Category Archives: Introductions

Bird Lancaster

Several times, I went to New York City to visit my childhood friend, Kristin Petersen. She is blonde and Swedish, I am brunette and Norwegian. We were raised together in Bellevue. We went to school together from kindergarten on, were Bluebirds and Camp Fire Girls, as well as close friends. When she was a junior or a senior, Kristin began to dance, which she’d loved since she was tiny, but had never seriously studied ballet or modern. Nevertheless, she was a gifted interpretive dancer with a beautiful figure and long, stylishly straight hair.

Almost immediately after we graduated, she moved to the Big Apple, never to return, dancing for Alvin Ailey and with other avant garde ensembles. After about a decade, I went to visit her at her loft right off Broadway on Houston Street. On the fifth floor of an old warehouse, already reclaimed and gentrified downstairs, but not inside, she had a large dance studio, lined with mirrors, complete with barres. At the far end of the space was the living area, a perfect hippy world walled off with four by eight sheets of plywood and some two by fours.

The living space was crowded with stuff. She had a sleeping area against the exterior wall with its grimey window on one side, and a rickety shower and bath on the other window side underneath an ancient, grime encrusted skylight. Along a line created by the bathroom was an eight foot high sleeping loft slash storage area arrangement, accessible by a step ladder propped against the wall. The opposite side provided a sitting area with coffee table next to an office, another sitting area, a stand-alone closet stuffed with clothing, abutting the sleeping area shrouded in Indian print sheets.

The space was imaginatively furnished with found objects from the streets of the City. The first time I visited, Kristin’s live-in lover, Mark, had an impressive mahogany table from some Wall Street board room as the centerpiece. The second time I visited, I flew to Manhattan, then took a cab to Kristin’s loft with all my bags of stylish clothing and a promise from a gentleman friend to take me to some Broadway shows.

I had recently become interested in aerobics and was a fit 5 foot two inch size five with a new life, so Kristin and I were still like female bookends, yin and yang, blonde and brunette Kristins. Sadly, elegant Mark and his regal table were gone. In his place was a huge American Indian named Turtle Heart and a giant cage with an angry cockatoo named Bird Lancaster. Other inhabitants included a large, flop-eared bunny who lived in the shower. He had the run of the place and his own litter box, placed in the bathroom area alongside the cats’ boxes. Two cats, Siamese variants, flitted over furniture and behind walls, but left the rabbit and Bird alone.

At first the Indian was delighted with me, but as soon as I made it clear that I would not be joining him in bed with Kristin, that changed. He also hated me because my gentleman friend made good on his offer, and sent a limousine to pick me up to go uptown to Petrossian and to the theatre.

I wore this killer black and silver, off-the-shoulder disco dress to go out with Bob, the hundred and seventy five dollar an hour attorney from Seattle who was squiring me around town. Turtle Heart told me in no uncertain terms that “This is not a hotel” but I was Kristin’s friend and guest, plus it was her place, so after a while he left me alone, sort of.

My heart had been stolen by Bird Lancaster. He was a terrible, spoiled brat, but we bonded the minute we laid eyes on each other. Kristin let him out at dinnertime that first evening, so he walked along the floor to the table, then used his beak and claws to crawl up my jeans leg onto my lap. He watched me eat; I gave him tidbits from my plate. After that we were inseparable.

Sometimes it was okay for Bird to be out, but he hated to go back. They would catch him and shove him in, slamming the door. He would scream fit to split your head, then grab the edge of his food dish to dash it against the cage, so seeds and kibble flew out in all directions.

Turtle Heart made a great living as a dope dealer and shaman. He had a maple box on a tv tray by the door. The box was segmented to display thirty two kinds of primo marijuana and hash he imported from all over the world. The phone rang all the time, and the most interesting people in Soho showed up at all hours to smoke and talk.

As a shaman, he also had a following of easily led New Yorkers, who thought he had answers, but he only had contempt for them. However, I was not allowed to join in the ritual, to punish me for being so worldly that I wanted to see Broadway shows and let a rich man buy me expensive dinners. I did not care, stayed in the living area, and played with Bird. When Kristin and her paramour returned from the studio ritual into the living area, Turtle Heart said,

“Did any of those wallheads leave any money?”

Kristin and I stayed up till wee hours, smoking pot, talking and weaving beads around sticks in a distinctive pentagram shape she had mastered. She cast my horoscope and we talked a lot about astrology and mysticism.

She told me that I am a dark moon person, who searches for meaning in others but only finds it within herself, but that she is a full moon person, the opposite, who searches for meaning within herself but only finds it in others. Apparently, she found it in Turtle Heart, because she sat at his feet.

During the day we walked around New York, shopping for Turtle Heart’s special tobacco, his booze, special food from the Farmers Market, striding under ever-present scaffolding, visiting shop after shop with an unlimited number of twenty dollar bills peeling from Kristin’s pocket. Finally, we went home, but only after a lengthy visit to art galleries festooning the ground floor.

Upstairs at Five Front, Turtle Heart was at work in his office. This was the early era of computers, with four inch discs that showed a lot of their inner magnetic tape through a hole diecut through its cardboard cover.

One simply shoved a big disc into the A drive, saved the data, then ejected it for remote storage. In this case, Turtle Heart had a lot of discs, stored on several shelves above his desk. The monitor, keyboard, and printer were all observed by Bird, whose cage was his elbow.

The cockatoo watched Turtle Heart’s every move, all day, every day, as he saved files, switched discs, running his business in a modern, organized fashion. He worked at his desk often, maybe to keep the details of his lucrative enterprises recorded, maybe to write arcane answers to universal questions. No one will ever know.

Because I let Bird out and forgot to watch him.

Also, I made the mistake of answering the phone. I did think it might be Bob, and it was, but it was Turtle Heart’s business line. Unfortunately, while I chatted, Bird flew up onto the desk and began to pick up each disc in turn, angling it with his foot so that he could pop the delicate magnetic tape with his beak. He had destroyed quite a few when the Indian stormed into the living space to find me on his phone and Bird on his desk.

Oh man, did we catch it. The giant yelled at me for answering the phone, while he grabbed Bird, flinging him into his cage. Kristin came to our rescue: we made dinner or some other conciliatory activity, feeding the enraged bird treats to calm him.

Often Kristin would play with her cats when we were trying to avoid Turtle Heart. She had a colorful Costa Rican hammock strung across the room; she would capture the Siamese, wrapping them in the hammock like cat peas in a pod, then swing them round and round in a circle.

Wheeeeeeeeee

One night, I was up in the alcove, nestling in my sleeping bag, when I heard clamp, scrape, clamp, scrape, repeated, repeated, getting closer and closer, up the step ladder. Into the attic room came Bird, with his little top knot unfurled, and his wings held out from his sides. My visitor ran round in circles on the rug in excitement. It was like being visited by a Martian.

He came right up to me, staring, inviting me to rub under his wings. He was purest white, with canary yellow overtones in his topknot and on the edges of his wings. A soft, talc-like substance clung to my fingers after rubbing the soft skin under his feathers. His tail was damaged from being in the cage, but he looked healthy, watching me from one side of his head with that eloquent eye, iris expanding and contracting in the dim light.

It was all I could do not to leave my elegant clothes behind so that I could punch holes in my suitcase and steal Bird Lancaster. I will never forget him. I’ve never stop regretting that I didn’t try to buy him, because he died the next year, but his Martian spirit lives on.

Owl vs Robins

Today our resident barred owl landed on the bare maple outside my west window, her wings catching my eye with a whirl of tan and white stripes. I froze so as not to alarm her, then crept to the window with my phone, hiding behind the huge tv so she couldn’t see me. She hates to be observed. Another time she slammed onto a hapless mouse on the walkway outside just as I walked into the room to witness it.

The owl and I have tolerated each other for thirty years, ever since we built our house on top of a hill in her forest at Tara Lane. The first time I saw her was because of her strange call, like she was sucking in sound instead of hooting it out. She was clinging to the rope securing our hammock. We stared at each other for a long time, then I went inside. Clearly, this was her space. We would hear her calling to her mate with strange garglings in the twenty plus acres behind us, spreading out to the big green swamp on Sunset.

One halcyon summer day I sat on the porch of my pumphouse in the woods next to our wetland road, lined with salal and bracken then forest on either side. Everything was quiet except for the buzzing of bugs when Tara, the barred owl, flew through along the mossy roadway three feet above the ground, absolutely silent, her wings spread straight out, a gliding plane searching for food.

Whenever spring comes and I see the owl, I remember a pair of robins who labored beyond strength and reason to build a sloppy nest on a shelf outside my living room window. We watched them every day as they to and fro-ed endlessly, first building their nest, then laying eggs, incubating them, each devotedly taking turns to relieve the spouse, then endlessly feeding their squawking child, the sole survivor.

One day I was walking into my living room when there was a sudden kerfuffle from the robin’s nest. I realized the fledgling was about to launch. The messy little robin, down sticking from between his new feathers, stepped to the edge of the nest, lifted his wings, became airborne, then

WHAM!

The baby only got about two feeble attempts to flap his wings as he fell to earth but was snatched mid air by stealth owl Tara, who had been lurking behind the trunk of the big white fir, eavesdropping, all along. Good old mother nature.

The robins were shocked. They had no idea what had happened. Their baby had completely disappeared. Now you see it now you don’t. They squawked around for a while but what are they going to do?

Luckily, they got over it fairly quickly but nobody ever used that nest again.

Back from a long hiatus

I’ve done a lot of writing since my previous postings, but it was scattered here and there. Through my association with the Lit Lab, which meets monthly on Camano Island, I have increased my output, especially the animal stories, which has inspired me to collect my stories here. Recently, in response to a prompt agreed upon by the Lit Labbers, I wrote about a dramatic interaction I witnessed right out my front window. It is titled “Owls vs Robins” plus I will post my stories about crows and Coopers hawks, my own nighthawk Otto as well as other everyday adventures with animals.

A life changing experience

Recently I told my son about an exceptional experience that I had when I was about thirty eight. I pondered it for years, talking about it occasionally with trusted friends and strangers, but never really connecting with anyone about it. Many people scoffed, saying it was paint fumes, but I couldn’t stop thinking about it.

I told my trusted friend, JF Lewis, about it and finally I’ve had a break through and am anxious to share this with my community. It really was a special and powerful experience which changed the direction of my life. Please read “Accidental Shock Therapy.”

Susan goes to the ‘Glades

When I was twenty one, I moved to south Florida. Every day was an adventure there: scuba diving, snorkeling, tramping around in the Big Cypress Swamp with my first husband Bish, I learned so much and had so many wonderful experiences. I wrote the Florida and the Ohio stories when my kids were small, but knew they would require rewriting at some point in the future. That time is now. More soon and thanks for all your support.

A New Adventure!

Today I finished a new adventure starring Susan Lulu and her friend Marty, entitled “Susan and Marty Find a Fort in the Woods and Marty Runs Away.” So wonderful to remember the pristine Cascade woods where we spent hours playing. I am channeling my childhood, recalling the death defying feats we used to carry off without a thought, climbing impossible trees, teetering across the creek on logs, swinging on a dangerous rope swing. The sad thing is that all these places bright with trilliums and yellow violets, or Johnny Jump Ups, became the first Microsoft campus.

Derelict in my duties but there is hope

Have been apathetic for a while, mostly because of idiotic technical difficulties, like a beloved laptop giving up the ghost. So sad, plus the headache of getting external devices to  cooperate, but hooray! it looks like I am back. Uploaded a bunch of illustrations last time. Today I am inputting some corrections, courtesy of my dear friend JF Lewis, who is chief nit picker, which I really appreciate. Let’s hear it for JF, and the eternally excellent jam session he hosts each Thursday in deepest darkest Ballard.

Susan and Phineas in Florida

After Susan Lulu’s first four catastrophic experiences, she had to learn. It would be impossible for any father to take a defiant and willfully ignorant child to a dangerous place. So she wised up, allowing me to retell some of the delightful adventures I had with my first husband Bish when we lived in Naples on the Gulf for five years. Each of these encounters is true, except the frog across the face incident actually happened while we were careening around a dangerous corner at a major intersection in downtown Naples. The frog splatted directly across Bish’s face. It was huge, and obscured one of his eyes. He said he thought it was the hand of Satan. I crawled around on the floor of the Landcruiser I was laughing so hard.

JF

I have a really good friend who helps me edit my stories. He is always right, so I overcome any immediate resistance to his suggestions. I make the change: kill the hyphen, add a semicolon, so that he will keep reading my stuff. Occasionally, he asks for a change I cannot make, without explaining that I already used that device twelve stories down, which is why I want it this way. Maybe on the second rewrite, I promise, but eternal gratitude for caring enough to read with such care.

I write stories about the animals, plants, and bugs I observe

Tris Hussey, author of the text we are using in this class “Create Your Own Blog” says that your first few posts will suck, and he is right. I have been learning so much that I dropped the ball on explaining my material to a new audience. When I lived in Florida during the early Seventies, there was a column in the newspaper called “Nature Notes,” just observations of a resident, which I really enjoyed. So I started writing them, too, but I never had an easy way to share them, until now.