Monthly Archives: October 2016

Ghosts I Have Known

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The ghosts that frequent my family are fond of waking us from sleep, often early in the morning. They were hard working folks in this earthly life and apparently no less so on the other side. And though I come from this same long line of early risers, I am not one myself. It’s just not in my nature. In fact, most of these Book of Days chapters are written in the deepest dark of night, when all is quiet and I can sit and think with darkness all around me. Tonight, as it so happens, it is blustery outside––perfect for that witching hour setting––but the darkness is a gentle darkness, illuminated with the glow of orange and purple lights for Halloween, inside and out. It ushers in a more mysterious time of year, Halloween does, and it is a favorite time of year in this house, and so we welcome it warmly. The lights are part of that welcome.

Back to the ghosts. History has shown that that early-to-rise philosophy by which my ancestors lived continues on into the afterlife. My mother, who, like me, enjoys a little extra sleep in the morning, revealed that she was awoken by my grandmother early one morning after Grandma’s passing. A Mass was being celebrated for Grandma at church that morning, and Mom remembers distinctly being nudged by someone and waking up to see her mother there, come to get her up and out of bed so she could get to church. It was a gentle nudge, and Mom felt at peace about the event.

My father was awoken by his mother early one morning, too, though she came for no apparent reason. It was on the first anniversary of her death, just at the time she died, in fact, about four in the morning. Something made him open his eyes from sleep, and there next to him, beside his bed, before the moonlit window, stood a shadowy form. He recognized the form immediately as that of his mother’s. His heart was racing. The shadowy figure said nothing and did nothing; she just backed away slowly and vanished.

That was in late November, after Halloween but still about the time of year when we especially remember those who have gone before us, the time of I Morti––the Dead––which begins at All Hallow’s Eve (the source of our modern word Halloween) and runs to Martinmas in mid-November and perhaps lingers a bit longer still for some. With Halloween and the days that follow (All Saints Day on the First of November and All Souls Day on the Second), we arrive at the last of the year’s cross quarter days, finding ourselves here in the Northern Hemisphere at the midpoint between the autumnal equinox and the coming solstice of midwinter. The ancient Celts believed this was the time of year when the veils separating the worlds of the living and the dead were at their most permeable. And still, to this day, this time of year holds this magic.

My grandmother was tough on my father and they butted heads a lot, but there was some mystery in their relationship, too. Dad was born with la camicia––the “shirt” or the “veil,” as they say. In English, we call it a caul: a piece of membrane attached to the newborn child. Not all of us are born this way; in fact, it’s pretty rare. If you are, well… we Italians can be a pretty superstitious people, you know. It is good luck to be born with “the veil,” but it is also said of those born with la camicia that they have the ability to see their path of life and also the path of the dead. They are a bridge between the realms. They are given the chance, if they want it, to observe the World of Shadows that exists parallel to our world. The old Lucan women of Basilicata say that if you have these powers, on All Souls Day you can place in the middle of a crossroads a basin of water and in the reflection of the water you will see the Procession of the Dead.

You can use that power in the Lucan tradition but once. Dad has never used his. There is far too much traffic these days to risk placing a basin of water in a crossroads, let alone peer into it. Plus he is just not interested. The shadowy visit from his mother left him shaken enough. It didn’t have the same calming effect on him that my mom experienced when her mother visited. But Dad still carries la camicia: his mother saved it after his birth and gave it to him on his 18th birthday along with a pipe. Later, after he met my mom, her mother sewed it into a little pouch that he carries with him inside his wallet, like a good luck charm. He had it with him all through the Second World War and he was pretty lucky through that, and truth be told, Dad has had a rather charmed life all his years. He’s worked hard through it but has always been able to accomplish what he wished. He is not, however, interested in the slightest in his apparent powers as a bridge between the living and the dead.

Come this time of year, I think of the me that was a little kid, trick or treating in a hobo costume on any 1970s Halloween (I was almost always a hobo) and I think of that little kid as a ghost, of sorts, too. He existed for a spell but now I am me, the grown man who writes to you every now and then. I am not that same me as that little kid, not exactly. And so maybe he is the first ghost I have known, dressed as that hobo in the CPO jacket with the patches sewn on it by my grandma, a crayon beard, crushed hat. And if I wasn’t a hobo, I was probably Charlie Chaplin’s Little Tramp character (another, more specific hobo) or if it was 1969 I was dressed in a Woolworth’s astronaut costume, the kind that came in a box with a plastic mask, very popular that year, or perhaps a scarecrow one other year, that one store bought, as well. But all of them by now––hobo, tramp, astronaut, scarecrow––ghosts of sorts, ghosts of the past.

But I, too, have run into more traditional ghosts. My grandfather died in 1982 when I was 18. Every night I kissed them goodnight, both Grandma and Grandpa, but the last night of his life we had company and we were gathered around the table and he was tired and he went to bed and I did not get up to kiss him; instead, he made a general proclamation that he was off to bed and I said goodnight to him from my seat, just like everyone else at the table. I never saw him again. He left this world during that night and it always bothered me that I hadn’t given him a proper goodnight kiss.

Months later, I had climbed into bed and before I could switch off the light in the closet from the light switch next to my bed, I fell fast asleep. But eventually I did awake; I awoke distinctly feeling that I had been kissed goodnight by my grandfather. I am very much aware that it could have been a dream, but it felt so very real that still to this day I have my doubts about that rational argument. It seemed beyond dream. My grandfather also liked to turn off unnecessary lights, so I also believe he may have returned not just to set my mind at ease about the kiss, but also to wake me up so I’d shut off the light. He was a practical man, after all. I count Grandpa as the first real ghost I have known.

There is something reassuring about the dead coming back to do simple, ordinary things. Like getting us up out of bed for an appointment or reminding us to turn off a light, and the ghosts I have known, for the most part, have simply been trying to help me out.

There was also the guy at the library where I work who appeared in a sideways glance while I was in the restroom on the third floor and who was gone before I could turn to see him fully. He was dressed in orange. Appeared, disappeared, and when it happened the electrical energy in the room shifted so all the hair on my body stood on end. I mentioned this to my boss at the time, who replied calmly, “Oh, you’ve seen our ghost.”

The building today is a patchwork of wings constructed at various times, but as the story goes, when the original five story building was being constructed in the 1960s, one of the workmen had fallen to his death from one of the upper floors, and it is his ghost, they say, that roams the building, even now. People have known of him since the building opened, but that was decades ago, and by now, most of the folks who knew him are gone, retired or off to different jobs. Some have joined him there in the afterlife. As one of my younger coworkers observed just a few nights ago, about something completely unrelated: “This place has terrible institutional memory.” There is some truth to this. All the folks who have left by now have taken his story with them and though I wasn’t by any long shot one of the originals who knew the tale, I may very well be now one of the last in the building who is familiar with it, and I wonder, what becomes of the man in orange once I myself leave that place? Does a ghost have any relevance if no one knows his story? I worry about him sometimes. But then again, that’s in my nature, too.

 

Image: The Horner Ghost. When I went to the Penland School of Crafts to take my first book arts class in 1994, the print shop was located down the hill in Horner Hall. We heard all kinds of stories at Penland, and one of them was about the Horner Ghost who shared the space with us. I opened a door down the hall from the print shop one night. It was a broom closet. I found this ethereal sketch pinned to the back of the door.

 

Dia de Muertos or, the Nights Grow Longer

Tonight, amidst the glow of a waning moon and the orange and purple lights we’ve begun to string through our home, it feels like a good night to pull a couple of chairs together, just us, you and me, maybe by the fire if you have one burning. The nights are growing cooler and longer here in the Northern Hemisphere, even here in Lake Worth. Leaves are falling from the trees in northern climes as trees cease their production of clorophyl: their energy is directed now underground, to growth we are not privy to witness.

Just as the trees shift their attention underground, so do we in our way. We gather in our harvest, store what is good for use throughout the dark months to come. We gather in our thoughts, shift our energy inward: in to the home, to the hearth, to the table, to the heart.

This autumnal time has also, since time immemorial, been the time to shift our focus underground in more literal ways: we are approaching the time when we remember our beloved dead. With the approach of November, we prepare for the feast of I Morti in Italy and in Mexico, Dia de Muertos, or Day of the Dead. These things are related to the passing of the old year into the new that comes in the Celtic tradition with Samhain, the precursor to our modern day celebration of Halloween. What begins with Halloween continues all the way to Martinmas, the 11th of November: Hollantide, Hallowtide: All Hallows and All Souls. Those orange and purple lights we strung tonight will illuminate all of these autumnal nights. The fabric of them all is woven of light and dark, of life and death.

Death is a natural part of life, of course, and I’ve said it before and I’ll probably say it over and over again for as long as I write this blog: the Convivio Book of Days is no sappy saccharine book about seasonal traditions. It is a book that acknowledges that there is a seat for death at our table, at every celebration, every ceremony, for it is death’s presence that encourages us to live each day. And the ceremony of a day is what this book of days is all about.

And with I Morti and Dia de Muertos, these Days of the Dead, we approach a celebration that honors death and celebrates those who have come and gone. I know more than a few people who do not want anything to do with a holiday like Dia de Muertos. It’s too creepy, too spooky. But I think they are missing the point of the celebration… and are the poorer for it. Dia de Muertos is not a spooky and creepy time. It is, rather, a time to remember the ones we love but are no longer with us, those who have left this world for distant shores. They do live on in our hearts and in our memory and sometimes in our dreams and who knows where else they live on, but surely they do in some way. And at this time of year, especially, we are reunited with them, one way or another. No culture does this quite so beautifully and as fervently as they do in Mexico. The short film above by Harbers Studios does a lovely job of showing just what Dia de Muertos is all about.

My family is not Mexican; we are of Italian descent. But we have adopted this celebration to some extent and I encourage you to do so in your home, as well. There are many things you can do to take part: You can visit the dead. You can make a feast and celebrate with others (that’s our usual!). In the coming days I will post a recipe for Pan de Muertos, bread of the dead: just as we bake ours each Day of the Dead, so might you. And while it’s not usually my goal to get you to buy things, Dia de Muertos is one of the true specialties of our Convivio Book of Days Catalog. We sell only REAL and authentic traditional handicrafts from San Miguel de Allende, in Mexico. Nothing made in China. This supports the local artisans, many of whom are making things that their ancestors before them made, too. We think this is the best way to shop, supporting the traditional ways of artisans who feel a connection through time to the things they make. We also have a new shipping policy: Spend $50 and we’ll ship your order at no cost to you. Beautiful words those are: Free Shipping! If they can help you to celebrate these special days and nights with more meaning, all the better.

You can also come see us and shop our entire Dia de Muertos line from San Miguel de Allende at the Autumn Makers Marketplace this Saturday, October 22, from 10 AM to 4 PM at Florida Atlantic University in Boca Raton. Look for the blue and white MAKERS MARKETPLACE signs that will be posted on campus roads. If you do come, be sure to say hello. I love meeting and chatting with Convivio Book of Days readers!

 

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The short film in today’s chapter is titled Dia de los Muertos, produced in 2011 by Harbers Studios, available on Vimeo. The film description reads, “Every November, towns and cemeteries across Mexico are transformed with flowers, food and festivities, as people celebrate Dia de Muertos, or Day of the Dead. This evocative short film shows us how one culture honors relatives and friends who have died, and reminds us that though our own loved ones may be gone, they needn’t be forgotten.” Amen.

 

Your October Book of Days (or, Riding out the Storm)

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Lots going on these days! It was Seth’s birthday on the last of September and then we segued right into my mom’s 90th birthday at the start of October, so it was, oh, nonstop celebration all weekend. Then at work on Monday I walked in to learn that there had been a water leak all weekend; by the time the water mitigation crew left for the day on Monday night, their amazing vacuum equipment had sucked over 300 gallons of water out from under the bamboo floorboards. The drying-out process will continue for at least another week. And still that same day we learnt that the forecast track for Hurricane Matthew was beginning to suggest that he had us squarely in his sight. And so Tuesday at work we prepared for the storm, and Wednesday we prepared the home of an old family friend. Thursday morning we will prepare ours, and then we will wait.

This is all to say I’m sorry, but I am just now getting around to letting you know that your Convivio Book of Days Calendar for October 2016 is posted to our website. It is a printable PDF, ready to print on standard US Letter size paper, and a great companion to the Convivio Book of Days Blog. Cover stars this month: pumpkins photographed just last week, before all the madness began, at our friends Leif and Jeffrey’s home––these green pumpkins are from last year’s harvest! They’re still looking beautiful. And any friend of pumpkins is a friend of mine.

Over at the Convivio Book of Days Catalog, we are trying something new: we’ve operated for years under a flat $8 shipping fee policy, but now if you spend $50 at the Convivio Book of Days catalog, you’ll get free shipping. Magic words, aren’t they? FREE SHIPPING. I love them, too. We’ve also figured out a way for folks outside the US to order (you’ll see a flat $30 shipping charge on your invoice, but we will contact you with the actual shipping rate before we ship or charge your card and will adjust the charge accordingly… most likely your actual shipping charge will be less), so that, too, is something new.

Also new are lots of new items added to the catalog––mostly handcrafts from San Miguel de Allende for your Day of the Dead and Halloween celebrations but also lovely screen printed tea towels for cider season. (Speaking of cider: don’t forget the Shaker mulling spices.) We’ve also added about a dozen new German advent calendars this week, too, and as long as we have power during the storm, I’ll work on adding some new Christmas and letterpress items, too. Right after I bake a batch of granola for Seth.

Pretty soon we will have reached the point where we have done all we can to prepare, and we will take shelter. There seems to be, at least here in Lake Worth, no need for evacuations, so we plan to stay put, Seth and me and Haden the Convivio Shopcat. We will watch the wind and rain from the shelter of this old house. The house is wood, cedar and old Dade pine, tough as nails, but it will creak and moan a lot, especially as we get into the thick of things, and there will be times when things will get a little scary. We know this; we’ve done it before. We’ll be okay, we all will be, you, too.

Now go on: get shopping. Spend 50 bucks, make us pay for that shipping. We promise to take good care and to not send anything out until the rain has passed. Happy October.