A "headache word" I used to call it whenever my mother used it as she took me out on our walks through the park near our basement apartment.
In the same manner her Lakota grandmother taught her, she taught me -- with common sights.
The lesson of the rooster weathervane. "Poor Mr. Rooster," she would cluck her tongue, "slave to whatever winds blow, never able to stand his ground.
"Wise Mrs. Willow Tree who sinks her roots deep in good soil, standing her ground, yet bending with the wind and not snapping in two like proud and foolish Mr. Pine."
She would ruffle my hair and say, "From the willow tree you must learn autonomy." I pressed my lips together hard.
I couldn't even say that "headache word," much less know what it meant. But if you wanted an untweaked nose, there were just some things better left unsaid.
We writers many times are like mimes playing to a world of the blind. Not that we are in any way better because we see beneath the surface and many others do not.
We were taught to do so, by mentors or by example. But the fate of the one-eyed man in the kingdom of the blind is usually not a happy one.
The wiser of us know that going in. The more foolish of us learn it eventually. The fate is the same.
Yet, it is the journey we must savor as artists.
Enjoy telling the tale for the thrill of reaching even one soul with our efforts. Push back the darkness, if only for the moment. Touch that one hurting heart.
As in that Zen teaching tale :
should we find ourselves clinging to a cliff face, bandits above shooting arrows at us, a hungry tiger waiting to feast on us should we fall,
take in the crisp Spring breeze. Watch the grace of a swooping eagle in the bright blue sky.
And should there be a strawberry bush growing on that cliff face, reach out and taste a strawberry, savoring its flavor with our last breaths.
I wrote THE BEAR WITH 2 SHADOWS in tribute to my mother's stories.
Tales told me as I lay coughing in our basement apartment without power during that terrible winter blackout that lasted for days.
In it is a story of Hibbs, the bear with two shadows, when he was but a cub. And it relates to what I've been saying :
It was the "Warming Season When The Geese Returns" in the Valley of the Shadow. Sometimes Estanatlehi would walk beside him, sometimes not.
Even as a young bear, Hibbs had known that The Turquoise Woman ranged the whole wide world. But in this season of her second coming, she always returned in the flesh.
It was something that Hibbs had thought would last forever. Such was the foolishness of young bears.
One morning, he had emerged from his comfortable den and wandered to the edge of the Snaking River. Sitting by its edge, he had looked down into its sparkling blue surface. He hushed in a breath.
A face appeared below him. A look of shock was on its furry face. He frowned. It frowned back.
He snarled at being mocked. It snarled back.
He sat back on his haunches and laughed.
The face was but a reflection of his own. He laughed again and looked down. His river-face laughed back. He stuck out a tongue. And a tongue snaked out from his reflected face. Hibbs amused himself with this game all morning.
Hibbs had finally wandered off for more exploring. But the next morning found him at the river's edge again.
The wind of an approaching storm ruffled the image of himself so that he could not see it clear. His mood darkened along with the skies, and Hibbs had been in a foul mood the rest of the day.
The weather of the third morning was still bruised and dark from the storm of the day before. Hibbs' mood was equally sour. It worsened when he found his reflection was merely a shadow.
The day had been ruined, along with the young cub's spirits.
The fourth day found dark clouds over Hibbs' head, but they were no darker than the cub's mood. The river-face below him was dim and angry. In a fit of temper, Hibbs hit the offending reflection with his open paw. Cold water splashed him back in the face. It was the last straw.
"Oooh, River-Face," he growled. "You're going to get yours!"
Like a rippling brook given life, icy laughter sounded behind the young cub, "Oh, Little One, you are a walking parable."
Hibbs turned around so swiftly, the water was slung from the fur of his face in a tiny rain. "GrandMother!"
The happy discovery of Estanatlehi's return masked her words from his understanding. The meaning of her words arrived a moment later, like thunder rolling after the flash of lightning.
Or rather their almost-meaning. Hibbs frowned. He scratched his head.
"A walking what?"
Estanatlehi's face suddenly saddened. "A way of teaching, Hibbs."
"D-Did I just make you sad?"
Hair of living lightning became a shaking display of Northern Lights. "No, Little One. The race called Whyte did that long, long ago when they killed one who meant much to me. He loved to use parables."
"GrandMother, I - I don't understand."
Estanatlehi ruffled the soft hair atop his head gently. "You will. All too soon, you will."
She forced a smile. "But for now ... these different reflections of you that are such a torment ...."
She hesitated, and Hibbs whispered, "Yes?"
Turquoise eyes peered into his questioning brown ones, and a ripple of true happiness swam beneath the pain.
"They are only different because of the wind, the rain, and the storm clouds. They are only fluff, mere changes in the external. The internal is eternal."
"I - I do not understand."
She tweaked his wrinkling nose. "You must try very, very hard to do so."
Hibbs earnestly nodded his head like a bobbing apple. "I will try. I promise."
At the sight, Estanatlehi sniffed back her tears and hugged him. "I know you will. I will help."
She stepped back, caressing his left cheek. "Reflections are but that. Reflections."
Hibbs had nodded as if he understood, which, of course, he did not. "Reflections. Yes."
Estanatlehi looked as if her heart were breaking. "Little One, did you feel pain when you slapped your river-face?"
"N-No."
"That is because it was not you, merely a reflection. And reflections of you will change as you meet one being after another. Reflections that change because of their surface, not your core self."
"Core?"
A smile born of pain and love murmured the words, "As apples have cores, so do Two-Leggeds, the seeds of who they truly are."
"S-So I have a core?"
His wrinkling nose was tweaked again.
"Yes, Little One. You have a core. And if you know who you are, you will know your core. But if you do not, you will know only the reflection of yourself that others will give you. And as they change swiftly from one to the other, you will feel all the frustration and anger you just felt at your river-faces."
"So if I know who I am, I can laugh at all the not-core reflections others reflect to me, right?"
Estanatlehi's face looked near to tears as she hugged Hibbs' tiny head. "It always comes back to laughter with you, doesn't it, Little One?"
"It has to come back to something, doesn't it, GrandMother? Why not laughter?"
Estanatlehi wet eyes squinted as if she were looking far into the distance as she murmured, "I do not have the heart to answer, Little One." ********************** I am giving 100% of the profits for ALL MY BOOKS to the SALVATION ARMY :
A "headache word" I used to call it whenever my mother used it as she took me out on our walks through the park near our basement apartment. In the same manner her Lakota grandmother taught her, she taught me -- with common sights. The lesson of the rooster weathervane. "Poor Mr. Rooster," she would cluck her tongue, "slave to whatever winds blow, never able to stand his ground. "Wise Mrs. Willow Tree who sinks her roots deep in good soil, standing her ground, yet bending with the wind and not snapping in two like proud and foolish Mr. Pine."
She would ruffle my hair and say, "From the willow tree you must learn autonomy." I pressed my lips together hard. I couldn't even say that "headache word," much less know what it meant. But if you wanted an untweaked nose, there were just some things better left unsaid.
We writers many times are like mimes playing to a world of the blind. Not that we are in any way better because we see beneath the surface and many others do not. We were taught to do so, by mentors or by example. But the fate of the one-eyed man in the kingdom of the blind is usually not a happy one. The wiser of us know that going in. The more foolish of us learn it eventually. The fate is the same.
Yet, it is the journey we must savor as artists. Enjoy telling the tale for the thrill of reaching even one soul with our efforts. Push back the darkness, if only for the moment. Touch that one hurting heart.
As in that Zen teaching tale : should we find ourselves clinging to a cliff face, bandits above shooting arrows at us, a hungry tiger waiting to feast on us should we fall, take in the crisp Spring breeze. Watch the grace of a swooping eagle in the bright blue sky. And should there be a strawberry bush growing on that cliff face, reach out and taste a strawberry, savoring its flavor with our last breaths.
I wrote THE BEAR WITH 2 SHADOWS in tribute to my mother's stories. Tales told me as I lay coughing in our basement apartment without power during that terrible winter blackout that lasted for days. In it is a story of Hibbs, the bear with two shadows, when he was but a cub. And it relates to what I've been saying :
It was the "Warming Season When The Geese Returns" in the Valley of the Shadow. Sometimes Estanatlehi would walk beside him, sometimes not. Even as a young bear, Hibbs had known that The Turquoise Woman ranged the whole wide world. But in this season of her second coming, she always returned in the flesh. It was something that Hibbs had thought would last forever. Such was the foolishness of young bears.
One morning, he had emerged from his comfortable den and wandered to the edge of the Snaking River. Sitting by its edge, he had looked down into its sparkling blue surface. He hushed in a breath.
A face appeared below him. A look of shock was on its furry face. He frowned. It frowned back. He snarled at being mocked. It snarled back.
He sat back on his haunches and laughed. The face was but a reflection of his own. He laughed again and looked down. His river-face laughed back. He stuck out a tongue. And a tongue snaked out from his reflected face. Hibbs amused himself with this game all morning.
Hibbs had finally wandered off for more exploring. But the next morning found him at the river's edge again. The wind of an approaching storm ruffled the image of himself so that he could not see it clear. His mood darkened along with the skies, and Hibbs had been in a foul mood the rest of the day.
The weather of the third morning was still bruised and dark from the storm of the day before. Hibbs' mood was equally sour. It worsened when he found his reflection was merely a shadow. The day had been ruined, along with the young cub's spirits.
The fourth day found dark clouds over Hibbs' head, but they were no darker than the cub's mood. The river-face below him was dim and angry. In a fit of temper, Hibbs hit the offending reflection with his open paw. Cold water splashed him back in the face. It was the last straw.
"Oooh, River-Face," he growled. "You're going to get yours!"
Like a rippling brook given life, icy laughter sounded behind the young cub, "Oh, Little One, you are a walking parable."
Hibbs turned around so swiftly, the water was slung from the fur of his face in a tiny rain. "GrandMother!"
The happy discovery of Estanatlehi's return masked her words from his understanding. The meaning of her words arrived a moment later, like thunder rolling after the flash of lightning. Or rather their almost-meaning. Hibbs frowned. He scratched his head.
"A walking what?"
Estanatlehi's face suddenly saddened. "A way of teaching, Hibbs."
"D-Did I just make you sad?"
Hair of living lightning became a shaking display of Northern Lights. "No, Little One. The race called Whyte did that long, long ago when they killed one who meant much to me. He loved to use parables."
"GrandMother, I - I don't understand."
Estanatlehi ruffled the soft hair atop his head gently. "You will. All too soon, you will."
She forced a smile. "But for now ... these different reflections of you that are such a torment ...."
She hesitated, and Hibbs whispered, "Yes?"
Turquoise eyes peered into his questioning brown ones, and a ripple of true happiness swam beneath the pain. "They are only different because of the wind, the rain, and the storm clouds. They are only fluff, mere changes in the external. The internal is eternal."
"I - I do not understand."
She tweaked his wrinkling nose. "You must try very, very hard to do so."
Hibbs earnestly nodded his head like a bobbing apple. "I will try. I promise."
At the sight, Estanatlehi sniffed back her tears and hugged him. "I know you will. I will help."
She stepped back, caressing his left cheek. "Reflections are but that. Reflections."
Hibbs had nodded as if he understood, which, of course, he did not. "Reflections. Yes."
Estanatlehi looked as if her heart were breaking. "Little One, did you feel pain when you slapped your river-face?"
"N-No."
"That is because it was not you, merely a reflection. And reflections of you will change as you meet one being after another. Reflections that change because of their surface, not your core self."
"Core?"
A smile born of pain and love murmured the words, "As apples have cores, so do Two-Leggeds, the seeds of who they truly are."
"S-So I have a core?"
His wrinkling nose was tweaked again. "Yes, Little One. You have a core. And if you know who you are, you will know your core. But if you do not, you will know only the reflection of yourself that others will give you. And as they change swiftly from one to the other, you will feel all the frustration and anger you just felt at your river-faces."
"So if I know who I am, I can laugh at all the not-core reflections others reflect to me, right?"
Estanatlehi's face looked near to tears as she hugged Hibbs' tiny head. "It always comes back to laughter with you, doesn't it, Little One?"
"It has to come back to something, doesn't it, GrandMother? Why not laughter?"
Estanatlehi wet eyes squinted as if she were looking far into the distance as she murmured, "I do not have the heart to answer, Little One."
**********************
I hope you enjoyed this bit of THE BEAR WITH TWO SHADOWS. I spotted a wolf as I drove this twilight along a wilderness trail. In thanks to the Great Mystery for that, I thought I would share this with all of you :
Dreamer. Writer. Believer in the worth of each soul I meet.
It is not so bad a thing to have been born with the gift of laughter and the knowledge that the world is mad.
Book 4: Victor Standish risks all reality to bring back from the dead those he loves.
WOLF HOWL HAS HIS OWN BLOG!
VISIT IF YOU DARE
THE LAST SHAMAN AUDIO BOOK!
Mankind's time is nearly up. Can the last Lakota shaman save the soul of the assassin he loves before the end?
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Sometimes it is death, not life, that brings us love
A GHOSTLY WRITING MANUAL
Twain, Hemingway, Lovecraft & More!
An Age Is Ending & Ancient Evil Returning
Like PENNY DREADFUL? This is for you.
A SUPERNATURAL LONGMIRE
In Egypt, the dead never rest easy
NO ONE HEARS THE SCREAMS IN SILENT FILMS
An isolated Hollywood film crew is hunted by Nightmare
A SAMPLER OF MY HEROES
Mysteries Explained, Secrets Exposed
The Origin of Toomey Starks!
Hellhounds were never this much fun! Only $4!
VOODOO & LOVE IN THE FRENCH QUARTER
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FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE AUDIO BOOK!
The supernatural predators come out after Katrina. Can two undead legends stop them?
AFTER KATRINA, THERE IS NONE BUT TWO TO STOP THE UNDEAD
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LISTEN to GHOST OF A CHANCE
Can an author be drawn into his own fictional world and killed by his own characters?
HIBBS HAS FOUND HIS VOICE!
A tale of enchantment
Souls At The Crossroads
Where do you need to be?
THE DEADLIEST ENEMY IS WITHIN
What if Stephen King wrote of the life of a blood courier?
Listen to this haunting tale of horror and love
It is 1853. An undead Texas Ranger is on board a cursed ship in search of a murderer who is wearing the face of her last victim as a mask.
Listen to the LAST FAE
When the world is mad, there is little else to do but show them what true insanity is!
Can a man marry both the moon and the sun?
In the eclipse of myth, he can
What Defense is an innocent soul against the Powers of Darkness?
Let Hibbs, the cub with no clue, show you
Before Indiana Jones or Allan Quartermain
There was Sam McCord and his doomed love for Meilori Shinseen
Alice and Victor in 1834 New Orleans
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Buy_FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE
Hurricane Katrina has cast New Orleans into darkness. Predators, living and undead, close in on the helpless survivors. Can Samuel McCord and a vampire priest keep the French Quarter from being drowned in blood?
Buy_LET THE WIND BLOW THROUGH YOU
Enter the dangerous world of a Native American Noir thriller where forbidden love clashes with the politics of crime
You will never see the end coming
In his beginning is his end
My 1st SERIAL TRILOGY continues
There are none so lost as those who refuse to see
The 1st SERIAL TRILOGY!
In the dark, we are all orphans
In Memoriam - Maukie my cyber friend
RITES OF PASSAGE link
The earliest Samuel McCord adventure: Dare to board a fantasy Titanic as it sails into the Bermuda Triangle
VICTOR'S HERE!
BOOK 1: No one talks openly of the misty figures seen walking along New Orleans' iron-laced terraces, casting no shadow. Of the shapes seen rising from sewer grates. And no one willingly visits the crypt of Marie Laveau at midnight. Into this strange world arrives the street orphan, Victor Standish, from Charon's Greyhound. Charon has to keep up with the times ... the End Times. And the teen destined to be called the "Ulysses of the French Quarter" has come just in time for Hurricane Katrina, the End of All Things ... and the deadly love of the Victorian ghoul, Alice Wentworth.
VICTOR AND ALICE ARE BACK!
BOOK 2: Victor's a street kid. Alice is a Victorian ghoul Their love breaks the chain of reason. Their new adventures bring the French Quarter back from the brink of nightmare.
THE RIVAL
BOOK 3: Victor & Alice are in the French Quarter of 1834. Voodoo. Demigods. Revenants. And the hilarious Menage a Trois of Death! Oh, and someone we love dies at the end.
END OF DAYS is here!
St. Marrok's. The most eerie high school in which you will ever die. Its curriculum? The End of Days. Alice Wentworth plans to get an A+.
ADRIFT IN THE TIME STREAM link
SEQUEL to RITES OF PASSAGE: Come aboard the doomed DEMETER with undead Texas Ranger, Sam McCord, and sail with her into the depths of madness in ADRIFT IN THE TIME STREAM.
Buy_CREOLE KNIGHTS
SEQUEL to FRENCH QUARTER NOCTURNE: The dead rise. Elder Beings strain to enter our world through Katrina devastated New Orleans. And the Angel of Death is kidnapped to clear their way. Can Sam McCord stem the tide of madness in time?
Buy_THE LAST FAE
Once there was an age undreamed where legends walked this earth … and nightmares, too. Terrible were the battles, tragic the outcome of the wars. Until finally there were only two survivors : the nightmare and one bruised legend. These are the legend’s stories, each one a different facet of the same priceless gem – a jewel that has come to believe herself worthless. So come. Listen to her. Listen to THE LAST FAE.
GHOST OF A CHANCE
What if what you wrote became real?
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Journey with the last Lakota shaman, Wolf Howl. The white govenments call him Drew August. Those who hunt him call him Death. The last day of Man has dawned. Watch as Wolf Howl turns to meet his human hunters. Shadow, the love of his life, returns to aid his hunters. Then, Mankind's death descends. Can he save Shadow before the world's time runs out?
BRING ME THE HEAD OF McCORD!
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GHOST WRITERS IN THE SKY
LEARN TO WRITE BETTER AND LAUGH ALONG THE WAY
LAST EXIT TO BABYLON
At the dawn of the End of All Things, the Last Fae finds there is no hope ... but love.
IT'S HERE TO BUY!!
The trilogy concludes. Not even the eclipse of myth is forever. But love is. And eclipses return. Listen. The voice of Blake, son of Man, is calling across the night skies.
Buy THE PATH BACK TO DAWN
Only in the eclipse of myth can a young man find himself with both the Moon and the Sun as his brides. Can he survive what follows?
Buy_LOVE LIKE DEATH
From the pages of THE LAST FAE springs this paranormal romance/thriller. Fallen, the last fae, discovers the name of the young teenager to whom she lost her heart : Blake Adamson.But she also discovers what happens when you believe your fears over your love : heartache and loss. And so Blake Adamson finds himself torn between two loves : one fae, the other an alien drinker of souls. Their love is deadly, but love, like death, will have its way.
THE BEAR WITH 2 SHAD0WS link
Based on the stories my Lakota mother told me as a child when I was deathly ill in a freezing Detroit basement apartment. Think a Native American LORD OF THE RINGS.
FROM THE GREAT BEYOND HOP!
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ZOMBIE PREPAREDNESS!
LISTEN TO THE CDC
Thanks, Alex!
THE WORLDS OF ROLAND YEOMANS
Donna Hole astonishes with her insights on my linked worlds
FANTASTIC REVIEW OF THE LEGEND OF VICTOR STANDISH
Michael Di Gesu does a masterful review. I am honored by his friendship
LIFE LESSONS taught me by GYPSY
Dedicated to GYPSY
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Buy_BLOOD WILL TELL
One lone telepath finds himself a helpless spectator as the race of Man is subjugated into mindless drones by the very blood within their bodies.When the war is over, and he finds himself totally alone ... How can he go on and why?
CALL ME TOMBS
The last Lakota Heyoka faces voodoo and ultimate evil in the Carpathian Mountains of Transylvania with his Hellhound, Puppy
CATCH FIRE!
BLOG TOUR FOR ALEX J, CAVANAUGH'S NEWEST NOVEL
SIV'S BLOGFEST!
The Norse Gods Are Watching You!
NERDY IS THE NEW SEXY!
BECOME A JEDI KNIGHT FOR TEENS
THE SECRET OF SPRUCE KNOLL
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Written by the author who could very well turn out to be the new William Faulkner, Elliot Grace
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