Transparency

On Openness, Vulnerability, and Conflict

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Prelude

A clear pool is a rare find on this river. The Rio Grande is only half water; the other half flows with the memory of sandstone. The red-brown stone of Abo, the orange of Yeso, yellow Glorieta—275 million years of earth’s being, worn to essence and carried in the heart of the river.

Sometimes you’ll find a slow place. The sand settles. The water clears. Sunlight shines through without hindrance. Tiny fish cast flickering lights as they dart back and forth in the slow water. They are hatchlings, and their skin is translucent. Light passes through them in places, reflects in others. They look like ripples of sand on the river bed.

On a sandbar in deeper water, mallards squabble. Quack. Flap. Huff and trade places. Politics, and not the serious kind.

A screech overhead—frantic wing beats, piercing cries. Small birds harry a Cooper’s hawk, chasing, wheeling, diving. No mere squabble, this; no politics. This is war. Their shadows cross the pool, and the fish scatter. They’re at no risk but flee by instinct. Sometimes transparency—the free passage of light without hindrance—is a good. Sometimes it’s a danger. The trick is to know the difference.

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Fugue I

Openness or exposure. Openness: the quality of being frank, truthful, candid. But also unprotected, doors wide to all comers. An implied safety. Confidence.

Exposure: being laid bare. It implies vulnerability, to the elements or to harm. But it also suggests hidden things brought to light: lies, plots, weaknesses.

Weaknesses. There’s the rub. Being transparent with our strengths—that’s easy. Exposure of our weaknesses… Some see it as shame, a blow to the ego. Others see it as the root of resilience. Our perspective determines our behavior, and the shadows we flee from, whether on personal, professional, or cultural levels.

Openness or exposure. In the sciences, “open data” is the rallying cry of a movement I’ve been following with interest. Science depends on replicability: the same experiment, run by different people, should yield the same results. The idea of open data is to make that process easier. Scientists provide free access to their experiment’s pool of data, along with information about methods and conflicts of interest. At its best, openness fosters collaboration, integrity, and accuracy. It speeds progress when the science is sound. It minimizes harm when the science is weak.

Harm: because science can inform policies that affect lives. Social attitudes, laws, and medical practice can all spring from scientific studies. Accuracy and replicability matter.

Some scientists worry, though, that openness might expose them to damage. They are concerned about “research parasites”—thieves of their labor, which may represent years’ worth of work. They fear harassment by non-scientists with ideological agendas around hot-button topics like climate change. Some worry about requests made “vexatiously”—to impede research rather than promote it.

A recent essay in Nature suggests a guide for testing sincerity of motive: Is a request about the use of data or its abuse? Scientific openness or weaponized exposure? I’m not sure the distinction matters.

I understand the double edges of transparency. What are the scientists’ fears but personal fears writ large? I have always preferred good, thick walls of privacy, sheltering what I care about from misunderstanding and misuse. It’s a siege mentality, perhaps, to see safety in fortresses, but a natural one. Even here my thoughts emerge through layers of meaning. I do not like feeling vulnerable.

The last year, though, has made me feel vulnerable indeed: my sister-in-law’s death from cancer; two cancer surgeries of my own; an unwanted change to my job that took a third of my income and my health insurance; worsening pain, cognitive difficulties, and energy. I am no longer financially independent. I am not quite disabled, just abled in a very narrow bandwidth.

I have not written openly about much of that. The line between sensible internet privacy and truthful sharing is unclear. And I hate exposing the truth of vulnerability. I can no longer fully take care of myself. I want to hide, like a small fish fleeing shadows, or to lash out in anger.

But the deeper into illness I sink, the more my family steps up to help. The brittle strength of self-containment is yielding to the resilient strength of community. To hide vulnerability is to be false to this new, better strength. I am struggling to discern that truth, and to overcome the instinct to flee.

The instinct to fight.

* * * * * * *

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Fugue II

Not all conflicts are wars. War is openly declared, armed hostility. Metaphorically we use the word to stand in for disagreement, struggle, or antagonism. But that reflects a—lazy—lack of imagination more than an understanding of war.

Let us be clear. War is fight-or-flight hardened into policy. War is the utter risk of life, limb, and moral conscience. War is the will to commit atrocities that dehumanize and destroy. War is Improvised Explosive Devices spattering roadsides with brains and guts and limbs. War is land mines blowing children to pieces generations hence. War is civilians dying of starvation and dirty water; diarrhea; shortages of medicines. War is irreversible brain damage from flying shrapnel. War is people so maimed in death that they cannot be identified. War is refugees drowning on overladen boats. War is nightmare after nightmare, PTSD, and sleep shattered by screams. War is foul, ugly choices between life and death.

War does not mean disagreements, unfortunate happenings, or tensions: ducks squabbling on a sandbar. I will not use war lightly, to describe the ordinary struggles of life.

Not all conflicts are wars. The trick is to know the difference, because they call for different behaviors. We often forget that. The strategies of war—attack, defend, withdraw—seep through every disagreement. Our tools for encountering difference come from metaphorical battlefields. We “defend our positions” in arguments; we “undermine” our opponents. These strategies may bring victory, but not necessarily peace. For peace, both sides must lay down arms and be willing to be vulnerable.[1]

Despite our peace testimony, Quakers also get trapped in the strategies of war. Our preferred strategy is often retreat: avoiding conflict by withdrawing. My Quaker ancestors in colonial America moved their entire community to escape the Seven Years’ War. In Friends’ Meetings, disagreements can fester in silence rather than coming into the open. I often duck out of conflict with a smile and nod.

We Friends recognize that our tools of disagreement—attack and defend—are warlike, no matter how gently we use them: you cannot make peace with them without simulating war. But sometimes we fail to recognize that retreat is also a strategy of war. It prolongs or even escalates conflict. You cannot achieve peace—active reciprocity—by retreating. Avoiding conflict does not create harmony, any more than victory does.

Some struggles are easily mistaken for wars. I dislike battle metaphors for illness, but they are hard to avoid when illness threatens at deep levels: self-care, food, shelter, self-determination. You are fighting for the means of life and for your identity. I have lost my independence. No prose can do that justice. I want to scream it from the top of Sandia Peak until granite and sandstone echo and the Rio Grande Rift hollows to bedrock, until my lungs bleed and my voice shatters. That loss rakes me raw. My independence has been who I am, my consolation as my world has grown smaller. I am frightened for the future in ways I have never been. I am fighting an undertow. Drowning isn’t war, but fight-or-flight doesn’t permit many shades of nuance.

My workplace showed me the deep pit of vulnerability and reminded me how little I am. When a co-worker’s thoughtless words cut to the quick of fear, I lashed out in a way I seldom do. With my entire arsenal of eloquence, with all my weapons of logic and righteous fury, I set out to verbally annihilate. And I succeeded. I became an engine of war. I became what I was fighting against as I, in my turn, dehumanized the person before me. In protesting injustice, I was unjust.

I did great harm, great wrong, because I forgot that this conflict was not a war. And the harm done to me does not excuse that.

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I’ve been thinking about these distinctions—between openness and exposure, conflict and war—because of an ugly controversy about my illness. In the thick of the open data debate stands the PACE trial, a 2011 British study of treatments for ME/CFS.[2] The researchers theorized that ME/CFS comes from a mistaken impression of lingering illness, creating a vicious cycle of inactivity and deconditioning. It assumes ME/CFS to be psychogenic, though the onset may have been biological. The PACE trial tested four different therapies and concluded that the best were Graded Exercise Therapy (GET) and Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) to overcome patients’ “false illness beliefs.”

Headlines shouted that ME/CFS was mental and curable. Private insurers took note, as did disability benefits providers. In the UK, GET and CBT became the National Health Service’s primary treatment for ME/CFS. Because of PACE, patients there can be denied care ranging from disability income to wheelchairs to close-in parking permits.

The UK is a scientific powerhouse, and studies there carry weight globally. Laws, social attitudes, and medical practice across the developed world are shaped by this science. PACE and its underlying assumption that ME/CFS is a psychosomatic illness have had an enormous impact.

Conversely, in 2015 the USA’s Institute of Medicine conducted an exhaustive survey of the scientific literature on ME/CFS and concluded that it is a serious, systemic, biologic disease. It affects the endocrine, immune, and central nervous systems. At its worst, it is as debilitating as late-stage AIDS or end-stage renal failure. A hallmark symptom is Post-Exertional Malaise, a relapse of flu-like symptoms following activity. The IOM strenuously discourages GET and CBT.

Psychosomatic illness or grave, biological disease. This is a serious conflict. The logical premises—and the conclusions that follow—are so different that proponents of each view are almost unable to reason with one another: their world view has too little in common.

Full disclosure: PACE does not ring true with my experience, and I disagree with both its premise and its findings. My illness began after a flu 20 years ago. I ran a low fever off and on for months and struggled with exhaustion. I pushed on but could do less and less: 45-minute walks turned into 30 minutes, then 30 with a rest, then 20. One day on a long walk I collapsed; I was diagnosed a few months later.

Worse than the exhaustion was the cognitive dysfunction. I once forgot where the turn signals were on my car (not in my purse, where I looked for them). I was a music historian but couldn’t remember basic things for hours at a stretch—how to spell Beethoven, or what country Bach was from. I still seldom listen to music because the noise is painful. I have a PhD from an Ivy League university, and I sometimes struggle to understand children’s books.

I drink 20 glasses of water a day to keep my blood pressure from plummeting when I stand. I strategize energy-saving ways to brush my teeth. I do not leave the house on evenings and weekends so I can hoard energy for a 5-hour workday. And I exercise. For the last 20 years I have swum laps or done gentle aerobics. My health is declining, yet even now I do 30 minutes of seated yoga five times a week. I am not athletically fit, but I am not deconditioned.

I want to know why, if GET works, I have lost my independence. If GET is going to help me, I’d like to know when, because I’ve been exercising for 20 years. Where is my recovery? Where is plan B, when GET fails?

I am lucky, and have lost only about 40% of my capacity. 25% of us are housebound or bedbound. Some cannot speak. Some must lie alone, year after year, in darkened rooms with blindfolds and ear protection, because movement, light, and sound are excruciating. Some cannot sit up without fainting or vomiting, because their blood pressure drops to nothing. Some must be fed through tubes. Some are paralyzed or have seizures. Some are in constant neurological pain.

I believe ME/CFS is a biological illness and that a biological model holds out the only hope for recovery.

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The PACE trial’s recommendations of CBT and GET are only part of the controversy. Many patients have found flaws with the study design and interpretion.[3] Among their criticisms:

  • The researchers did not declare all conflicts of interest to participants, including work for insurance companies.
  • Objective measures for improvement (including a timed walking test) were abandoned mid-trial, leaving only subjective assessments.
  • The threshold of recovery was lowered mid-trial, so that patients could enter the trial, get worse, and still be considered “recovered” at trial’s end.
  • With the new recovery measure, 13% of patients in the study had “recovered” before participating in treatment.

Patients have asked to see the data in ways consistent with scientific practice. They have called for openness—to have the inner workings of the study exposed, to see the way these decisions were reached. All are hoping for truth; most are hoping to have the study retracted; some to see the scientists’ work exposed as hollow. A few are vindictive.

No matter. Their requests for openness have been dismissed with contempt—in the Nature essay on open data, PACE questioners were lumped with climate science deniers. Are the researchers protecting work they believe in? Their reputations? Either way, they’ve maintained high walls, resisting exposure of the data. I doubt they trust the patient community to be neutral—to examine the data without intent to do harm; not to twist findings to their own ends. (Ironic, since many patients believe the scientists have done that very thing.)

I’ve largely stood back from this controversy: my own immediate concerns have taken priority. But I’ve also stood back because the conversation has been ugly. You will know the patterns from your own spheres of activism: the camps of “us” and “them,” the utterly right and utterly wrong; the “enemy” de-faced and dehumanized, and fair game for vicious treatment. Attack provokes counterattack, and it goes round and round. We are Democrats vs. Republicans; Tories vs. Labour, and there is no common ground to stand on.

Dehumanize, attack, counterattack: the strategies of war. What does a Quaker do in the face of war except retreat—or protest the war itself? But as I have learned, retreat is a strategy of war, and one which prolongs conflict. And the warlike behaviors… I do protest them. I hope I do not engage in them. But I also understand that injustice is driving them, and that the injustice must end.

What is at stake for ME/CFS patients because of PACE? If ME/CFS is a grave, biological illness, then a lot. Income to replace a worker’s wages: food and shelter. Medical care. Real research into causes, treatments, and cures. The alleviation of suffering. For some the stakes are literally about survival—a threat caused not by our illness but by our fellow humans’ response to our illness.

What is at stake for the PACE study’s researchers in dismissing the patients’ concerns, their calls for openness? I am not sure. I would like to understand. Perhaps principle; an ideological sense of rightness; a school of thought; the scaffolding of a health-care system. Reputation, which could translate into income opportunities. Perhaps emotional or physical safety: researchers have claimed harassment and threat by patients and their families.

I do not condone emotional or physical threats. But to patients, for whom the stakes are so high, this conflict is felt as a cold war waged on the ill. We are on the down side of a power imbalance—an assault by large medical and academic institutions, protected behind ivory towers, against the vulnerable, who can barely stand. When survival is threatened, fight-or-flight kicks in, and fight-or-flight doesn’t permit many shades of nuance. Activists are small birds harrying hawks.

I still struggle to understand the weight of the PACE authors’ risks—to balance them against basic medical care, food, and shelter—and to understand the contemptuousness of their response. But the strategies of war are self-perpetuating. Attack provokes counter-attack in defense. I don’t believe this situation is a war on the researchers’ side—that the stakes for them are as high as physical survival. But war is a reflexive response, a habit, even in situations that are only conflicts.

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This conflict may soon be resolved by a different kind of exposure—the international limelight. In the last few months, people outside the community of patients have taken issue with the PACE trial: David Tuller, academic coordinator of the graduate program in public health and journalism at UC Berkeley; James C. Coyne, professor of Health Psychology at University Medical Center, Groningen, the Netherlands; Andrew Gelman, director of the Applied Statistics Center at Columbia University; Ron Davis, director of the Stanford Genome Technology Center (whose son has severe ME/CFS); and others.[4] They have brought the study to the attention of the broader scientific community as it considers the issue of open data as a whole.

Tuller, Davis, and others have requested the trial data. So far all have been refused. The PACE authors have called the requests vexatious, or have cited risks to participant anonymity. (It is worth reading the response to Prof. Coyne’s separate request in full.) Some of PACE’s co-authors are now requesting immunity for university researchers from the UK’s Freedom of Information Act. But pressure from authorities the world recognizes (i.e., not patients) is mounting on the PACE authors and their publishers, The Lancet and PLoS, to show the data or retract the study: to allow the science to self-confirm or self-correct.

Funny: I have always seen the scientific method as a model for peace, no matter how duck-on-a-sandbar squabbly individual scientists may be. Scientists work across disciplines, nationalities, and political boundaries. In theory, their work springs from openness to ideas and engagement through curiosity: the search for clear pools of insight amid gritty rivers of information. Exposing flaws is part of discovery; the retesting of data evidence that truth matters more than theory. Even failure contributes something valuable to knowledge. The brittle strength of individual effort yields to the resilient strength of the community.

It is hard to disarm, hard to be vulnerable. Openness is exposure.

How much do I believe in the scientific method? If the PACE trial’s data are released, am I willing to accept the findings, no matter what? To listen to them if they prove sound? Yes, if they are weighed appropriately with all the other data. Because what I want is not to be right or to do harm. The big, transparent truth that seems to have disappeared in all this: we just want to be well.

This conflict should never have become a war.

 

Notes

1 This section relies heavily on Sharon Strand Ellison’s Taking the War Out of Our Words (Berkeley, CA: Bay Tree Publishing, 2002).

2 Good summaries of the trial and ensuing controversies have been written by Rebecca Goldin and Leonid Schneider.

3 Among the many calls for review, Tom Kindlon’s work stands as exemplary. An index to his publications can be found here. MEPedia provides a patient-centered overview here.

4An index to Tuller’s influential series of articles in Virology can be found here. Coyne summarizes his concerns here and declares the “Moral Equivalent of War” on the study’s practices here.

Ritual Standard Time

IMG_9192.2The last thing I’d expected to hear was a baseball game. The day had started with snow — a Scrooge of a storm, all hard knocks and bitterness, dry even for New Mexico. The wind hounded it off and then howled at its back for hours. Leaden clouds stripped the life from the browns and…other browns of the desert. It was a raw, bleak February afternoon, weeks from opening day.

But when I flipped on the car radio, there it was:

“The ball just caught the inside corner of the plate. Two balls and one strike the count.”

The UNM Lobos, playing some poor young men from Fresno who were swearing never to leave California again.

“41 degrees at game time, with a wind chill of 19. A swing and a miss, and it’s two and two.”

I don’t know the first thing about the Lobos. Two thirds of an inning passed before I even figured out which team was at bat. The announcer did the barest of bare-bones jobs. But oh, that call.

“There’s a fastball up and in. Three balls and two strikes.”

It’s the heart of the game, the pulse underlying 162 regular-season games a year. Add the pre- and post-seasons, and six months of the calendar are measured in balls and strikes, the way they have been for over a century. It’s the sound of summer, no matter the actual weather, and on that raw February day two seconds were enough to transport me to a world of delicious, slowly unfolding tension. I wasn’t on Saturday errand time any more but on Ritual Standard Time.

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Slowly unfolding tension. Yes. It’s monsoon season — the height of the year in a dry country. To watch the thunderheads building every afternoon and the sky turning black, to wonder whether the “scattered showers and thundershowers” will include you in their path, whether the heat will break in a downpour… Suspense is a slow burn in the desert until the rain begins to fall.

I love this time of year. Mornings I take my tea out to the patio and watch the sky turn from steel to robin’s-egg to azure. After work I’ll sit there with something cold while the clouds build, enjoying the shade and the crossword. Toward dusk I’ll take the ballgame outside and watch the sky darken again. The first stars come out to the call of balls and strikes.

So many mornings. So many evenings. Summer is a long season of rituals for the senses. The basking, the cold drinks, the fragrance of basil and mint, the grapes and peaches and juicy melons, the crickets and cicadas. The windows tuned to catch every breeze as the hot desert day fades to a cool desert night. And the wait for rain.

This is why we endure the heat: because it brings the blessed, life-giving rain. The monsoon has been generous this year. But oh, how the tension draws out before the rain begins to fall.

So many mornings. So many evenings.

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Baseball announcers are experts at parallel conversations. The play-by-play proceeds on one track and the color on another, without either feeling like an interruption. They are like meter and rhythm in music: the balls and strikes shaping strong patterns beneath the stories that create character and variety above. Vin Scully can describe an earthquake happening live in Dodger Stadium and then spin off to the ’89 quake at Candlestick Park, all while the count continues. (“There’s a ball in the dirt.”)

Sometimes the tracks stay resolutely apart, and stories and stats float above a sleepy count. But sometimes they converge over a good play — a diving catch, a sweet stolen base, a towering home run. The moment is brief. It may cast a glow for a while, but not for long. The next batter steps up to the plate, and count and color start over again. (“That was almost a good bunt. It’s oh-and-one.”)

Count and color. Baseball is like life, you know, and the patterns of count and color, meter and rhythm, are the same patterns that fill our days. The rituals of mealtimes, of morning coffee, are like balls and strikes — the structure beneath the adventures that give our lives character and variety. My own life, forced into patterns of rest, is heavy on count and light on color. Between the gentle job and needs of daily life, I enjoy few breaks in routine. But even the healthy have to eat every day. We are all forced by our bodies into a certain amount of routine.

When does a routine become a ritual? When you come to love it and feel lost without it? When you make it beautiful? When it leads you to some deeper experience?

And when does ritual lose its meaning again? How often can you repeat it before it becomes mindless habit? How often before you stultify?

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IMG_0955.2aI love my patio, but it gets claustrophobic sometimes. Between close walls, the only openness is skyward. After a weekend resting at home I feel cloistered. How did nuns do it — the Medieval ones sent off to live within stone walls? How did they cope with enclosure and sameness? With the eight hours a day of prayer and singing, the regimented duties, the privations?

The only variety came from the passage of seasons, the food on the table. And from the liturgy itself — the grand sweep of the church year from Advent through Christmas and Epiphany, Lent, Easter and Pentecost, and then into the long, summer months of Ordinary Time.

Did they cling to resentment like a last bastion of their old selves? Did they live with their minds elsewhere, in the only escape they could find? Did they learn to take comfort in the rituals? I have done all three. The last is the most satisfying, but it must be relearned every day.

A ritual doesn’t become a ritual without repetition. How you deal with repetition determines whether ritual matters, or whether it bores you silly.

I wonder how baseball announcers do it, cooped up in a press box three hours a day, 162 days a year. I think of the stories about the triceratops skull found beneath Coors Field, the D-Day invasions, and Motorboat Jones’s nickname (“How’s ol’ Motorboat doing these days?” wondered the announcer, and then we all found out)*; the lines of Longfellow and Donne scattered ironically between pitches; the endless litanies of statistics. Apparently, they struggle, too.

We are programmed for activity, for synapses to form, for neurons to spark. We are not programmed for stasis. Forced leisure has a certain ambivalence in comfortable circumstances. It is not a bad thing, exactly, to be stuck in safety in a cushioned garden chair looking at clouds. Hour after hour. It is not bad to be cloistered. This is not a prison of violence or poverty. But illness is a prison nonetheless. You are limited in action and movement; you are forced against your will into sameness, into the bare bones of work-to-live and necessities. You are aware that even bare bones are a luxury.

In restricted circumstances it’s hard to find the color. It’s a struggle to give fresh meaning to repetition, to see leaf and blossom in the rituals that root our days. The color matters — the evenings out, the movies and concerts and gatherings with friends. Without it life is endless balls and strikes and no home runs. It’s Narnia under the curse: always winter and never Christmas.

One can bring color into the count. Announcers might gussy up their language. (“That ball had more English on it than the Queen.”) Medieval nuns might have embroidered altar cloths, and burnished paten and chalice to glow in the candlelight as they chanted. I bring my favorite mug onto the patio, run fingers through a patch of chamomile, settle in to watch the hummingbirds. The color may be reduced, but the rituals are strong and beautiful.

Still, dissonance grates between the pleasure of individual moments and the restriction that builds up over time. Happiness demands a winnowing of awareness down to an ever-smaller present.

So many mornings.  So many evenings.

_________________

*He’s fine.

*     *     *     *     *

IMG_0267.2The bell at San Felipe de Neri Church is ringing. You shouldn’t set your clock by it (trust me), but it’s a pleasant companion on the patio. Tonight as it calls the faithful to Mass, it calls me in to dinner. I’m making a favorite: a simple pasta salad with handfuls of fresh herbs, some tomatoes and scallions, a salting of feta, a drizzle of olive oil. In the background, the Dodgers are playing the Rockies.

Calling baseball “the sound of summer” isn’t quite right. It’s more the sound of summer’s waxing and waning. It has April’s promise of excitement; the slow warm-up of May; the long slog of midseason heat; the quickening pace in August and September; and the final blaze of October before evenings turn long and quiet. The ball-and-strike count has a different tone on Opening Day than during the championships; a different intensity before the All-Star break and after it.

Ritual means something different in context. The small changes in its rhythms articulate the long, slow changes of cycles and seasons. They connect the day to the year; they position it in context to give it its own flavor. They link to long histories — the 130 years of baseball, the centuries-long flow of liturgy.

Rituals articulate time. When you observe them, you don’t look up startled one day and wonder, “Where did the summer go?” You’ve lived the progress of the season; you’ve engaged in its slow unfolding. You’ve tasted its subtle flavors.

My attention has wandered from the game (baseball can be like that), but it dawns on me that the pace has slowed. I listen and understand why. Troy Tulowitzki is at the plate. He is the slowest batter in baseball — and among the best. He does a long routine between pitches, and the announcers have plenty of time to describe it: he tightens his batting gloves, takes a good look at his bat, digs in, adjusts his helmet, taps the bat twice on home plate.

This at-bat is a wily one. Tulo fouls off pitch after pitch. In between he re-does the gloves, the bat, the digging in, the helmet, the tapping. Every. Single. Time. The announcers are half irritated, half amused.

Then we hear it. The crack of the bat. The voices sharpen, the pace quickens.

“There’s a high fly ball into right center field. Pederson is on his horse, he’s racing back, at the warning track looking up, and she is GONE! Troy Tulowitzki! A three-run home run!”

The moment when count and color come together in a blaze of glory.

Without the occasional hit, Troy Tulowitzki is just another obsessive-compulsive slowpoke. Factor in his batting average, and he’s a pro who uses ritual well — to focus his entire being on the split-second present, on every 90-mile-an-hour fastball thrown his way.

As I scoop the herbs off the cutting board the fragrance of dill fills the kitchen. My senses come alive: to the summer breeze through the window over the sink, the rhythmic motion of knife on board, the aromas of onion and herb, the bright splash of tomato on heirloom dishes, the sound of the game running through it. How many meals have begun this way? How many eons of meals have begun this way? I am standing in a grand continuity of dinners and cooks. Everything savors of ritual: the plate and cup, the running water and washing of hands. It’s a feast of senses and mind, memory, enjoyment, and kinship.

This moment is reduced to bare bones; it is all essence. Food and drink, safety, connectedness. Beauty. It’s a home run. It’s Christmas Day. At least until tomorrow, when we’ll start over again. Another at-bat. Another meal. Another ritual.

Thunder growls low. The wind holds out an offering: in a dry land, the sweet, sweet scent of rain.

IMG_0865.2 ___________________

The penalty for being a slow writer is that facts change before you finish with them. Tulo is no longer a Colorado Rocky, alas. I wish him well in Toronto.