Monday, December 28, 2020

2020 The Enjoyable Bits

2020 informed us about us. Aspects perhaps we surreptitiously hid from our awareness.  Thrown back upon just ourselves, many have felt over the limits of their personal resourcefulness.The pandemic has also pared things back to its essentials and a simpler appreciation of life. This, for me, has been where the enjoyable bits were to be found, alongside the truly dreadful 


Walking
Jnanasalin and I were able to take advantage of daily walks in our surrounding countryside and coast. Which, when you live in a place like North Norfolk, its easy to take for granted. I found a strip of lonely pebble beach where I love to go for a bit of alone time. Discovering together in the Spring a beautiful bluebell wood a brief walk from our house, we had no idea existed. Small important joys.



Reading
What curtails deeper engagement in anything, is believing you haven't sufficient time for it. My reading of novels in particular, had become reduced to a brief bedtime read before shut eye. Substantial books requiring prolonged attentive reading I've often struggled to make much progress with. 

You have to slow your pace of life down in order to read well. Being driven by a perpetual state of haste, trying to do two or more things at a time, skims over the surface of literature, as well as life  Rather than fully savouring each moment of the lived reading experience. 

Damian Barr's Big Scottish Book Club did not just revive my desire to read, but also to read well, to set aside time solely for reading. Even developing an ongoing list of books I intend to buy from my local independent bookstore in Holt

Recommended Reading: Damian Barr /Maggie & Me - Douglas Stuart/Suggie Bain - Sayaka Murata/Convenience Store Woman. - James Baldwin/The Fire Next Time/Notes of a Native Son

Listening
Its much the same when you're listening to music, you need to provide the space to give it closer attention within. You can just leave music pootling away in the background. But not all the time, otherwise we only gain a sense of it as aural wallpaper, not the breadth and beauty of sound or emotional resonance. This year my engagement stepped up a gear in the pursuit of fresh musical landscapes. It has had two prominent directions- the individual, distinctly personal voice and the other more experimental vehicles for grand noise, with the occasional mash up of the two.

Recommended Listening: Joni Mitchell - Richard Dawson - Cabaret Voltaire - Chris & Cosey - Anna Von Hauswoolf - Anna Meredith - Silver Mt Zion - Eliane Radigue

Meditating
With the inexorable rise of Zoom, meditating with others was still possible, bridging distances from a mere tens of miles to whole continents,with Zen groups from Norwich to New York. The benefits of this has been plain to see in the regular maintenance of my practice. Zazen practice encourages being present with the present. In the midst of a pandemic and all the multitudinous concerns that arise out of it, it's been useful to practice grounding experience whilst remaining openly aware and letting go attachments to whatever arises.


Writing
Time and space also allows the heart to open up more, to respond to the rumblings of deeper streams, ones perhaps rarely touched upon amid the noise and hurly burly of so called 'normal' life. The very concept of normality has revealed the flimsiness of it as a confection. I've written in a broader range of forms and more frequently over this year. At times its been quite a thrilling ride setting out into new territory.


Watching
Films and TV have been a safe and comforting form of interaction with the outside world, but also quite a passive one. Great to vegetate in front of, but sometimes you need a richer more complex emotional engagement, than flashy editing and visuals alone can provide. So from films, documentaries to comedies I've appreciated things that provide a sense of closer human connection or an irresistible positive zest for life.

Recommended Watching: Ambulance - Hospital - Grayson's Art Club - Schitt's Creek - Bait - Battlestar Galactica - The Repair Shop - American Utopia - Streetcar Named Desire


Local Shopping
We decided to adjust our mindset from 'online first' to prioritise 'local first'. You have to be willing to forego the convenience and potential cheapness of Amazon. But these always come with a hidden cost to something, whether its cheap slave labour overseas, the environment, or to your local economy. Online shopping has the potential to isolate us still more, whilst ruining our local quality of life. I've found I actually enjoyed the process of investing more of my cash in the Sheringham area. After all we are a local business ourselves, so this has been to do with extending the scope of how we collectively and individually walk our talk.





Sunday, December 20, 2020

FEATURE - More Zen Mountain Poems







Valley Sounds, Mountain Colours

The murmuring brook is the Buddha's long, broad tongue.
And is not the shapely mountain the body of purity?
Through the night I listen to eighty thousand gathas,
When dawn breaks, how will I explain it to others?

Su Shi








Mount Lu Revisited

Regarded from one side, an entire range;
From another, a single peak.
Far, near; high, low, all its parts
different from the others.
If the true face of Mount Lu
cannot be known,
it is because the one looking at it
is standing in its midst.

Su Shi








With coming and going, a person in the mountains
understands that blue mountains are their body
The blue mountains are the body, and the body is the self,
so, where can one place the senses and their objects?

Zen Master Hongzhi Zhengjue
(1091-1157)







A person in the mountains should love the mountains.
With going and coming, the mountains are their body.
The mountains are the body, but the body is not the self
so where can one find any senses or their objects?

Eihei Dogen
(1200-1253)


Thursday, December 17, 2020

POEM - Submit

Impossible
to dam the air against movement,
to fight back flight or flurry, in an
ineffective resistance, standing witness
to the willful impetus of wind
flying in your face, buckling
the knees, slipping past any resolution,
playfully flipping what's left
of your hair, into a squall of snakes
subverting umbrellas, turning the night skirts
of your romantic soiree inside out, gales just
walk over and around, they belittle our pathetic persistence
beneath an elemental brassiness, still we are trying
intransigence, the swingeing demand, tantrums
of exasperation, the wind commands
you surrender yourself, to it
stop walking head down, into it,  body
positioned against the riotous force, of it,
and submit 
just do it
submit, be
with it.


Written October 2020
Stephen Lumb

Sunday, December 13, 2020

FAMILY FRAGMENTS - Maureen Fills Another Photo Album

The following short story had its beginnings in a recollection of the bizarre and frequently hilarious photo albums that one of my Aunts would make. This forms the nucleus of truth from which my imagination has freely deviated and run with, taking it in unexpected directions. The result is almost an entirely fictitious tale. Only I know the bits that have some truth to them.  I hope you enjoy it.










Am I happy? was a question Maureen rarely left open long enough to respond to. As she spread out the latest batch of photographs picked up from the chemists, she was quick to divert her attention away from wading into any residual pools of sadness. Firmly reasserting that it had been such an enjoyable coach tour with her best friend Ida. Great weather in Cornwall, far better than last year. But then,the very next moment, she picked up one photo and with a pair of scissors aggressively lopped off the half blurred gentleman shown just to the right of her. Maureen was taken aback by the abruptness. But then, feelings, memories, photos themselves, always had the potential to divert ones attention.

There'd been no pause to consider whether or not to leave the gentleman in. The impulse to chop arose from the distortion in the man's face, that self-pitying beseeching look to his eyes. As if he knew a form of death voodoo was nearby, to be delivered by a pair of dinky blue handled pinking sheers, that had once come free with The People's Friend.

Having so brusquely snipped it off she picked the fragment up again.  Did she know him? Was he one of their coach party? That quiet man who always sat on his own at the back of the coach or disconsolately played with his bacon at breakfast in the B&B. Tall, Brylcreem, back combed hair, walking stick seat, slightly abraded cord jacket. By the time she came back to herself, a largely fictitious narrative had been conjured out of one smudgy snippet from a photograph. Whoever he was, she felt a pang of regret. Censoring her photographs was just not the done thing.

She persisted with the musing. There was always 'the quiet single man' on coach excursions. Kept themselves to themselves, never said much, but you could usually extract from the tour rep that they were 'recently bereaved'. Hardly a wild guess, gentlemen who traveled alone on coach trips often were bereaved, or were, euphemistically speaking - 'light on their feet', sometimes both. Coach travelling being predominantly the mode for ladies of a mature age, accompanied by a female companion, also sympathetically bereaved. Single men stuck out.

Though Maureen had lost her Mother barely a year or two ago, her reasons for taking coach trip holidays had always been quite practical. When Mother had been alive, they had briefly taken her out of the narrow confines of a chronically deaf nonagenarian's world view. Her regular travel companion, Ida, was a close friend and old work colleague. It was a friendship largely forged around their shared spinsterhood and, once retired, a mutual desire to travel. They'd both worked out how to make going on holiday as a single woman work, in a world that penalised you financially for travelling alone. Travel together and share a room. 

By the time your bosoms sagged and a colour rinse became essential, no one made anything of two women travelling together. It was as though society was certain that once a woman passed the menopause, the need for physical intimacy completely vanished. That all one needed from life then on, was the frisson of conspicuous pampering. 

She continued rustling through the remaining photos on the low coffee table. Here was where the joy lay for her, in the composition. Contriving an artifice, a sequence of pleasant recollections, and to then make that feel casual and spontaneous. Emotionally the essence of a holiday experience was relived through the laying out, shaping, sorting and, very importantly, the labeling of her snaps. Apt ways to encapsulate in one brief sentence something perhaps not quite captured by the image. If indeed there was an image at all.

Over the years she'd become resigned to her camera's occasional malfunctioning  There were venues where a small plastic point and press film camera would always take a dim view of the lack of light. Once processed and printed there would be a dark glossy rectangle with just the suggestion of a small vertical smudge centre left, that may have been Ida or herself smiling or pointing at something, also unidentifiable. 

If the photo was of Maureen then the fault would obviously be Ida's, who was forever putting her short fat fingers over the lens. A pithy sentence underneath would make that abundantly clear - 'those sausage fingers are not mine!' - 'it's too close for flash Ida' - ' Ida, the camera strap, it's over the lens.' Even if it was almost a totally blank picture it would say - 'there's a large organ near me on the left hand side' 'the flower festival in St Josephs was very colourful' ' I had a lovely ham sandwich in the cafe here'.   This was done without any sense of being archly ironic or tongue in cheek. It was simply to sketch a context into the overall visual darkness.

Most folk would have thrown these photographic failures away with a regretful sigh, but not Maureen. Everything means something, was a useful little phrase she'd picked up from the paper craft pages of a long forgotten magazine. It was shorthand for 'I don't know why this is here'. Her alignment with the spirit of wabi-sabi was completely unconscious. sticking into her albums every crashed exposure, shutter jamb, end of photo reel, and person or persons photographed only from the legs down - 'Everything looking ship shape down below'  What did it matter if they were over exposed - It was a very bright delightful day.'  The albums were a record of her travels, mishaps and all.

These short explanatory phrases attempted to make the calamitous nature if her photography, never exactly her fault. She frequently laced them with sarcasm about it being a reflection of her companions mood - ' It was Ida's time of the month again'  - 'do put your glasses on woman'  Ida was always the handy stooge. The snipped photo felt different, this continued to bemuse her, there was a reason to keep it. Somewhere in the backroom of her mind, a memory was currently peddling madly away from her.

Maureen never realised that when she proudly plonked the latest completed photo album on the knees of a family member, it produced in them an uneasy, if not sinking heart - 'my god, what appreciative response can I summon this time?' It wasn't that her photo albums were a glorious experience universally treasured. For some they were, but not quite in the way Maureen envisaged. For the regular visitor they were a too frequent and burdensome responsibility for even the most secretive of camp giggling.

A brief look around her small terraced house quickly revealed photo albums in plastic folders stuffed into every available nook and cranny. Rows and rows of them on bookshelves, packed in boxes in cupboards under stairs, large stacks left by armchairs on the lounge floor for causal perusal, dozens and dozens of them. In the kitchen and the bedroom we're other photo projects, as yet half finished. Works in progress were scattered across every available white melamine surface. For such tasks took time and consideration, with her Mother dead, the house, the space, and all the time in the world, were now her own. 

She put so much into them, they became like small house extensions to her equally diminutive physical frame, gradually building up to an encyclopedic length.  Her family thought her self-obsessed, teetering on the edge of narcissistic. Always ensuring it was her presence that was kept centre stage, either visually or in words. Never leaving authorship open to doubt. Maureen had turned herself singlehandedly into the curator and repository for her families history. Relishing the apocryphal tales in particular.  No one else knew the extent of how embellished, and hence unreliable, these were.

Then, there was a suggestive feeling of a particular individual. One previously hung just outside conscious reach. Recollections began to bubble, then they arrived in a series of photographic flashes - there was a male tour guide.....in Penzance....flirtatious... quite amusing.. well oiled patter... flattered... felt bashful.... well he was half my age!... the delight... in masculine attention... appreciative....... touched....beyond that.....the edge of....... something soft..... tender ..mournful...... an emptiness......devoid of intimacy...... unlovable.  Hold on, pull back, pull back, pull back, no no no no, this will not do, this will not happen. no wallowing Maureen! ........double warning.... exclamation marks...!! 

She shook her head violently as if these thoughts and the feelings accompanying them only resided in her hair. The ground could easily have collapsed from beneath the triumph she'd made of living happily alone, and fallen into that sticky tar pit where her loneliness presided. Even as she dabbed back a trickle of tears, she was re-constructing the firm emotional staircase up and out. There was no point in dwelling now on what had not happened in the past. None whatsoever.

Composure eventually restored, she could gaze equanimous at the out of focus gentleman with a calmer kinder self regard. Progressing swiftly on to the practical issue of the photographs restoration, how should she do that? She could hardly pretend the crimped edges didn't exist by butting the two pieces back together, that would be too much like a badly concealed toupee. Eventually settling upon permitting a thin meandering river of white paper to show between the two parts. 

Though this fully honoured 'the process' of its creation, something was still absent - the man's name. If she ever had known it, this refused to be unearthed from the fluster and bluster surrounding her melancholy. She wasn't venturing back into that. So she decided on this occasion to abandon her loyal allegiance to factual accuracy, and simply make one up. Drawing a dramatic arrow from outside the photo to right on the nose of the man's face, at the other end she wrote BRIAN! in blue Biro.  She always loved using exclamation marks, two or more if possible, with their pert suggestion of surprise. 

Her efforts concluded with the swiftly following breeze of a succinct title. Then having achieved satisfaction and a sense of closure, Maureen placed the completed album 'Penzance 1989' on the 'ready for viewing' pile. Beneath the now sensitively restored photo Maureen had written:-

'Oops!!!'


Written December 2020 by Stephen Lumb




Monday, December 07, 2020

FEATURE - Three Dogen Mountain Poems

These three short poems are each written by Dogen, they arose from his reflections on the Lotus Sutra. They capture something of what he was trying to convey through his own Mountains and Waters Sutra; that an intimate connection with reality in its true state is right in front of our eyes.










In the valley, vibrating sounds
On the peak, monkeys' intermittent chattering,
I hear them as they are exquisitely expounding this sutra.




Grasping the heart of this sutra
even the voices of selling and buying
in the world are expounding the Dharma.










Colours of the mountain peak and echoes of the valley stream
all of them as they are, are nothing other
than my Shakyamuni's voice and appearance.


Eihei Dogen

Saturday, December 05, 2020

SHERINGHAM DIARY NO 44 - 3 Tiers to 3 Phases & Back Again










1st Phase - Mothballing Your Work 

Once the shop was closed, yet again, it released a certain amount of gleefulness. Like at the end of school term. Finally we could see ourselves getting off the shop focused making treadmill for a while. One we'd been on pretty much solidly since after our January holiday in Malton. Restarting our daily walks in the woods, parks, along the sea promenades we are so fortunate to be surrounded by.

But first there was a bit of practical catching up, those tertiary tasks that kept falling off the to do list. Tidying up the garage, sorting out the workshop ( which had got into yet another mess of my own making ) plus starting to rebuild our website on a new platform.  These sound such minor things as I write them. But the first week was full of these small satisfying reliefs.  I don't think either of us realised why and how much they weighed down upon our sense of brio, but they did.

It also provided the time to refine my knitting technique of tawashi face scrubbies, I'm sure you are all delighted to hear. Made a couple of swish mirrors, more back up coaster stock. If your little brain cells are ticking over right now, wondering quite  how this was getting off the shop focused making treadmill. Well it was planned; our making is focused better when we aren't also minding the shop, and it was our way of clearing out our desks before a 'holiday' break. Once the website was moved with a basic range of stock on it, we planned to stop and create a breathing space.








2nd Phase - Holidaying At Home

I don't know what we expected from our nine day 'staycation', at home. A holiday where you don't stray far from where you live all the time, why would that be problematic? Well, for sure, its never going to rejuvenate like a stay in another part of the country, away from the same old same old. So it started with not knowing quite what the space we had now opened up was for.

The tendency, initially, was - for goodness sake fill it with another form of making, busyness or task. Plug the existential gap left by eschewing working on shop stock. We put ourselves at a bit of a loss, until we decided doing nothing much was actually more than good enough. Jnanasalin compared it to going on solitary retreat with ideas in your head what you might do, but on arrival finding you're not interested in 'doing' full stop. This leaves you a bit adrift with emotions and stuff roughly unpacking themselves for a while. But if you keep your nerve, then low, a state of relaxation is born in the land of Boris. A less driven sense of ourselves emerged from the swamp. That unproductive lazy retard that lives happily repressed within us all.

Benefiting from just slobbing around for a while. There was loads to be grateful for, the walks, having time to cook, lighting a fire of an evening, reading poetry, watching emotionally engaging TV programmes like Ambulance or Hospital. And if things got too heart rending there was always Only Connect and Nigella decadently stuffing her face on camera for light relief. 

Loving the Steve McQueen Small Axe movies. The fabulous Big Scottish Book Club continues reigniting my interest in reading books. 

I found reading Damian Barr's childhood memoir Maggie & Me immensely satisfying. His writing style so deceptively simple, as it deftly slips from light humorous reminiscence to a darker more distressing abuse event often within the space of a paragraph. What a difficult upbringing.

As we entered the final weekend before we return to making, there was a bit of anticipatory tension in the air. 






3rd Phase - As You Were, Gentlemen.

On our first day returning to making shop stock, there was the recognisable whiff of reluctance to re-engage, plus the caution not to return to our state before the holiday, as if it were some default. Our first day back largely consisted of a trip over to Wells-next-the-sea to pick up a new batch of our Cottonwood soap stock, wiggling in a walk around the Holkham Estate to transform it into a health benefit. Then back to our shop in Sheringham to drop off the soap and pick up stock to photograph for the website.

This set the tone for the ten days to follow, purposeful but bitty, a little stab of making, a dash of photography followed by the necessary follow through on shop set up practicalities. Neither of us is ever short of things to do, though we haven't finished as much as we'd hoped. At one point having to scale back my ambitions for what I could feasibly achieve, as I'd suddenly felt over whelmed and oppressively weighed down by it all.

As a result of watching The Big Scottish Book Club, I appear to be buying books that are a grim recounting of working class Scottish upbringings. Following the Damian Barr memoir with the Henry Miller like Greek tragedy unfolding in Douglass Stuart's Booker Prize winning novel Shuggie Bain. I'm only in the opening chapters, but so far I'm really impressed with it.

And so the month of lock down came to an end, reversing all we put in place just a month ago. Re-merchandising the shop floor, putting in our Christmas window and the next day reopening. How will that reopening go? Who the hell knows? I try to travel empty handed, prepare to be unprepared, ready to respond well towards whoever walks in and whoever walks by. I frequently fail in this. Its a practice that is far from perfected.