Good morning the Fellowship of the Farmy. I am in California for the holidays.

I apologize for not being available lately. I had a number of issues (wrong word), things (even wronger), unavoidable challenges? to deal with and my head space got crowded as things came to a head. My Dad commenced to shuffle off his mortal coil ( his words) and I was unable to be with him. The Matriarch ran into some health issues and was in and out of hospital. All this coincided with me reconfiguring my workload at the mill so I could re-assign a number of my responsibilities to other members of staff allowing me to focus on baking and customer care and orders.

Then the new Variant loomed, a couple of other issues made themselves known and all of a sudden it became too much. I saw Burn Out, broken Break Down and Screaming Bloody Heamee Memees looming on my horizon. I was not coping. Not sleeping. My face developed an invisible twitch just around my mouth. I could not see Dad ( him dying in New Zealand and me in USA). I was not able to visit Sandy in hospital. I had to keep reminding myself where I was and what I was supposed to be doing. Even my conversation developed gaps as I struggled to find words. I could feel my heart beating so hard I could feel it with my hand. I was melting.
So I went on the defense. I fled emotionally. Concentrated. Dug deep. Hunkered Down. Became very Still. Froze. Like the way a piglet does when she gets a fright. Removed myself. All those things. It helps to stand on one foot and pause. Just watch things play out through a port hole. To freeze and listen hard. To retreat. Think. So I did. But it was hard on everyone else. And I am sorry for that.

My mother in law the Matriarch was recovering at speed thanks to Johns care but then my Dad died. I thought I was ready for the tectonic shift of losing the last parent. But when I was told that my Dad had died in New Zealand – even though I knew he was dying and even though I knew covid would ban me from saying a decent goodbye or helping my siblings with his send off, or attending his funeral or baking bread for his wake or raising a glass in his honor or any of the things the oldest daughter should do, even though I knew these things – I was more angry than I think I have ever been in my life. Wild spitting destructive anger. I was deep in my mental pause by then so I had no valve for the fury that rose into my mouth, blinded my face and took my words. I silently carried rubbish bags into my room, shut the door and commenced to clear it out, for two days I sorted through years of detritus and threw stuff into the bin bags.

I was sick of it all. Sick of all this stuff. Sick of all this plastic. Sick of all this ownership. Sick of this comfort. Sick of pretending to be sweet and malleable so as not to upset anyone. Sick of being so far away from my children. Sick of this damn virus. Sick of walls. Sick of me. I wanted to bite and glare and shake this off like a wet dog. It was a dangerous rage this one. It could burn stuff. Break people. So I threw that into a rubbish bag too. I piled the bags up into the corner of my bedroom to wait and flew to California.
I think I am hard for myself to know.
I have looked at these paragraphs for over a week now and wondered if this is overly dramatic or quite true.
I need to calm down for about a year.
( I did not discard everything – I put the oil-skin hat and coat from Dad, art from Mum, recipe books from my grandmother, the hand made coffee mugs and glasses gifted to me by different children, a bowl and a knife, bench scraper and bowl scraper all into one box. In fact it was a curious and consuming exercise. Possessions have levels and once I began to let go of each level a whole raft of useless things followed behind clattering into rubbish piles. But gifts from the ones I loved I kept. My cameras and written words went into another box. I have kept some clothes because otherwise I will be cold (and they are useful for wrapping fragile objects) but I don’t like most of them. My clothes no longer reflect who I am – they have been overwhelmed by millwear, and comfy culture).
Anyway as I breathe out here in Visalia, with my son and his children, I remember that life (as Shakespeare and you and I know) has chapters in it, episodes, dynasties. I loved being a stay at home mother, being a single mother of many, being a teacher, a friend, being involved in the film industry, being a mother of adults, learning to farm and succeeding, being married,
But now many of those descriptions have the word absent in front of them. Absent mother, absent teacher, absent friend, absent daughter, absent sister, absent wife, absent film, absent writer. Absent me.
The time has come to try and turn my absent into active.
So now I am forcing my life into its next Act where I am determined to blend it all together. And I am burning the trail to get there. I want to be active not absent. Writing, baking, moving and learning. Working alongside my children and grandchildren and sisters and bothers too. I almost loitered too long. I allowed a gap to widen between my selves. I almost lost my people. My country. Myself.
Now I am determined to move to and get to know each of the youngest members of my family and create a present relationship with each of my children and my brothers and sisters. I want to rekindle my old friendships and work harder to keep my present ones alive. I am going to try and stir my life back together with all its eclectic ingredients and bake it.

I will continue to work for Janie’s Mill remotely – taking that show on the road – by teaching, baking with, writing for and supporting her customers and in turn supporting myself, as long as they will have me. That in itself a a huge piece of work and I relish the challenge.

My possessions will decant back down to my two old suitcases. Two phones. My office into a satchel. I will create a new rhythm to my old life. One that is no longer absent. John might get so sick of my darting between countries feeding my families and working from remote locations, that I become homeless again but that is his right and my risk. Active and absent. It is a hard ask.
I am in California now, flying back to Illinois tomorrow and will return to California in February to help with the children for a month, then back to Illinois in March, then late March I will travel again and go to New Zealand for a while, NZ is on course to open without supervised quarantine Feb 13th. But I will need to self quarantine. If they close the doors again I will go to Australia. I look forward to Canada opening up. I am back in the game.
And of course – as ever – I am taking you along for the ride – if you want to come.
So there you have it.
Act V
Cecilia
PS – I am working in Black and White as an expression of my personal mourning period for my father. I think we should give ourselves permission to grieve as long as is necessary. Grieving and mourning is not all about uncontrollable tears it is also about respect and goodbye and time. And Dad taught me by using black and white photography as his medium. So I will create black and white images as my goodbye.



85 responses to “In Transit”
Beautiful and from your heart! Have a wonderful 2022. This too will pass…
Good morning Ron and thank you.
Cecilia, I am so sorry for the passing of your father, your last parent, your last hold on your own childhood. It is hard, it is wrenching, it is sorrowful, it is anger-producing. It makes us stop and ask, “What do I want? Who am I, really? Where do I want to be?” If you haven’t read Glennon Doyle’s “Untamed,” now might be the right time. When my Mom passed, my last parent to die, I felt exactly like you do. Wanting to be connected, truly connected, to those I love. That takes effort, intention, courage and love – especially love for ourselves. I read “Untamed,” and learned that to love myself first is key, to never abandon who I am in order to make others comfortable. I can’t wait to follow your journey.
Thank you Karla! I will find this book. And I am so grateful to hear that you and I had similar responses. It will be a journey for sure! Thank you again.
I will hold you close in my prayers as that is all I can do for you.
I hope you are able to move forward with clarity and some comfort.
Thank you Chris. It is lovely knowing you are still there!
You write from your heart Celi- such a moving column. Being from Australia but living in the US, I understand the pull of the country and society we grew up in, even though my parents are long gone, and my children are here. I have a yearning to go ‘home’.
It is a yearning that has got louder in recent years. Now I have to listen. Thank you so much for your words.
You write from your heart Celi- such a moving column. Being from Australia but living in the US, I understand the pull of the country and society we grew up in, even though my parents are long gone, and my children are here. I have a yearning to go ‘home’.
I’m very sorry to hear that your dad died, especially with the pandemic going on and closed borders. Don’t be too hard on yourself. Hopefully the world will get a bit better in the coming year. Best wishes, MD.
I hope so too. We will see.
I felt it coming, Cecilia. I wanted to say something but couldn’t find the right words. You have survived this and are coming out the other end. I know that rage. It happened after my mother died of a terminal illness. I knew it was coming but the grief of losing someone who could never love me was unbearable. I was married to someone just like that and at 62, ended my marriage, had my sister and daughter rescue me as the illness from my rage and grief (profound Bells Palsy) made me incapable of staying upright, driving or ever working again. I never recovered my health which is why I so worried about you. I could feel it brewing deep down. I ache for you but know you have found a path through this so much healthier than you even know now. You owe us nothing. Keep taking care of yourself and it will reflect on the rest of the family. I wish you all the best in the new year and in your new life. Sending love and big squishy hugs.
You are such a stunning woman – I am so proud to know you. Thank you so much for your words and your care for me. c
You impressed me the first moment we met. Your strength will carry you through. You are heading in the right direction. Love and hugs always.
For you too beautiful.
My heart goes out to you.💕 I adore your strength, determination and inner motivation – the journey you laid out will give you exactly what you need to be you!
I sleep now – after making this decision and beginning My plans I am able to sleep
Well done! I’m not quite as far along as you, a work in progress. When Canada opens I hope you’ll visit the woolmill I’m helping with. https://wavefibremill.com/
Your woolmill sounds wonderful and I would love to bake with you too!
The website is fantastic. Maybe one day I will buy a length of fabric or do they sell clothes too?
Yes, they have Clothes too! (https://wavefibremill.com/store/?amp) Your twitch is from a need for magnesium Celi (We’re all chronically short, so having issues is no great surprise with all you’re going through!) Glad you’re taking the time to take care of yourself and get what you need most. Grieve for as long as you need to (and damn anyone who says differently!) Hugs, Deb
Oh Celi, such difficult times. I see how being the amazing woman that you are you have spread yourself thin and are just about stretched out. Your “In Transit” plan sounds like a wonderful one, with wide open, loving horizons in the future. No doubt a difficult plan to embark upon, but one that will bring you much growth and new learnings and reconnections. And of course we want to come along with you! The Fellowship of the Farmy will always be here for you, and thankfully, you for us.
Beautifully said. We have been rattling on together for a long time! I am excited to begin a new chapter and feel so much calmer now.
Do what you need.
Happy New Year Jim.
Thanks. May your new year be rewarding.
don’t know if you can receive this; growth can be odious; but joy and awareness hover waiting for you; you are awesome; i live in altadena, ca; have traveled all over, Russia, siberia, ukriane, not like Club Med; it is relationship that counts!
Totally agree! Thank you so much.
I’m so sorry about your Dad. We dont realize the planks of invisible support the idea of our parents are until we lose them. It skews your view, it makes you feel off balance when the support beam of their existence is gone. I’m glad you have a plan for rebuilding your internal space. I hope it works and that you are always flexible enough to change the course when it gets rocky.
When I lost my mom I did not have either a plan to fix the huge wobble in life it caused or the flexibility to change course. I imploded and lost nearly everything.
I hope you find joy in 2022.
Oh no. That sounds so hard. Thank you so much.
Thank you for your heartfelt sharing of feelings and frustrations! Your future awaits you and you will do well! Take care and keep on writing! We love you!
A breath-taking piece of writing. So honest, so raw, so true to you. I’m gob-smacked. Sending love, and more love.
You are wonderful! Let’s hope we can both travel again this year!