in less that a day??? This didn’t seem like a good omen, and it certainly wasn’t. I dropped into my chair and stared at the TV for only a few minutes, and then spent most of the day staring into nowhere, which seems appropriate.

I’ve read part of the manifesto put out by trump and friends, and yes, it scares me sh***tless. And yet somehow I put much less concern into it than I should have. Tonight, if I’m thinking clearly, I’ll delve further to acquaint myself more fully with Project 2025 and the demons that lurk when we’re not looking. I won’t make that mistake again, but is it too late?

The Lives We Live, the Changes at the Door

Last week I learned that my uncle had died quite suddenly of a heart attack. I can’t say he was a spring chicken, but since I didn’t see him often, he was always young in my mind.

He was one with a passel of boys and a sister, born and raised in the Garden District, and later landing in Pass Christian, Mississippi.

He had a good life, and I plan to remember him that way.

Not all of us walk both sides of life. My uncle was a gentle loner who leapt into action when there were friends nearby, served as an avid tour guide whenever we drove down for a visit, and was delighted to show us the ins and outs of the garden district whenever we were in town. He was a good man, learned and happy to tell all he knew. I liked him very much.

When we heard the news, I took it hard. In fact, much harder then you’d think for a girl who spent time with her uncle on perhaps a hand full of occasions during his life. He was, however, much like my own father — they were brothers who took on whatever tasks seemed right for each day.

I was always charmed to know a man who not only worked both sides of the fence, but happily lived a life that melded simplicity, oodles of knowledge, good stories, and a true interest in everyone who crossed his path. He was gracious without a second thought.

I think I would have enjoyed growing up at ease with either side of the coin — something I’ve never been able to say about myself.

I sometimes wonder … do the best parts of our selves jump into action only when we stumble upon tragedy? How often do we take opportunities to reach out, to listen, to laugh?

How often do these moments change us?

Can we hold on to the change? Can we become the change?

I’m still pondering.

Pam Goode

Crumbs

Some say the purest death
is to be ravaged alive
by beasts —
a final communion with creation
and instinct.
I could give myself to the lions
as red men gave their flesh
with joy to birds of prey, a feast
laid high on offering altars of pine,
their bodies rising
bite by bite to fill
the mouth and longing arms
of god.
And if I should die on African soil
at the pawing of tigers or men,
I pray the ants will piggyback my
sun-pressed crumbs across each undulation
of the ancient and bare breasted earth
and leave me soul to soil,
to nurse the hungry wild
and mingle with the stars.

© Pam Goode, 1995
Adapted 2024

Her Garden

I sang all day in the dirt.
Peat, sawed up wood, manure,
and what once took the shape of leaves
come happily together in my hands.

Good dirt smells.
First like the parts put in,
and rather less than pleasant as you
might expect —
and then all excited like a promise.
Earthworms writhe,
excited and aware.
They know full-out what’s to come:
the breaking down of life
into blackness —
and then rebirth.

Whoever thought beauty could burst
from a handful of chicken shit???

We are so much more than we know,
simply because we don’t take the time to see.

© Pam Goode

Steam

The summer is losing its steam,
and you begin to warm
and grow large in me
again.

Just today
I passed too silently
behind you,
and your body grew in greeting leaps
both left and right
until I doubted I could make
my way beyond
without a full submission
to your hands —
so present, and so full
of opportunities
to touch,

Your body
a forgiving bank
of second chances,

And I wanted my
hands
to have them all

in fingers full.

© Pamela Goode

i

i cough.

and breathe and

cough

again

and wash

and walk and

run

and run and run and

run …

and still you stick

in me.

© Pam Goode