Do you remember reading e.e.cummings in high school? One phrase he wrote, "mud-luscious," stuck with me. Last weekend, instead of mud-luscious, the weather was "spring-glorious." Golden poppies, nasturtiums, apple tree blossoms, and daffodils crowded the hills in the East Bay. The Carquinez Straits between Benicia and Martinez sparkled as tankers moving away from Sacramento through the water out to sea. Early Spring in California. Nothing seems to be wrong when it is Spring in its flourishing best. Blue skies, blue water, flowers covering hills, slight breeze to keep it cool. For a while we could forget the horrendous news that drops into our sight every day.
Since living in a city again, I have lost my sense of direction, which was so easy to determine when I had hills, tree shadows, and changes in the season. In cities, buildings nullify my sense of direction. This week, the sun came through a different window in the morning. The reflection off of the skyscraper windows sent the light not from the east, but from northwest instead. No wonder I am confused.
I find myself having to orient myself when I am walking on a street filled with tall buildings as if I am in a dense forest with nothing to direct me from one direction to another. The buildings' shadows fool me. I often turn in the direction I think I want to go only to discover it is the exact opposite, much like when we lived in Tokyo and I walked out of the Shinjuku subway and would take a wrong turn. There, every street looked alike with small shops packed together and overhead lighting flooding the streets like Las Vegas nightlife.
The other day, I came out of a bakery on Market Street and turned to my left thinking I was going to head to the Ferry Building. Instead, I found myself facing the opposite direction where Market Street starts to disappear into San Francisco neighborhoods. Market Street runs the length of downtown ending at the Ferry Building near the Bay and in the other direction, wandering past the Castro till it culminates in Diamond Heights to become Portola Drive. I think I should be able to sense my direction, but again the buildings and shadows fool me.
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| "In a Churchyard Garden" |
Portola is a common name in California. Gaspar de Portola was a Spanish Army officer who led the expedition with Father Junipero Serra through the lands of the Washoe, Raymatush Ohlone, Miwok, Pomo, and other indigenious tribes. We all know the effects of Western migration on indigenous tribes whose lands became the United States. The book, Ishi, the Last of His Tribe by Theodora Kroeber, represents the fate of so many tribes across the nation. Ishi was the last know member of the Yahi people. He came to San Francisco early in the 20th Century as a ward of a renowned anthropologist, and soon succumbed to tuberculosis, one of those diseases that white settlers passed on to various tribes. The name Portola, who was long gone before Ishi was discovered, still lingers as place names throughout California and remains a good reminder to understand more of history than just names.
California is a land of immigrants. We can find part of our history by looking for the origins of place names. Many names, such as San Francisco or Figueroa, refer to the Spanish exploration. Other places are words from the indigenous peoples' languages: Napa, the Patwin name for home, Shasta, Inyo, Siskiyou, Suisun, Sonoma (Pomoan for Valley of the Moon), and Tuolumne (cluster of stone wigwams) are a few. In San Francisco on King Street, we can walk on brass plates that form a dictionary of Raymatush words. By knowing the names and the history behind them, we pay silent homage to the tribes that Western exploration displaced.
Check out the list of indigenous names here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_California_placenames_of_Native_American_origin
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Let's pause in honor of these soldiers killed last week in the war in Iran:
Sgt. Benjamin Pennington, 26, of Glendale, Ky
Capt. Cody A. Khork, 35, of Winter Haven, Florida
Sgt. 1st Class Noah L. Tietjens, 42, of Bellevue, Nebraska
Sgt. 1st Class Nicole M. Amor, 39, of White Bear Lake, Minnesota
Sgt. Declan J. Coady, 20, of West Des Moines, Iowa
Maj. Jeffrey R. O’Brien, 45, of Indianola, Iowa
Chief Warrant Officer 3 Robert Marzan, 54, of Sacramento, California
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