Don’t Fight It. Ride It.

July 26, 2006

Happy Happy Birthday One Year Old.

This time last year your dad and I were sitting on our meticulously clean bamboo floors (I was nesting back then and never again do I suspect those floors will be as clean as they were those days before your arrival). I was crying. Your dad was massaging you through my stomach. I was at a crossroads back then, too. Would I continue standing there wondering and worrying and stressing about why you had not been born yet, 14 days past your ‘due date’? It was hot. Summer in the desert hot (no evening swing on the porch with lemonade or a jump in the pool cools this kind of heat). You really don’t know heat until you’ve stood in an asphalt parking lot around 2pm in July in Phoenix. It was hot and I was heavy with baby. I had done it all at that point: castor oil belly massages, evening primrose suppositories, blue and black cohosh, and lots of good old love making. I had even taken a robeezo type piece of fabric and tried to hammock my belly, hoping you’d spin around from you posterior position, the reason why I thought you were sticking around in my womb.

But I had finally put it stop to all that induction nonsense. Or I should say you did. Your dada and I were hanging out on the floor and he was rubbing my belly. We were talking to you, asking you to please come on down, safely and peacefully, and we’d catch you in our arms and love you forever. And you then just told me off. You were so loud and so fierce that I was sure your dad must have heard you when you said,” I’ll come when I’m ready. Please leave me be, Mama.”

And I stopped. I listened to you a bit more and you told me that you were almost here. To have patience. Everything was fine. And for the first time, perhaps ever, I truly, truly trusted. It became apparent to me that you would pick the time and date. And my efforts to force you sooner than ready, obviously annoyed you. I am glad you have a loud voice and I am grateful for all my teachers who have told me to listen.

And for now that is your birth story. The rest of the story isn’t as profound for me, yet. Actual labor was sweet, juice, wet, achy, tingly, expansive, tight, loud, quiet, easy, tender, messy, deep, circular, heavy and light.

I know I promised by your first birthday I would have the words that would match your birth neatly typed and spellchecked, bound and presented to you bound in a emerald color ribbon. But this is all I have for now. The rest will come when I finish learning lessons from those 6 hours we hip rolled and spun together.

Here are some moments from when my stomach cuddled you:

2/28/2005 Warm. Quiet. Serene. You feel so nice. Your presence has been that of a polite visitor and I love having you inside me. I can’t wait till I start to feel what your movements will be like, using the inside of my flesh as your swimming pool wall, pushing off and floating around this watery womb. Little fish, little fish. You are such an ocean. I keep seeing the ocean. Some nights my dreams are so waterlogged I feel sea-sick in the morning. Are you a pirate? A mermaid? A brilliant tangle of coral reef?

3/1/2005 Baby Bee II, Your sisters sleeps soundly in bed next to us so I can steal a few moments to be alone with you. Today is warm and clouds float together like puzzle pieces in the sky. I think I am finally feeling your movements. Slight and sweet. I am beginning to understand that there is actually a person inside me. My child. What a job to have. I can see your long legs like your sister. Long fingers and toes, too. Enjoy your time swimming like a mermaid in my inside universe. I will try my best to create abundant space for you. I will breathe to you and I will keep waiting for those movements when you limbs bounce off my skin.

We’ll camp together, explore and run through nature, talk to trees and Mia will hold your hand and you will be our baby.

3/8/2005 You really feel like a feather. How stinking cute.

3/28/2005 My diet has not been so great. Easter treats in the house. Cadbury Cream Eggs have never tasted so good, though. Also delighting endless amounts of grapefruit, fried egg and cheese sandwiches, and ice cream. Always room for ice cream at night. Why is it that it is the only thing that relieves this heartburn?

I am trying to find the mother inside of me, the true mother.

4/25/2005 You are like a rainfall tapping. Pitter patting against me inside out. Rhythmic. I slowly understand your needs more and more. Rest. Relaxation. Stillness. Food. Barely stretching kind of stretching. You like child’s pose. And lotus. You’d rather me float in the water that take a hike up a hill. Unfortunately we will have to compromise. I’m not much of a pool person and warrior hikes of mountains frees me from my skin. We’ll do a little of each.

You really are a peaceful heart. We will do our best to offer you an existence filled with natural beauty. We will be conscious of where we live and the attention we pay to surroundings. I know you are a gift from the moon, a mystery. But you are a true motivator and luck seems to be filling our life because of you. We are transforming. We’d like to offer you a deeper sense of breath and time.

(Then comes weeks of bowel records, in somewhat of detail. Remind me someday to speak to you about the joy of organic dark roast enemas).

6/30/2005

BabyBee II, Oh how this has moved quickly. You could be here any day now. I am so big with your powerful form. I know you will come down and out of with grace and ease.

I don’t fear what my body creates. I don’t fear what my body creates.

I am stung and stretchy and open.

You are soft and resilient.

You are like the suns rays stretching from my bump of a belly.

7/1/2005 Some days are easier than others. Some days are just really rough. I feel raw and salty and moody. I feel fat. I feel depressed. Then I feel really joyous. It’s a bit too much, this rollercoaster. I cry then laugh then dance then yell. Shit. This world is so not made for a tempermental pregnant women. Mia needs so much from you. She is nursing all the time. I get some strange looks in parks. I am large and pregnant and nursing you, 21 months old. I am enjoying our final days as just a pair, though. Soon enough we will be a triad. Just mama and Mia. But she is busy busy and sometimes I just want to sleep or be lazy and it’s hard to stay anchored with a toddler running the show.

I hope to savor these babies’ years. They are so short. Soon you will be born and sprout like wheat. Golden.

7/2/2005 Birthing tub is ready. I sit in it daily (without the water heater on). I watch Sesame Street with your sister, both of us floating in the tub, drinking tea and juice.

Bottom line: I am so nervous about being mama of two.

Even more bottom line: I am bursting with joy which means I am not in labor. Yet.

7/7/2005 I thought today you’d be born. I really did. It doesn’t feel like you are dropping or getting closer. I am just getting bigger and your movements are wild. Spastic.

Why we birth at home:

-trust in nature and women and babies and life -peace and solitude -freedom. To move, to be me, to eat, to cuddle, to walk, to dance, to moan. To monitor myself. No wires or weird smells or strangers. -Time is not an issue. Nobody watches the clock in this home. -I make a statement to the universe: This body I believe in. I am relaxed in.

7/17/2005

6 days past that damn due date. I know you will come right on time. How rude to call you ‘late’. You come when you are ready. Just know I think I’m ready. Hint.

I trust you baby. I trust you and goddess birthing pure love. I trust my heart and other muscles. I trust my yoni will spread open wide, slowly and artfully. Your soft pink head will journey out into water? Air? You choose. You’ll leave your dark pond soon.

I will guide you. Up to my heart space and you and I will be the first to meet and we and I will take a deep breath together and we just are love.

Sound fun baby bee? Come on out love, we have something called chocolate here.

Watery Moon Baby you are perfect.

7/19/2005 Dear love, it’s getting closer to the change of signs, approaching Leo and leaving Cancer. We are waxing fuller and soon the moon will be a whole pearl. I wonder if that is when you’ll be ready to come to this home. I will open up like a soft, flexi-gate to pull you through to Earth Ville.

7/20/2005 Baby Bee II, last night we were honored in a most amazing why. Three midwives (in the literal sense) paid honor to me for holding you. We ate cheese and chocolate and they danced and chanted blessings around us. It was just a small piece of what type of family and community you will be born into. We are so not alone.

And the last entry, not dated says:

“Don’t fight it, ride it.”

Crossroads, the long version.

July 20, 2006

I was thinking about how nice it would be to get pregnant again. How nice that hard bump at my center would feel, the wonderment of fluid and loose hips. How precious the holographic light that surrounds my body (and others) when I am with child would be. What a joy it would be to reach my hands down again, tuck my chin to my chest and ahhh out a small person, a particle of humanly hope and freedom and bring her to my breast and feed her the rich milk that only mama’s have.

Was I F-in’ crazy? Insane? Worthy of asylum? Right now we have such a perfect thing: Mia and Sula are partners. Mia’s airy lightness helps to spread Sula’s passionate fire. Mia’s image mirrors her dads. Sula’s look comes directly from my blood. Both of them own their own intensity and as wonderfully fun and entertaining and intelligent as they are I would not call them low-maintenance. I have all I can handle. I have 2 arms and there are 2 of them. Together we total 2 parents, a perfect combination for raising 2 kids. We have reproduced what we equal, so why the thoughts on getting pregnant again, so soon? You’re outta your mind, my husband told me. Utterly out of my mind. (though he has mentioned there is a third soul, a girl, waiting for us to ask her in again. someday.)

I just realized today that it is not pregnancy I long to create. It is not a child I want to cultivate. It is my artistic path, the one I stepped off of in order to be Mother. A mother in total completeness, so my children were all I had to think about for a while. I want to nurture a life force again. Beginning as energy, not so different than that of a soul, yet not exactly the same either. I want to cultivate it into a seed, sprouting it like a delicate plant. I want to watch the seed swell and grow and mutate. I want to allow it expansion and make a ticket for traveling a spiral, a journey through my breath, in and out, filling the belly of my mind with creative awareness and the ability to allow something a life; nothing less than exactly who I am. And then release it. Let it all go and release it to the world as a gift. It need not be a child. I understand that now. But it needs to be something.

I always thought it was my words. Since I was a five years old and wrote a book about the gorillas throwing shit at each other while enjoying my first visit to the San Diego Zoo, I called myself a writer. I longed for the day I would be that word, that person to others. I longed to justify to them that my skill was worth their dollar and that dollar could feed me and my future family. It wasn’t until I was 23 years old and found a worthy teacher of prose that I realized that it did not matter if anyone ever read my words and it certainly didn’t matter if I ever made a dime off of them. I just needed to write and if I didn’t death would slowly creep up my spine and destroy my spirit. I knew that writing, like breathing, came naturally. Yet one does not get really good cleansing and healing breaths without pranayama, the practice of breathing. And so as a writer I knew I had to spend a lot of time practicing. I had to have the time to write.

A few years down the road I was called to be with women, to be a pillar and friend while they journeyed through their rite of passage: pregnancy, birth and motherhood. I did not ask to be a doula. It came to me long before I even had kids. But when I helped my friend breath that first baby out…wow. Oh wow. For years I have contemplated getting my training in Childbirth Education. For the most part, my prenatal yoga classes where childbirth education, yoga-style. It is something my inner-wise-woman wants and needs to do. I had an image once of being very old and gray and being the midwife for my grandchild’s birthing-journey (from the deep crow’s feet around my much brighter eyes and the gray head of spiked hair it seemed it was probably the birth of my great-grandchild). So I have half-walked this path for many years, never fully jumping in because I feared I was just distracting myself from writing. I also have issues with even getting to know a medical side to birth, something I would assume be a good thing if you are practicing childbirth education. I am such a naive birthing woman. To me it is souly magical and mystical. It is my second nature to wander to that deep place within and be with baby and invite Birth Energy to temple dance slowly, softly to allow the baby out. We all seem to receive the birth we need to grow, the birth that in the end makes a smarter and stronger woman, regardless of it’s outcome. I probably have way too hands-off approach to birthing that I would be horrible as an educator. I have a hard time speaking of birth, which for me is organic, and lusciously so. There are no verbs to describe. Just sounds and movement and touch. I guess that it why I want to study more, to learn more. To develop that language. Walking what I have down this path has helped me continue on with my ultimate feminist women-love-duty. Like I said, it seems to have come to me. Do I ignore it? No it just becomes part of this list.

I played classical piano from the time I was five until I was 21 years old. I would much rather listen to music than do pretty much anything else. When all the other kids where playing library or house or school, I was playing rock and roll chick, wearing my big sisters rock concert T-shirts of the early 80’s: Pink Floyd, Rolling Stones, KISS and their wooden high-heeled clogs. I would hip thrust and head-bang for hours standing atop my vanity chair, looking at my audience: me. my reflection in the mirror. While other kids were playing tag throughout the neighborhood I was attempting to learn WHAM! and Duran Duran songs on the piano. As I grew my heart told me I wasn’t a performer. Those sweaty palms and the queasiness I had in my belly while people looked and listened to me while I played in piano concerts forced a desire to be more behind the scenes. My first piece of published writing was an interview with The Congos, a classically revolutionary reggae band. And I become a music whore. A groupie. A dancer. A supporter. And then I met my husband who (and I will rip-off this phrase from a dear friend because it is so right for me): played for me the soundtrack of my life. Electronic and wooden and wet each time his fingers would beat a drum or fiddle with the reverb, it was obvious that organic grooves with rhythm and purpose with be for me like food and nourishment. And for years now I have been the one who created flyers, booked shows, sent out CD’s, organized recording sessions, coordinated websites, searched endlessly for vocalists and according to him, shined as his muse and sound board. That’s a lot of work for one mama to do. And now the time has come to finally release the first LP. This is big work. Big tings gwan. Organizing the hopeful release of this record on a reputable label could mean working almost every second of my free-time for awhile. It would mean getting so organized that my type B personality might burst. It would also mean putting on my music industry face. Kind of fun, kind of not. If I don’t do it, don’t know who will. For the next six months this endeavor would need so much attention so that we can toy with the slightest, smallest, miniest of chances that we might be able to morph into our life-long dream: daddy working less with the heavy and environmentally UNfriendly granite business, more with sounds and people, bringing joy that goes beyond counter-tops and backsplashes. Daddy could start working from the home studio (a perfect place to start the unschooling everyday!) Visiting places around the globe, bringing music and positive messages. Lifting my kids up in the air, out of the concrete strip malls of Phoenix and giving them a different view of the world from a stage.

Then of course there is yoga. I will always be first a student of yoga, then a teacher. But I am a teacher and at one point I lived out a dream and owned a yoga studio. The day I opened the yoga studio a little line on a pregnancy test told me that I was indeed holding a delicate yet powerful flower-child within. I balanced the pregnancy while teaching 3 classes a day and being the employer of 7 other people. Then I balanced a newborn on my knee, bouncing her up and down while I ran the studio and strapped her to my front while I taught classes (she to this day is an excellent tree). Then one day she started to crawl. And I lost the balance. It was her. All about her. I had no love to give other people. At all. I wanted to follow her around and watch her grow. I sold my studio and moved to the desert to be a mama. As my practice grows and changes (and at time becomes a bit of a paradox as I long to take more and more classes yet see the Americanization or the “Los Angelization” –buy and consume yoga!– of the ancient way as a repellent, pulling me to stay home and practice alone) I really do feel obligated to teach what I learn. If open, a yoga practice can change lives. It did for me. I want others to feel it.

And above all, I have always wanted to create community. A place where my neighbors are my friends and my kids can run through their gardens and play in their yards. Instead of an email or a phone-call, I walk a thoughtful acre or so to meet up with a friend. A place set up simply yet carefully designed so that it sustains itself, ecologically and financially. A place where creative minds and industrious inventors of self and the world come to dream and live and teach a bit differently than our culture has been set up to do. It would mean, purchasing, cultivating, organizing, building, incorporating, expressing, compromising. It would be mad work. But it would also enable some time to do all the things listed above on my To Do With My Life list. With a close-knit community to help play/raise/teach children, not to mention collectively help each other fulfill one another’s dreams/life work (everyone commits small amounts of time working for each other so everyone has assistance with their lives. Explaining the 10 year and running plan of this place is a whole other piece of writing…something too close to my heart to even express at this point) time and space and childcare are not so much issues anymore. I do believe that ‘we’ have structured our society in a way that makes it impossible for the nuclear family (in most cases) to truly thrive. Parents and children are separated for lengthy amounts of time. Spouses/partners are separated as well. Arts/dreams and spirit callings are often interrupted by either survival and desire to succeed in the material world and there should be no reason why all of these things can’t live together. We live in a society that is fractured, broken. And we constantly cast it without traveling to the marrow to heal it’s wound. We are far from wholistic/holistic. We separate ourselves into compartments from living, to working, to playing to loving. I see community and meshing, blending and becoming one smooth machine of humanity. Separate we a nothing. Together we are one.

I often wonder if my push/pull to many different passions can be lent to the same philosophy. Singling out just one of my arts may make nothing for me, but together they can become All. Then the question is obvious. Where is that path that allows me the time and energy to accommodate it all? (To my sage friend who said my passion for so much acts as compost for my writing, you are wonderful. But how? How?)

And so I have come to the crossroads. I am at the center point of one of my favorite symbols: a circle that surrounds a cross, with each part equal. I know this is a powerful place to hang-out, yet it is a scary place to dwell for long periods of time. Too long and one runs the risk of never leaving. At the crossroads, I am given choice. I can pick a direction to walk. I am lucky to be offered this choice. Blessed! And I am sure through some sort of meditation and stillness, I can see what direction to take. I can walk until I reach the curve of the circle and follow it around until I wind up at the crossroad again. At this center point, where I stand right now is where the African orisha, Elleggua the warrior stands. Face to face we are and he challenges me to slice through my thickness of indecision and fear. He is the warrior whom teaches me to charge by the chaos, absurdity and unpredictability of standing directionless at the center. There will be no path pleading with me to enter it’s golden doors. It will be up to me to hear myself tell myself where to turn and what to do. Unless of course the chatter of my mind is not allowing me to hear (most likely scenario). My children, although they still need almost constant attention, are also sending me signals that it is time to start thinking of me again. Mia asked me the other day, “Who are you?” I replied that I was MaryBeth, her mama. “Who else?” This time I explained to her I was “a daughter and a friend and a wife and a lover of life.” And to this she told me, “And you write and you teach yoga? Yes or no, mama? Yes or no?” I realized then she was trying to see me outside of herself, outside of her mama. She was trying to see me as a person (she also asked me who she was that same day. I told her only she could answer that.) And so for her, and for me, and for the world, I would need to start making me a better person and mother and member of this universal community. Time to do something wildly creative and wildly me. It is understood that I must offer more gifts to the world besides my children. And I am burning up to do so.

Yesterday I received animal medicine. I pulled a card from my deck and was given Antelope: Action and Pace. The card was upside-down telling me the pace of my action was too slow. Antelopes, which run in a straight line and at high speeds, without unnecessary waste of energy told me, “Do it now. Don’t wait any longer.” Stop taking and give. You are blessed. Quit being so conventional and following the path of others. Make a decision now and take action. The fear of the unknown will subside once your devoted action begins.

Then I pulled Whale. Upside down as well. Whale, the record keeper of the knowledge of Mu, the Motherland. Whale medicine allows us to hear subtle frequencies, the songs of the soul of the universe. Whale told me that until I have the desire to know, to really know, I will keep hearing all the chatter in my head, the restlessness in my soul. The questioning and wasteful floundering will continue. Once I can hear the whale call, I can unleash my power and tap into my own stash of the fresh akashic ether.

All morning I stood alone at the crossroads and pulled my hair out trying to figure out the path to take. I am struggling with my love for too many things and not enough time to spend on them. I have a few hours a day, at night to work on things other than being a better mama.

And of course, more than anything else, I am committed to my children. To being a gentle and attentive, patient and creative, loving mama. They are my true passion. They are my ultimate creation. They are my life. I will not farm them out to daycare. I will be there for them like the river is for the rocks. Like the wind for the oaks. Like the sun and rain for the crops. And because I spend all my time with them, I am now at loss for what else I am.

And that brings me to what a yoga teacher said a few days back while we lie in Sivasana: Once we start to think about who we are, we are not being who we are.

I stand at this crossroad with Ellegua, The Antelope and The Whale. I sing Om Nimaya Shiva. Greetings to you who I am. I sing Om Ojo Vatyei Namaha. Greeting to Her who is full of energy and shares it with me.

After I started writing this entry(it takes me days to write a sentence) I went back to my Ashtanga Yoga class with Dave Oliver, a teacher I hope to be ready and worthy to study under. While driving there my head was spinning. My mind full of monkeys that I know belongs in another type of jungle. I asked myself to just listen for one message, one little, teeny tiny piece of guidance to help me with this questioning. At the beginning of the class Dave reminded us of what Ashtanga yoga meant. 8-limb. 8-fold path. The whole science of yoga consists of 8-equal slices of life pie. He was reminding us that Asana, the physical practice is only 1 slice. And not to rely on that one slice too much. It’s not whole within itself. At the end of the class we spread our bodies heavy and limp in corpse pose and looked up to the crafted skylight above us. It was circular and had 8 perfectly even pieces of pie. The constipated desert sky, a gray-blue with flecks of urging light streamed through each slice equally. It observed me as I observed it. Dave spoke of the paths of Ashtanga: keeping yourself in check; observing the self and others; asana/physical practice; breath-work/ life-force; letting go of the senses; concentration; meditation; and the last one: to be happy. To just be happy and joyous. At the point when we are so happy and blissful, asana isn’t even needed. Ashtanga yoga will allow us to stir up our fears and our doubts, our ignorance and our attachments to needing and knowing. And as we become conscious of them and see them and can own them as our own humanly imperfections, we can then let them go. So one simple science of yoga is able to achieve One thing through 8-different paths. Paths that you can practice pretty much simultaneously.

And all the paths lead to the one thing. Samadhi. Happiness. Joy. Bliss.

I will stand here then. Waiting a bit more. Each morning I will turn to face each direction, among the pewter hue that surrounds my space and I will try to project an image of myself against the sky’s ceiling. I am standing tall and strong. I am Shiva/Shakti-like, Durga-like, mother-like: multi-armed. 8 Limbed. I am equipped with Apparatus. I am many parts, I am destroyer of chaos, I am serpent energy. I am fire.

Selectah

July 14, 2006

I never really believed in Writer’s Block. I thought it to be a bullshit excuse for lack of creative energy. I used to say I had The Block when weeks would go by and not a single word was penned. But deep down the block was out of my shear and utter laziness. I would rather be watching movies, eating chocolate, drinkging, having sex, folding clothes, taking up any other hobby that I wasn’t good at like sewing or painting or photography…just because I was a lazy writer. Not because I didn’t have the abilty to express. Expressing takes work. Sometimes I like not to work.

But now I try. I have tried and tried. And I literally can’t write a thing. Not a damn sentence that makes any sort of sense. It all sounds like BLAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHG. Crap. Puke. Not me. Voice is lost. Musta left it back in Ojai when of couse I had words banging down at my fingertips, begging to be let out in the open mountain air… yet not a soul in sight to watch my kids so I could feel the release I so longed for. Is this it? Am I done? No more bones to write down to, Natalie Goldberg, I think they all broke. Shattered. Because hours have gone by and I have been glaring at this lite-brite of a screen, my tired brown eyes aching and seeing double. My lower back in severe pain from this horribly inadaquete and uncomfortable desk chair. My fingers move and the keys click but nothing, and I mean nothing comes out. I guess it’s Writers Block. Figures.

While I wasn’t allowed any writing time in Cali, we did have some great music and dancing sessions. We had a blast blaring the tunes up to 10 and hearing them bounce off the mountain and back into our open doorway. Our fabulous friend Jason, whose home and goats we gaurded has a doubly fabulous music collection. From Blues to Bluegrass, Jazz to Reggae, Country to Freedom Rock, Electronica to Elevator, Jason has it. It was refreshing to dive into someone elses vinyl, putting the needle on different record grooves and exploring sounds from across the board, sounds we don’t own or else have lost in a pile of CD’s (years in music PR has granted me an eclectic collection of dust). Plus we don’t have a variety of vinyl, Bill basically gave away everything but his performance wax , leaving us hundreds of records in all schools of reggae, break-beat and DnB. And their ain’t nothin’ like vinyl. Nothing other than live performance can compare to the frequencies offered upon to the airwaves like the black wax can.

So these are the most requested sounds made by my tiny muscian/dancer/appreciator, Mia Rose.

  1. Hello, Nasty, The Beastie Boys
  2. Working Man’s Dead, The Grateful Dead
  3. The Muppets Movie Sound Track, The Muppets
  4. Ghost In The Machine, The Police 6. Are We Not Men? We Are Devo, Devo
  5. Quality Control, Jurassic 5
  6. Gracious Mama Africa, Dezerie 3.Let’s Wiggles, The Wiggles (this was not a vinyl in the Byal household but a gift from a friend. not bad actually.) 2.Rasta Business, Burning Spear 1 Aparatus, Great Stone Sound System feat. Tony Culture, Rocker T, General Smiley, Casper Lomadawa and Megan Jacobs (the very soon to be released CD produced by Mia’s Daddy, aka Dr. Rock. This is not an album in the ojai collection either, but everytime we got in the car we had to start our 15 minute descend down the mountain to track 6: Fire Wata. Then to track 10: Urge Fi Dis. And then over and over and over again. Hope the masses like it as much as our almost 3 year old.)

“I can teach you how to rock. Watch me.” -Mia Rose, age 34 months, after she didn’t like the style of dancing I was doing and wanted me to shift gears.