Wine and Chile

Wine and Chile

I must confess that I did not take a single picture during this week of Santa Fe’s Wine and Chile Fiesta.

Not of food, that is.

CancerRoadTrip, healing, cancer, Chile and wine

View from the Santa Fe Opera

And that’s because I attended Saturday’s Wine and Chile festivities, enjoying offerings ranging from oysters to lamb chops, and wines from sauvignon blanc to some excellent pinot noirs. Two hands were needed to manage both food and wine; no room for a camera on this foodie foray!

But on an upcoming trip to the Paso Robles area, pictures will be taken. Paso Robles is one of my favorite pinot regions. The cool sea breezes and warm days produce remarkable pinot noirs; but more on that later.

The Santa Fe Wine and Chile Fiesta

The Wine and Chile Fiesta in Santa Fe is a gathering celebrating the food of Santa Fe, matched with many of California’s best wines. Dinners at various restaurants throughout the week offer food and wine pairings, with most meals in the $150/head range. So many restaurants, so little time! But I passed on the individual dinners, lunches and various culinary events to attend the Grand Tasting at the Santa Fe Opera.

CancerRoadTrip, healing, cancer, Chile and wine

Santa Fe Chile Rista Photo Credit: Unsplash

Peaked white tents set up in the upper parking area at the Opera provide shade and seating, while thousands of people meander among Santa Fe’s favorite restaurants. Accompanying them are wine producers, many of whom were from California. And they brought some wonderful wines for tastings, ranging from a Silver Oak Cab to a Paso Robles Justin series of reds.

Takes on local food, like stunning grilled shrimp tacos were scattered among the offerings. But most of the food choices transcended geography, and were simply delicious. Wagu Beef; fried oysters; raw oysters with a green chile salsa; paella; honey pork on arugula salad; the list goes on.

I obviously decided that this event was not for the diet conscious, although much of the food, served in beautiful, artfully arranged,  small portions, was actually fairly healthy. Well prepared crustaceans, fish, meat and vegetables met with some excellent wine offerings to create a fun and memorable afternoon.

CancerRoadTrip, healing, cancer, Chile and wine

90 wineries poured samples of every varietal imaginable Photo Credit: Unsplash

Not to leave out the art community, this year’s Santa Fe Wine and Chile Fiesta poster artist was Ed Sandoval, who currently hails from Taos.

The history of this event goes back to 1991 when Mark Miller, Al Lucero, and Gordon Heiss got together to organize a one day food event that would grow into the world class, one week celebration that the fiesta is today. Over three bottles of Joseph Phelps 1985 Insignia at Cafe Sena, the first Wine and Chile Fiesta was launched. The full story behind all this on the Santa Fe Wine and Chile Festival site, www.santafewineandchile.org.

Seventy restaurants and ninety wineries made this year’s Wine and Chile Fiesta a total success. Sommeliers, guest chefs and local chefs all provided food and demonstrations throughout the week. If you’re a serious foodie, this week in Santa Fe is one to put on your calendar for next year. Proceeds from the event go back into restaurant and culinary education in Santa Fe.

CancerRoadTrip, Santa Fe, travel heals

Downtown Santa Fe

More Foodie Forays With CancerRoadTrip

Life is short. Good food nourishes one’s body and soul. Here are a few other (among many!) foodie posts on my travels.

Foodie Forays 2017
Culinary Travel Karma: Dublin and Killarney
Art, Flavor and Elegance at Resturant Martin

Oyster Quest
 

Like This Post? Pin It!

CancerRoadTrip, healing, cancer, Chile and wine, travel heals

If you’re interested in learning more about photography (or cooking or film or any number of topics) check out MasterClass All-Access Pass for on-line excellence:

[et_bloom_inline optin_id=”optin_10″]

What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

Follow me on Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and at Anti-Cancer Club.  Connect with me!  I may need a place or two to stay along the way!

Sound For Healing

Sound For Healing

Using sound for healing is an art thousands of years old. Sound, after all, is energy and it was discovered long before X-rays and sonograms and many other modern medical wonders.

And sound can heal.

A chance meeting brought a form of sound therapy into my life. In addition to the omnipresence of lymphoma always lurking in the background, I’ve been dealing with  Dupuytren’s Contracture which is causing my fingers to curl and become severely crippled. I am quite concerned about loosing the use of my right index finger, and thus the use much of my right hand.

The medical options include needle aponeurotomy, steroid injections, and enzyme injections. These interventions tend to last only for a short period of time. Surgery does not offer any good statistics or guarantees either.  

In short, these options address the symptoms, but not the underlying disease. Welcome to modern medicine.

So I’ve been on a lookout for options. That’s when travel serendipity struck yet again.

I was invited to give a talk about CancerRoadTrip. Afterwards a woman came over and introduced herself: Laurie McDonald.

Meeting Laurie is so Santa Fe. Here is a highly educated and accomplished woman with a resume that would kick butt anywhere. She has a BFA, from the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design; an MA, from the University of Houston; has studied sound therapy in New Delhi/Chennai, India with the Nada Centre for Sound Therapy (and earned a CNCMT); and is a Certified Acutonics Practitioner, in Santa Fe, New Mexico (www.soundtherapysantafe.com). And an author (Travel for STOICS). And a pioneer in working with sound therapy and vets for PTSD; and a film maker with clients such as the Whitney Museum of America Art in New York.

For me, the combination of acupuncture with the energy of sound made sense for a connective tissue issue. I’ve had superb results from acupuncture over the years. I’ve used it for tennis elbow; for general well being; to manage horrific chemo side effects.

As a result, acupuncture is among my first line choices for healing. Combined with the energy of sound, it made sense to me for a connective tissue problem. So I thought I’d give it a go.

Laurie warned me to keep my expectations low; she made no promises. But I’m a few weeks into this now and I’m seeing real improvement, particularly in my right hand. If I can just stay the progression, I’d be happy. But progress! Beyond my wildest dreams.

But it shouldn’t be. Over time, through travel and travail, I’ve come to look for healing disciplines that treat the cause, as well as the disease. It’s here that modern medicine bats .500. I’m on a quest for the other half of that equation. And sound for healing may be part of that equation for me.

To discuss sound for healing, let’s start with a look at acupuncture, because my current explorations are combining both.

 

Acupuncture

Mind/body medicine, sound for healing

Acupuncture

 

The history of acupuncture goes back over 8,000 years, long before modern medicine even existed. Think about the centuries of practice and experience in this tradition.  The Chinese use it for everything from healing to anesthesia during surgery.

The basic principle, derived from thousands of years of use, study and observation is based on Taoism which promotes a balance between yin and yang. Using over 2,000 acupuncture points that have been identified in the body, fine needles are used to adjust the flow of energy and restore health and balance. Acupuncture is also used in pain management, as one New York Times reporter learned from personal experience.

Richard Nixon’s opening of China opened the door for acupuncture to be introduced to the U.S. But is was when New York Times reporter James Reston  successfully used it for surgical pain during an emergency appendectomy while in China, and his ensuing articles about his experience, that mainstream America started to notice.

Over the centuries, acupuncture has become a vital part of  healing for many people. Given my experiences, the idea of accessing the acupuncture points using sound vibration made enormous sense. Particularly in dealing with the connective tissues issues in my hands.

Sound For Healing

Using sound for healing is part science, part art, and part ancient tradition.

Sound is simply the vibration of matter. And humans are systems of vibratory matter.

Matter tends towards harmony. The process is called entrainment. Entrainment explains why metronomes synchronize and why people can bond deeply over a conversation. Humans vibrate in resonance with their surroundings.

The ancient Tibetans and other cultures understood the importance of sound. The Tibetans used the deep rich song of singing bowls in their healing practices; the shamans of Peru use the repetitive beat of drums to bring on a deep meditative state. In our own culture Martin Luther King, knowingly or not, used the sound of his voice and the cadence of his speech to resonate with his audience.

Sound is energy. How do we use it? What impact can it potentially have on our lives and health?

From Dr. Mitchell Gaynor, MD

Sound can change our immune function. After either chanting or listening to certain forms of music, your Interluken-1 level, an index of your immune system, goes up between 12 and a half and 15 percent. Not only that, about 20 minutes after listening to this meditative type music, your immunoglobin levels in your blood are significantly increased. There’s no part of our body not effected. Even our heart rate and blood pressure are lowered with certain forms of music. So, it effects not only our soul and our spirit, but it effects us on literally a cellular and sub-cellular level.

 

Sound transcends time and traditions. It brings up memory and emotion.

And if both the ancients and the neuroscientists are to be believed, perhaps sound is a channel to the mind and the body’s memory of emotion.

 

Sound for healing, CancerRoadTrip

Photo Credit: Fancycrave, Manali, India

 

Sound and Harmony

Researchers have discovered that cells resonate at particular harmonic frequencies. When these cells are healthy, they vibrate at “optimum balance,” like tuning forks. Obviously, disease is dissonant or disharmonic, having a negative effect on cells.

Cancer, like many other diseases, may reflect an imbalance in the body. Modern medicine often does an excellent job at fighting disease, but finding deeper personal, emotional and psycho-spiritual healing is what many cancer patients need.

I have come to believe that finding peace and harmony is a critical part of healing. Cancer fractures your life. Futures are gone; relationships may change; physical after effects may impact your ability to do things.

The need to heal, and to regroup, is a need for harmony.

To my mind, it’s about finding that energetic balance, whether it’s through the coherence of meditation and heart such as HeartMath; through acupuncture or yoga; through massage or sound.

Everyone is different and everyone resonates (no pun intended) with different modalities. The key is finding something that suits you.

So it is I’m on an exploration of sound for healing, at least for my hands.

Laurie McDonald uses a system called Acutonics, which uses vibrational sound on acupuncture points. This system was developed by  Ellen Franklin, PhD and Donna Carey LAc  in Taos, New Mexico.

Acutonics brings together the wisdom and efficacy of Oriental medicine, psychology, science and the arts, with the energy of sound. Precision engineered tuning forks are chosen for their specific vibrational frequency and are placed on the various points in the body. The harmonic combinations and the use of acupuncture points are used to manage, move and rebalance energy.

The idea behind using sound for healing is simple, while the execution is more complex.

Practitioners may study for years to develop the fine sensibilities of providing vibrational sound healing. The tuning forks provide feedback. Is the sound moving smoothly, or encountering resistance? Is the harmonic frequency the right one? Are the acupuncture points chosen wisely?

Is sound healing?

***

Synergy in Sound for Healing

Sound does more than simply resonate within the body. It has the ability to touch deep into one’s psyche and emotion and it is here, science is coming to believe, that healing occurs. Neuroscience is catching up to age old wisdom, recognizing that mind and body are one.

Candace Pert was a scientific leader in this quest. Her book “Molecules of Emotion” chronicled her successful quest to show that neuropeptides linked the mind and the immune system. Her research showed that your thoughts impact your biology.

 

 

The mind and body, she argued, are one.

 

If thoughts are energy that release neuropeptides, what of sound that touches an emotional chord within?

From Dr. Gaynor’s book, The Healing Power of Sound:

“According to Beverly Rubik, a leading expert on energy medicine, energy fields form inside and outside the body carry information that changes and perhaps even regulates cells throughout our bodies. …Sound waves are yet another form of energy that can conceivably influence neuropeptides and their cellular receptors.  And if we recognize that our own biological healing systems are influenced by energy fields, we can begin to understand why sound and vibration are important new tools for healing.”

Gaynor relays a story of one patient, who finds peace with his cancer by delving into the pain of his adoption. Using sound for healing, he connects with his pain, and in connecting with it, he is able to release it. Years later, he is living with cancer, but otherwise healthy.

Anecdotally, I hear many, many stories of how deep healing impacts biology. What helps us to reach deep? Is sound perhaps one modality?

If mind and body are one, is the resonance of energy through sound part of the neuroscience of healing?

Can sound help us by-pass our social conditioning to find a deeper internal resonance for health?

 

What are the sounds in your life?

 

vibrational healing, CancerRoadTrip

Photo Credit: Marius Masalar

***

CancerRoadTrip is a trip of curiosity, soul and deliverance.

Curiosity because I can’t help myself; soul because it’s what gives life substance; and deliverance from the constraints of my culture. I sense a deep need to see more, to experience more and to know more than the superficial tumult of the waves on the modern surface of our society.

My life has, and continues to be, a journey. Starting with the existential threat of cancer with all it’s emotional ups and downs; to discovering the transformative effects of meditation; to acupuncture; to sound; to other cultural perspectives of health.

 

Independent of cultures, certain healing traditions seem to emerge in my travels.

 

From the stories of the Tewe people, to the shamans of Peru, there is a story of soul, connection and harmony that is missing in our mass produced, consumeristic, judgmental society. The connection is deep, it is of the earth and it is spiritual in nature. The Ka Ta See talk of finding one’s song. Here the idea of sound becomes a metaphor for soulful exploration and harmony.

Barbara Culbertson (shaman, friend, and wise woman) said to me that our lives today are 180 degrees from the wisdom of the ancients. I agreed when she said that, but as time goes on, I wonder just how far we’ve veered from our connection to the earth and our place in the universe.

 

Photo Credit: Joshua Earle

 

What is it that opens the doors to deep connection?

What timeless modalities unite us with the wisdom of the past, to find the truth of the soul?

And what impact does this synchronistic way of life have on our health, our families and our communities?

 

 

More Reading on Sound For Healing

 

 

Mitch Gaynor, integrative oncologist and author of The Healing Power of Sound,  sadly died recently. His insightful, out of the box approach to complimentary healing has much to teach all of us.

In this book, he explores the cultural traditions and techniques of using sound for healing and for soulful exploration. This is an amazing book. If the idea of using sound for healing intrigues you at all, this is a must read. And, as always, your purchases through this website are greatly appreciated.

Bernie Siegel, M.D., author of Love, Medicine, and Miracles, and  the ground breaking Yale oncologist says of this book:

“This book is about healing your life through rhythm and harmony. Read it and learn how to orchestrate your life.”

As an aside, I’ve had the pleasure of having Dr. Seigel enter my life twice. The first time was in the eighties, at Yale. He gave a talk about the emotional and psychological aspects of healing. Needless to say, the neanderthal mindset of the surgeons in the room dismissed him (actually, they weren’t even that polite).

Some years later, I spoke to Bernie again. We talked about Anti-Cancer Club. He told me you can’t heal or effect change by being against something. It took me some time to see the wisdom in his comment.

He quoted Mother Teresa:

“I was once asked why I don’t participate in anti-war demonstrations. I said that I will never do that, but as soon as you have a pro-peace rally, I’ll be there.”

–Mother Teresa

It’s only now, many years later, that I truly understand the profound wisdom of this philosophy in life, in one’s soul and in cancer.

 

More Reading on Healing and Travel

Peruvian Healing Traditions: Ka Ta See
Puye Cliff Dwellings: Earth Spirit, Fire and Art
Labyrinth Walking in Santa Fe
Serendipity: Life Lessons from the Road
The Mayan Ruins of Chichen Itza and Chaccoben

 

Like This Post? Pin It!

 

Sound for healing

 

If you’re interested in learning more about photography (or cooking or film or any number of topics) check out MasterClass All-Access Pass for on-line excellence:

[et_bloom_inline optin_id=”optin_10″]

What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

Follow me on Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and at Anti-Cancer Club.  Connect with me!  I may need a place or two to stay along the way!

 

The Burning of Zozobra

The Burning of Zozobra

Zozobra, or Old Man Gloom as the creature is known, was created long before Burning Man was even an idea. Each year, residents of Santa Fe write down their woes on pieces of paper, which are then stuffed into the fifty foot figure made of wood, chicken wire, and papier mache. Everything from pathology reports, to mortgage papers to cremated ashes finds its way to Zozobra.

Then, on the Friday before Labor Day, Zozobra is set spectacularly ablaze. In the fire, all the gloom and doom contributed by residents, perishes for the year.

The event traces its roots back to William Howard Shuster, Jr.  who, in 1924, started Zozobra with a private party. His inspiration for Zozobra came from the Holy Week celebrations of the Yaqui Indians of Mexico; an effigy of Judas, filled with firecrackers, was led around the village on a donkey and later burned. Shuster added some personal touches, like a costumed dog parade and the Hysterical-Historical Parade

Zozobra may have started as a bit of a spoof, but it’s now thoughougly ingrained in the Santa Fe calendar. Accompanied by the the Desfile de Los Niños––the Pet Parade––and the Hysterical-Historical Parade, Zozobra opens the celebration of Fiestas which date back to 1712.

Here’s a bit of background:

From  Mountain Mover Media on Vimeo.

 

This year for Zozobra, I avoided the crowds of 50,000+ people and watched from a nearby hillside house. It’s an annual event that allows your worries to go up in flames, with the hope of a bright and unencumbered future. What more could one ask for? Absolution from worry (if not sin) for the remainder of the year, wrapped in a Santa Fe party!

Zozobra 2018

Zozobra

Zozobra, 2018, Santa Fe

More Reading On Santa Fe

Labyrinth Walking in Santa Fe
Four Museums and A Garden
The Art, Beauty and Culture of Santa Fe

Like This Post? Pin It!

 

zozobra

If you’re interested in learning more about photography (or cooking or film or any number of topics) check out MasterClass All-Access Pass for on-line excellence:

[et_bloom_inline optin_id=”optin_10″]

What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

Follow me on Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and at Anti-Cancer Club.  Connect with me!  I may need a place or two to stay along the way!

The Blog: Behind The Scenes

The Blog: Behind The Scenes

A lot goes on behind the scenes of this blog.

I wear many hats, from research, to travel, to writing, to photography. Networking and meeting people. Filming and making pitches. Let’s look behind the scenes, here in Santa Fe.

The Blog: Behind The Scenes

What’s a day in Santa Fe like with CancerRoadTrip? Here are some looks at daily life.

 

[rev_slider alias=”behindthescenes1″]

 

I’ve been able to establish a bit of a routine that includes daily exercise, walking with my Urban Poles or hitting the elliptical when time is tight; a matcha latte with almond milk in the morning (matcha for its antioxidant support, in lieu of coffee); having a few favorite things with me.

Wind chimes ring at my front door; Clarence (the gargoyle, in the slider above and picture below) looks over my small office; an old and favorite bracelet waits for me every morning. Weekends at the Farmers Market, events like Indian Market, an evening out at the Opera to see Madame Butterfly, and activities like hiking fill in the balance.

 

The Blog: Working from Wifi

 

CancerRoadTrip Blog

My office in the casita

 

 

“I work very hard, and I play very hard. I’m grateful for life. And I live it – I believe life loves the lover of it. I live it.”
– Maya Angelou

 

There is good and bad about writing a blog and being something of a digital nomad. The good is that you can work from anywhere. The bad is that work is always with you. I’m grateful to be truly passionate about what I’m doing.

A blog can open many doors. It forces me to get out and constantly explore. (See Life Lesson #1)  It means interacting with people from all over the world. It means on-line learning to develop your skills.

And of course it’s all a bit of an adventure.

From the first year, some milestones:

  • Twitter has grown from zero to over 10,000 followers, reaching to over 1.1 million people/month (and growing!)
  • Instagram is coming up on 10,000 followers soon
  • Visited 8 countries, 11 states (some more than once)
  • Photography entered my life as a new found passion and I’ve just added a super zoom lens to my bag.
  • And last but certainly not least, I have simply survived the last year.

I’ve resettled, re-energized and re-oriented my entire 60 something life since events sent everything reeling, and the way I view things has changed dramatically.

I’ve worked hard to develop non-judgment, less I drive myself crazy over the perceived injustices of life. The Buddhist sense of impermanence combined with the stilling of my mind has allowed me to find a place of peace. I work on this daily.

Being homeless for some months, I’ve found that I don’t “need” many of the habits that had once made up my life. I can happily exist in many situations, under many conditions. I adopt the disciplines that promote my well being; I allow the rest to be.

 

“When we are no longer able to change a situation–we are challenged to change ourselves.”

–Viktor E. Frankl

 

 

Yet through all this, some things remains constant. I am someone who likes having a home base. I admire the people who can be permanently nomadic, but it’s just not for me.

When I landed in Santa Fe, everything seemed to just click. With this lovely casita,  I have wifi, computer and camera. Here I find a timeless connection to the land, the energy and the people that simply fills my soul.

Life is good.

 

The Blog: Life Through The Lens

 

CancerRoadTrip O'Keeffe house in Abiquiu

Artifacts on the window ledge, O’Keeffe style

“In photography there is a reality so subtle that it becomes more real than reality.”

–Alfred Stieglitz

 

I take my camera almost everywhere with me; there’s much to learn and explore through the viewpoint of a lens. The endless creativity of the medium has thoroughly captivated me.

The addition of the Gallery section of the blog, and the unrelenting appetite of an Instagram feed, have pushed me to constantly take pictures in my travels, often daily.  As I look back over the last year, I see great improvement. I am hoping the next year sees still more.

I have signed up for two photography classes this fall. One is technical; one is more hands on.

I pity the poor instructor because I already have enough questions lined up to fill a semester.

 

The Blog: Life Lived Through the Lens of a Story

 

Cancer Road Trip Indian Dances #GatheringoftheNations

From the PowWow in Albuquerque

 

“Tell me the facts and I’ll learn.

Tell me the truth and I’ll believe.

But tell me a story and it will live in my heart forever.”

– Native American Proverb

 

We learn through the stories we tell.

Isaac Dineson once said that “To be a person is to have a story to tell.”

At heart, the best stories are really about a journey into the soul.

The cancer story is one of challenge, seeming defeat, perseverance and triumph. It’s about life and death; about presence and love.  It’s about all the things that make us human and allow us to learn and grow.

I know we will all choose different routes and destinations because we all carry different stories. But along the way, our paths will intersect and resonate. Where they cross, where our emotions and experiences meet, are timeless truths to be shared.

 

 

The Blog: The Story In A Name

What’s in a name?

CancerRoadTrip. What does that conjure up?

Fighter, warrior, survivor.

We seem to want to label people, experiences and viewpoints.

But there is no label that captures this cancer experience. To try to label it, to simplify it and to apply it to everyone, ignores the many dimensions of people and their experiences. It ignores the uniqueness of each story.

 

CancerRoadTrip

What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. –Shakespeare

 

And yet names define us.

They’re a marker, an identifier, perhaps an inspiration. They tell a story.

 

It is here that I need your help.

 

As you know, we’re gearing up to give away healing journeys.  I am (for the moment) calling the people (the cancer patients, survivors and the friends and family impacted by these events) who embark on these journeys with us as “Journeyers”.

After all, cancer is a journey; healing is a journey; ultimately life is a journey. Are we not all travelers through our times?

But perhaps there is a better word than Journeyer.

Traveler? Pilgrim? Explorer?

Voyager?

Can you think of a better one? Send me your thoughts either in the comment box below or via email, pat@CancerRoadTrip.com.

What’s a name that inspires, motivates and connects with you?

 

The Blog and The Journey: CancerRoadTrip

 

CancerRoadTrip, blog

 

Everyone’s CancerRoadTrip is different.

Some people learn by physically challenging themselves; some through introspection. Some quickly embrace a new life; some not.

Whatever the choice, it’s an evolving path of uncertainty pulled by promise, given to everyone, embraced only by some.

 

“To dare is to lose one’s footing momentarily. To not dare is to lose oneself.”

– Søren Kierkegaard

 

Which brings me to an interesting conversation that challenged my view of CancerRoadTrip.

 

CancerRoadTrip Adventurer Sean Swarner

Sean Swarner, Cancer Survivor, Mountaineer and Adventurer

 

I’ve been acquainted with Sean Swarner for some time now. Sean is a force of nature and then some. He has climbed the highest mountains on all continents (starting with a successful first summit on Everest ); gone to both the North and South Pole; completed the Ironman World Championship in Hawaii; summited numerous other mountains many times.

All on one lung.

Because two different terminal childhood cancer diagnoses left him with just one functional lung.

Most recently he took on the North Pole and the film, “True North: The Sean Swarner Story”,  has been nominated for an Academy Award.

 

 

Sean and I reconnected recently and we got talking about the incredible self knowledge that can come from experiences of being in and challenging nature. About setting goals and working through them; about the incredible power of one’s mind.

The challenges Sean has chosen are the stuff of legend.  Climbing the highest mountains, going to the most remote areas, defying the bounds of what was considered humanly doable, not to mention beating terminal cancer not once, but twice.

Perhaps a bit of physical adventure should be a part of CancerRoadTrip moving ahead.

Which brings up my own life and level of physical fitness. It is not where it needs to be, and all of a sudden I realized that I might miss out!

 

CancerRoadTrip Blog

Kilamanjaro

 

What if we were to add Kilimanjaro to the CancerRoadTrip lineup? Or another more physically oriented retreat?

Right now, I’m not fit enough to go.

So I have started a serious fitness program which is long overdue. I’m 61 years old and quite honestly in the worse shape of my life. The combination of (multiple rounds of) chemo, a failed hip, off the charts stress, weight gain and being on the road have taken their toll. While I’m doing some light hiking and moving, I’m not “in shape”.

 

CancerRoadTrip Blog

Getting in shape is my numero uno mission behind the scenes.

“Don’t die without embracing the daring adventure your life was meant to be.”    

– Steve Pavlina

 

Behind the scenes, my fitness is now an absolute priority. I want to be present, to experience everything I possibly can, for as long as I can.

 

***

I didn’t know where CancerRoadTrip would lead when I started. The journey has become the blog and now the blog is becoming an adventure beyond me. One that I look forward to sharing with many, both in person and vicariously through the new website.

Cancer challenges and changes our lives. Many of us need to regain trust and confidence in ourselves and our bodies.

We need to plot a new path forward.

We find ourselves with an urgency and renewal of life that only comes from confronting death and the dissolution of all we perceived to be real. Physically, psychologically, socially and spiritually we need to find a new footing, a new way forward, one step at a time.

 

“The power of storytelling is exactly this:

to bridge the gaps where everything else has crumbled.”

– Paulo Coelho

 

When all else has crumbled, it takes courage to move ahead. Courage to face mortality, and then life. Courage to make self care a priority. It takes courage to listen to your heart and soul to possibly follow a new path and create a new story.

If there is any good news about cancer, it is that it can be a wakeup call, to patients, friends and family.

Are you living your best life?

Are you feeding your soul?

 

If you could…

What would you do?

 

And even more importantly,

 

Where would you go?!

 

CancerRoadTrip, Behind-Scenes, blog 2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes 2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes CancerRoadTrip, Writing a Travel Blog CancerRoadTrip, Writing a Travel Blog2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes 2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes 2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes 2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes CancerRoadTrip, Writing a Travel Blog CancerRoadTrip, Writing a Travel Blog2018-Cancer-Road-Trip-Behind-Scenes

 

Sign up below to stay in the know on our healing retreats.

 

More Reading On Traveling With CancerRoadTrip

Traveling With Cancer: A One Year Anniversary
Road Trip!
Thoughts On The Metaphor Of A Road Trip
A Woman Wearing Too Many Hats
An Out of Body Experience: Getting Fit With Cancer

Like This Post? Pin It!

 

CancerRoadTrip Blog

 

If you’re interested in learning more about photography (or cooking or film or any number of topics) check out MasterClass All-Access Pass for on-line excellence.

[et_bloom_inline optin_id=”optin_10″]

What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

Follow me on Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and at Anti-Cancer Club.  Connect with me!  I may need a place or two to stay along the way!

 

 

The Not So Quintessential Ghost Ranch

The Not So Quintessential Ghost Ranch

I have been waiting to write about Ghost Ranch and Georgia O’Keeffe. What can one say?

It’s stunning; it’s beautiful; it’s inspiring?

That the landscapes O’Keeffe painted are equally awesome in person?

Art lovers plot their pilgrimages to view the landscapes of Georgia O’Keeffe. But they are limited to (a very good) tour of the ranch where the guide matches up O’Keeffe’s paintings with the landscape.

Because, alas, her seven acre house in Ghost Ranch is off limits to the touring public.

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch, Georgia O'Keeffe,

Guided van tours take visitors to various locations to view some of the vistas that Georgia O’Keeffe made famous in her paintings.

Or at least it usually is.

But as serendipity would have it, I was able to visit the interior of both of O’Keeffe’s houses, at Ghost Ranch and at Abiquiu.

***

Ghost Ranch captivated me from the first time I drove down the long, unpaved drive. A steel gate with the name of the ranch opens discretely at the roadway. From there the road climbs, as the motion of the tires kicks off a dust cloud that moves along with the car.

Washboard, dust and rock wind through the desert in a semblance of a road, up the hill. And then, the landscape that inspired O’Keeffe emerges.

O'Keeffe House, Ghost Ranch, CancerRoadTrip

Moonrise at Ghost Ranch

The beauty is astonishing. My first visit was in winter, and winter may remain my favorite time. The cottonwoods have no leaves; the stream, the Rito del Yeso, is meager and partly frozen; but the landscape stands out, immutable through seasons and time.

O'Keeffe House, Ghost Ranch, CancerRoadTripv

Cottonwoods line the partially frozen stream through Ghost Ranch in winter

I find myself drawn to the area; I can totally understand what O’Keeffe saw in this landscape. But the sheer guts it took to relocate here and live twelve months a year at Ghost Ranch is quite astounding.

In the 1930’s Ghost Ranch was only accessible by a dirt road that wound its way from Abiquiu. There were no signs or markers except for a skull mounted on a fence, which would later become the ranch logo. Yet this remote locale attracted the celebrities of the day, such as Charles Lindbergh, Ansel Adams and John Wayne. Later it would host scientists from Los Alamos. And included in the mix was Georgia O’Keeffe.

CancerRoadTrip, O'Keeffe house in Abiquiu, Ghost Ranch

The old road to Ghost Ranch

Here is some short video on Ghost Ranch (complete with bugs on the windshield!). You’ll notice not only her house, but the red hills–the Chinle formation –that appear again and again in her art; the towering cliffs; and of course the iconic collections of rock and bone.

Visiting both the O’Keeffe houses is an opportunity to see behind the scenes, into the artist’s daily life and perhaps catch a glimpse of her vision. What surprised me most was how different the houses were.

Had I only visited Ghost Ranch, I would have had a very different sense of O’Keefe. I would not have seen the serenity and extraordinary sense of place she created at Abiquiu.

Had I only visited Abiquiu, I would not have understood the true grit her life at Ghost Ranch exemplified, nor her camping and painting forays into areas such as Bisti Wilderness.

Together, both residences offer a glimpse of the incredible range, curiosity and talent of Georgia O’Keeffe.

Click Here To Visit the Ghost Ranch House

Click Here To Visit the Abiquiu House

***

Georgia O’Keeffe’s introduction to New Mexico was through a visit to Taos in 1929, and later through her stays at Ghost Ranch. It was love at first site, and she would return and eventually resettle in New Mexico until her death at age 98 in 1986.

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

The American West, Ghost Ranch

Ghost Ranch comprises 21,000 spectacular acres in northern New Mexico, about half an hour north of Abiquiu.

And as history has it, it’s haunted.

It was originally named Rancho de los Bruos (Ranch of the Witches) by the Archuleta brothers, a pair of cattle rustles from the 1800’s. The brothers would steal cattle, lead them up through the stream to hide any tracks, and tuck them away in Box Canyon which was the perfect corral. The sound of the wind whistling through the rocks were rumored to the the wails of men who had sought to reclaim their stolen cattle.

Needless to say, while the property was avoided, it was not haunted.

Nor was it to shunned for long.  In 1928, Roy Pfaffle won the deed to the ranch in a poker game.  Carol Stanley, his wife, recorded the deed in her name and named it Ghost Ranch. When they divorced, she moved to the property and created an exclusive dude ranch that attracted a celebrity clientele.

After O’Keeffe’s first visit in 1929, she returned again and again, renting a house from Arthur Pack, writer and editor of Nature Magazine, each time.  Pack eventually purchased the ranch from Carol Stanley in 1935, and in 1940 O’Keeffe purchased Pack’s house and made Ghost Ranch her home. In 1945, she purchased a house in Abiquiu, about 20 miles south, where she could enjoy a garden and establish her studio. Ghost Ranch then became the “summer house”.

Click Here To Visit the Abiquiu House

CancerRoadTrip, O'Keeffe house in Abiquiu, Ghost Ranch

The front door of O’Keeffe’s Abiquiu House

The Abiquiu house is open for tours; the Ghost Ranch house is not.

Not usually, that is.

However as luck would have it, I was able to tour the property that is otherwise closed to the public. I wasn’t able to take any any interior pictures. But to have the experience of walking in her home, seeing her environment as she saw it and to have stories and art come together was truly a special experience. All my thanks to the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum who made this possible.

O'Keeffe House, Ghost Ranch, CancerRoadTrip

Click Here To Visit the Ghost Ranch House

The power of Georgia O’Keeffe’s paintings draw from the deep soul of the landscape as well as from her imagination. To walk in her steps, to see the views from her house much as she saw them, was an experience that touched me deeply.

I found I could say things with color and shapes that I couldn’t say any other way – things I had no words for.– Georgia O’Keeffe

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

Cerro Pedernal, viewed from Ghost Ranch. This was a favorite subject for O’Keeffe, who once said, “It’s my private mountain. It belongs to me. God told me if I painted it enough, I could have it.”

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

This is the actual view from the courtyard of her Ghost Ranch house, taken during my visit, July 2018

O’Keeffe expressed her love of Ghost Ranch in a 1942 letter to the painter Arthur Dove:

“I wish you could see what I see out the window—the earth pink and yellow cliffs to the north—the full pale moon about to go down in an early morning lavender sky . . . pink and purple hills in front and the scrubby fine dull green cedars—and a feeling of much space—It is a very beautiful world.”

In addition to the artistic legacy of Georgia O’Keeffe,  Ghost Ranch also includes the Florence Hawley Ellis Museum of Anthropology and Ruth Hall Museum of Paleontology.  It is the site of numerous retreats and workshops. Plus horse trails, hiking trails and a wonderful labyrinth.

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

Labyrinth at Ghost Ranch, NM

Plus of course the house where City Slickers was filmed:

O'Keeffe House, CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

“City Slickers” was filmed here, at Ghost Ranch

Unbeknownst to many, New Mexico is one of the leading sites for film projects, attracting major stars for major productions. Most people are amazed at the breath and sheer numbers of film credits associated with this state. From traditional western to sci-fi, New Mexico is the location behind many well known films. Talk to the locals, and nearly everyone has a film story to tell, as an extra, as a worker on the set, or as an observer. Here is a small selection of films set in Ghost Ranch, New Mexico (click the image to learn more about the movie):

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch


CancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch


CancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch


CancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost RanchCancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch

Ghost Ranch is not just for film buffs. It’s for everyone with an appreciation of history and beauty, whether you come at it from the perspective of geography, outdoor adventure, art, film or travel. It’s a special, timeless place, immortalized in rock and stone, paint and film, with something of interest for everyone.

It’s a “must do” in northern New Mexico.

Click Here To Visit Georgia O’Keeffe’s Ghost Ranch House

Visiting Ghost Ranch

From Santa Fe, the road winds north through Espanola, to Abiquiu and then to Ghost Ranch. Ideally, if you have time, stay at either Ghost Ranch or the Abiquiu Inn and explore a bit. There are also several AirBnB’s in the area.

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch, O'Keeffe house at Ghost Ranch

From Santa Fe to Ghost Ranch

If time is tight, here are a few thoughts:

Are you into the outdoors or horseback riding? If so, plan to spend the bulk of your time at Ghost Ranch. Stop at The White Place (Plaza Blanca) outside of Abiquiu on your way to or fro.

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch, O'Keeffe house at Ghost Ranch

The White Place

Into art? Spend a bit more time in Abiquiu, visiting O’Keeffe’s house and connect with The Abiquiu Art Project. Plan ahead for both. House tours for the Abiquiu house are very limited and the Abiquiu Art Project requires reservations and for the artists to be available.

As one starts to explore New Mexico, one discovers the extraordinary depth of culture, history and outdoors. Ghost Ranch is part of that exploration–have fun!

More Reading on Ghost Ranch and the Legacy of  Georgia O’Keeffe

Inside The Georgia O’Keeffe House: Ghost Ranch
Inside The Georgia O’Keeffe House In Abiquiu
Georgia O’Keeffe Country: Abiquiu
Art in Abiquiu: Visiting The Abiquiu Art Project

Like This Post? Pin It!

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch, O'Keeffe house at Ghost Ranch

Georgia O’Keeffe’s ladder at her Ghost Ranch House

CancerRoadTrip, Ghost Ranch, O'Keeffe house at Ghost Ranch

If you’re interested in learning more about photography (or cooking or film or any number of topics) check out MasterClass All-Access Pass for on-line excellence.

[et_bloom_inline optin_id=”optin_10″]

What is #CancerRoadTrip and how did it come to be? Read this post to get the backstory! 

Follow me on Twitter, Pinterest, Instagram, and at Anti-Cancer Club.  Connect with me!  I may need a place or two to stay along the way!