I'VE GONE BACK TO THE PLACE OF MY BIRTH MANY TIMES.
Family is there; Mom and Dad - memories. My folks still live on the home place
near the city of Twin Falls, although now in a trailer closer
to Rock Creek Canyon's lip. My brother and his wife bought the
house. Mom's 88. Dad's 83. She stays in a lounge chair mostly,
her legs propped up as she awaits the day when congestive heart
failure ends her earth journey. Dad I know will quickly follow.
There's no separating those two. The love bond between them
remains strong. He's presently her caregiver.
I wanted to see them again, as well as my sister and her husband's
new cabin in the high country and what relatives I could in
one trip. A letter announcing my 50th High School Reunion convinced
me that July 2005 was the time to go.
My sister is a dream boat. She took me everywhere once I arrived
in Boise. We both share the same birth date, ten years apart.
Her two boys are one year apart, same day, one day before ours.
So in two days, we have four birthdays. We laugh a lot about
that. I had almost forgotten how clear the air is in Idaho,
how bright the colors, and how bold and huge the land. You can
see 360 degrees in all directions, all the time. That openness
defined my character from the beginning. Volcanic soil, sagebrush,
Snake River Canyon, Shoshone Falls, Twin Falls, Perrine Bridge,
Sawtooth Mountains, South Hills, the bigness of everything -
I have always loved this country and I still do.
The overnight at her cabin, just the two of us, brought back
so many childhood memories. I was comforted to know that mountains
here still thrum, pine still creaks as it bends, cottonwoods
and brush still rattle, and creeks still sing of stories as
wind skips by. It was as if I had never left - except for the
hummingbirds. Hummingbirds? Yup, three of them, fighting over
sugar water, doing body slams in midair. I never realized the
tiny things could be that aggressive. We watched their antics
from the deck as evening turned off the light. No television.
No phones. Just lots of talking 'til sleep came.
One of my aunts had broken her hip in a fall, yet her healing
was remarkably fast. A visit to a cousin's place delighted both
eyes and heart, for we had never had intimate moments like we
were able to share this time. Mom looked somehow better than
she had during my last trip, her mind bright. Dad hovered around
her, concerned, yet fully present. I went back to see them every
chance I had, tucked into a full schedule of events. Among them
was the long drive to Ontario, Oregon, to see Dr. Reimer and
his partner Jeanie. I owe my life to Doc Reimer. He brought
me back after my three experiences with death in 1977. I have
yet to meet a healer who could compare with his level of ability,
knowledge, and devotion to calling. Sadly, a lifetime of smoking
has taken a heavy toll of his health. He could heal everyone
but himself. Now it is Jeanie Reimer and the angels she communicates
with who do wondrous things for others.
My 50th High School Reunion surprised me. The large turnout
was so friendly and so caring, the people so loving, that you
couldn't tell the difference between the millionaires and those
who struggled on social security. Everyone was equal, members
of the one family we had become. The love we shared with each
other was extraordinary.
On Sunday my classmates were abuzz about water gushing over
Shoshone Falls, almost as much as during the "good ole
days" (the Western drought had necessitated cutting most
of its flow). My sister had loaned me an extra car so I hurried
over. That feeling sense within me that has become so acute
since my experiences with death bid me to park atop the grade,
and not drive into the canyon itself. I have no idea how high
the rim is from the canyon floor, maybe several thousand feet.
The falls are higher than Niagara's but not as wide. Sunshine
stretched heavenward as I clamored up and down rim rocks seeking
a better view. I was a kid again doing what I had always done,
much to the chagrin of my parents who often held their breath
lest I lose my footing and fall. The rock shelf where the water
tore loose was my playground when dry. I never missed an opportunity
then to explore every nook and cranny, hang from every cliff.
Mom used to yell, "I wish you'd learn the meaning of fear
someday." I did, but not from such explorations. Adventure
was my middle name.
When I reached the perfect spot, the panorama before me parted
like a curtain does and I stepped through - physically, sensorially,
hyper alert - to view all the people who had ever had a role
to play in the unfoldment of my life up to the point where I
married and had children. Scenery served as a backdrop to an
assembled mass of relatives, friends, strangers, attackers,
interested and disinterested folk - all smiling at me, all exuding
pure love.
I did not have a pleasant childhood. Five fathers, two mothers,
the horrors of school, Pearl Harbor, rationing, an uncle who
molested me, frustrating confusion. I had been born with dyslexia
and synesthesia and developed a stuttering problem because of
the trauma this caused me. Some claim I was a spoiled brat as
a child. Those who saw deeper said I didn't fit in; I couldn't
be what others expected of me. A need to prove the difference
between reality and imagination became an intense drive. I pushed,
prodded, and examined everything. And I survived this way.
The people who filled the first phase of my life now stood
before me, smiling. Their presence revealed a living truth -
that we had all been players acting out scripts - my purpose
for being was the script I followed; the orchestration of their
roles and mine, how we gifted each other. Each of us as the
souls we really were had known all along what we were doing
and why and who we were to each other.
The reality of our companionship, and of the greater love that
enfolded and embraced us, overwhelmed me. I knew all was forgiven;
the first phase was over.
The presence of these people was neither a perception, a memory,
a dream, nor a fantasy. Each was real and fully dimensional,
and I viewed them standing on the edge of the world as I saw
through the world. In love's truth, I recognized love's power
to acknowledge me, to validate, forgive, and set free.
Love defined my entire trip. My 50th High School Reunion, every
relative I had time to visit, every person I greeted or spoke
to, even the police officer who pulled me to one side in Wendell
and cautioned that I was driving too fast - 30 miles per hour
in a 25-mile zone. His broad smile and friendly banter betrayed
any threat. When I needed to leave, both my parents walked me
to the door, arms around each other, waving, smiling, love personified.
I could hardly believe my eyes. Everywhere I looked there was
only love; anything else but an illusion, put there to fulfill
a purpose, to teach or awaken.
On Monday, my brother drove me to Boise to catch the plane.
We arrived early, so I asked to be taken to Julia Davis Park
in the downtown area. That park had been the scene of many events
when I lived there and I wanted to see it again. He parked his
pickup near the bandshell. Directly across from the span of
where I sat at a picnic table, there I stood, a young mother
with picnic baskets interrupted in her stride to keep up with
family by the sound of a man's voice. On the floor of the bandshell
stage sat a man in the yogic lotus position speaking to a crowd,
microphone in hand. He wore plain white garments. Nothing fancy.
There was something about his voice. He spoke of a greater
reality, that we were all one family, children of the same God,
and that the universe and all of creation were good, and that
we as co-creators with the Creator, determined what happened
in our lives by our intention, our thoughts, and the choices
we made. He said he experienced this truth while taking the
drug LSD, and then he described the glory of what he beheld
while under the influence of its psychedelics. He called himself
Ram Das.
One little old lady, seated on the front row of the crowd,
jumped up and ran to the stage. Straining to see the man above
her, she excitedly shouted out for all to hear, "I experience
the same thing every time I crochet!" As the crowd roared,
he admitted that there were many ways to discover the truth
about life without taking drugs as he had. I echoed his comment
for I had had such experiences too, drug free.
My family motioned me to hurry so I walked away. But that moment,
that specific moment in time, was the beginning of the second
phase of my life. A seed had been planned that day. And, like
the former Richard Alpert, esteemed Harvard professor whose
controversial explorations of human consciousness ended one
career while jumpstarting another as the "Servant of God,"
Ram Das, I also began to research human consciousness - which
opened up whole new worlds for me that led in very different
directions from anything I had ever known.
Sitting at the picnic table that morning I witnessed my turning
point back in the 60s. The "me" I saw, everyone else
present at that time in my personal history, were completely
and utterly real, fully dimensional, and sensorially experienced.
I did not ask my brother if he saw any of it because I knew
he hadn't. I described that day to him, though, because I wanted
him to know how important it had been to me.
The many phases of each of our lives have definitive beginnings
and endings. Most of us seldom give heed to such things. Although
I could have surmised when mine were, going back to Idaho in
July of 2005 stopped me short. The revelations given were so
surprisingly intense and involved, they were beyond my reckoning
- living proof that forgiveness really does heal and love does
indeed conquer all.
© 2005, P.M.H.
Atwater.