This is not a sad post; it's a memorial to an extraordinary man poet, composer, philosopher and musician: Ric Masten. Though his blog and his music and poetry, he allowed all of us to journey with him during his long time battle with prostate cancer. His daughter Jerri reported his peaceful
death on May 15 in Big Sur. This article about Ric’s life ran in
the Monterey County Weekly. If you do nothing else, if you go to Ric's website, listen to his signature song, "Let It Be a Dance." I don't know how to embed it.
Jerri kept all of Ric’s friends and followers updated during the last weeks of his life, when he became too ill to go to his blog. Yesterday she said this would be her last e-mail about her dad and she included a poem she had written about him as she scattered his ashes this week. Billie Barbara, Ric’s wife, recently broke her hip and she has been diagnosed with early stage Alzheimers. Ric had so hoped he would die first, but, it didn’t work that way. Though we are sad, Ric was an extraordinary man who continues to teach us how to live, age and die. I am so grateful I knew this man.
Perfect 7-23-08
by Jerraldine Hildreth Masten Hansen
That's me Jerri, Ric's oldest daughter
It’s just a quiet Wednesday
The 23rd of July
I hit the speed limit on Friday
A new year for me but without you
First the dog died our Sheelah
And then you Dad
Lightning struck
And the fires came
Blackened our landscape
Your funeral pyre
It filled my lungs
Dark brown
I was afraid
I kept busy
I piled your paintings in the car
Stacked between my favorite rugs
Irreplaceable
I carried your ashes
In my purse for weeks
Waiting for today
To put order back
A quiet Wednesday
The smoke is clearing
Today I feel my grief
I empty the car
And hang your paintings
One by one
My memories
The last one hung is my beginning
Bixby beach the year I was born
I am here... Today
Liked you asked me Dad
To watch your bones
Join in the dance of surf and sand
I think of Joe and Norm
I keep looking up
To the sky
To the bridge
I look ahead
And behind
The long path
I see you
Carrying me piggy back
Through this enchanted forest
You my sturdy steed
I, your princess
Today our last walk together
I carry you on my back
Your first born
I have not walked here
In all these years
You have been ill
The path is overgrown
I feel the sting
Of so many nettles
So much is changed
But I still know my way
Arms overhead
I press forward
With one last push
I am through
Out in the light
The beach is PERFECT
Someone has left
A totem of stacked stones
An island in the middle of the stream
A place to leave you in honor
I sit and write
In your favorite sweater and hat
Your bell
Your original hippy bell
Sounds my way
And...here you are
In sand castles
And 4th of July
Camp outs
And trout fishing
The smell of sea and bacon
Turpentine and linseed oil
The canvases of my life
The happiest times
I can remember
I am growing old now
And I don't know what to do
All these days ahead
Without you
I AM GRIEVING
I rub your ash across my feet
And wade into the river
Atop a large flat rock
Are seven stacked stones
I spread you like mortar
Between them
I beat my chest and scream and wail
My tears fill my hands
Then to the oceans edge it spills
You seemed so white
And then
Were swallowed up
And disappeared
Into kelp and foam
I've held some of you back
To leave on the road
And the trail home
Bread crumbs
My fingers are dusted with white powder
I carry you under my nails
And between my toes
The sea seemed so loud when I arrived
Now it whispers
And I am ok
And you are ok
And its time to go home.
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