Ceremony
Before she died, before she even knew she was sick, my friend and former housemate Mara gave me Leslie Marmon Silko’s novel Ceremony. She gave me her own copy from college, with her collegiate marginalia annotating the text—she was clearly trying to come up with a paper topic at the last minute, scribbling things like, “We need other people to help us. Can’t do it entirely alone. Relate to Aristotle?”—and the extension number for her phone in the dorm inside the front cover.
Mara gave me the book because Silko’s invocation of uranium mining on Native American land and the detonation of the first atomic weapons relates to some of the research I am doing for my dissertation and Mara felt, I think, that reading it might not only interest me, but also deepen my work as an historian.
She gave me this book in early 2004 when I was in the midst of writing my first major paper and, facing deadlines and all manner of pressing demands, I kept it unopened in my stack of “books to be read.”
Shortly thereafter, Mara was diagnosed with colon cancer—a pathology so statistically improbable in a woman in her early 30s that her doctors did not catch it until the cancer was very far advanced—and she died in September 2005. At the time, I struggled to make any sense at all of her death. Any sense at all. I can’t say that the past year and three months has given me any measure of comfort in that regard, but simply because time has passed I have, I suppose, gotten used to the fact that she is gone.
I have been thinking about her a lot lately, partly because for me the holidays always conjure up thoughts of those who are no longer with us, and partly because I read Ceremony last week. For many months the book’s close association with Mara had made it too painful for me to crack. But it finally seemed like the right time, as though I was at a point where I could absorb the message Mara wanted me to get from this novel, a message that through literature, through a story, she could deliver to me across that unknowable boundary that separates the dead from the living. And reading this book, which has so much to do with storytelling, healing, and a cyclical (as opposed to linear) understanding of time, was indeed a very powerful experience for me.
Being a scholar, my initial response was to go to the library and dig deeper. That led me to a collection of interviews with Leslie Marmon Silko, which I began reading rather carefully. This quote from Silko about storytelling on the Laguna Pueblo stopped me in my tracks:
“…there was an old custom, long ago, where the storyteller would say to one of the persons in the room, ‘Go open the door, go open the door so that they can come in,’ and it was as if ‘they,’ being ancestors, can come in and give us their gifts which are these stories, and that through the stories, somehow, even though people may be dead or gone or time is gone a long way in the past, that through the storytelling there was a belief that it all came back very immediately, that it came right back in the room with you. And so the storytelling in that sense was an act of…so that there wasn’t anything lost, nothing was dead, nobody was gone, that in the stories everything was held together, regardless of time.”
It struck me as I read this that we need this kind of storytelling in our lives, even if our postmodern assumptions won’t accommodate the idea of the immediate presence of our ancestors or past times, even if our linear sense of time tells us that once a person is dead, she’s gone forever. I began to ponder what exactly I am doing here on the blog when I tell you stories about my great-grandfather’s favorite joke, or my uncle’s approach to dieting, or my Great Aunt Frances’s knitted wedding dress. I concluded that I might be participating in a great 21st-century cyber version of “opening the door so that they can come in,” and that when you read these stories and respond to them, it is as though we are all sitting in an unbroken circle, where those who are gone are brought back to us and nothing is lost.
In that spirit, and because she was in effect the one who led me to contemplate this particular power of storytelling, I would like to tell you a story about my friend Mara, and the kind of person she was.
Mara had a delicious, sly sense of humor, she almost never complained, she kept her troubles to herself, she was a talented and greatly loved teacher at the Aurora School in Oakland, California, she had a remarkable aura of calm (particularly remarkable to those of us who are, ahem, a bit more, how shall we say?, agitated perhaps?), and she was really, really beautiful. I felt that this last attribute was underappreciated by men for reasons I am hard pressed to explain except by resort to the notion that they must have been blind.
While we were living together, she once admitted to me that she sometimes found it really annoying to have housemates, and I laughed because it was a feeling which I shared, and yet she said it in such a way that I understood that the comment was directed at the general condition of life with housemates and not at me personally. She used to go hiking every Saturday morning in the hills above Berkeley’s campus and then swing by the farmer’s market and buy the most seductive looking vegetables you have ever seen in your life. California’s finest produce. She made the most consistently delectable dietary choices of anyone I have ever met, which was entirely consonant with her life philosophy, one based on finding something to love in every day and in taking joy in everyday things.
Some Saturdays I went hiking with her. On one memorable occasion, we encountered a huge, bright orange fungus with great undulating ruffles, like a sea creature, growing up at the base of a tree. She stopped short, right there on the trail, and pointed it out to me. “That’s incredible,” she said. “That’s one of the most incredible things I have ever seen!” Her joy, awe, and appreciation for the natural world, even its less obviously attractive elements, was compelling and infectious. I never go hiking, or for that matter encounter a fabulous fungal growth, without remembering Mara.
This holiday season, I hope you take time to tell your own stories, the ones that create and maintain those connections to people and times past, and I hope that through these stories, you can create a moment in which nothing is lost, nobody irretrievably gone.
And here is my holiday wish for all of us: may everything be held together, regardless of time.
December 18th, 2006 at 1:38 pm
Thank you for that lovely tribute to your friend Mara. It reminds me of the old song, “Will the Circle be Unbroken? By and by, Lord, by and by.”
December 18th, 2006 at 3:37 pm
Wonderful story, I must see if I can get that book here in Scotland. I’m currently working on a storyteller figure for much the same reasons
bright blessings
amber in scotland
December 18th, 2006 at 4:04 pm
Beautiful, Ellen. The Silko quote – that’s the way I feel about stories. Family, fiction, history, it doesn’t matter…for a brief instant, you know someone. The writer, the person, the times. That’s what I’ve been ejoying about my blog, and the blogs I read. Even on those where I lurk, I’m still getting to know someone, and getting the same connection I do from other stories. The person writing doesn’t always have to know – but it’s nice when they do [g] – the point is that there’s still a connection being made. And even if a blog, a book, a written journal, a movie, a person leaves… Some part of them is still here with us. I get the same feeling from ancient artifacts, too. I think that’s one of the reasons for a life-long fascination with archaeology. Someone made/used this, you think in a museum, or looking at a picture in a book, and it was a person like me. And wham, it hits you that no matter how many years it’s been, yes. Yes, there was a person or persons connected to that, and it’s not just a fragment of pottery or such any more. It’s something that was in touch with a person you now know existed.
Hi, Mara. Nice to meet you.
December 18th, 2006 at 5:26 pm
It’s uncanny sometimes. . . . I’ve been contacted by someone who knew my great-grandmother on my dad’s side – I’ve been trying for a while to “nail down” who she was. Most people in this part of the world claim an “Indian princess” as an ancestor. Family legend said that my Gramma’s momma was half Indian. I’ve been trying to find out if that’s true or not – still trying to find it out, but this woman who contacted me has told me some wonderful stories about my great-gramma, and her daughter, my aunt. That connection with the past is something that we should never, ever lose. Growing up in the southwest and with the Indian (Pueblo, Navajo, Apache) culture all around me, you’d think I’d already know that, but I apparently need to learn it again. Thanks for the reminder!
December 19th, 2006 at 1:37 am
I think I have a lot to say about this – it resonates with an amazing conversation I had tonight and some things I’ve been thinking about. I don’t know if I will get my thoughts together to say the things I might have to say about this, so in the short form…yes. and thank you. and I’m so glad to have met Mara right here today for a minute.
December 19th, 2006 at 2:12 am
That was such a poignant post, full of peace and love. It was a softly lit window.
December 19th, 2006 at 6:04 pm
You summed up all of those we miss and remember during the holidays. Just last week I began writing about a world-traveling friend and debated on posting it. Thanks for sharing Mara’s story and giving me the inspiration to share about my own “dearly missed” friend.
=:8
December 20th, 2006 at 11:30 am
This is a lovely meditation, Ellen. Those whom we love and have loved form a circle around us. Sometimes we fight being in the center of that circle, and sometimes we revel in it. But nonetheless we are there.
Merry Christmas!
December 20th, 2006 at 2:50 pm
Ceremony is one of the books that I hold with almost mystical reverence. Thank you for the beautiful thoughts about time and memory and spirits.
September 8th, 2007 at 2:42 pm
I am an unlikely visitor to your fun Blog. I found you while searching for more on Ceremony by Leslie Marmon Silko. You are probably aware that Silko is a “living State Treasure” of New Mexico. I loved her book. Your story about your friend who passed on the book to you is remarkable. I just wanted to say I noticed and was touched. Thank you for sharing your story. We have nothing without the stories. P.S. I am forwarding your blog to my Mom because she loves knitting.