Laurie Klein, Scribe

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Exposure: Risk and Gift

by Laurie Klein 8 Chiming In

Exposure—now there’s a threatening word. Are you up for an armchair adventure?

Crown Exposure, Camperdown Elm, crown

Let’s play “Exposure: Risk and Gift,” a creativity game I dreamed up, well, just because.

Exposure: Risk beginning, step 1

  • Using paper (or your device), write I’m afraid 25 times down the left-hand margin
  • Finish each phrase with whatever comes to mind, without lifting pen from paper (or fingers from keys)
  • Circle any “I’m afraid” statements that alarmed or surprised or annoyed you

Exposure: Risk writing, step 2

If you read my recent post on the Camperdown Elm, here is the same tree, seen later in the day and from another angle. Trick-or-treat, anyone?

Camperdown Elm with vintage home
Camperdown Elm at Dusk, Poulsbo, WA

Using one of the statements you circled, write a letter, or a list, a poem, or a song, or even a partial scene using one of these phrases below (or one of your own) as a kickstart:

  • They planted me deep, downhill from the Ferris place, never suspecting . . .
  • Sleepwalking inside somebody’s nightmare . . .
  • I never meant to . . .

Or you could write from the viewpoint of someone discovering the cure for Dutch Elm Disease . . .

Play with possibilities, no matter how crazy, and see what happens. Sometimes free writing unearths an emotion that’s “under the radar,” eating at your inner peace.

Camperdown Elm, zoom on tortored branchwork

Exposure: Offer a gift, step 3

The Camperdown Elm in November dusk (first two photos) looks pretty creepy.

The Camperdown Elm below was taken in April, in afternoon light.

Camperdown Elm at Filoli Garden
Camperdown Elm at Filoli Garden, Woodside, California

Margaret Atwood once said: So much depends on the light, and the way you squint.

Now take what you’ve risked writing so far and “gift it” with one or two of the following:

  • A favorite time of day, or weather
  • A new character
  • A quote or proverb you love

Follow wherever the words want to take you. Stop when you feel done.

Read back what you’ve written. Has the overall mood and/or meaning changed?

Have your thoughts about the underlying fear you identified changed?

Exposure: Optional

Consider emailing me what you created. I’d love to read it!

Was this experiment interesting or enlightening?

Would you enjoy a similar creative prompt from time time?

 

p.s. To see a stunning full view of the Filoli Camperdown Elm tree in bloom as well as the fabulous winged seedpods in close-up, click here. (scroll to image #5)

Laurie Klein, Scribe

 

Filed Under: Springboards Tagged With: Angle, Creativity, Exposure, Gift, Play, Risk, transformation March 30, 2016

When the Graft Takes

by Laurie Klein 20 Chiming In

Family Tree, a Holy Graft

He spoke into my life where my parents could not or would not involve themselves: the stunted places, those aching, relational gaps.

Husband of Pat, my beloved Theatre Arts mentor, Dr. Howard Stien entered my life slowly. Gently.

We shared coffee, anecdotes, laughter, the singular pleasures of knowledge vs. mysteries, and the love of writing. We shared our awe for a God who loves to graft stories and lives together.

How does one measure the relational graft that feels divinely ordained—and, finally, organic?

In Tree-speak, a graft can generate something new.

A graft can also repair an injured tree.

When the graft grows

Stien recognized my injured sapling-self. His regard grounded and sheltered me. Oak-steady, he modeled as well as articulated God’s grace in ways I could grasp. His quiet confidence in my abilities renewed hopes, long dormant.

With trademark humor, Stien wore black on exam days. I wish I’d taken one of his Biology classes.

Are you thinking of someone who’s been a spiritual father, or mother, to you? A person this special enters our lives as if sent—even fleetingly—and if we are open, we are indelibly changed.

My stoic Viking in denim was also a soft-spoken apostle for curious, wide-awake living. Kindly and wry, his questions took root in me. Generated ideas. Dropped seeds.

Over the years, he attended many of my performances. During our hug afterward, sometimes he’d say he’d felt nervous for me. Just like a dad.

The graft that “takes”

What will be said about us, after we’re gone?

Are we, like Stien, leaving a vibrant legacy?

Family man and farmer, scientist, pastor, and builder, tail gunner and neighborhood runner, author, professor, and mentor—he feels spliced into my spirit. Part of my extended family tree.

Had Stien been born a tree, I’d picture something oak-ish: resilient, and crowned with shining leaves.

Oak Tree
Mt. Figueroa oak tree, CA

In “Trees for the Forest,” from his book Thoughts While at Bat in the Tenth Inning, Stien writes:

“My intrigue with trees is about as old as I am . . .

[L]ately as I drive down a tree-lined boulevard
or stroll through the ponderosa stand bordering our community
I marvel at the unique individual beauty of these magnificent creations.

It’s like seeing persons in a crowd.”

He adds that while people’s names often elude him, he still recalls genus names from his early studies, like Quercus for oak.

The graft that takes keeps on giving . . .

Leaving Hospice a few days ago, the word terebinth dropped into my mind. Terebinth, often translated “oak” in the Bible, comes from the Hebrew word meaning “mighty.”

I’ve no idea what aftershave Stien wore, but the terebinth’s unique fragrance unites heady balsamic resin with notes of lemon and fennel.

You want to stay near a richly complex aroma. Breathe it in. Absorb its warmth.

Online, I explore Stien’s world, and learning eases my sorrow. I return with these spiritual parallels:

  • A solitary tree, the terebinth holds its ground on exposed hillsides and in tangled ravines
  • Substantial roots deeply penetrate soil and anchor the tree
  • Fruitful, the tree provides soothing oil and strengthening proteins
  • Valued for its inner treasure, the tree, when tapped, offers a cleansing solvent (turpentine)
  • Handsome, even in great age, the terebinth is recognized by its subtle blossoms and winged leafstalks

He is nine days gone. It feels like a wing has gone missing.

tumbleweed, underground

“Although my father and my mother have forsaken me,
yet the Lord will take me up
[adopt me as His child].”

—Ps. 27:10 (AMPC)

Laurie Klein, Scribe

Has someone been a spiritual father, or mother, to you?

Are you currently encouraging a sapling-soul in need of repair?

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: family tree, father, Gift, grace, graft, mother March 2, 2016

Divine Detours

by Laurie Klein 14 Chiming In

Detours? I’ve lost count.

Despite, or maybe because of them, my twenty-year writing apprenticeship has birthed a book! The New Year and new paths beckon.

Following several detours with my publisher—overseen by the Author of all-things-good for my growth—UPS delivers my presentation copy. It’s beautiful.

I open it on the winter solstice, the shortest day and longest night of the year. Which seems fitting. Fruition is fleeting. (I hold a souvenir of the path I have walked.)

Detours in a Tangled WoodThe extra long night ahead invites thanksgiving and deep rest—before book launch efforts commence (more on this in another post).

So, in view of uncharted paths ahead, am I making resolutions?

No.
[Read more…]

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: brainchild, divine detours, Gift, hope December 31, 2015

ADVENT*U*RING!—Alongside Angels

by Laurie Klein 6 Chiming In

Advent, the church calendar name for the four Sundays preceding Christmas, is here again! Advent means “arrival,” or “to come to.” Advent means special candles. Stories. And angels.

Are angels still at work in our world?

Human musings about their sex, wingspans, and celestial footwear (for dancing atop the pearled heads of pins) persist to this day.

Advent Angel with Snowflake

Many of us, or people we know, have a guardian angel theory. Or story.

(Our daughter believed that Cindy, her personal angel, lived on the roof and kept robbers away.) [Read more…]

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: Advent, angel, Gift, message December 3, 2015

The Other Side of Goodbye

by Laurie Klein 8 Chiming In

ACT I:  Send-off

vertical garden revA family like a garden—life-giving, even in loss.

But so tired. Wearied to their roots.

Today the Bradford clan celebrates the life of 42-year-old Emily Grace. Parents, siblings, and kin fill the front row.

From where I sit they look like flowers. Heads bow as blossoms will, after a downpour.

They wear pink, yellow, jade and navy and August green. There are strokes of black like the richest soil.

Staging the public goodbye depletes a family’s energies. It strip-mines their emotional marrow, their spiritual DNA.

And what of the mourners? [Read more…]

Filed Under: Immersions Tagged With: Burden, Gift, Goodbyes, Hats, Wings September 4, 2015

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