November 29

I love foggy mornings. Unexpected things emerge from the fog, shapes shift. Fog is the trickster, the space of possibility, play and wonder. I love the soft translucent grey of it and the feeling that I can touch and caress the air. I love that it beckons, invites me to come closer, to step into it, but at the last moment, when I am already at the threshold, it recedes: the objects around me become clear and another space of murky possibility appears, daring me to try again, lulling me off my path.

Griffin is letting their blond hair grow long like on the decade-old photo I saw once. They wears earrings with a stone of exact same blue colour as their eyes and looks beautiful. This is the first thing I say after five months of separation: You look beautiful. We couldn’t find a table to sit face to face, so we sat side by side, facing outside, and turned our heads to look at each other. I used to not be able to look at Griffin directly. I used to not be able to look at people I care about directly, because looking at them meant opening myself to the kind of intimacy that was too much to bear. I used to talk too much just to fill the silence, because silence is another kind of intimacy. So, we sat and we talked, pausing, as necessary, and we looked at each other. What did you do this morning, asked Griffin, and I told them about meeting the common acquaintance who’d harmed me in a bad way. I still hate her, I said, and I hated seeing her, but was also strangely excited to see her. I guess, I’m addicted to the drama and the chaos of complex trauma. To which Griffin laughed because aren’t we all. They showed me the pictures of the makeup they wore for a burlesque show. I told them I still hadn’t had the courage to buy the red lipstick I wanted to buy since spring 2023. I will buy it next week, I promised, and I’ll send you the picture. It will be my accountability.

November 28

I resent the idea of winter and winter commutes, of the long meandering days that start and end in darkness. But tonight, stepping into the cold rain and being greeted by the warm yellow ocean of Christmas lights and by female voice singing Wicked Games somewhere on the corner near the Hudson Bay Company flagship store, the tired and light-dependent creature that I am, I felt touched by grace.

By the time I got home, the rain turned into timid snow that melted before it touched the ground, as if it hadn’t quite decided what it wanted to be. As if turning water into snow was a miracle this new winter hasn’t yet mastered. Still, I stopped in the middle of the empty street, right beneath a street light, lifted my face and looked at the snow. A few hundred meters further, some wet naked tree branches formed a kind of halo around another street light and I stood for some time, amazed, staring at this perfect spiral shape and wondering if it was always there, hidden in plain sight, or was conjured on this very night out of darkness, electric light, end-of-year sadness and first snow.

Juniper has the sweetest way of winking with her both eyes that makes her look a little like a kind owl and makes me feel safe and accepted when she winks at me across the table. She told me today something she had learned from her Buddhist teacher: that miracles are simply a way of noticing what other people miss. Amen to that.

November 27

There are two women who meet every morning on my bus. They always look happy to see each other. One looks like she’s about fifty, handsome and rather plain looking. The other one could be anywhere between sixty and seventy, she has a snow-white hair and wears funky clothes, the kind I hope I will be wearing when I am her age. They ride a few stops together, then the younger one gets off and the older one stays to ride all the way to the REM station and to Montreal. I am witnessing the daily meeting of these women with a kind of quiet gratitude one feels seeing the rising of the sun. I read that ancient Mayas were quite suspicious of the sun, believing him to be a cruel and capricious god (something to do with living in an earthquake-prone area). So, they made sacrifices to make sure the sun keeps rising. There is a tiny Mayan part in me, always anxious about the sunrise, always grateful at being granted another day. I see these women on the bus and remember that in Ohenton Karihwatehkwa, The words before all else, we thank first for the people.

Winter is coming and I feel like it will be long. I want to huddle with people and feel their bodies, their warmth, their solid form. At times like these, when everything is volatile and covered in darkness, our bodies, their textures, our smells of skin and sweat and perfume, our sheer physicality may be the best antidote to despair.

November 24

Other side of what?

This morning I woke up again with the weight of the world on my chest and my eyes were wet with actual tears. Isn’t it ironic how the only matter that makes it from the dream world to the other side are tears? Our ancestors were right, November is the time when the boundary between the worlds is at its thinnest and most fragile, when every separation, every crack in the universe is felt with particular acuteness. November is a long process of falling apart. The sequence of days and dates: first, the shift to the winter time – the early darkness, the elections, the 1000 days of war, the anniversary of two revolutions (and a long forgotten anniversary of another one), finally the Holodomor remembrance have ended in one long heartbreaking dream. I also notice that dreams, the ones that feel like another kind of reality, more immediate and uninhibited than my waking reality, often come at the end of the three-week cycle, just before my next therapy appointment.

In my dream, I was having a very big party. Not just any party, but some kind of reconciliatory fest meant to bring together family and community after a rift or some sort of tragedy, meant to make things right. There were many people and the walls of the room were warm chestnut brown, the windows were big and there was grey autumn lights outside – it looked nothing like my house, but I knew it was my home. There were many children, most of them dark-haired, loud and rambunctious. There was loud music. I was waiting for someone, anxiously. Other people at the party told me they wouldn’t come, that I should just enjoy myself, but I was posted on the sofa in the middle of the room, playing with children and keeping an eye on the door. At some point, they came. The party went on, but it stopped for me. There were three of them: a man and two dark-haired, sad-looking women. The man looked nothing like anyone I know. To be honest, he looked like Frank Gallager from Shameless, which may be explained by the fact that I’ve been binge-watching Shameless for the past three months. The women looked a little bit like the Turkish woman from my previous dream, but I didn’t recognize them. Their presence shook me. I got up from the couch and came up to the man and clung to him and started crying with the kind of cry that fills all your chest and makes it difficult to breathe. I woke up slowly, as if emerging from the depth, with my chest still aching and my eyes wet.

Something else I remember from this night is half-waking from another dream, while it was still dark, and telling myself “They need to learn how to live in darkness. This is the way we’re heading. We know how to do it, we’ve learned, they need to learn from us.” I think by “we” I referred to the Eastern Europe and to all we’ve been through during my lifespan and before. Who are “they”?

November 16

I had a breakdown. It was one of those weeks when I feel like I am walking around with no skin on. Every thing, good and bad, rips through my tissue right to my heart. It wasn’t just this week, but the one before and the one before that. Creative fever, difficult conversations, trump, soul-shattering argument with an old friend, another old friend mourning the one year anniversary of her son passing away, her son was the same age as my daughter, a joy from an unexpected Friday email from someone I am afraid to care too much about, feeling totally and completely held by people I trust, having hard time getting up in the morning, falling asleep in the evening bus, feeling various degrees of loneliness, sadness, love, feeling so much, all the time that the feeling itself wears you down, yet being afraid to let go of that feeling because if I no longer feel how will I know I exist?

Saturday morning didn’t bring peace. In a short time between getting out of bed and rushing to children’s extracurriculars, my son cried because he absolute wanted to draw a picture with a black marker and didn’t have a black marker. When we found a black marker and he drew his picture, he started crying because it was all black. Isn’t this art imitating life? Then he cried because he didn’t want to go to karate. Then my daughter cried because I saw that she still didn’t brush her teeth and said « are you kidding me? » She thought I was screaming. Maybe, I was. Then we walked through beautiful sunny morning, sulking and keeping distance from each other. Just before separating in different directions, we held hands and said we loved each other.

After I dropped off my kids, I went to the coffee place where I read my Indigenous Spirituality course book every Saturday morning and ordered coffee. I just settled at a small table in the corner, when the young girl who works there on weekends came up with a big earthenware mug of latte snd said « here » putting it in front of me. This is what broke me. This simple gesture of care. The girl walked away and busied herself putting out Christmas decorations. Coldplay’s Hymn for the Weekend was playing. I was staring at the dusty pink earthenware coffee mug in front of me, my eyes burning and tears streaming down my face. I felt so full, so whole, so grateful, so surrounded by love, so heartbroken for the loveless world. The Hymn for the Weekend ended and The Fugees’ Killing me Softly came up and I cried again, because I love this song so much and because it always matters what music plays. I wish we payed more attention.

November 11

There is a squirrel outside of my window right now at the very tip of a very thin branch of an almost naked maple tree. She is diligently picking every last remaining grain and fruit and stuffing them in her cheeks. The squirrel knows the winter is coming. Squirrel has no idea about the genocide or American elections. She has no language for either of those.

When I was young and part of the evangelical movement, our favourite joke was about the Sunday school teacher who asks children “who is little, gray, has a big furry tail and eats acorns and hazelnuts?” A little boy raises his hand and answers: “I do know that Jesus is the answer to everything, but this sounds awfully like a squirrel.”

Now, being much older, I wonder if squirrel was the right answer to everything all along.

November 8

I no longer see rainbows as a sign that God will not destroy humanity, but I am still delighted and fascinated by them. This one was waiting for me, when I finally stepped outside after an exhausting day. It only stayed for a couple of minutes.

When I was younger, I lived in the binaries. I moved from joy to despair, losing myself in every emotion completely and with abandon. I remember this one episode, I must have been about fifteen and had a falling out with my good friends – they were a newlywed couple, slightly older than me. Or, maybe they told me they had marital issues – they ended up divorcing eventually. I must add here that both me and my friends were evangelicals, so marital issues leading to a divorce did seem like the end of the world. And after this falling out I decided I would never be happy again. Never smile, never laugh and avoid talking as much as possible. I was so devastated, even worse, I was angry either the world for continuing as usual, blissfully unaware of my devastation. I think I lasted half a day, but it was an intense half a day.

Now all I see are spectrums and shades of gray. I had a huge argument with a friend yesterday over Trump election. He was angry with me for being upset about the result, while one or another made no difference in the genocide. I wanted to tell him to f*** off, but instead I said I am sorry for triggering you and I love you. And he said I love you too. Today I got an email from someone I have only met twice. Someone wonderful and young and doing amazing work in the world, who shared that they had an amazing week working with environmental justice activists in Mexico. What I realised is I like living in the world full of spectrums and shades. I like that we can cry and be angry and celebrate and despair and fuck and break things and laugh till our bellies hurt and all of this at the same time. I’ll take this world over binaries. But I have conditions: I will not pretend that I am well when I’m not, I will not hide my feelings from people I love, i will not show them to people I don’t trust, I will accept whatever people I love want to show me and set my boundaries with others and I will not be afraid to tell people I love them. Because love and unconditional acceptance is the most revolutionary, incendiary and counter cultural thing right now.

What I did on the day after the US election 2024

Get up before 6am. There is no way to not know what you already know.

Coffee. Food. Write something, anything, just not be silent.

Notice the unreasonable warmth for this late in autumn, notice the strong southern wind pregnant with rain.

Meet a neighbour on my morning commute and talk all the way about love and motherhood and future. Not mention the election once. It’s incredible how much I know about this woman and how much she knows about me just from these few shared commutes.

Change the planters for our office plants first thing in the morning. Feel earth and water and permanence of the good things.

Eat lunch at ten in the morning. Try to write emails and fail. Try to write something else and almost succeed. Text people who I love that I love them.

Go to therapy. Cry for the first time on my way there. Cry almost all the way through my session.

On my way home, see through the bus window that through small openings in heavy inky clouds shows the beautiful orange of sunset. Cry the rest of the way.

Go for a walk at night, wishing I’d thought of putting on my running gear. Try to write a course paper on Indigenous spirituality and fail. Instead, spend an hour on YouTube listening over and over and over to one song. L’Amérique pleure.

November 2 – 3

Sometimes I feel like I live on a fault line about to open. Like I can physically feel every crack in the universe. Usually, it happens around full moon, in the spring, when the ice cracks, in the autumn with shedding of leaves and all the migrations, visible and otherwise. At every tipping point: light turning into darkness, darkness into light. Speaking of which, I hate the hour change.

I love people who stop to look at something. In Ukrainian, the verb look and the noun miracle have the same root – it is anything but coincidence. In my evening walk in sad November twilight I met a woman with an old German shepherd who stopped to watch a lonely goose flying over our heads with sad sad cries. Then I saw a young man, standing next to his bike looking at the trees wrapped in pink of the dying light, reflected on the surface of the water reservoir. Then I stopped myself, as a flock of geese – relatives? – was flying low under our heads. From that short distance I could hear not only their plaintive cries, but the whoosh-whoosh of their wings. The most beautiful sound.

October 29

Thank you to everyone who’s not writing to me these days. I am doing ok. I could be doing better. There is always possibility to be doing better. As I acknowledge this possibility, I wonder if the possibility itself limits my agency in the present moment and state. I could be doing better, but I am not. And maybe I am not doing at all, but being, breathing, listening, yawning, feeling very very tired, feeling my skin lose its summer glow, my eyes losing their shine as they adjust to a bleaker backdrop of late autumn.

Anyway, thank you to everyone who is not writing me. I experience your silence not as abandonment, but as space. I know we don’t need words. I wonder… if with some of you we’ve come to wordless understanding. In the wordless understanding, there is no guilt, no expectation, no public to perform for, no eloquence, no need to prove oneself, no spellcheck, no self-censorship, no ego. The wordless understanding is defined by what it is not. What it is will be left unsaid, undefined, unspoken.

The woman in the seat in front of me is learning some language that looks like Japanese on some app. What are the chances?