Last night I slept alone in the schoolhouse for the last time
this year. When I woke up in the middle of the night, I stepped outside to see
the stars. I could hear the river from across the field as it can be heard only
at night. It anchored me to this very specific location. The Milky Way arched
protectively over the house securing our galaxy within the vastness of space. The
Milky Way is so immense we can both see it and be in it. It is a unique position, observation and
experience at once. I am sixty-one years old today here not far from the
Musselshell River in central Montana on planet earth, circling our star within
the Milky Way galaxy which swirls beautifully in the universe.
local to local
Daily observations at or near Two Dot Spot, written by hand on the backs of postcards that record with ink and coffee a few minutes of the earth's orbit around the sun. The cards are physically mailed from Two Dot, Montana to those who have requested them...local to local. Ruth Marie Tomlinson
8.06.2014...
When I ambled about the house in the night, stars filled
every window and this morning the sun broke over the horizon without hindrance.
It lightened my mood after yesterday’s gloom. I am so dependent on my
environment for wellbeing. After wiping dew from the lawn chair, I sat in front
o f the schoolhouse listening to birds, some morning traffic on the highway,
and the faint churn of new wind machines on John Whelan’s ranch. The wind farm
is part of the landscape now and not unwelcome. Wind power is progress, though
yet to be fully determined if it is a real solution. Things begin as progress,
but sometimes don’t prove to be progressive; that is if the idea of progress is
to advance the well being of the planet.
8.05.2014...
It felt like I was in the house all day, though I really
wasn’t. Perhaps it is because I have been stuck inside myself. I raised my hand
in greeting three times today when cars passed the schoolhouse. Jerry passed by
first on his mid-afternoon rounds, then the Wheatland County Sheriff who has
recently been circling the town almost daily, and finally a stranger in a blue
sedan. These were my contacts and
I was counting them! It rained most of last night and morning. The distance
remained hazy all day. I felt hemmed in even in my beloved Montana landscape. I
can recall winter days when I longed for a stretch of time alone, but I don’t
feel that now. Even so… I choose here and the simple clean shock of time with
myself.
8.04.2014...
The sun crossed the horizon this morning at 6:10. It hugs
the edge of the first window now, just as I am beginning to hug the edge of
summer. The meadowlarks are gone, but Sandhill cranes continue to call from the
river, and flickers checkout the cottonwood tree and the flagpole in the yard.
When I am alone like this I both revel in my surroundings and wonder why I am
here on my own. It puts me in mind of so many before me who have spent time
alone with their surroundings in Montana. Hollywood nearly wiped out the
loneliness of that venture, but I suspect it was real.
8.03.2014...
I know the West is changing. I know there are many who mourn
the losses and I don’t deny that there are losses: billboards obscuring mountain
views, ranches parceled into suburbs, fences stopping short any free-range, chemically
dead fields. These things and many more are distressing, but they are not the
whole story. The West has always been subject to romanticism and then nostalgia.
Neither one is particularly true. It is Montana’s current reality that I am
interested in, a reality that is built on the past and looks toward the future,
but lives in today. What is here to be appreciated? What is problematic? What
can be created?
8.2.2014...
Last night I talked with Karen Land about story and story
telling, about the potential difference between fact and truth, and about the
expectation for well told stories here in rural Montana. Mary Clearman Blew
refers to the idea of a “Western” story when she recounts an often-told tale of
a historic encounter between two locals. She suspects the story has been embroidered.
I can only think that means it is stitched with care.
8.01.2014...
August is a melancholy month in the sweetest form of
melancholy. It is such a warm and bright and lovely month, but I begin to feel
summer's edges and know I am approaching its end. It is a challenge to hold the enjoyment and knowledge of its loss at the same time, but it is what we must do all through our lives.