The Amazing Creatures of the Pacific

I was early for class so I stopped in briefly at Mad Monk Center For Anachronistic Media then at Moe’s Book Shop on Telegraph. There was a large table, maybe labeled staff favorites or perhaps it had no label at all. As I glanced around, a small book with exquisite illustrations* caught my eye and I leafed through it. Inside were more colorful illustrations and each page was devoted to one or more of the inhabitants of Pacific Tidal Pools. I’ve been to tidal pools, always enjoy Fitzgerald Marine Reserve down by Moss Beach, but I know next to nothing about the inhabitants of the pools. I’ve never studied Marine biology.

I made the purchase, placed it in my purse, and didn’t give it a thought until the next day, riding home on BART. I had a seat so I took out the book – time to read up on these life forms. What I found in those pages was a brain teaser, things difficult to get my mind around. I couldn’t believe I wasn’t reading science fiction.

I read about the Aggregating Anemone which can split itself into two clones which, in turn, can follow suit. The resulting Anemones cluster together in a colony and will do battle should another, similar colony of clones, intrude into their space. Imagine if you could leave a part of yourself behind in a painless way – maybe a tear or a drop of sweat. And then, without any nurturing, parenting or encouragement by you, the original you, it could grow into another you! And what you were missing would regenerate making you whole again. The Strawberry Anemones share these cloning talents.

The Frilled Anemone can reproduce asexually by splitting in two. No nurturing needed here either. Imagine this skill as a procreation possibility for those who choose a celibate life.

Brooding Anemones are born female but as they grow, they develop testes and continue till death as a hermaphrodite.

Not to be outdone by the Broodings, all Owl Limpets are born male but at a certain stage, when they are bigger in size and more mature, they all transition to female.

Imagine if all women dropped dead after giving birth. That’s pretty close to the female Giant Pacific Octopus that dies as soon as her eggs hatch. I think these hatchlings are self-sufficient as the book didn’t mention the male octopus taking part in any nourishing or nurturing of these tiny creatures once mama was gone.

A type of Turkish Washcloth can live up to 90 years producing descendants that grow from spores, year after year. These descendants only survive for all of a year while their originator may be around for decades longer.

I had no idea we were sharing the planet with such fantastic creatures.

*Fylling, Marni (2015) Fylling’s Ilustrated Guide to Pacific Coast Tide Pools, Berkeley CA: Heyday

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Synchronicty, coincidence, or flukes

A series of coincidences, synchronicity, or just flukes?
I was in Oakland finishing up a client project and went to a bookstore. I always start in the memoir/biography section but that day, I didn’t see anything that grabbed me. Next I checked out the “how to” books on writing. 
  
I saw a book “Writing The Mind Alive” about the proprioceptive method, which sounded somehow familiar. I had to get back to work so I bought it and left. I commute home by BART/bus so that evening was my first chance to crack it open.
  
I read the acknowledgements and there was a thank you to Christiane Northrup who was one of my doctors when I lived in Portland Maine.  I’ve seen her on TV and know that after I left Portland, she wrote some popular books on healing. That was interesting. Then I see that Northrup wrote the entire forward to the book.
  
I learned that the author, Linda Trichter Metcalf and her partner Tobin Simon  had a Writing Center in Rockport, Maine and I thought, well, I must have seen something about proprioceptive writing when I lived in Portland – but I had no memory of it.
  
When I got home, Mary Anne was on the phone with her sister Katy. It was Katy’s birthday. I went to the computer and looked up proprioceptive writing and saw that there was going to be a weekend writing workshop, nearby – in San Rafael, which is just over the bridge from where we live. I pondered if I should consider going and if I went, if I should sleep over or just commute each day. I went back to the living room and discussed it with MA. She said I should sign up and should sleep over.
Then we were talking about birthdays as her brother’s was the next week and hers the week after and she said “and you know what’s after that” and I said,”yes, your father died.”
Her father died the day after her birthday and her mother died the day after the birthday of one of her brothers. She said it would be the 30th anniversary of her father’s death. We talked for a while then I went back to the computer to find out more about the class, the retreat center, and to register/pay.
  
In looking at the web site for the retreat center, Santa Sabina, in the About Us section, I read the design was influenced by Sister Raymond O’Connor – Mary Anne’s father was Raymond O’Connor! In doing a search for the Sister, I see she died back in the 1930’s and they refer to her as Mother Mary Raymond O’Connor as she was the Mother Superior of the Dominican Order that was at Santa Sabina ( I’m not Catholic – I hope I got that right?). I made MA’s hair stand on end when I told her that. She had to go in our office and verify it on the computer screen.
  
The next week I was working in Berkeley so one lunch hour, I went to a bookstore there – straight to the memoir section. I scanned the one bookcase of memoirs and didn’t see anything but I had more time so I started over – book by book. I saw there was one book- Drinking the Rain – about Maine -by Alix Kates Shulman . I knew she was a famous author or a famous person but didn’t remember her books. I wasn’t sure why I knew her name but I know now. The back cover told me she left NYC and moved to an island in Maine so I bought the book (it’s about Maine so how could I go wrong?) and I went back to work based on that alone. Later, riding home on BART, I cracked it open and saw it was dedicated to Linda Trichter Metcalf and I thought, wait a minute, isn’t that who wrote the proprioceptive book? And soon I had verification.
  *
I loved  Shulman’s memoir, the island was Long Island, you can get there by ferry from Portland. I’ve been there once.
*
There was a woman L in my support group and her partner was Jane Wray, an artist. One weekend, my girlfriend and I went out to Long Island with Jane, L, and Jane’s mother  – or am I remembering incorrectly – was her mother still living there? The Wray’s had a house there and Jane had lived there when she was young.
That day, her mother told us stories about WWII when there were a lot of soldiers stationed on Long Island and people stayed up until all hours drinking, dancing and playing cards (no TVs yet). The entire visit, Jane’s mother sat in the kitchen, sipping a small glass of sherry and smoking cigarettes and telling us stories but of course we took a break for a walk and went down to the beach and probably walked by a long driveway where Jane may have said “a famous writer lives there.” 
  *
So we were out on Long Island because Jane and my girlfriend were making a trade – one of Jane’s paintings for a small sailboat. A friend of my girlfriend’s  (Nancy, an architect) was sailing that boat from the mainland to Long Island because Jane wanted it there.
  *
So Nancy finally arrived, the trade was made, and I’ve never been back to Long Island. However, I loved that painting and it hangs in my house today.
  *
So when I sat down to write this with book in hand, on opening it I saw the first acknowledgment in the proprioceptive book was a thank you to Alix Kates Shulman! It must not have registered consciously with me before but maybe that’s why I pulled her book off the shelf back in Berkeley. Still, I can’t believe there was just one  copy of her book among their limited supply of memoirs and now it belongs to me.
  *
When I told my friend Val, who lived in Portland when I did, all about this, she told me had been a visiting nurse out in Long Island and met so many interesting people there and she’d read Alix’s memoir 3 or 4 times. So soon, I will start again on page one.
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