Tag: Whidbey children

  • Minding the Sky || The Constant Inconstant

    Minding the Sky || The Constant Inconstant

    BY JUDITH WALCUTT
    July 1, 2015

    I had been posed in a shoulder stand during my morning yoga practice when the words: “constant inconstant” came to mind. The last I remember writing here, so many months ago, the cherry blossoms had just peaked, the air smelled of turning earth, and we began to imagine the days of summer beauty coming upon us, suddenly, like a deer crossing the road. (https://www.whidbeylifemagazine.org/minding-the-sky-dreaming-of-buried-treasure/)

    Hidden jewels  (photo by the author)
    Hidden jewels (photo by the author)

    The sky has changed several times since then and now we are in the full bloom of it. The light lasts late into the day, the scent of strawberries drifts up from our tiny patch in the morning sun and I have already put aside some jam to capture their beauty for a winter’s remembrance. My feet pointed at the ceiling and blood rushing to my brain, I thought: “The upside down bat laughs at the topsy-turvy world, while the constant inconstant swirls all about” and I thought—perhaps that’s what I’ll write about for this solstice season’s blog.

    The phone rang. I came down from my shoulders to answer it. By the tone of the caller, I knew something life changing had happened. And indeed it had. My husband’s work partner in the Firesign Theatre, Phil Austin, aka Nick Danger, had died in the early hours of that day. The loss—to his wife and closest companion for over 44 years—Oona, to his other surviving Firesign partner, Phil Proctor, and his wife Melinda, and to us, let alone the fans, the multitudinous, wonderful, motley and colorful assortment of fans who have loyally memorized and recited lines from over 25 albums and performances over the past 50 years, is quite frankly incalculable.

    The question is: what loss isn’t?

    And the follow up—will the grief ever subside?

    Phil Austin, aka Nick Danger   (photo from the Firesign Theatre Archive)
    Phil Austin, aka Nick Danger (photo from the Firesign Theatre Archive)

    In our community, we’ve shared such losses that the whole town has turned out for—and each one of us, individually and alone, has had some loss that has left us topsy-turvy, upside-down and backwards, wondering, “How will I ever come back from this?”

    Sometimes it sneaks up on you when you’re not looking. Sometimes you even think you’re ready for it. When my mother died, a year and a week ago this past Sunday, I had thought, while I held her hand, or just sat in the room as she slept most of her final days away, that I would feel a relief for the end of her suffering, for the end of the life in which she was bedridden, in pain and stuck between one reality and another. I thought I was prepared for saying goodbye and letting her go to wherever she was bound to from here.

    In her final days, in a moment of luminescent alertness that comes in the process of dying, she told me she was excited because when she left here, she was going to go back to school. “A big school—well, more like a medium-sized one—but big enough,” she said, modestly pleased with the prospect. “What will you study?” I asked, curious as to what she saw for herself as her next course, after here.

    “I’m not sure” she said, a little daunted, as I’d asked her to describe a place she‘d never been, “I think I’ll find out when I get there, but I’m sure it will be interesting. I’ll go on ahead and get things started—we can meet up there later on.”

    3Mom before she went IMG_1775
    Muriel Albers Walcutt Bittel toward the end (photo by the author)

    I hoped that would be true, that we’d meet up again, later on.

    She was 96 and had celebrated her birthday three months earlier surrounded by family and people who loved her, in good spirits, with good cake. I see now that for her, that was her ideal goodbye party—the one at which she smiled and nodded regally, then merrily waved us off on our way as she silently made up her mind to let go and die (which three months later, to the day, she did).

    I was completely wrong about being relieved when she “checked out of the hotel,” which is how we in our family refer to the d-word. I was as distraught as anyone at any age might be, losing a mother who was, like Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way. Never mind that in the last years of her life, she was a flat, paper-doll semblance of her former self. The memories I had of her were rich, 3-D, and filled in all the gaps. She was funny, she had moxie, she threw a good party and had a terrific laugh. She was the mother everyone wished they’d had.

    In the patient slog up to death’s door, I tried to remind her of as many of our shared joys as I could, and while she seemed to relish the stories I told her of many great times we’d had together, she also seemed distracted by the world that was visible to her just past my shoulder, attending voices only she could hear at that exact moment.

    As it turned out—no, I was not relieved when she was set free from her body. I was distraught, grief-stricken, and felt as though someone had stabbed me through the chest with a sharp implement. That feeling has stayed with me, to a greater or lesser extent, ever since. Recently, I have come to the conclusion that I will never not miss her. And so it is, I think, with those people we really and truly love, who are irreplaceable in our shared lives and hearts. How could we expect to “get over it”? Prepared for loss or not, ready or not, we grieve. It is the human thing to do.

    This past week my husband lost his life-long friend and working partner, Phil Austin—aka Nick Danger, the fabulously funny faux detective who sent-up the noir genre in a conflagration of cellophane sound effects. His wife, Oona and he were what Kurt Vonnegut would have seen as a duprass—a life-team of two who, together, were part of the four-man karass of the Firesign Theatre; they—Phil and Oona—were in it together, for life.

    In their forty-four-year-and-counting relationship, they spent only one night apart in that entire time, and when they did, they agreed never to do that again. The grief for Oona over the loss must feel insurmountable.

    Phil’s departure coincided with the weekend of the first anniversary of my mom’s death. As a result, I felt it hugely, both coming and going. Floating in the tide pool of these deep emotions, I find that the only refuge from that sense of grief is to remember.

    That’s right: remember. Not avoid—but remember what I loved about my loved one that I miss so much. Because if I avoid thinking about it, I will lose the sense of who that missing person is and what was beloved about them. And then I would really lose them—forever. So as hard as it is, (and I imagine it is very hard in Charleston, S.C., right now, and locally in Langley where Bob Giswold’s family gathers this week to honor his passing) let’s remember them, think of them, see them in our mind’s eyes, and love them still.

    As for my mother, I remember she was quite simply magic. A real live Magic Mommy—she made magic with birthday parties with present trees and buried treasure and backyard carnivals—and she made magic at holidays with the sort of Santa Claus you could really believe in and an Easter bunny no one would doubt, and she made magic on plain old ordinary days, because what could be better on an ordinary day than a little magic?

    I don’t know how she did it. Even when I was grown and gone and living on the opposite coast of the country, my mother could suss out what I needed most at that exact moment and somehow got it to me. In my twenties, which were pre-computer days, when—if you were a writer or trying to be a writer, you needed your typewriter with you at all times—I lugged my Smith Corona electric back and forth across the country on every trip, from one end of the airport to the other, on and off trains, in and out of subways, up and down six-floor walk-ups in downtown NYC, as I looked for that illusive writing job that would finally settle me down to one place, one job, one life.

    My mother witnessed this struggle with the mechanics of my life, as she met me at an airport between flights, to share a quick meal, on the way to someplace else. Finally home in Los Angeles afterwards, I was amazed when a UPS guy delivered a package to me that contained an Olympic portable, the lightest typewriter made at that time, specifically for journalists and built to fit on fold-down airline trays. I was ecstatic. My mother—the true magic mommy—was a practiced genius of observation.

    I miss that about my mother—the way she had of knowing her family’s needs and making sure they were met.

    Now, I lean heavily on the constantly changing nature of the sky to remind me that however things might be at this exact moment, if I wait a minute or two, or a day or two, or even a week or two—it will change—it will all change and upside down or right-side up, the constant inconstant will be at work. But there are also the permanents, the eternals, the qualities that are outside of all time/space continuums—and I am certain my mother’s thumbprint is visible even there, on my understanding of what remains in the wake of the permanent impermanence of our lives.

    In the last days, as my mother’s hold on the here and now began to weaken and the life force thinned out and away from her bones draped in the luminous transparency of her vanishing flesh, she had begun to speak in that kind of beautiful poetic, symbolic way that comes of trying to say big things, summarizing huge thoughts from a lifetime of experience, in a very few words. At such a moment, she looked at me with great seriousness, and said in one short declarative sentence everything she knew to be true in this life: “Love is bigger than a big sky,” she said, saying the exact thing I needed to hear at that moment.

    Love is bigger than a big sky—and the sky is always changing. Let the big wings of the one carry you through the downdrafts and the bumpy air turbulence of the other. And believe me, because my magic mommy told me so and she knows—“It will all work out,” she said with a kind certainty, “Whatever it is, it will all work out—just wait and see.”

    Muriel at 96—the day after the party (photo by the author)
    Muriel at 96—the day after the party (photo by the author)

    ____________

    If I wanted to be a magic mommy like my mother, I would be sure to take a band of appropriately aged children and playful adults to the Meerkerk Garden’s Fairy House Festival between 11 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, July 11, where supplies will be available to build your own elf and/or fairy house. $5 admission charge, unless you are 12 and under, in which case admission is free. See http://www.meerkerkgardens.org/calendar.html for details.

    The last time we went there, I took some old childhood friends of mine who were visiting the island and they had a marvelous time, enjoying the spontaneous magical buildings, photo opportunities, and a picnic on the grounds. In memory of my magic mommy Muriel—I share a few pictures from that outing below.  (photos by the author)

    5Four friends go to MeerkerkFour old friends set off on their adventure at Meerkerk Gardens.

    6Four friends alot to see IMG_2327Odin and Agatha are excited to show their visiting friends Robear and Celeste the magic of Meerkerk Gardens.

    “Where shall we go first?

    Let’s tour the houses!”
    7-P1060611

    That one is interesting…

    8Four Friends visit unusual structure!

    Let’s get a closer look!

    9Four friends trying it out 2011-07-09 00.22.56

    Very comfortable!

    10-Four friendsLet's try this one! IMG_2342

    Here’s one with a roof top garden. Love the view!

    11-Four friends the girls IMG_2353

    The girls like this one!

    12-Four friends picture IMG_2355

    I’ll snap a picture!

    13-Four friends Celeste and RobearIMG_2356

    We’ll use this one for our Christmas card!

    14.2011-07-09 17.56.35

    Picnic time for the four old friends at Meerkerk Gardens after visiting the Fairy Houses

    15-Four friends time to go IMG_2368

    That was fun! Time to go!

    16-IMG_0283

    The author at work.

    Judith Walcutt lives and writes on Whidbey Island. Her novel, “Memoirs of a Modern She-Noodle,” will be published in 2016 by NeoPoiesis Press. (photo by the author)

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  • Creating a ‘Good’ Story—Part 2: Linda

    Creating a ‘Good’ Story—Part 2: Linda

    BY RUSSELL CLEPPER
    Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor
    April 30, 2014

    As a little girl, Linda Good would come from Seattle to visit family on Whidbey Island and would play for hours on the beaches and in the forests, letting her imagination run with her. She and her two brothers pretended an old, abandoned house nearby was haunted. Back then, she wrote stories and would create mysteries about the old house.

    Later she would channel that creativity and sense of play into her music and return to the island a young, grown woman who would teach music to the next generation of skipping, spinning island kids. And then another generation. Now she is set to start teaching a third one.

    The network of music teachers she founded here, Island Strings, is now in its 40th year. Perhaps as many as 1,000 children have studied with one of the many teachers who have been associated with the organization through the years.

    "Linda was always creating opportunities for us to perform." – Teo Benson  (photo by David Welton)
    “Linda was always creating opportunities for us to perform.” – Teo Benson (photo by David Welton)

    Last weekend, Good was honored for her work when Whidbey Life Magazine publisher Sue Taves presented her with a check for $500, the first grant in a program the publication is initiating to support local artists and/or arts organizations. The occasion was a party the publishers had organized at Freeland Hall to celebrate the first-ever print edition of the magazine, which began two years ago as a strictly online arts and culture review.

    The highlight of the party was a stunning tour-de-force performance by former Island Strings student Gloria Ferry-Brennan that brought the capacity crowd roaring to their feet. The 17-year-old Ferry-Brennan has caught the attention of some of the best violin teachers and music schools in the region and the country, including Juilliard. It all began when she was just a four-year-old violin student of Linda Good.

    Linda Good receives the first WLM Arts Grant from publisher Sue Taves and an appreciative hug from former student Gloria Ferry-Brennan. (photo by David Welton)
    Linda Good receives the first WLM Arts Grant from publisher Sue Taves and an appreciative hug from former student Gloria Ferry-Brennan. (photo by David Welton)

    “Linda is responsible for me being where I am today,” said Ferry-Brennan. “I always looked forward to going to lessons. She made it fun.”

    Good has been a long-time proponent of the Suzuki method, which incorporates principles of language acquisition that the movement’s founder called “the mother-tongue approach” along with fun activities such as singing, hand-clapping and rhythm activities and games.

    Ferry-Brennan said, “We made music from the very beginning. We weren’t just practicing on our instruments.”

    Grace Sillar, a neophyte Island Strings violinist, sings as she plays. (photo by David Welton)
    Grace Sillar, a neophyte Island Strings violinist, sings as she plays. (photo by David Welton)

    Teo Benson, another star graduate of Island Strings who has now founded his own music school in Seattle, said what made Good special as a teacher was her ability to create performance opportunities for her students.

    “I wasn’t the most dedicated when it came to practice,” he said, “I liked to play sports and run and play. But I did practice. What I liked most, though, was performing and watching others perform. What Linda did so well was having this community of musicians and creating opportunities for us to play for each other. We played at parades and fairs. Not everybody played the violin. We had guitarists and cellists.”

    Both Benson and Ferry-Brennan describe Good as being warm, friendly and supportive as a teacher. Ferry-Brennan loved going to her house where, she said, “there was a good vibe.” She still goes there from time to time to observe lessons and expects to continue doing so, especially since her two-year-old nephew will be starting lessons soon.

    Benson explained that Good’s teaching emphasized learning by ear. “That has been very important for me since I play other styles of music besides classical. I can improvise.”

    Long before she began her music-teaching career, when her name was Linda Grannis, Good had become a gifted, accomplished young musician in her own right. She had wanted to play the piano as a three and four-year-old child, but her mother, a classical musician, believed the ideal age to begin learning music was seven.

    Island Strings teachers Linda Good, left, and Susan Debnekoff encourage their student ensemble during a recent performance on Earth Day at Bayview Market.  (photo by David Welton)
    Island Strings teachers Linda Good, left, and Susan Debnekoff encourage their student ensemble during a recent performance on Earth Day at Bayview Market. (photo by David Welton)

    “So on my seventh birthday, I started my piano lessons,” said Good. A few years later, while in fourth grade, she began learning to play the violin. Meanwhile she continued her trips to Whidbey to visit both the Grannis family on her father’s side, and the Metcalfs on her mother’s. Her uncle Leon Metcalf actually gave her lessons, although not on Whidbey. Leon’s brother John Metcalf lived near Langley on what is now the Metcalf Trust land.

    Her senior year in high school, the young Miss Grannis was studying with a violin teacher at the University of Washington and performing with the symphony there. She ended up obtaining a BA in Music there before going on, later in life, to earn an MA in Ethno-Musicology from the University of Hawaii. Her thesis was a study of traditional music on the island of Fiji.

    Her pursuit of musical knowledge was also how she came to meet her husband, Leonard Good. She spent a year with her mother in Des Moines, Iowa and did her junior year at Drake University. Leonard was also studying there. For extra money, he used to buy old beat-up guitars at junk stores for a few bucks, patch them up, put strings on them and sell them for twice or more what he put into them. An economics professor told Linda about Leonard’s enterprise and she called him. So he took one of his patched-up instruments, threw it on the back of his motorcycle and drove over to meet her.

    Not only did he sell her the guitar, which they still have, but they also fell in love and were married in 1962. After a short time in Seattle, the couple took off for Hawaii. During their time there, they realized that they needed to have a home of their own and that Whidbey Island had land cheap enough for them to afford.

    In 1974, Linda Good founded Island Strings along with Paula Pugh and Linda Morris. Many of her hundreds of students still play music, even those who have chosen to pursue other careers. She even remembers teaching piano, not violin to one of her young four-year-old protégés. She chose him to play the part of Christopher Robin when her students performed a version of “Winnie the Pooh” that year.

    “He was the perfect Christopher Robin,” she said. His name was Aaron Parks, and he has since become one of the world’s premier young jazz pianists. He recently traveled from his home in New York City to perform at PianoFest at WICA last month.

    “He was my student only briefly, but I like to think that I somehow encouraged him,” Good said. Then she smiled and sang Christopher Robin’s song as she remembered how that little boy bounced and danced around the room.

    For more information about Island Strings please visit: http://islandstrings.com

    Russell Clepper is a singer-songwriter who plies his trade locally and around the country. He is also a substitute teacher for the Oak Harbor School District.

    Part 1 of this story was published in Whidbey Life Magazine on March 26. You can read that article at https://www.whidbeylifemagazine.org/creating-a-good-story-part-1-leonard/

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