Friday, July 10, 2026
Women on Skopelos
Friday, June 12, 2026
Without Rob
On the third anniversary of his death
No music drifts down from the attic.
No jasmine incense burns.
No ear to listen to me ramble.
No driver when I go to town.
At the end of the day,
No one yells down the stairs
Dinner is ready.
I hate how I sometimes, lost in my work,
Begrudgingly came to the table.
Every summer, we’d drive to the jazz festival
And sit at small outdoor cafes.
Order beer or wine and before the waiter
Could bring our drinks a calm musical note arrives.
Every bar, street corner and alleyway had musicians playing.
I swear he loved jazz more than me.
Still, he would choose performers who sang,
Knowing words are my passion.
He wanted me with him.
He wanted me.
Now, I choose my own fruits and vegetables.
No mango, pomegranate, black radish or bok choy.
I gave away his exotic spices.
And season with a pinch of salt and pepper,
And an overdose of garlic.
There is no such thing as too much garlic, he’d say.
My nights are disturbed.
I sleep for two hours and wake,
Perhaps have a cup of camomile tea, light a cigarette,
Lean out the kitchen window,
Looking over a tangled garden.
Cry me a river.
And people don’t often
know what they’re saying in the end….
So I’ll say it now. Here it is.
Don’t pay any attention
if I don’t get it right
when it is for real. Blame that
on terror and pain
or the stuff they’re shooting
into my veins. This is what I wanted to
sign off with. Bend
closer, listen, I love you.
(Last verse is a poem by Alden Nowlan, a Canadian poet born in the Maritimes, like Rob)
Thursday, June 04, 2026
Woman Without a Country
How beautiful it is to get up and go out and do something. We are here on Earth to fart around. Don't let anybody tell you any different. Kurt Vonnegut in A Man Without a Country
I must make a decision about where to live and die because I am a woman without a country. Where am I most at ease? By myself. I am in a house that I am slowly changing to suit me but as I grow older the worn steps on three flights will become more difficult. Also, I am too far away from family and close friends... I delay these thoughts once again.
How beautiful it is to get up and go out. (Otherwise, I doodle my mornings away.) How beautiful it is this morning. The sun is shining but not too strongly. I slept a good seven hours because I took a sleeping pill last night - a luxury that I only allow myself when I have something important to do.
Today, Wednesday, I meet Virginie to write. And here I am, at peace, writing at a quiet table inside the Arcades bistro across from my friend before I return home to attack my French taxes. I would like to change, to become more productive. You are productive, Yvonne. And I am, I am but I bounce from one thing to another. I've written about this before. It's me. Is it so bad?
I am bad when I have visitors or most visitors. I'm incapable of anything. Do I talk too much? No. I love my house and yet, the sky is blue and the sun is shining and I want to go somewhere beautiful. I would like dreaming time and perhaps I can find it on my terrace if I buy a beautiful umbrella and pour a crisp white wine. Under this thought creeps a reprimand. You didn't take your vitamins this morning, fucking pills. I don't want to need additives. My body has served me well up until now but these days, it's yelling at me to pay attention, supplement my diet. And I do. Most of the time.
Read, play, play and stop the guilt trips. It is still weird being by myself. Love. Will anyone love me again, want to hold my old body - fiercely - kiss my lips? I have my doubts. Is it that I think I am unloveable? Love after Love, a poem by Derek Walcott leaps into my head:
The time will come
when, with elation...
You will love again the stranger who was your self.
Give wine. Give bread, Give back your heart
to itself, to the stranger who has loved you
all your life, whom you ignored
for another, who knows you by heart.
Take down the love letters from the bookshelf
the photographs, the desperate notes,
peel your own image from the mirror.
Sit. Feast on your life.
Today, a week later, I meet Virginie in Gaillac at the most beautiful patisserie, Pignou. Earlier this morning, I wrote out a quote by Leonard Cohen: "I greet you from the other side of sorrow and despair, with a love so vast and shattered it will reach you everywhere." In a week, it will be three years since Rob died. For the last two nights, he has been in my dreams, laughing at my antics and anger.
Virginie and I, first discuss our angst. This woman, thirty years younger than me, feels much the same about life as I do. I decide to pick up where I left off last week. Is it that I think that I am unloveable? I am not sure. As I write this my stomach does a somersault. An affirmation? My body is betraying me. Is it betrayal? I smoke. I drink wine. I forget to eat. I am lazy. For the most part, I do not enjoy the company of others. (Virginie feels the same.) Is it because part of me is missing? I never acknowledged the importance of Rob's presence. The comfort. The knowing that if something went wrong, he would be there for me. He took care of things that I didn't want to do...
I am afraid of where I am going with this writing. I remind myself that this writing is for myself, no one else. But I feel a need to tell. Still, these pages can disappear. I would like to amalgamate all my notebooks so I can find past thoughts but how can I do this when the minutes pass and I cannot accomplish what I need to do. How can I change things and find precious time? How can I concentrate? I do not have to run. I can walk or even crawl. "[I] do not have to be good/ [I] do not have to walk on [my] knees/ for a hundred miles through the dessert repenting./ [I] only have to let the soft animal of [my] body/ love what it loves."
Love is what I need - to be touched, not to be afraid. Do not be afraid, little one. As certainly as certainty dims, you are on your way out. And yet, there is still a bit of time. I think of Langston Hughes lines (I have always loved these lines, they have given me courage on my occasions):
Hold fast to dreams/ For if dreams die/ Life is a broken-winged bird/ That cannot fly.
Hold fast to dreams/ For when dreams go/ Life is a barren field/ Frozen with snow.
Poetry. How it hits me, crawls into me, offers me a softness, a way to walk even when I feel my legs ache.
How do I keep my dignity? By making sure that I always have my own space even when I travel. By sitting on a balcony in Greece and - if I must, smoke but most importantly - write because this is the one place, I find my purpose, my excitement.
Under these thoughts, slips thoughts of Michael. Can I find the right words to give him strength. Can words change one's life?
I need an epiphany. I love the feeling when suddenly I am hit in the gut and head with a new idea, a leap, a certainty. Some epiphanies take weight from my body and I feel lighter, happier and sometimes they last. At other times, they fly into the heavens and the lesson has to relearned once more.
Such is my world, at the moment. And my original question returns: am I loveable? Yes, but under this affirmative, there is still doubt.
Sunday, May 10, 2026
Kind
'Loneliness is not a longing for company, it is a longing for kind. And kind means people who can see you who you are, and that means they have enough intelligence and sensitivity and patience to do that." ~ Marilyn French
Once, years ago, I tried to define "love". I researched, read dozens of books and, in the end, I decided that listening to the other kindly, not mockingly is love.
Sometimes I talk and talk and talk and suddenly realize that I have not ask the other how their life is going. This happened the other night with my sister Maggie. She is the sister who all my sisters turn to in crisis. She listens. She takes care of us when we cannot care for ourselves. I paused my monologue and asked how she is doing. I took care to listen and not let my thoughts roam. Maggie didn't jabber but was casual speaking about matters big and small. I learned more about her day-to-day and health concerns. I felt closer to her.
This reminded me of women in the Wild Women Writing circle. Sometimes one or another pours out her heart when reading her writing and my heart responds. I feel so grateful that she has the courage. This also makes me feel bad because I don't often read. I am afraid of sharing me, afraid of sounding like a broken record.
The other day, an ordinary day, I burst out crying about Rob. I have no idea what prompted it. The grief lingers. I think I have reached a calmer place, a place of acceptance, and then I find myself angry at him for leaving me with all the day-to-day responsibilities and not being around to help me make decisions. He was always more sensible than me, more grounded but he, in turn, turned to me for help - usually when he wanted to have fun, spend a bit of money and needed permission. He told me once that he felt that he wasn't allowed to have fun. He had to be responsible.
I meander, I pause and have a cigarette, and don't immediately take care of what has to be done. I know. I know. I eventually do. But the workload has doubled since his death and I want things completed lickety-split. But often here, there are issues not within my power to complete immediately. I am trying to learn patience.
Slow down, you move too fast, you gotta make the moment last. I am writing in the bar with Virginie. There is such comfort here. I relate to her more than anyone in the village. She is still so young, an artist at heart - such a lovely heart. I told her that perhaps she should take a quarter turn (advice from Helen Luke) and view her life from another angle. Perhaps I should too.
"May I have the courage today/ To live the life that I would love,/ To postpone my dream no longer/ But do at last what I came here for/ And waste my heart on fear no more." ~ John O'Donohue
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Wild and Free
An excerpt from Rapture by Linda Hogan
How worthy the being
in the human body. If,
when you are there, you see women
wading on the water
and clouds in the valley,
the smell of rain,
or a lotus blossom rises out of round green leaves,
remember there is always something
besides our own misery.
Thursday, April 02, 2026
Non, Je ne regrette rien
The most regretful people on earth are those who felt the call to creative work, who felt their own creative power restive and uprising, and gave to it neither power nor time.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
Tempus Fuit
There is a kind of sadness that comes from knowing too much, from seeing the world as it truly is. It is the sadness of understanding that life is not a grand adventure, but a series of small, insignificant moments, that love is not a fairy tale, but a fragile, fleeting emotion, that happiness is not a permanent state, but a rare, fleeting glimpse of something we can never hold onto. And in that understanding, there is a profound loneliness, a sense of being cut off from the world, from other people, from oneself.
— Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse
I wake this morning pensive. Not an unknown state for me. I have not written here since January and so much has happened as I have travelled thousands of miles. I have spent time with my precious daughter and her family. A hundred glimpses of beauty. I have been to Paris working and have at least gleaned a dozen. I am home dealing with house issues in a language that slows me down and has me crying for help. Happiness descends when I accomplish some mundane task - of course, it is fleeting - but I feel proud of myself. And I continue to write with wild woman who remind me that I love to write and seldom allow myself the time." I need to work on this.
I do allow myself time to wine and dine and also zoom with friends and family. And I love these times and know that they are important for my well-being. I think of Stella Brown, a fine artist - I pause here to pull "Stravinsky's Lunch" from my bookshelf - and her biographer Drusilla Modjeska writes "If her life teaches us anything, it is that more than one thing matters, and maybe in the end it is the conversations we have - both in love and in art - that will come trailing behind us through those pearly gates."
I read the quote from Woolf again and wonder if she is right. Is life just "a series of insignificant moments"? Is happiness "a rare, fleeting glimpse of something we can never hold onto"? Do I feel "a profound loneliness"? At times, yes. I pause and think. But no, I do not feel a profound loneliness often. I feel lucky to have what I have. Below, a few glimpses of beauty.