Read Knocking on Heaven's Door: The Path to a Better Way of Death Online
Authors: Katy Butler
Tags: #Non-Fiction
until I gave up on sewing. I hated her when she grumbled, “I’m
not your servant!” while cooking our dinners and cleaning our
toilets and reading Betty Friedan.
After I graduated from college and spent a year working for
a lawyer in Aspen, Colorado, I returned home for a couple of
months before my final move to California. At one of her parties
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katy butler
I inflated a few weeks of volunteering at the
Aspen Times
into the journalism career I dreamed of. She said sarcastically, in front of a
lovely woman with red ringlets from San Francisco, “Oh! So you’re
a
journalist,
Katy, are you?” And yet her eyes filled with surprising tears a few weeks later as she watched me load the Rambler I’d
been issued by a car transport agency, carrying a map of America,
my handful of newspaper clips, and the three hundred dollars I’d
earned cataloguing votes in a
My Weekly Reader
presidential poll.
When I got that Rambler stuck in a ditch in a Colorado bliz-
zard, I did not call her for help, nor did I after I was fired from
my first job in San Francisco, reading the news on an FM rock
station. I didn’t ask for money. I applied for unemployment and
food stamps and Medicaid. I interned for an alternative weekly.
I told her nothing.
I hated her on the Christmas Eve when I returned to Connect-
icut wearing a pair of used thirteen-button wool navy pants and a
new red turtleneck and green cardigan bought especially for the
trip and got into my parents’ car to hear my father say, “Doesn’t
she look nice?” and my mother say, “Too many colors.” I wrote her
off as a perfectionist housewife and a frustrated artist resentful of
the role she was trapped in, jealous of my creative expression and
my childless freedom. I disdained in her everything her genera-
tion of educated, childbearing middle-class women had become
and I feared becoming myself: what Adrienne Rich called “the
victim in ourselves, the unfree woman, the martyr.”
And all through my twenties, whenever I walked on Stin-
son Beach, I remembered how she longed for the long, empty
sweep of the South African beaches of her childhood. When I
saw a single oak rising from a cleft in the tawny flanks of Mount
Tamalpais, I thought of her collecting dried wild weeds when
we walked around Lake Waban in Wellesley, and how she’d
cull and crop that armful of scratchy things into an arrange-
ment of improbable, austere beauty. When I saw the Golden
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Gate Bridge light up ruby in the day’s last light, I’d miss her and
wished she were with me.
That is how things stood between my mother and me until she
and I independently discovered Buddhism. My moment of awak-
ening came by accident when I was twenty-eight. Heading for a
camping trip in the Grand Canyon, my North Beach flatmate and
I decided on a whim to detour to a hot springs we’d heard about,
inland from Big Sur, deep in the Ventana Wilderness. In my dusty
secondhand Toyota hatchback we crawled seven miles up a wind-
ing one-lane dirt road, stopping at its highest point, Chews Ridge,
to look out. All we could see were the jagged green Santa Lucia
mountains, overlapped like spearheads arrayed on their sides,
their knife-edges rising skyward, their bodies, enrobed with trees,
flowing down into the canyons to wet their feet in Tassajara and
Church Creeks, which feed the Arroyo Seco River. We got back
in the car and drove the road’s serpentine twists, gravity push-
ing us downward as I beeped at the blind turns and pumped the
brakes to make sure they didn’t scorch and fail. We parked in the
hot dust where the road ended and walked through a massive,
dark, Japanese gate into a wooden settlement that looked like a
cross between a medieval Buddhist monastery (which it was in
the winter) and a New Age hot springs resort (which it was in the
summer). The sign out front read, “Tassajara Zen Mountain Cen-
ter: Zenshinji.” It turned out that an old friend, who’d disappeared
months earlier from the leftist political scene in San Francisco,
was a Zen student there, and he showed us the garden, the stone
zendo,
and the “Goodwill” free closet, where you could drop off unwanted clothes and take what you needed.
I woke up at dawn in a redwood cabin, hearing running foot-
steps and the jangle of a handbell followed by the deliberate
Chuck! Chuck! Chuck!
of a mallet against a wooden block hung
from the eaves of the meditation hall. Dressed in dark pants and
a long-sleeved T-shirt, I hurried down the path in the chill, past a
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young man in a wide, black, medieval kimono limned by a white
collar, as elegant as a man in a tuxedo, as he struck the final
chuckchuckchuck
rolldown on the
Han
after checking his digital watch. I put my flip-flops on a shelf, skittered down a walk-
way, lifted my left foot over the left threshold as I’d been shown,
bowed to the gray stone Gandharan Buddha statue in the dim
space, and took my seat in half-lotus on a black, pebble-shaped
cushion facing a white wall. I counted my deepening breaths in
the safe, communal silence in a practice not so different from
those that nurtured generations of my Quaker ancestors.
A handbell dinged. My left foot was asleep. We rose. I put a
flat, padded
zabuton
on the floor and, with my weight on my one good foot, made nine full bows, along with everyone else, touching my forehead to the cushion. For a religion that some adher-
ents claimed was not a religion, it sure had a lot of ritual—more
genuflecting than the Catholic Church, it seemed. Together we
knelt and chanted from a translated Japanese poem that I loved
but did not understand: “Yes, in darkness there is light, but don’t
see it as light. Yes, in light there is darkness, but don’t see it as
darkness.” My knees hurt. We chanted some more, about filling
a silver bowl with snow and hiding a heron in the moonlight.
I loved the language. It pointed to something that I, a lifelong
maker of phrases, couldn’t put into words. “Sentient beings
are numberless,” we chanted. “I vow to save them.” When it
was over, I walked out into the clear morning light. Something
nameless was alive inside me, a pool of pure water long hidden
in a covered well. I had time and I had space in a way I’d never
before known. I didn’t care that we chanted in languages that I
didn’t understand or that young men named Tommy and David
and Reb had shaved their heads and put on robes and now went
by Issan and Tensho and Tenshin. I wanted more.
*
*
*
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When next my mother came to stay with me in San Francisco, I
was living in a three-flat building I’d bought in the slums with a
loan from my father, not far from the city headquarters of San Fran-
cisco Zen Center, which owned Tassajara Hot Springs I shared it
with a roommate and my brother Michael, who was then work-
ing as an electrician and also practicing Zen. Before my mother’s
arrival, I vacuumed out a small utility room, tucked sheets and
blankets imperfectly around a single-bed mattress on the carpeted
floor, and set a tiger lily in a glass jar atop a fruit crate I’d taken
from the streets in Chinatown. On the bottom of the crate, I put a
book for her:
Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind,
by the late Suzuki-Roshi, who’d founded Tassajara and my new religious home.
She was among the first off the plane and smiling—wary,
pleased, and expectant. The plane had been oversold, and,
thanks to her perfect blonde chignon, silk scarf, and subtle
jewelry, she’d been bumped to first class. On the drive home
in my cluttered Toyota, she told me that sometimes the worst
things in life turn out to be the best things. Breast cancer had
led her to a support group run by a cancer doctor named Ber-
nie Siegel at Yale-New Haven Hospital, and that had led her to
yoga and opened her mind to meditation. I was thirty then, and
my mother was fifty-four. Eight years had passed since her two
mastectomies. I’d seen her scarred body soon after her surger-
ies—she’d once burst into my bedroom in Middletown, naked
and gesturing, “Look at me! Look at this!” The flesh over her
ribs was so thin that I could see her heart pulsing. But when she
was dressed, you’d never have known.
We pulled up at my building in the gentrifying and seamy
Western Addition, and she made all the right noises and thanked
me for the lily. Together that weekend we drove across the Golden
Gate Bridge to Green Gulch Farm, a pocket in the green coastal
hills of Marin County, and walked silently into Green Dragon Zen
Temple, housed in a renovated bull barn. There she sat for forty
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minutes with her back straight and her legs folded up like mine
in half-lotus, facing the wall. Afterward, in a living room full of
bold abstract paintings, black meditation cushions, and couches
set at right angles, we listened to a shaven-headed American Zen
priest whose life energy seemed to radiate palpably yet invisibly
from every cell. Tears filled my mother’s eyes, her hands clasping
and unclasping. The priest was speaking about embracing this
instant, with its joys and pains, and he picked up his teacup with
a sense of the sacred that did not require a god. My mother whis-
pered, “I’ve been waiting to hear this all my life.”
We drove the four hours to Tassajara, down crowded Highway
101, past the lettuce fields of Salinas and the rich second homes
of Carmel Valley, past a dusty trailer park on the Cachagua Road,
past a scattering of houses in the settlement of Jamesburg, and
finally onto the fourteen-mile dirt road over Chews Ridge, famil-
iar to me by then. Down we went into Tassajara Canyon, trun-
dling our bags to a small redwood cabin with a tatami-mat floor
and two low futon mattresses. She was paying for me.
The Zen aesthetic accorded well with her exquisite minimal-
ism. Outside the zendo one evening she exclaimed (loudly enough
to disturb those meditating inside) over a bowl carved into a stone
block, fed by water trickling from a hollowed-out bamboo stem.
On a shelf in our room, a tiny glass vessel held a single bud.
We walked across an arched wooden bridge to an old stucco
building whose hot springs had warmed the joints of the Esselen
Indians and Victorian travelers who arrived by stagecoach, and
in the 1930s, Hollywood movie stars. I slipped into the commu-
nal hot pool on the female side, joining other quiet women. My
mother filled her own tub in a small private room: she was shy
about her missing breasts. When I was hot enough, I stood up
and made ready to head naked down the stony bank to an area
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of Tassajara Creek sheltered by sheets of rush matting, where
other pink and naked women lay, letting the cold waters wash
over them. My mother hesitated to join us, ambivalent, ashamed.
“You are not only doing this for yourself,” I said. “You are doing it
for all the women here today who will someday get breast cancer.”
She took my hand and together we walked into the water.
No matter how bitterly we fought after that day—and we
did—my mother was no longer only my mother to me. She was
my dharma sister and my spiritual companion. The next year,
when I took a leave from the
Chronicle
and worked in the Tas-
sajara kitchen all summer, she came again to visit. She took
black-and-white photographs of an elegant monk named Issan
Dorsey, who had once been a meth addict, a female imperson-
ator, and a prostitute.
My mother went home, printed and developed her photos of
Issan, and took up the Japanese practice of
sumi-e,
painting the
enso,
the highest and simplest form of Zen calligraphy, making
circle after bold, one-stroke circle, each a unique expression of
the state of mind and body of the artist and the circumstances
of its moment. From then on she would send one every Christ-
mas to my brothers and me, along with a check for three hun-
dred dollars and a note reading “love, Ma,” embellished with a
heart. I gave her books like the
I Ching
and
The Tao Te Ching.
When I was thirty-four, I wrapped myself in a white silk kimono
with sleeves, lined in red silk, so deep they nearly brushed the
ground. Around my waist I wound a cream raw silk obi my
mother had sewn me and pinned it closed with a borrowed topaz
brooch, a bowl of brimming yellow water, bought by my father