Coming Home to Story

Notes from a journeyman writer, storyteller, and narrative consultant

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Silk

Posted by geoffmead on April 10, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Alessandro Baricco, Chris Seeley, Silk. 2 Comments

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I used to think that Chris was unromantic. “We need both heaven and earth,” I would say to her, wishing these qualities were more evenly distributed between us. Why did she have to keep her feet so resolutely on the ground, I complained.

I was a fool.

Looking back, I realise that although she rarely spoke of love, she had a thousand other ways of showing that she loved me. Actions meant more to her than words alone, though sometimes she expressed her feelings in cards and notes.

Over Easter Weekend I delved into a small cardboard box that she gave me on my 60th birthday. The outside of the box is decorated with a Japanese print and inside are the props and artifacts she used to tell a story at my party. There’s a copy of Alessandro Baricco’s book Silk from which she took the story; a DVD of the film; a handful of silk moth cocoons; and a letter printed on flower embossed paper, rolled into a scroll and secured with a wax seal in the form of Cupid.

I remember her telling the story of Hervé Joncour travelling to Japan in the 19th century to buy and smuggle silk moth eggs back to France and falling in love with a Japanese concubine. She told the story beautifully, holding us enraptured for an hour.

At one point, she slipped the scroll from its binding, looked me straight in the eye and read the words of the lovelorn concubine which she had adapted from the novel.

The letter ends, almost presciently:

This moment had to be.
This moment is.
And this moment will continue from now, until forever.
We shall not see one another again.
What we were meant to do we have done.
Believe me, my love, we have done it forever.
And if it serves your happiness, do not hesitate for a moment to forget this woman who now says, without a trace of regret… farewell.         

But there is no question of me forgetting “this woman.”

Unromantic? Pah!

 

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Falling

Posted by geoffmead on April 2, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Chris Seeley, fertile void, Gestalt Cycle, memento mori, mortbrod. 5 Comments

Skull

Chris chose this image – both stark and feminine ­– for one side of the mortbrod she made with the help of local artist Nicola Clarke as a memento mori. It hangs in a window by the front door of Folly Cottage as a sign both of remembrance and mourning. It’s been there for four months and, according to tradition, it should be left in place for another eight.

I’m writing this, sitting up in bed with our dog Ted snoozing by my side where Chris should be, feeling the enormity of her loss. The mortbrod moves minutely in the uprising draft of hot air from the radiator below the window. The house is silent apart from the ticking of the alarm clock on the bedside cabinet and the faint background roar of the boiler.

It’s Thursday morning and I have to decide what to do with the day. I know there are heaps of student papers to be read and dozens of business emails to be answered. Their narcotic lure is hard to resist: occupy the mind, dull the pain. But I will ignore their siren call and gaze into the void for a while longer.

Twenty five years ago, when I trained as a Gestalt practitioner, we used to speak of the void as a necessary part of the natural, ongoing cycle of human engagement: sensation, awareness, mobilisation, action, contact, satisfaction, withdrawal, and void.

Sometimes we experience the void as fertile, full of new possibilities, an empty space waiting to be filled; sometimes it feels like a dead zone, devoid of life and meaning. Which reminds me of a story:

A man is walking along the highway of his life. One day, without any warning, he falls into an existential abyss. It’s dark, precipitous and terrifying. He can’t see the bottom and he’s clinging to the vertical sides by his fingernails.

He is utterly alone.

After a while he can’t bear the loneliness and calls out into the darkness:

“Is there anybody there?”

“Yes,” booms an enormous voice across the void. “I am here with you.”

“Who are you?” calls the man.

“I am God,” replies the voice.

“What should I do?” says the man, looking down. “Tell me what to do.”

“Let go,” says God.

There is a long pause before the man calls again:

“Is there anybody else?”

I said I would gaze into the void, but that is not enough. I have already fallen into the abyss. I cannot look away. The question I must ask myself now Chris is dead is whether to cling on limpet-like to what is left of the familiar, comforting routines of my life or let myself fall into the unknown?

I know what she would say. I can hear her welcoming voice rising up from below and echoing round me: “What are you waiting for?”

“Nothing,” I reply. “Now is the time. Now is always the time.”

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A Good Year

Posted by geoffmead on March 29, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: A Good Life, Chris Seeley. 4 Comments

good year

In A Good Year, Max (Russell Crowe) and Fanny (Marion Cotillard) fall in love against the odds and despite a rocky start. Standard rom-com plot, I guess. The film didn’t receive great reviews from the critics but Chris and I were very fond of it. We watched it on DVD in her hospital room in Portugal in August 2013 just after we had decided to get married.

Back in England, we had a spectacular wedding in December with our dearest friends and family; became proud “parents” of Teddy the Cockerpoo in March; had several trips in our new campervan; and travelled to Amsterdam and Italy in the spring and early summer. Chris continued to supervise her doctoral students; we launched my new book; and we put on a great, two-day Centre for Narrative Leadership gathering.

Work took a back seat for once: we lived together in Kingscote and in Lyme Regis; we went to the farmers’ market on Saturdays; wrote, painted and read in the mornings; walked and swam in the afternoons; and visited friends in the evenings.

The medication did it’s job and Chris stayed symptom-free for 11 months until a series of seizures heralded the next stage of her illness in July 2014. It was a good year. It was a very good year. In some ways it was the best year we had together.

I’ve watched the film several times since Chris died, not for the story (though I still enjoy it) but for the memories it evokes of a time when we kindled a light in the darkness – a light that shone brightly right up until the moment it went out.

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First 100 Days

Posted by geoffmead on March 21, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: 100 Days, Chris Seeley, love and loss. Leave a comment

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Last week, I realised that 100 days had gone by since Chris died. This milestone made me think of what business and self-help gurus say about our supposed ability to change the world and ourselves in such a short period. I’ve always distrusted gurus and I believe that this kind of wishful thinking is an unhelpful fantasy. Life, love and loss go at their own pace.

Anything is possible,
The new-age gurus say.

100 days is time enough
To turn your life around,

To seek a new direction,
To find another ground.

But time is out of kilter,
You’ve stilled the hourglass.

How can I plan a future
When you are in the past?

There’s nowhere that I want to go
Without you by my side

And nothing that I want to do
If you can’t do it too.

To those who tell us otherwise
I have some news for you

100 days is not enough
To make a life anew.

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Wild Strawberries

Posted by geoffmead on March 14, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: tiger, wild strawberries, zen story. 1 Comment

wild strawberry

There’s a well-known zen story that reminds me of the last few weeks Chris and I spent together at home. It begins with a woman walking alone across a field:

As she walked she heard a roar behind her. She looked round and saw a tiger bounding towards her. She ran way as fast as she could, the tiger at her heels. Suddenly she came to the edge of a cliff. With nowhere else to run, she grabbed hold of a vine and swung herself over the edge. Hanging there she looked up to see the tiger drooling above her. She looked down, only to see jagged rocks far below. Two mice – one white and one black – started gnawing at the vine that was holding her. In that moment, the woman saw some wild strawberries growing out of the cliff face nearby. Holding on to the vine with one hand she reached out, plucked the fruit and popped them in her mouth. How sweet those strawberries tasted!

In the face of death, Chris also chose to savour life. Despite her declining physical capacity, she accomplished and delighted in many things after she got home from hospital. Here are some of her wild strawberries:

Having Sunday lunches at Abbey Home Farm
Going to the Anslem Kiefer exhibition at the Royal Academy
Visiting Westonbirt Arboretum in her wheelchair
Brushing Teddy (our dog) as he lay on her bed
Eating apple pie, preferably with cream
Using eye make up for the first time
Buying expensive new designer spectacles
Enjoying convivial meals with old and new friends
Having visitors to stay in Folly Cottage
Making Skype calls to distant friends
Getting massages and giving cuddles
Wearing dresses and hats in profusion
Collecting her thoughts and writing
Taking part in the Medicine Unboxed conference
Writing secret (and utterly brilliant) poems
Making images and art of all kinds
Watching the sun set and the moon rise
Commissioning a sculpture for her memorial
Designing an extension to Folly Cottage
Meditating and chanting with Buddhist friends
Sprouting seeds and juicing vegetables
Finding a spectacular birthday present for me
Being interviewed on film about living artfully
Helping to shape a student’s PhD proposal

Being Chris, most of the strawberries were shared. But I had a special one for myself that doesn’t appear in the list: after 15 years together she finally managed to teach me that love is a verb.

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The Tango Lesson

Posted by geoffmead on March 7, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Chris Seeley, Illness as Metaphor, Scent of a Woman, Susan Sontag, tango, tanguera, The Tango Lesson. 1 Comment

it takes two

A few years ago, Chris came back from a trip to South America, raving about an impromptu tango evening she had been taken to by her hosts. “There were all shapes and sizes, young and old,” she said. “The men came up and asked me to dance. I didn’t know I could do it but they led brilliantly and made me feel so graceful.”

My own terpsichorial repertoire being limited to headbanging and a rather pale imitation of John Travolta, I let her comment pass. But when she followed up in the next few weeks by renting DVDs of Sally Potter’s The Tango Lesson and of Al Pacino strutting his stuff in Scent of a Woman, I took the hint and booked a half-day tango lesson for us both as a surprise birthday present.

Sadly, my two left feet combined with Chris’s absolute refusal (in practice, if not in theory) to allow me to lead her anywhere, left us both frustrated and footsore. Nevertheless, we bought some fancy tango shoes and determined to give it another go. A couple of sessions later, however,  the reality of my incompetence on the dance floor overcame any remaining Strictly Come Dancing fantasies.

We put away our tango shoes for good. “Well, at least we gave it a go,” said Chris, finding a crumb of comfort in the fact that I had been willing to suffer public humiliation for her benefit.

“I’m not sure those shoes were good for your feet,” was all I could think to say.

But Chris continued to dance with life, through images, ideas, words and deeds. She brought the same playful impulse to her art and her work, making no real distinction between them. She danced with her illness and, in the end, she danced with death.

She understood, as Susan Sontag wrote in Illness as Metaphor (1978) that the metaphors we use to describe our illness come to define us. Wisely, she refused to frame her condition as a battle against cancer. “How can you fight something that is part of yourself?” she once said. “This is about living well and looking after myself; about doing what I love and being myself, whatever the circumstances.”

So instead of fighting her illness, she allowed it to lead her, responding to every improvised step with the verve, intelligence, and spirit of a true tanguera: a mistress of tango.

Dance with death

[Picture: Valente Celle Tomb, Genoa, 1893]

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Beloved

Posted by geoffmead on March 5, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Chris Seeley, Late Fragment, Raymond Carver. 2 Comments

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A few days ago, a friend reminded me of Raymond Carver’s poem Late Fragment. I find it both joyful and poignant (the more so because he wrote it when he was dying from cancer at the age of 50). It expresses beautifully what I wanted for Chris more than anything else, for her to know that she was both lovable and loved.

And did you get what
you wanted from this life, even so?
I did.
And what did you want?
To call myself beloved, to feel myself
beloved on the earth.

Unless you knew her very well, you would not have been able to guess that – despite her extraordinary gift for friendship – Chris found it hard to believe that she herself was worthy of love. Often I found loving her both the easiest and most natural thing in the world; but when the shadow of self-doubt ruled her heart, it was neither.

For me, our last weeks together were wonderful when she let me in and excruciating when (because of my fear and clumsiness or for reasons I didn’t understand) she pushed me away. As the end approached, my greatest fear was that she would die without knowing – really knowing ­– that I loved her. But at the eleventh hour, she let down her guard.

As she drifted toward unconsciousness, I held her hand and said: “I love you sweetheart. You do know that I love you, don’t you?”

She squeezed my hand and replied. “Thank you.”

They were her last words to me and I knew that she would die knowing that she too was beloved on the earth, and beloved by me.

Perhaps this is the greatest gift of all: not just to love but to take the greater risk of allowing oneself to be loved. As in so many other things, Chris taught me what really matters in the end.

[Picture credit: Paul MacDonald]

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Being Mortal

Posted by geoffmead on February 28, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Atul Gawande, Being Mortal, Medicine Unboxed, Medicine's Human Voices, Sam Guglani. 3 Comments

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I’ve just read Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End by the 2014 BBC Reith Lecturer, Atul Gawande. It’s a brilliant exploration of the unnecessary suffering that conventional western medicine so often inflicts on people at the end of their lives when we – doctors, patients, relatives – refuse to face our own mortality.

Gawande argues that rather than routinely seeking to extend life by all possible means, we should find out what people actually want and his conclusion is as simple as it is profound:

As people become aware of the finitude of their life, they do not ask for much. They do not seek more riches. They do not seek more power. They ask only to be permitted, insofar as possible, to keep shaping the story of their life in the world – to make choices and sustain connections to others according to their own priorities.

In the last few months of her life, Chris instinctively knew that this was what mattered to her above all else. She wanted to be at home; to make art; to eat well; to be convivial; to be in nature; to love and be loved; and to be expansive until the moment she died.

We were lucky that the oncologist managing her treatment at Cheltenham Hospital was Sam Guglani, a doctor who exemplifies the very best of what Gawande champions in Being Mortal. At our first meeting he asked Chris “What do you want?” to which she replied “It’s all about quality of life.” And he steered us through the maze of chemo- and radio-therapy, with that in mind.

When it became clear after just a few days of treatment that the side-effects were too damaging, he had the courage to say to Chris: “This isn’t working for you.” Instead of battling on with ever more debilitating results, we (Chris, Sam and I) chose to stop treatment and focus instead on rehabilitative and palliative care at home. Asking “What do you want?” was the difference that made a difference.

One of the last outings we had, just 10 days before Chris died, was to the annual Medicine Unboxed conference that Sam curates and directs. For Chris, art was the prima materia of life, and living artfully the only sane response to a fractured world, so she was delighted to find that Sam is also an artful practitioner, a poet-doctor who understands the vital need to meet his patients authentically.

After she died, Sam invited me to meet him to talk about Chris. I took one of her sketch books with me to show him. Of all the images in the book, this was the one that seemed to give him most food for thought:

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Perhaps it will influence the agenda for the next Medicine Unboxed conference?

I will certainly be there, with Chris beside me in spirit, to explore the frontiers of a medical practice that celebrates – as Gawande would have it – both our humanity and our mortality.

[Reference: Guglani, S (2014) Medicine’s Human Voices The Lancet, Vol 384, Sept, pp 847/8]

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Chris Seeley: Celebrating an Artful Life

Posted by geoffmead on February 26, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. Tagged: Celebration, Chris Seeley, Matara. Leave a comment

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Chris Seeley
21 Aug 1966 – 3 Dec 2014

Please come and help us celebrate the many aspects of Chris Seeley’s remarkably creative life: artist, teacher, ecologist, clown, writer, intellectual, ursophile, dog lover, bookaholic, sister, daughter, friend, partner, mentor, catalyst, designer…

We will be coming together for two days of exhibitions, installations, food rituals, music, clowning, storytelling, conversation, artful activities, sharing memories, poetry, quiet contemplation, and whatever else we can come up with. Do let me know if you have any ideas or would like to contribute in some way.

We’ve chosen to hold the celebration at Matara (where Chris and I got married) which is just 200 yards from Chris’s home in Kingscote village. It is also where her memorial stone will be placed in a wooded garden. Doors will be open between 11.00 – 20.00 on Monday 29 June and 11.00 – 16.00 on Tuesday 30 June.

Matara

Each day will offer a range of activities and you are welcome to come for one or both of them. There will be a “grazing bar” for tea, coffee and snacks throughout and something a bit more substantial at lunchtimes. Ask me for a list of local B&Bs and hotels if you need overnight accommodation. We are also hoping to have a “Skype Corner” for folk, especially from overseas, who can’t make it in person.

The event is by invitation and request. Chris had a huge circle of friends and colleagues and I’m bound to miss some of you by mistake so if you don’t receive an invitation directly from me, know that you too are welcome. Also please feel free to pass the invitation on to anyone else you think might like to come.

Please email me geoff.mead@me.com as soon as possible if you intend coming (or think you might) and let me know on which day(s) so we can plan catering etc.

 

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Alhambra Nights

Posted by geoffmead on February 20, 2015
Posted in: Uncategorized. 2 Comments

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We came here once,

            footloose for a day,

                        to wander in the city.

Now I’m on my own

            and passing through

                        to somewhere else.

I walk to Plaza Nueva

            past La Gran Taverna

                        and stop in my tracks.

Your smiling face hangs

            in the misty window

                        next to my reflection.

“Don’t you remember?

            It’s not so long ago,”

                        you seem to say.

“We had dinner here

            and laughed so much

                        we could hardly eat.

That was a good day.

            But it was before.

                        I wish I could stay.”

I blow you a kiss

as your face fades away,

                                    leaving the scent of your hair.

                  There’s magic in the moonlit air;

I look around the bustling square

                                    and suddenly you’re everywhere.

 

 

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