2 April

To New York City (Again): Outsider’s Journey, Horse Pilgrimage

by Jon Katz
Pilgrimage To New York
Pilgrimage To New York

Tomorrow, well before dawn, Maria and I will get up and she will drive me to the train station in Albany, where I will catch a 5:55 a.m. train to New York. It is a beautiful ride down the Hudson, I’ll bring a book, listen to music. will carry two  big bags, one for my camera, one for an extra lens or two.  It will be a long day, a fruitful day, I will learn something and feel something, that is what it means for a writer to be alive.

I’m going to talk to some of the carriage drivers, the story feels incomplete to me without a clearer sense of them, and of how they feel being put in this intense and uncertain position. They seem to be forgotten in the conversation, I want them to tell me if they will drive those “cruelty-free” eco-friendly fake vintage electric cars, I need to look into their eyes when I ask them. I always am drawn to the human side of stories, I always was.

It is a curious pilgrimage to me in a way, the  outsider’s journey, this is so much of my life, it is so familiar. I loved being a reporter because I was always the outsider who could peer inside, and then leave. I am not one of the horse people, I am not one of the animal rights people, I can’t imagine that in six months I will not be writing about something else. I am an outsider everywhere I am, it is in my bones.

Yet the carriage horse story has caught me, captivated me, gotten into my head as few things have. Perhaps the horses really are talking to me, perhaps this is, as some have suggested, a thing I have been waiting to right about for years, it incorporates so many of my ideas and feelings about animals. Still, I wonder why I am getting up yet again to go to New York again, hauling all of my bags around. Again.

In all of my life, the only place I know I have really belonged is with Maria, in her life and our life together. I am never an outsider with her, I am home where I belong.  I am an outsider everywhere else, I know it and accept it and when I go to New York and wander amidst this mesmerizing and closely knit tribe, I know I will be an outsider again, I am not looking to join, to be on the team. That is not what I want, I know it and they know it. I am different from them. It is not my destiny to be on any team but the one right here all around me tonight. I accept that, I am learning who I am.

But still, I want to hang in there with these people, in one way or another, we are on this journey together. One of the old carriage drivers, long retired, came up to me in New York during the Liam Neeson appearance and he gave my hand a ferocious shake, I was surprised by the grip of such an old man. “I think you are Irish,” he said, “you write with your heart.”

And my heart tell me to go. Again. I’ll be back Thursday night.

2 April

Poem: The Heart Is Right To Cry

by Jon Katz
The Heart Is Right To Cry
The Heart Is Right To Cry

The heart is right to cry,

when even the smallest drop of light,

is taken away,

When even the smallest drop of love,

goes cold.

We may kick and stamp our feet,

and scream in protest,

Once a day,

in the morning,

the donkeys and I

will speak in the silent language,

we look into each others eyes,

and they say to me,

“Hey, friend,” we see  you

know the joy and wonder of

our existence,

this will free you from

the earthly thing, from

the sorrows and worries

of people.”

2 April

Mermaid For the Dahlia Garden

by Jon Katz
Mermaid For The Dahlia Garden
Mermaid For The Dahlia Garden

I’ve been eying this figurine on the porch of Jack’s Outback in Cambridge for weeks, I’ve even taken a few photos of it. I bought it from Jack today, we are putting it in the soon-to-be-expanded Dahlia garden in honor of Spring, which appeared suddenly today. Jack says the figure is a mermaid,  you can see her tail and conch, and she is also wearing a fig leaf. I might bring it into my study as a muse, I really love it and maybe it will be happy in the Dahlia garden, I am happy to have it.

2 April

First Sheeperding: 2014. Happy Dog

by Jon Katz
First Sheepherding
First Sheepherding

For the first time in more than four months, enough grass appeared in the side pasture for Red to do a bit of herding. I didn’t want to do too much, as four of the girls are pregnant, so we moved slowly, Red got to work on his legendary outruns, and the sheep mostly huddle in a circle and stared at him as he raced around. This is the first time Red has really gotten to work since December, he was a happy dog, and I am a happy herder. Spring has emerged, still fighting its way through, but just about here. Today was a beautiful day and I am grateful for it.

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