Who I am.

I write about the landscape of grief, nature, and the wisdom of fools. The author of four books, my essays, poems, and reviews have been published in over 50 journals, including in the Huffington Post and Colorado Review. I’ve won the River Teeth Nonfiction Book Award, the Chautauqua and Literal Latte’s essay prizes, and my work has been nominated for four Pushcart Prizes and named a notable by Best American Essays. My account of hiking in Yosemite to deal with my wife’s death, Mountains of Light, was published by the University of Nebraska Press. http://www.markliebenow.com.

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Life is a River

I do not like dying. None of us do, I suppose. Every time someone or something we love dies, part of us dies, too.
Whenever I return to Yosemite, I want to see the places I’ve come to love, but invariably they have changed in some way, and I can’t stop them from doing this. After my wife died, I wanted to preserve every aspect of my life with her, but I suspect that if I’m focused on an increasingly dusty past, I will miss seeing what life is doing now. Trying to stop life from changing is like trying to hold back the flow of the Merced River with my hands. 

I do not like it when the air turns cold and leaves fall off the trees in autumn, the woods go bare, and green bushes turn brown. Because of the warm green shades of summer, I’m not a fan of muted brown. I turn away from the windows thinking that life has ended outside and there is nothing more to see. 
Yet, when the leaves are gone, I can see further into the distance and notice a barred owl sitting on a branch, deer moving down by the creek, and the sunset lighting up the bare trees in the woods. The brown colors are warm and inviting, and the scent of the autumn woods makes me think of deeper and eternal matters.
Then snow falls and changes the personality of the woods again, this time into a stunning landscape of white with black brushstrokes, and its quietness astounds me. I forget about autumn as I fall in love with winter, and I will not want it to change into spring. Then it does.

In spring, the river fills up with snow that has recently melted in the highlands. From the middle of Mirror Meadow, I’m delighted to find that I have a clear view of Half Dome rising 5000 feet above me without the trees blocking my view, and I watch the climbers that have returned to the valley slowly making their way to the top. There is such peacefulness here.

This meadow used to be a lake with stunning reflections of the mountains, until the park stopped dredging the sediment brought in by the river. Some of my favorite trails are gone because of rockslides. This forces me to scout out new trails, and I find places in the valley that I never knew existed.

As the world keeps changing, I discover how much more there is, and how grief fits in. As I say goodbye to one season of life, I am also saying hello.

8 comments:

  1. I am inspired by everything you write. I lost my husband 8 years ago. So much of what you write resonates with my ongoing journey. Thank you.

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    1. You're welcome, Mary. Comments like this keep me writing. It is such a long journey, isn't it. I no longer think that we work to get back to the path we were on, because we are now walking a different path.

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  2. Beautiful as always, Mark. I'm reminded of one of my favorite quotations, "Don't push the river; it flows by itself." Blessings to you, and thank you for yet another inspiring piece. ♥

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  3. I agree, Mark. I am a different person on a different path. I just keep following my inner voice...my soul. Peace be yours.

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  4. I seem to have an ever-changing love/hate relationship with the seasons here in Ithaca, New York. I always want to hold on to what I had or have but as I'm forced to move from trilliums and trout lilies to dusty trails of summer, and then to dropping leaves and finally mud and snow, I come to appreciate where I am in time and space, and see the changes reflected in my own energy and inspiration.

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    1. Good insight, Robin. There are seasons inside us, too, and they respond to the changes going on in nature.

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