If I returned to the place I felt most at home in my life, I’d unlock the door to a basement
apartment on Washington Park in the early 1980s, kitchen open to a private backyard—an extra room
for cookouts, gatherings, reading, listening to music—all with the feminist
friends who made up family, women who cooked and worked and played together, who
kissed and hugged and held each other with love and accountability. Who do we spend time with? What is justice and where could we find it or
how can we build it? A Women’s
Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice is one of many visions we shaped into
reality—trial, error, and success within reach while the home oasis softened
the journeys we took separately and together, experiments with collective living
and problem solving.
Can I get
more specific? A joy to come home at
work’s end and find messages in the notebook by the telephone—no mobile phones,
no texts. A precious kind of silence and
trust. Looks like 5 for dinner. I make
spaghetti with tomato sauce and salad, and put up a pot of lentils for soup,
and as guests flow in, they add a wedge of cheese, a loaf of homemade bread, onion
and celery for the soup, a jar of salad dressing, halvah desert, and a CD of
new music. A wonderful breaking of silence with tales of the day and evening
plans, maybe a rehearsal or movie, maybe a meeting at the women’s center.
Each move, we weave
new
webs of friends
flavored with the
same herbs and
spices.
My blog poems are rough drafts.
Please respect my copyright.
© 2024 Susan L. Chast