Kodiak---The Toilet Bowl? And, What is Your Life?

            



 I'm writing right now but what I really want to do is curl up in bed, sucking on a bar of chocolate. Any kind, really. Even M+M's will do. I'm going through chocolate and sugar withdrawal. It's been 12 hours since my last hit. And it's not helping that it's raining again all week. Like most of the last two months. (But okay, I WAS in California last week. So, I cheated: I snuck in a week of sun.) Add "sun-withdrawal" to the chocolate and sugar DT's. (And they're real!) 






     Right now my husband is out at our fish camp with our crew mending nets in the 42 degree rain, wind and fog. I'll be there in about 10 days, likely doing the same. The planes aren't making it on time these days, or at all on some days . … The trails are a morass of mud, the streets like rivers. 





                 The hardest thing about living on Kodiak Island is not isolation, not the cost of living, not the absence of roads and easy mobility, not the fact that we often get stuck for days either unable to fly in or fly out of Kodiak, and not the cost of good chocolate ….. Not these, though at times these make me want to ________.  It is this: One spring, it rained for most of 55 days, without even a glimpse of the sun. When the sun appeared one morning, it made the newspaper headlines. We average, in a typical year, one or two (partially) sunny days a week. One storm blows in with 60 mph winds, to be replaced by another from the NE, this one only gusting to 50, then a half day of sun, and here comes three days of rain. A few people who worked at a weather station here called this island, "the toilet bowl." When one storm moved out and another moved in, she'd say "Looks like God flushed the toilet!"














       So, what do we do besides trimming the webbing between our fingers? Here's a glimpse. At Homecoming a few years ago, we were inaugerating a new artificial turf field which would enable the playing of football on a green carpet rather than in a vale of mud. The town was excited. We were too. (My son almost drowned playing football one year. The entire field was under 2 - 3 inches of rain, and he ended up at the bottom of a dog pile, his face underwater.) But it rained and blew up another gale that day, which made the Homecoming games and celebrations more of a test of endurance. But of course we carried on, smiling between shivers.










                One Sunday, sitting in church, the sun suddenly broke through the swaying branches of an ash tree to cast a swath of light across the pews. We all stared with longing. I tried to restrain myself lying prone in its glow, face to the rays. The sermon that morning was  "What is Your Life?" from the question James asks in an existential moment. The answer is not terribly comforting: "for you are a mist that appears for a short while and then vanishes."  The text could just as easily have said, "For you are like the sun in Kodiak, that appears for a little while and then vanishes."  







          



 Who wants to hear how fleeting our lives are? Who does not know this? How does this help us cope with a northern geography and a lousy climate? 
               (And, even more, how does this empower me (and any other  else out there in Kodiak like me!) past this choco-sugar addiction? [What? It's going to rain and blow all next week too? I've got five words for that: carpe diem, Ghiradelli, and double-chocolate chip cookies.])  




              

            But strangely, it does help. When winter settles in for 8 - 9 months, when the most we can hope for is one or two pleasant days a week-----we dig in deep. We try to figure out this thing out----What life is for. Why we're here, alive. And why we're here in this particular place. Because this is a hard place to get to. And a hard place to stay. And a hard place to leave. We conclude it's more than wearing cute strappy sandals on the way to the beach, sipping cosmopolitans poolside, having tailgate parties at Homecoming games, going to concerts-on-the-grass, barbecuing in shirtsleeves. We conclude that life is more than shopping in malls, eating in new restaurants, exploring the city next door. We can't do any of these things. 









          Instead we gather in coffee shops and each other's houses. We cook together. We go on hikes.  


We run together in gale force winds. We go to church and hang around for hours. We sing together.  We shovel each other's driveways. We stand at track meets wrapped in sleeping bags and talk and laugh with whoever is next to us, whether we know each other or not. 




 It doesn't matter. The weather clots us together like clouds under the winds. The rain sends us all under the same tarp. We adopt each other as our mothers, brothers and sisters. We're all neighbors, all 14,000 of us. We mourn when anyone leaves. We welcome all who arrive as new friends. 










        The long long winters make our lives feel long as well, longer than a mist in the sun. We're not frittering away our days. We're working hard. To keep company with one another. To love the place we've landed. To find as much good as can be found. To do the good we should. 















         That's why we'll live longer here. Maybe not in length of days, but in fullness of days. In fullness of intent and purpose. 

"What is your life?"


I'm blessed to live in a place that forces me to ask. And that teaches me my answer. (Even if I remain a hopeless sugar addict!)


What is your answer?   















11 comments:

  1. I'm in the same boat. There's not much sun here in the Binghamton area of NYS. And you know how long our last winter was! Loving and knowing people is what life is all about. Thanks!

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  3. I'm starting over because of ridiculous typos! Wisconsin weather just might be more variable than Alaska. We can have temperature fluctuations of 30 degrees in a day! Winds whip up over Lake Michigan quickly and since we live near the water, our winds are constantly shifting. My "chocolate" is my camera. Whatever the weather, I dress appropriately and head outside to capture creation in whatever condition I find it. Sort of like Monet with his series of haystacks, I find beauty in the same subjects in different seasons, weather conditions, and times of day. I love the sense of community you have on Kodiak. Smaller places can promote more intimacy. We have found that to be true in our small farming community and our small church. Now here's a question for YOU . . . How do you stay so gorgeous and thin with a CHOCOLATE addiction?! Surely it's because the only time you sit down is to read and write!

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  4. Heather---okay, well, here's one thing I started this winter. I am reading and doing some of my writing standing up. So--there goes SOME of that gooey fat. And I agree about the camera. It does help us make and see beauty out of dreariness (though on the many days like this, we are so socked in with fog the lens has to stay macro.) We find ways, don't we, to bring good out of the gloom??!! And music, there is music. And most of all, God's word, that I cling to. Blessings, sister!

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  5. Thank you Leslie for reminding me what I miss LEAST about life on "the rock. Every time I feel homesick for Kodiak, I try to remember the weeks upon weeks of rain, mist, howling wind, over-cast skies, and even sunny days that were in fact, too cold to enjoy.

    Homer, AK: All the beauty of Kodiak (Thank you Lord for Kachemak Bay) w/ far better weather.

    Time for a stroll on the beach...

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    1. Ohh, you're mean! Thankfully it cleared up yesterday for a few hours---and it's not raining now (though will be soon.) But yes, Homer is gorgeous!! And less rain. AND it has a road to other towns! How lucky can you get?? (I hope you get to stay!!)

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  6. If Alaska is like Maine, you come out of the eternal winter and the wet-yuck of spring and, then, are devoured by black flies and mosquitos! I love how your writing gives me perspective and a touch of humor for looking into the face of not-so-great circumstances. Be sure to eat your chocolate in the house, because it doesn't taste as good with the bugs in your teeth!

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  7. Michele----ohh how I remember the black fly season in N.H!! Shudder! (I grew up there.) Alaska's state bird is the mosquito-------but I'm fortunate to live beside the sea so there is always enough wind to keep them off. Other places---ugh! Like Maine. You can't get food into your mouth or breath into your lungs without a bug net. There are some things worse than rain, I guess!!???

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  8. Hi Leslie, John and I were in Kodiak last weekend for our grandson's graduation. Almost didn't make it in or out. John actually commented when we were headed for the car on Sunday, that he was glad he had come because it made him realise that he does not miss all the rain, fog and wind and was looking forward to getting back to the sunshine. Fortunately, we are in a small community and our subdivision only has 9 homes (we are on acre lots) and we all look out for each other and lots of Kodiak folk down here already, so we are loving life :-) Getting ready to make you cookies again, but a half batch this time.

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    1. Maureen--yes and the rain and fog just continue to continue! It takes patience and perseverance to remain. I'm SO glad for you that you landed where you did!! And how wonderful to have that sense of community there! Bravo!! Yuh on the cookies. I had to quit making them. Was making them weekly for the Christian school---and that was disaster. Am currently trying to wean myself off sugar! A fool's errand likely, but truing at least!!)

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