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Phyllis
Chesler, Ph.D, is an Emerita Professor of Psychology
and Women’s Studies at City University of New
York. She is a best-selling author, a legendary feminist
leader. This article first appeared in her newsletter:
https://phyllis-chesler.com
I am editing and also expanding a new book and thought--why
not? Let me share some pieces that are not "political,"
that do not document or analyze the considerable sorrows
of our 21st century here on earth. I hope you enjoy
this little piece, first published in 1998 in On
The Issues Magazine. Do tell me what you think
of it, whether it gave you a moment's pause from the
incessant debates about the incessant war zones.
When
in doubt or trouble, but also in times of joy, I always
return to the sea: to put things in perspective. In
America, only the elements seem eternal, and as such,
afford splendid relief. Elements have the power to transport
me out of my self. Perhaps the sea is my Confessional.
Always, I come down smelling of the city and secular
anxiety, grimed over with it. The sea washes all that
away, I am reborn in her salty beginning.
I
meant to go to France, but when the trip fell through,
I found myself driving out to the Hamptons, on New York's
Long Island, a place that, for me, is far more than
merely "trendy." I've written books here;
the place is my own splendid, shining, American Riviera.
I need only squint, slightly, and I can see Monet's
Mediterranean: lush green foliage, dazzling white light,
sails on the water, umbrellas on the beach, the human
enterprise—sandy, wet, impossibly hopeful.
Before
I see her, I can hear her, smell her, taste her in the
air; she is misty-salty on my tongue, pleasantly rank
in my nostrils, a rhythmic pounding in my ears. It never
fails. I am always slightly overwhelmed each and every
time I first catch sight of the sea, it is so heart-stoppingly
enormous and yet utterly familiar; it brings one back
to childhood summers—no, to a world far older
than that: to the very origin of our species. When we
left, we took the ocean with us; it is in our every
cell, we are, as biologist Carl Safina writes in his
recent book Song to the Blue Sea, "soft vessels
of sea water...70 percent of our bodies is water, the
same percent that covers the Earth's surface. We are
wrapped around an ocean within."
In
America, the elements remind me that life is short,
and therefore precious. Only the elements truly comfort
me. Sky, sea, stars, all were here long before human
beings first built campfires; with any luck, they may
still be here at the end of time. The elements test
your mettle against natural forces. The sea reminds
us that we have to take what comes as it comes, that
some disasters cannot be avoided; that luck or fate
is everything, but skill and courage count too. Especially,
expect the unexpected and prepare: to ride it out, pray,
die, live—and live hard.
The
town of Easthampton is 350 years old, older than the
American Revolution, far older than that, since Indians
once lived here. On April 29, 1648, white settlers (mainly
Englishmen from Maidstone, in Kent, but some from Holland
and Wales, too) purchased Easthampton from the Indians
for 20 coats, 24 hatchets, 24 hoes, 24 knives, 24 looking
glasses, and 100 muxes (tools for making wampum). In
1660, a group of Easthampton men bought Montauk for
100 pounds sterling.
Once,
I owned a pre-Revolutionary cottage on Three Mile Harbor.
I never did find out whether its earliest inhabitants
had been whalers or tanners, soldiers or preachers.
Tradesmen, perhaps. I do know that the house was cold
in winter and hot in summer, had low ceilings, incredibly
wide plank floors, small rooms—but I was charmed,
instantly, by its long history. It belonged to this
place. The large, modern houses have yet to prove their
staying power.
Monday:
A rainy day, sea-side. Midmorning, the sky is dark and
Scandinavian-wintry; by midday, thunder rumbles, indoor
lights keep flickering off, the sea is grey-black, the
air raw, wet, damp. There is no lightning, but the sky
is pale and ominous, sheets of darkening rainwater slant
before our eyes; the sky closes in, descends over the
waters, the sea turns up the volume, her waves grow
wider, wilder, white. A few wet birds sing. A lone figure
trudges along the beach. Friday: Today, morning is all
haze and fog, and the beach-walkers appear, as if in
a dream. One cannot tell air from water, land from sky.
After five days of steady, often torrential rain, suddenly,
in a flash of unannounced heat and light—the sun
appears. I do not trust it, but I have no choice.
It
is disingenuous, cruel perhaps, for outsiders to romanticize
an element in which they themselves do not risk their
lives. On a bad day I'd call it slumming, or even exploitation,
as when heros die, are maimed, and the bard is praised
and enriched for telling their tale. But it is oh so
human to honor others for doing something we dare not
do.
I
have no illusions about the sea, which has been known
to wipe out a human being—no, entire shiploads
of sailors and passengers—in hours. Suddenly.
Without pity. Only a hundred yards from land, minutes
from rescue. Sometimes, ships have gone down off the
treacherous, sandy bars of southern Long Island in full
view of distraught rescuers, who could do nothing. In
1850, feminist writer Margaret Fuller, on her way home
from Italy, drowned only a hundred yards from the Fire
Island shore. The cemeteries in Amagansett and Easthampton
are filled with monuments to native sons who died at
sea and to strangers who washed up on these shores:
frozen in "great blocks of ice", still clinging
to shattered masts. The sea is so lovely—for a
killer. Make no mistake: Despite sophisticated rescue
technology and heroic air- and sea-rescue teams, here
"weather"—hurricanes, gale-force winds,
rogue waves—remains a Major Player in human destiny.
(Read Sebastian Junger's book, The Perfect Storm.)
Although
I used to sail, in my twenties, and will never forget
the blessing of calm waters and steady wind, or the
nights on board under the stars, I lack the sailor's
and the fisherman's profound patience and courage in
the face of natural catastrophe. I am no Viking, or
pirate (although I love all the myths about them, the
true stories even more). I love the sea as metaphor,
and from shore, safely. Although there was that one
time, five years ago, in Amagansett, when I was alone
at the ocean's edge and a great storm hit. All the houses
around me were dark. Someone called to say that the
police were evacuating Long Island beachfront communities.
And then the phone went dead. Rain lashed the windows,
sounded like hail. I made myself a stiff drink and decided:
"What the hell, so one Jew gets washed out to sea,"
and went to bed, woke up to a shining Hampton morning.
It
was as if the storm had never happened—but it
had. "Time is but the stream I go fishing in,"
wrote Henry David Thoreau. I also fish, in other, more
metaphoric waters. Like sailors and fishermen, I have
premonitions. I act on them. Despite the dangers, and
the high risk of failure, the wearing, boom-and-bust
cycles of the writing life, I, too, keep returning to
sea. I have traveled through deep waters, usually alone,
my entire life, so I'm used to it; it's too late to
turn back, too late to learn another way of being in
the world.
Over
the years, I've asked mountain climbers, deep-sea divers,
sailors, wilderness survivalists, what living in Nature
requires. They say: You must be prepared, remain alert,
never lose your "cool" or give up hope; they
say your chances of survival are better in a group than
alone. Enormous patience is everything. Time stands
still, or is irrelevant when one lives in the moment
and for the task at hand. One gets to where one wants
to go not at any cost, but rather as a function of adjusting,
and re-adjusting to the weather. Is the sea too stormy,
the surf too high? Is "getting there" on time
worth dying for? Can we get "there" if we
die? Saturday, Montauk Harbor, 5:15 pm: The fleet comes
in all at once, like a school of fish, in formation,
silent, safely home. I note the tanned and barefoot
boys of summer on board. Ye olde fishermen would probably
be amazed that there is only one commercial fishing
boat among them. All the rest are sport-fishing boats.
It's a recreational Armada. Still they keep coming.
A mighty brigade of stragglers begins to round the bend.
One is flying a skull and crossbones and playing the
Grateful Dead. The day is so very lovely that even this
does not offend.
Sunday:
A bride and groom are in each other's arms on the beach,
close to the surf; all decked out in white gown and
tuxedo, shoe-less. The sea is to be their witness, their
place of memory. It seems absolutely right.
I
am unanchored now, heading off, once again, into uncharted
waters. My mother recently died. The sea is my mother
now; the surf, her heartbeat. For the moment, it is
all I need.