Friday, April 25, 2008

Peace Prayer Team on ETSY



A Peace Prayer Team of Etsians has been assembled (and more are welcome!):   each time a prayer is "purchased" the team stops what they are doing and prays the following prayer:

"We have complete and total faith that the universe is showering the earth in Peace. May Peace Prevail on Earth".

The "cost" of the prayer is .20 because that is the minimum listing amount for an item on ETSY.  The .20 cent listings are paid for by the individual team members on Etsy who list the prayers. There is no monetary benefit to anyone but ETSY...a small price to pay for a team of peace pray-ers.  You don't even have to "pay" for the prayer!  Just be sure to check out completely!  Also, if you'd like a photo of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, that can be sent to you for .61 cents!



If you'd like to join the team and aren't a member of Etsy, that's fine! Just contact me and I'll add you to the Team list for notification when a prayer is "sold".


Thank you for supporting all efforts toward World Peace. May Peace Prevail on Earth.

Caladonia March

Sunday, April 13, 2008

Helen Hanna Eulogy

Delivered at Saint Paul's Episcopal Church, Norfolk on April 12, 2008

Greetings everyone, and thank you so much for being here with us to celebrate the life of a delightful woman of tremendous light named Helen Hanna.
I want to take this time to thank all of you who embraced Helen into this community. Like a hug from Charlotte Leinbach, Helen, like Charlotte loved the human race. She was so open to encounter, but never intrusive. You can imagine the plethora of cards and calls we’ve received over the past ten days since her death. So many of you have mentioned that you had the most wonderful encounter with her the very Sunday before her passing. Thank you all so very much for caring for her and holding her so dear and close in this community she enjoyed for five years, and specifically these 2 or so years since George’s death. I suspect that she is the first “New Englander” invited to the Second Circle, but Iris, Chappie, Ann Brook, thank you for letting her drink too much wine so that she had to be driven home after her first meeting!
1. There are so many tired cliché’s about mothers in law. None of them apply to Helen. Helen Hanna, over the course of 19 years taught me by example what it is to be a good mother. Helen’s motives were always certainly fixed on seeing others happy. She lived her adult life in devotion to her sons: she and George frugally saved to send Kevin and Chris to Ivy league schools.
2. She was champion to Kevin’s preternatural artistic abilities while nurturing the spiritual gifts he brings to that process of creating fine art. Her first five years of retirement from teaching 5th grade, were spent providing daily care to her first Grandson Liam so that Kevin could continue to take commissions and create his world class sculpture.

To say she was Chris’ biggest fan would be a most unfortunate understatement of the excitement she brought to the theatre experience. She was a life long devotee of the stage, in fact, that is how she met George Hanna, working in community theatre in Westchester. She was planning to see Hank Williams the Lost Highway at the Wells last Saturday, with her new friend Ann Brook, and if Helen had ever heard a country tune in her life, I would be stunned if she remembered it’s title, but she would never pre-judge a play based on “what it’s about”, she would experience the play with an open mind and bring intelligent inquiry and observation to the post show discussion. And Ann Brook, I’d love to see the play with you if you are still interested.

In the words of Nick Wheeler, she was a “Grand Lady”. I met Helen in 1989 and in all those years there was only one brief moment that she was not in complete control. In Dec. of 2006, she had surgery to repair her broken hip. On Christmas Eve we broke her out of Lake Taylor Rehab, where she was recovering, so she could join us at the Tekamp’s for Christmas dinner. Mark, upon assessing the situation, gently got her out our car, knelt down, laid her over his shoulder and carried her into the house. I wish I had a picture to show you of a Helen, relaxed, in surrender, veritably thrown over the shoulder of that gentle Giant Mark Tekamp. Truly, it was a blessed sight to behold!
Helen had an exquisitely sharp mind and a decidedly eloquent way of speaking. A life long writer, she often recorded for others her perceptions and impressions of their situations; to receive a birthday letter from Helen was an envelope thick with eloquent remembrances, and andecdotes, thoroughly infused with love and sincere caring. In a world where time has become the most coveted currency, Helen made time to share her gift and love of writing with others.
If we live as we die, my mother in law is a shining example! She was the Energizer Bunny! At 86, she kept going and going until she no longer did. Her friend Jane commented to me that what was so unique about Helen was that in her aging years she continued to form new relationships and I know many of you were the recipent of those new found friendships. In Connecticut, Helen had joined a writers group, again, atypical of an 86 year old and I imagine they will miss her sorely when she doesn’t return as they hoped she would in May. She was happy up until the last moments of coherent thought and I cannot imagine a more fitting end to an extraordinary life of love and service to her family and friends. Helen was a beloved kindred spirit, a woman of great faith and of deep wisdom. She was tenacious, frugal, hard working and uncomplaining in the discomfort and pain she experienced later in life as her body began to deteriorate while her mind continued to sharpen! 

For those of you who had the honor and joy of knowing Helen, I offer you my sincere condolences on the loss of your dear friend.


. Helen showed me the love and tenderness and nurturing that my own mother was not capable of. My sister in law Mary and I were truly the daughters she had hoped for and I am deeply grateful for the time with Helen on this heavenly earth. God was so very generous and merciful in granting me the gift of being with her at the moment her body surrendered it’s existence, I touched her head, so hot with fever, touched her wrist, seeking her pulse; made contact and FELT the last of her beating heart...the final beat of a loving heart, passed like a relay baton, into my own loving human flesh; to cherish and hold and continue to be inspired by a woman whose love of family, life, God and all his magnificent creations knew no end, no boundary. Helen Hanna is resurrected in each of us whom she loved so dearly. Death is certain as is the knowledge that Love never ends.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Helen, So High



Helen, So High

On a late September Thursday, 2005, within the definition of a balmy, still fetid kind of "when is this humidity going to end?" indian summer, my mother in law, Helen Hanna flew to Norfolk from her sunny, two hundred year old Connecticut farm house to attend the opening night performance of Virginia Stage Company’s production of Crowns. Helen was 84 at the time and, having arranged meticulously for the elaborate elder care details of her ailing husband of 50 years, she set off on a solo adventure. A gracious Russian immigrant arrived in a Lincoln Town car to drive her to LaGuardia: her sole purpose to support and enjoy, for probably the sixty seventh time in 25 years, the imaginative mind of her beloved son Christopher, artistic director of Virginia Stage Co. Helen, (a young ingenue in her Barnard days) was a life long devotee of the stage, in fact, she met George Hanna, her husband of over fifty years, working in community theatre in Westchester, New York.

The moment I greeted her at Norfolk International Airport she began to regal me with the high points of her bumpy trip down the mid-atlantic coast, specifically, the kindness of a stranger who assisted her navigation of the labyrinthine machinations of Dulles Airport, Washington D.C. Arriving upon the arm of a quintissential southern gentleman, to the gate that would bridge her journey to Norfolk, a fellow passenger informed her that her compatriot had been none other than U.S. Senator John Warner, that dashing and eternal U.S. Senator of Virginia, perhaps more widely known as husband number 4 or 6 or 8 of Elizabeth Taylor. Senator Warner, with his undeniable charisma had won her over and inflated her spirit to such a degree that she was emboldened to flirt I think, just a little. For a few moments, she returned to the ingenue of her college years, Helen Phillips Hanna, ever demure and thoroughly engaged in the presence of chivalry and the attentions of a kind and generous man. For these brief moments, gently led by a man of integrity, glamour, beauty and intelligence, she escaped the role of dutiful daughter turned wife, procurer of tired rattan trays set with tin flatware, applesauce, rice pudding and milky tea, delivered diligently three times a day to a husband, diminished for years by weakening lung capacity, unable, though perhaps unwilling, to lift up off a dusty and ancient sofa to meet the dignity of a table well laid.

I deposited Helen at her winter home, two doors down from the love nest Chris and I have created over our 14 years on East Severn Road. We would share five winters with her in this manner, she and George summering in their diminutive Connecticut farm house, wintering in the milder temperatures of Tidewater, Virginia. For Helen to make this time for herself to enjoy her river cottage south of the Mason Dixon line, was a respite she courageously carved out for herself and in perfect health and mood, I left her to her thoughts.


On Friday, at about 5:30pm , driving home from my jewelry studio, my cell phone rang. Answering, I heard the ominously anxious voice of my beloved, asking me to come to DePaul's emergency room, where he'd taken his mother who thought she was having a heart attack or a stroke. Being asked to arrive at an emergency room is tantamount to blowing a cosmic dog whistle that only I can hear. There is a Saint Bernard with a life-giving cask of brandy around her neck who took up residence in my heart when I was ten years old and I relish being called into service in times of drama, trepidation, worry or imminent death. Adrenaline kicks in and my sense of purpose on the planet is completely engaged. Actualized in my fullest potential, I am Florence Nightengale in a dog suit, ready and on the spot to save the day or die in the attempt. Say what you will, I bring a certain undeniable confidence to the impending death scenario. Fascinated by the process? You betcha! Energized by the beauty of the leaving, absolutely! I just LOVE being in the presence of the peacfully departing.

I arrived to fetid ambulance exhaust wafting into the cloying heat and humidity of a drab hospital emergency room, where the notion of functioning air conditioning has apparently been usurped by an automatic door that refused to close. Among the hurt and ailing gathered in their gloom of pain, there sat Chris with his mother, saying his goodbyes, while Helen slumped in the shabby blue wheelchair she'd been put into, her blouse asymetrically buttoned, unable to keep her eyes open. Her speech was slow, she had difficulty connecting the dots of her thoughts and she said she "just didn't feel like herself, almost as if she were outside of her self". I knew fairly quickly what the problem was.

Shortly, she asked me to help her to the bathroom and there was born the dynamic of helping my mother in law onto the toilet. This moment is important, for there now exists between us a humbling and loving intimacy that we had not, til now, had the opportunity to show one another. While she tinkles, so softly into the bowl, I ask what she has eaten today. She inventoried her breakfast of peanut butter toast, her lunch of soup and a pear, and then uttered the statement I assumed would be next: "oh and I found those little brownies you left for me in the freezer and I had THREE!"

Yes, I had left little chocolate cupcake shaped brownies in Helen's freezer because in her absence, it was her kitchen where I baked medicinal marijuana brownies for a friend of mine with brain cancer. I baked at Helen's to avoid Jesse's inevitable "mom, what is that funky smell?" inquiry. It had been several days since I'd made them and I kept reminding myself that I needed to get them out of her freezer.

When I pulled Chris aside and told him what I knew to be the truth he was furious! Not many people have seen my husband angry because it just doesn't happen very often...but believe me, he was mad enough that my first question was, "are you going to divorce me? " He said, "No, I'm going to go open my show while you deal with this situation you've created." So he and Jesse said goodbye and I sat down to wait for Helen to be seen by a doctor. By the time we did move back to cubicle three her nausea had passed, and she was beginning to feel a little better.

Now, I doubt that many of you have pondered what you'd do in my situation: You've inadvertently gotten your 85 year old mother in law very, very high on the active ingredient in cannabis...THC. You are so very relieved that A., she’s not dying and B., you know what the problem is. But what of the ethical dilemma? In all honesty, you can't make a bad situation worse by adding the cost of unnecessary tests to what is quickly becoming a laughable situation. If you are like me, which is to say somewhat of a coward, you can't even tell her what's going on because it's just too complicated to explain to a very stoned elderly person that your belief in the healing and soothing power of marijuana for medicinal purposes is something you are willing to break the law over. But the real truth is that I'm afraid of being judged and so I cop out and don't tell her what's going on.
And then we proceed to have the sweetest, most intimate time of our nearly 20 year relationship. The beautiful thing about Helen is the way she mirrors the love and compassion we are each capable of. She tells me how much I've meant to her, I tell her how much she's been the good mother to me. When she tries to go philosophical she can't make her thoughts connect into sentences, is frustrated and incredulous at her inability to think in a straight line! Over and over I tell her "let it go, it will come back around." Asking Helen Hanna to let go of something she's after, like coherent thought, is tantamount to asking her to give up chocolate. Or brownies for that matter!

Finally, about 9pm, 5 or 6 hours after she's ingested enough THC to last a cancer patient about a week, a tall, kind and compassionate doctor arrives and begins to interview her. She is still speaking slowly: and challenged to hold onto a conversational thread but this woman is DETERMINED to be understood and given the God-like status she bestows on male physicians and her almost flirtatious manner toward doctors in general, it is just an awe-inspiring sight to see her engage fully with this man asking her to follow his finger as he creates an arc in the air, her determination to touch that hand when instructed as it moves slowly in front of her, her own ability to count backwards and forwards with her own fingers. In other words, she passes the basic neurological tests with flying colors. And let me tell you, she is darned proud of herself and so am I! When the doctor completes his exam and turns to go order scans and blood work and x-rays and what have you, I follow him out and ask for a private audience.

I ask if I may speak off the record, he says,

"Yes, of course."

"I have a friend with brain cancer and sometimes all she can eat is brownies and sometimes those brownies have THC in them and sometimes they don't and I believe my mother in law has ingested THC. "

"Well, that is something we would normally check for."

"And I don't want to go to jail."

"Well, it won't be because of me".

THANK YOU DOCTOR~ THANK YOU SO MUCH!

So, blood work is done and ultimately the doctor comes back to privately tell me that THC is "on board" and that given how strong her vitals are and that she is in my care, they would like to release her and send her home. Don't you love that? "In the care of " the daughter in law who left marijuana brownies in her freezer. I wish I could adequately describe the thrill and collective smirk of the emergency room personnel as, one by one, they heard this story. "hey, did you hear about cubicle three?? 85 years old and high as a kite."

I took my dear mother in law home, put her to bed, removed the brownies from her freezer and went home gratified and humbled to have dodged a bullet that hours before Chris and Helen had briefly thought might kill her. The next morning she was amazed to feel absolutely wonderful and her old self. The treasure of this entire ordeal/experience was her sincere gratitude at being alive to live one more day. And that she didn't miss Crowns! She saw it Saturday night and loved it~
The story would end here if I hadn’t shared the story with my friend Sonja. She’s a brilliant radiation-oncologist and she said adamantly, “you have to tell her”. And why hadn’t I told Helen that she wasn’t dying? The truth is I was so guilt ridden and ashamed that it took me almost a month to gather my courage to call her and tell her what had really happened that night. My fear was that she would judge me, but no, that would be my own reflection looking back at me. My mother in law, Helen? She laughed out loud and said,
“My goodness, I’ve had my first slice of pizza this year, you introduced me to sushi and now I’ve taken marijuana!”

Helen Hanna died on April 2, 2008.

May she rest in peace with lots of chocolate and brownies and tall handsome doctors.

Friday, April 04, 2008

Helen Hanna 8-29-1921 to 4-2-2008




On Monday afternoon, my mother in law, Helen Hanna set out on her dining room table, all important information and papers that would be required in the event of her death. She then stripped her bed, got her purse, locked the front door and drove herself to DePaul Hospital. While crossing from the parking lot to DePaul’s entrance she fell and hit her head on the curb. She was taken to the emergency room, Chris was called and he arrived in plenty of time to say goodbye. Her last words were, “oh, this is so bad!”, the nurse said, “what’s so bad,honey?”. Helen replied, “I’m so happy”. Those were her final words and for this we are grateful.

She was transferred to Sentara’s Trauma unit where it was determined that she had been having a stroke. The fall resulted in the brain hemorrhage that would take her life, which ended peacefully at about 1:15pm on Wed., April 2. I was fortunate to be with her at her end, in fact I was taking her pulse when her heart beat its last.

God is so very merciful. If we live as we die, my mother in law is a shining example of this! She was the Energizer Bunny! At 86, she kept going and going until she no longer did. She was happy up until the last moments of coherent thought and I cannot imagine a more fitting end to an extraordinary life of love and service to her family, friends and the children she taught professionally for twenty years. Helen was a beloved kindred spirit who experienced great joy from seeing people happy, especially her sons, Kevin and Chris, and her grandchildren, Liam, Nora and Jesse.

Helen had an exquisitely sharp mind. A life long writer, she often recorded for others her perceptions and impressions of their situations; to receive a birthday letter from Helen was an envelope thick with eloquent remembrances, and andecdotes, thoroughly infused with love and sincere caring. Helen Phillips Hanna was a woman of great faith and of great wisdom. She was tenacious, frugal, hard working and uncomplaining in the discomfort and pain she experienced later in life as her body began to deteriorate while her mind continued to sharpen!

For those of you who had the honor and joy of knowing Helen, I offer you my sincere condolences on the loss of your beloved friend. Chris and Jesse and I are most grateful to have spent her last months with her here in Norfolk. She was looking forward to returning to summer in Connecticut, spending time with Kevin and Mary, Liam and Nora. Her plan was to take it easy and write. Since George’s death 28 months ago, she afforded herself the luxury of a little more time writing in her spiral bound notebooks, with a blue Bic pen, medium point.

Her memoirs complete, she was ready to take on her first novel.

Namaste` Helen,
May You Rest in Peace