10 December 2010

A Word on Personal Lineage, Pt. I


Where Do I Come From?
Ever since childhood, I have always been interested (obsessed) with the idea of lineage, or more specifically, my lineage. I don't recall fascination with any one else's lineage, be it my peers, or the genealogies of historical figures (though I did intensely long to be of their descent). I had no greater, desperate hope than to one day uncover my scandalous adoption- that I actually hailed from two quite epic figures with long, celebrated histories of anomalous behavior.

As a youth, I dreamed and wondered a lot. Probably not more than most young artistic children, but to be fair, perhaps more than most in my family or neighborhood. I found nothing particularly valuable about reality (this belief continued into young adulthood) and thus preferred books over people. I lived in books like Pippi Longstocking by Astrid Lindgren, Ramona by Beverly Cleary, Stargirl by Jerry Spinelli and Matilda by Roald Dahl. These all chronicle the adventures of innocently nonconformist little girls with all of their societal rejection and misunderstoodness. "Yep, that's me," I thought.

I had always possessed a strong desire to know what kind of species I was. By at least 10, it had been, by blood, confirmed: I was a Pippi. A Matilda. I had gone through too much hazing not to be. I was autonomous, idiosyncratic- I was even curiously parentless. Ordinarily, I suspect a young child may find their natural pedigree sufficient for explaining their general origins. Not me. My parents were, in my perception, almost illusory. They were towering, incomprehensible figures that spoke a foreign, incomprehensible language; my many memories of them are mere shrapnel of noise and shapes that I combined to create caricatures of practicality and wrath.

I had a profound mistrust for adults in general, and they were no exclusion. I can partially attribute this belief to the many influences I had which confirmed the anti-adult campaign, however implicitly: Charlie Brown, Rugrats, Goosebumps, Where the Wild Things Are, The Velveteen Rabbit, Winnie the Pooh, the list goes on. Only the teacher of the Magic School Bus could be trusted. As for my independent disposition, I think it can and must be traced to my natural heritage. I am half Greek.

"I don't speak Greek."
My father was raised in a small, racist village in Northern Greece during the 40's and 50's . When my (Hispanic) husband and I got engaged, my father disowned me, not due to his racism, but due to his deeper xenophobia. Even I, in my very being, was subject to this curse. My father himself, upon moving to America, had married a non-Greek: a blonde-haired-blue-eyed non-Greek (they are divorced), of which I was the more obvious progeny, my sister being crowned with dark skin and hair and eyes. From childhood this handicap wretched a deep schism in my identity that by it's very nature was irreconcilable. There is also the language thing.

Every first-generation American child knows about the language thing; it's when you don't speak the language of your foreign family/family member. There we would be, in Greek diners in New Jersey, my Dad at a bar stool emphatically gesturing and uttering with other men, my sister and I in a booth, playing tic-tac-toe on the back of paper placemats, writing our names in cursive and speaking in pig latin. And then we would be addressed.

"Hey, mori" (do not ask what this word means) my father would whisper. I'd look up, all big eyed, high hopes for affirmation, and a man behind the counter, always offensive and fat and bejeweled with gold rings and necklaces, this man - his huge black mustache parting, would ask me a question in Greek.

"I don't speak Greek" I'd say, transitioning into an emotion that children (or adults) should never feel. My father would give a slight nod, turn his back and begin to raise a chorus to which fat man would laugh and wheeze. They would continue, totally absolved from responsibility perhaps because of their sheer Greekness (once upon asking my father about his thoughts on the afterlife, he replied challengingly, "to heaven, where the Greeks are!")*. As a child I thought his post-humiliation rave was about me; in my teen years I realized it was about my mother.



*A friend of mine once asked, "Does that mean he thinks all Greeks go to heaven, or that heaven is a place where there are only Greeks?" I remembering laughing, and also feeling nauseous, shuddering at the thought of either one.

30 August 2010

The Union

for Christa

The Union

of who one is
and who one ought to be
is consummated by suffering.

At times, he who sins against his brother
has forgotten what he has been given.
At other times, it is simple failure.

I can imagine two who, before Babel
enjoyed the benefits of like speech –
understanding, agreement, even laughter.

Now the great event has come,
parting in two even those from
the same womb.

And they just make sounds high and low,
sharp and flat, in the native tongue
that all men know: silence.

Between Cain & Abel
are 1,000,000,000 Milky Ways.

09 June 2010

The Story of Felicity Abigail



Felicity Abigail Gastelum was born on Monday, June 7th on a hot-but-not-too-hot afternoon. She weighs 6 lbs. 11 oz. - as perfectly predicted by her grandpa. She is 20 and 1/2 inches long.



****



Cheyanne called me early Monday morning and told me Felicity was coming, probably later that night. I was at work, but we decided there was no need to leave just yet. A few hours later, Haven called me and said: "We see the head." Okay!

When I got there, Cheyanne was having a contraction. I had never seen a birth before, so I took my cue from Desiree, Haven, Serene and Tearah that what was happening was a-okay.


Once her contraction subsided, she greeted me and confirmed that all was well. Arturo was by her side, talking in Spanish and looking characteristically relaxed.



Between contractions, Cheyanne would talk to the finch as it tweeted merrily. Poor Luna was locked outside, though she watched expectantly through the window.






Between tasks and preparation and questions, there would be long moments of time where we would all stop and quietly watch and wonder. The experience is at once both natural and not original. It is more than wondrous. It is not frightening at all. It is powerful.

Every so often, the pain would come. A pain that can only be described as the worst pain of life.
Her knowledge guided her; the Lord upheld her. Felicity was coming.





Glory was having a blast. She was very focused and devoted to taking as many pictures as possible, as close as to the action as possible. Unlike Tearah, Serene and myself, no looks of aghast wonderment or worry or tears crossed her little face at all.


For Pam, births seem both altogether sacred and also, for a midwife, the norm. She was very calm- very calm, affirming, present and had the utmost respect for Cheyanne. Above she is giving Chey some honey to boost her energy.


Periodically, Chey would want ice, or watermelon, or both, or neither. Later in the evening I asked Desiree if she was proud of me as I ate slices of watermelon while looking at and studying the placenta.

And then...
All of the hard work came to fruition. The hard work of 9 months previous, and the hard work of labor. She labored for 10 hours, and had active labor for 5.

Felicity!


Cheyanne scooped her up out of the water and with all knowledge and instinct, starting rubbing her and talking to her as though she had known her for years.




The whole thing caught on film...


Felicity Abigail was ushered into the world by the arms of her mother and father, amidst a host of aunts and grandmas. She started to blow bubbles and Cheyanne kissed her and sweetly asked her, "are you giving attitude already? are you blowing bubbles?"


Soon the Swartz caravan came rushing in and the house was full of God's people.




Roger was sure, after taking one quick glance at her, that she was 6 lbs. 11 oz.
After nine children of his own, I must say, how could I have doubted him?



We joined Pam in the kitchen for a lesson on the placenta. Shown above is what's called the "tree of life." Cheyanne's placenta was heart-shaped!





Felicity was an instant Daddy's girl and Arturo was an instant Daddy. Here he is protecting her already, from the afternoon rays.



Soon enough Arturo joined the guys outside and was enjoying a delicious egg and hot dog sandwich. The girls stayed inside and took turns holding the precious new possession of God in our midst.






What more to say than praise the Lord our God!

"Let them thank the Lord for his steadfast love, for his wondrous works to the children of man!" Psalm 107:8




02 June 2010

Alone Within the Multitudes Pt. I


"What loneliness is more lonely than distrust?" -T.S. Eliot

*

"Who ever did you tell? Who did you confide in?" asks my pastor, who is utterly fascinated by this tale, and every tale. He asks with gentle and blazing curiosity. He is the perfect model for listeners everywhere.

It's a dark evening at his home in the desert. We've just finished dinner, and are now enjoying his famously preferred vanilla ice cream and berries. There are books, literally, just - everywhere.

He asks this question as I recount the torment of my bygone life. I talk of my secret, unquenchable longing - the secret, unquenchable longing - of desire without satisfaction, burning without flux or relief.

And though I pause after his question, I know the answer with certainty, immediately. I watch him and think how noticeably alive and reasonable he is set in contrast to the sea of still books behind him. And I look to him and say, knowing that he too, even better than I, understands the fire of Hell:

"No one" I say, "I never told anyone."

___


Let this be recorded for a generation to come,
so that a people yet to be created may praise the Lord:
that he l
ooked down from his holy height;
from heaven the Lord looked at the earth,
to hear the groans of the prisoners,
to set free those who were doomed to die,
that they may declare in Zion the name of the Lord,
and in Jerusalem his praise,
when peoples gather together,
and kingdoms, to worship the Lord.
Psalm 102:18-22

26 May 2010

Distressed Furniture Makeover

Hey folks :)

Below are the results from the first ever Campos furniture makeover. We did three dressers. One is not pictured because I forgot to snap a shot of it :) I'd like to thank Jenn at Livin' the Simple Life Blog for the inspiration and directions for this project. I would also like to thank my husband, who was constantly wonderful, and for our brother Matt Hicks who happened to be at our house every time these dressers needed moved. Also, Jan and Ty who donated the bedroom dressers to us and my Mom who provided the makeover $$ as my birthday gift :) And of course, thank the Lord for good is he!

Dresser 1: For the Bedroom - the other dresser is a smaller, three-drawer version of this one with slightly different handles




*

Dreser 2: Affectionately crowned 'Lucille Ball', she will house our art supplies




*

Some simple directions for a distressed furniture makeover:

Supplies:
1 quart primer
1 quart paint
1 quart polyurethane sealant
1 can spray paint for handles
60 grit sandpaper (the sheets worked better than the hand-held squares for me)
rollers, roller brushes and roller pans (3 of each)
thick handheld brushes
plastic covering for ground
optional 1 quart of gel stain for sanded areas
optional small brush for painting sanded areas with gel stain
optional new handles

Directions:
(for painting I applied large areas with rollers and details with brushes)
1) clean furniture of all dust and stains
2) coat with primer, let dry, apply second coat, let dry
3) paint, let dry, apply second coat, let dry
4) sand raised edges; if you do not like the color of the previous color that shows through, you can paint the sanded areas with gel stain and a small brush (we didn't)
5) coat whole dresser with polyurethane - do not shake can of polyurethane!
6) spray paint handles with selected color, fasten once dry
7) enjoy and give thanks :)

*

This project was very fun. I am officially hooked.

Love,
A

P.S. Look at how hard my husband works! Also, that is the other dresser!