Turtle
Introspections
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
One day
Bonnie said to me, “Sondra, you are a turtle. When in a group you tuck your
head inside your shell, listen and watch.” Ever since then I cannot look in the
mirror without seeing my turtle.
In a moment
of turtle introspection, I realized a turning point has changed the direction
of my life. I generally don’t see my turning points until I can look backward.
Some positive, others not so much.
In my
freshman English 101 class at what was then the College of Great Falls, I was
an adult student with an eight-month baby girl. I felt dumb as a post hole,
having graduated high school in Harlem, now surrounded by brilliant
sophisticated youth from the two Great Falls high schools, students with
definite advantages.
Many adult
students attended CGF, mostly men from the Air Base. But my inspiration was a
woman, eighty-eight years old, attending my same freshman English class. I
clearly see that my higher education was a stepping stone, not a turning point.
But I’ll bet it was a turning point for this admirable woman.
I didn’t
know enough, was too young, to ask her the questions I would ask today. I sat
at the same round wooden table with her in the SUB between classes, sipping tea
and pretending to study. One day a man in his thirties asked her why she was
starting College this late in her life. “Why not?” she answered. Undaunted, he
continued. “But do you realize how old you will be when you graduate?”
And for
the first time I heard the classic answer, “How old will I be if I don’t?” Turtles
live a long life.
Turning
points seem like the seasons. Sometimes a season changes imperceptibly. Or like
today, I woke up from winter yesterday into spring today.
My lime
trees are full of white blossoms, the mango and avocado heavy with seed shoots,
the pomegranate loaded with blossoms and baby fruit. A green bird with yellow
belly and distinctive black and white helmet head perches on my clothesline
pole. Lavender and jade and the purple flowered bush perfume the air. Emerald
hummingbirds flash like blinking Christmas lights in the bottlebrush.
Surely, we
may have more cold days but spring is undeniably here. And with the arrival of
spring, I have arrived at a turning point in my life.
I am not
sure that means there will be a perceptible difference, looking at me from the
outside inward.
I’ll probably still wonder if I combed my hair this morning. But
from within, outward, I know with everything in all my knowingness, I’ve turned
a corner.
Most of my
turning points have been subtle. Not marriage or deaths or births or geographic
moves. If my life goes on the same as before, with same actions, that is not a
turning point but merely a leaving one room and entering another, sometimes
hoping geography will make a difference.
One turning
point long ago, at CGF, was when my English teacher, after reading a story I
wrote, asked me, “Have you thought about writing poetry?” I turned the story
into a poem and never looked back.
Or when a
friend said, “You need to spend at least a month alone and get your head
together.”
Terrified me. It was years before I acted upon his advice, but those
words created a turning point, regardless, never forgotten. Slow, like a
turtle, but I got there!
For me,
change has seldom been precipitated by a large event, I’m talking inner change,
a life-attitude change. More likely the cause has been a whisper, a fleeting
image, a subtle nudge.
So why do I
feel so confident this is a turning point? I suppose I sound crazy. But I stand
differently on my two feet, taller, more confident. I breathe more deeply. The
green is greener to my eyes. I’m no longer in black and white Kansas but my
personal tornado has plunked me in the middle of Technicolor Oz.
Those are
outward signs. Inside, I feel like I’ve been scrubbed clean, ready for a new
chapter. Right—I do sound crazy.
For a while,
I have been letting life happen to me, a passive bystander. Now I feel
dissatisfied.
Rumblings. Anger. Ready to move forward. This turtle has her head
up, feet plodding along, ready to do some serious introspecting.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
February 13,
2020
__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
This can be a positive attitude. Go for it!
ReplyDeleteThank you! I truly will.
ReplyDelete