Held by the Trail

I once fell in love in a land of myths and legends.  A place where salt air spray swirls with thick-trunked mango trees.  Fresh rivers bubble rainbows, falling to pool in eddies held by the scent of wild ginger flowers.  For thousands of years, people have sipped from these waters and walked barefoot through the fruitful forest.

Rex and I, we drank from crisp springs spouting through thick moss and funneled the nectar to our lips with a Ti leaf.  At night on the bluffs by the sea, we’d make wishes on stars while he played guitar, singing songs and watching the waves glow silver in moonlight.  When it was time for sleep, we’d follow the path to our riverside camp, guiding the way with one flashlight.

This place, that love, it is my own folklore.  A tale of how the winds whispered through the guava that this man would be the father of my child.  How the story would unfold over three years, through two trips to India and at least five break ups (and reconciliations) before our son actually wove into the telling.

This place holds my family legend.  As does the eleven miles of rugged trail that threads to reach this haven.  The initiating pathway that strips the excess from the soul.  Baring body, heart and mind in order to be worthy to walk among the sacred.  The last time I walked its entirety, I was thirty years old and five months pregnant, committed to hiking in one more time before the baby came to change my life forever.  The moment my soles stepped upon the path, I knew all would be well.

photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

That’s the first time Jeb and I hiked that trail together.  Deep coastal oxygen filled my bloodstream and a joy emanated from the baby in my womb.  Eleven miles and four and a half hours later, I was dipping in waterfalls and napping in the sunshine on a warm rock. It was on this same journey that I felt my child move within me for the first time, as I pressed my back to the land and watched the stars. He loved this place too.

That was over seven years ago.  The family that was seeded in mountain mist and music became fractured.  There were diapers and groceries.  Lost dreams and broken promises.  Longing, disappointment and eventually, resign.  But separation doesn’t mean the end to pain.  For years there’s been a quiet edge we’ve walked, as we’ve tried to reconcile the loss.  Jeb has been the physical reminder of a magic and a love that we once shared.  An essence that can feel so lost and foreign.

Over the years, I’ve hiked portions of the trail with Jeb, the first time when he was three.  But not since he was born have I made it back to the lore that lives eleven miles in.  Though Rex has traversed that course over 200 times in his life, it’s been at least 10 years since he’d set foot upon the path.  Never had our family hiked it together.

photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

Following a thread, a whisper, some kind of intuition, I suggested that the three of us hike in the first two miles of the trail.  Rex was a surprising easy yes and Jeb was enthusiastic.  So yesterday, with 70% chance of rain and a backpack full of PB&J, we stepped upon the healing trail.

The depth of what was experienced still percolates.  Softness patted with every step upon the path.  Wordless touches reverberate and ring.  Jeb’s movement between us, offering periodic hugs to each throughout the day.  Exclaiming between the switchbacks, “I love my dad!  I love my mom!”

photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

We ate pineapple on a boulder at the river mouth.  Watched whales breach in the ocean and saw dolphins spinning in a huge pod.

photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

Jeb scaled mountains that have taken down a grown up.  So inspired, he pushed us past our two-mile mark to trek further on to four.  Upon our return the rain clouds gathered, soaking us on the downhill as we sloshed through puddles.  Wet and slipping through jungle mud, our whole family was smiling.  We were happy and in our element, moving down the mountain and across the river with ease.

photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

Eight miles (roundtrip) later, we emerged from the trailhead and went straight to the salty lagoon where we sighed into lapping waves, rubbing the dirt from our bodies with the sand.  We toweled off under the trees and put on dry clothes.  Rex exclaimed “I feel better than I have in years!”

The lifeguards packed up to go home.  The tourists fumbled through their rental cars in the parking lot.  Jeb and Rex and I walked on wet pavement back towards my car.  Jeb still hummed one of the little tunes that had been spilling from his throat all day.  There were pruned toes and Rex’s back was a little sore -“I must be getting old!”  But no one was complaining.  We were all just happy and amazed.

So the legend continues, this weaving of the tale.  How this sacred place holds my family – a connection all our own, one we are still learning to understand.  We touched peace in the mountain path.  Breathed in molecules of ease as they dripped from rain-soaked banana leaves.

I hear my own words to Jeb as we were there sidestepping through slick mud.  “There’s no hurry, love.  Take it one step at a time.  And just let the trail hold you.”

What Got Jotted Down

Random mother moment:

Jeb’s in the back seat of the car with the window down as we drive.  “Mom, I’m trying to catch the wind and give it to you.  Can you feel it?”

Mother Plant ~ photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

Things I’ve noticed:

Farmers in the tropics are fine to wear boots with board shorts

Coral sounds like rain on a tin roof when the ocean laps and rolls it

Cockroaches know they’re unwanted

It can feel oddly lucky to have bird poop land on you

Everyone likes to get letters

It takes courage to be the first on the dance floor

Plants bring ease

photo by Jessica Dofflemyer - all rights reserved

Talk to the Hand

Taken thirty years ago, this photo slipped and fluttered out of an old journal of mine last week. Not sure what to do with it, I’ve kept it sitting on my desk for the last ten days.

I’m seven years old here, during a family trip to Shaver Lake, where we stayed in a secluded cabin with another family.  It was probably the last trip we took all together, as my parents separated later that year.

Jessica Dofflemyer – all rights reserved

I remember the experience – the beauty of the woods and sunshine through trees in wide fields.  Freedom in wandering dirt paths embedded with quartz crystals.  An open meadow with tall grass and a zip line pulley we could hang from.  At night, a brown sleeping bag with soft, lime green lining.

And puppies.  Not ours.  The other family had brought the little dogs that follow behind me in the photograph.

I kept this picture out because in it, I am the same age as Jeb.  Jeb’s greatest wish (now that touching snow has been accomplished) is to have a dog.  In Jeb’s world, I am the force of reason that stands as barricade to his canine companion.  It’s not for my lack of love of furry friends.  I love them so much, I want them to have the best upbringing possible, and for me right now, raising a dog is more than I can undertake.

So I wanted Jeb to see the proof that I, like him, had a love for dogs too. I understand his longing.

When I show him the picture I remember that the two puppies really didn’t get along.  They would start to play but inevitably their fun would turn to attack.  I tell Jeb about the time I was petting both of them in my lap.  They suddenly lunged at each other and when I put my hand in the middle to stop them, I got bit.

Thirty years later, this memory I had forgotten comes flooding back with ease.

“Did you bleed?” Jeb asks, holding the picture in his hands while I make breakfast.

“Yeah, actually, I did.”  I look down at the spot on my right hand that still holds a slight scar from the incident.  Though I see my own hand every day, I hadn’t thought about the origin of the spot there in years.

“Did it hurt?”

“It did.  Not horribly, but it surprised me, for sure.”  I touch the scar on my 37-year-old hand and am amazed that there is still a faint, tender feeling in the fleshy layers below the surface.  As if the cells and nerves still remember a distant story that my mind had long forgotten.

“What are you doing with your hand?” he asks.

“I’m just touching the spot where it happened.”

“No, in the picture, Mom.  What are you doing with your hand?”

“My hand?”

I walk over to him and glance again at the photo.  Jeb sees what I hadn’t.  I realize I’m holding my hand in the picture because I just got bit by the puppies.  The moment forever captured when soft fur and innocence collided with a sharp, toothy snap.

“You’re right Jeb.  That’s the hand I’m holding.  It must have just happened when they took the picture.”

Jessica Dofflemyer – all rights reserved

In this past week, a different aliment has had my focus.  I’ve continued seeking opinions about alternative ways to dissolve this ovarian cyst.  I’m surprised at the woo woo advice I receive from well-respected physicians.  I’m looking for possible diet alterations, herbs, supplements.  Something biological, scientifically proven.  A prescription or formula.

But instead I’m told “Use your intuition.  Your answers are within.”  Or “Tune in to your 3-7 year old self.  Give her a voice and let her express her feelings.”

I truly do not think the doctors that made these recommendations are incompetent (or crazy).  Short of surgery (which hasn’t been deemed necessary at this point), the medical field says nothing else can be done.  Three different doctors from three different areas of expertise have all turned it back to me.  This strange and unusual cyst calls for strange and unusual measures.  I guess I’ll take the hint.  I’m willing to try woo woo.

As I’ve been digesting these suggestions, the photo sits on my desktop.  I search for something in this picture. What does this girl have to say?  How does she feel?

This purer version of myself was short on experience but closer to senses.  Porous to forest sunlight, the smell of puppy breath and the shadow sides of love and play.  Moving through grasses in a borrowed coat.  Too young and full to put words to the depth of feeling, soaking every cell.


Shaver Lake on Dwellable