I am back, the garden has greeted me with an explosion of colours, I missed the spring abundance of lilac and tulips and wisteria, but I am not complaining. Despite the heat. In the very early morning, I am listening to the familiar bird song, wondering when the tūī and the pīwakawaka will join in. The journey home was fabulous. I was treated like royalty by two airlines, with wheelchairs waiting for me whenever needed, polite porters pushing me past security queues and into cosy lounging areas with trays of food selections to nibble.
One last bit of New Zealand that has amazed me. The grandchild goes to primaray school, to hihi 4, as all classes are named after native birds. In the morning, the class stands together for the karakia, an incantation to welcome the day and what lies before them. There are many karakia in use, to start the day, a meeting, a journey, to come together, arrive home and so on.
This is the one that gets sung every morning by a boisterous group of seven year olds:
Whakataka te hau ki te uru
Whakataka te hau ki te tonga
Kia mākinakina ki uta
Kia mātaratara ki tai
E hī ake ana te atakura
He tio, he huka, he hau hū
Tīhei mauri ora!
translated:
Cease the winds from the west
Cease the winds from the south
Let the breeze blow over the land
Let the breeze blow over the ocean
Let the red-tipped dawn come with a sharpened air.
A touch of frost, a promise of a glorious day.
I have a recording of the grandchild singing it but that's private, so here is a version from the internet, same words, same melody.
In my dreams, I am falling backwards, down the stairs, out of the plane, tumbling, tumbling, through the air, endlessly. God, I hope this is just jetlag and that it will pass eventually. But I am grateful for nights of deep sleep, evenings when I try to stay awake watching movies with R (One Battle After Ânother was a hit for both of us) every distracting phone call, all the daily rituals I can manage to remain somewhat patient, another eight days to the next orthopedic follow-up, and so on. In reality, behind my jolly calm facade, I am scared. Every tinge of pain, be it brief or dull or sharp, never - thankfully - constant, makes me gag with fear. This is all new territory, I have taken mobility for granted. How could I.
I look around, it feels unreal to even imagine that I have been away for four months.
When I feel myself getting too smug, when I start counting all my blessings, I start to think about all the things that could go wrong. I remember that I have to die someday. Everything falls apart. All things tend towards chaos. I close my eyes against the mad torrent of panic. This is ok, I think. This is life, this is life, this is how it's meant to be.
Donal Ryan

Welcome home...bringing so many vivid memories from your trip, including wonderful music. Be well, comfortable and strong.
ReplyDeleteSO glad to hear you are home, safe and sound and having been treated like royalty. Of course there is going to be some pretty serious adjustment. May your fears fade with time, just as your pain does. May healing continue.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful song. What a lovely video.
Welcome home, pleased to hear that the airlines behaved themselves for you.
ReplyDeleteWelcome home. I'm so glad that the airlines all worked well, no last minute flight changes or cancellations. I imagine it feels good to be back in your own bed.
ReplyDeleteA karakia sounds like such a good way of teaching children about transitions.
It's hard to trust a body when it has failed you but there will be a new normal. I think that's what aging is all about, getting used to one new normal after another:)
Welcome home! Hopefully things will seem less chaotic as you get acclimated. I'd never heard of the karakia tradition before -- that's pretty great!
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful way to start the day. Much better than pledging allegiance to a flag, country, government. Much better to greet the morning full of possibilities.
ReplyDeleteWelcome home to your garden, your birds, R. I'm glad the trip was so effortless. Once you are fully mobile the dreams will stop I think. It's normal to be anxious while you heal. especially during a long healing. Yes, we all have to die, but not today.
Good to know you are home with R and your garden after your heartening and eventful family visit.
ReplyDeleteCodex sounds like you left a slice of heaven. Glad everything turned out.
ReplyDelete90%of the things we worry about never happen.
The other 10 we don't see coming.
;)
I'm so happy to learn you are home now. Fear is so freakin' normal. Don't you just hate it? Those flowers at the top of this post are RED RED RED. They make me happy. And the song, the morning song. So civilized and beautiful.
ReplyDelete