Memoir Sample

Canyon de Chelly

Canyon de Chelly

The last manmade structure shrank to a black dot in my rearview mirror as I drove down the cracked and pitted highway without a car in sight. The unmarked turnoff to the left was barely visible between juniper trees and sagebrush, the place where the pavement turned to dirt. Although I had explored the region before during my time off from work, this particular turnoff had escaped my attention.

The next forty miles of deeply rutted tract led me into vast stretches of high desert wilderness in this remote and untouched part of Utah. Red rock slabs, towers, pinnacles and cliffs soared into the cobalt blue sky. The crisp air smelled pungent with essence of pinon pine wafting into my nose.

I could tell from the faintness of the ruts that this stretch of road had not been traveled for a long time. Other than the ruts in the road, I saw no evidence of human activity. My 4-wheel-drive Bronco kicked up clouds of rust-colored dust as I meandered along, daydreaming about how I ended up in this part of the world.

The year before, in 1971, I left behind the life I had known back east and headed off to the Southwest, having no idea I would be entering a world I never knew existed. The Bureau of Indian Affairs hired me to work as a 4th grade teacher at a boarding school on the Navajo Reservation. I was twenty-two. It was my first real job.

Erica standing in the back to the right with her 4th grade classroom. Chinle, Arizona. 1971.

Erica standing in the back to the right with her 4th grade classroom. Chinle, Arizona. 1971.

The school was located in the town of Chinle, Arizona, at the mouth of Canyon de Chelly, one of the most beautiful places on earth. Many of the children in my class spoke no English. When I made an earnest effort to learn Navajo, I was instantly invited into the homes of my students and their families.

Weekends, when I wasn’t exploring the backcountry, I drove one or two of my Navajo students home in my 4-wheel drive vehicle to their isolated log and dirt hogans scattered throughout Canyon de Chelly. Over the course of the school year, I had driven every student in the class to their homes. As their families became comfortable with me, they invited me to participate in their lives and daily activities, including their religious ceremonies. The remoteness of their homes in the canyon kept age-old traditions alive. The food, dress, ceremonies and outlook on life remained the same for many generations.

I loved participating in the Navajo culture and learning about how my students saw their world, a view that bore little resemblance to that of white people. The culture was earth-based with a strong relationship to the natural world. Animals were seen as kin and embodied special powers. They bore messages for the people they encountered.

Just as I was drifting deeper into these reflections on my life with the Navajo people, I saw something tan out of the corner of my eye. A medium-sized coyote with a long bushy tail darted in front of my slow-moving Bronco. In Navajo culture, when a coyote crosses your path, it means something big is about to happen. I couldn’t remember if it was something big in a good way or something big in not a good way. Before I could give it more thought, crimson red buttes and other fantastic geological formations started filling my windshield from both sides, pushing aside all concerns about the meaning of the coyote crossing my path.

Further down the road I remembered what one of the kids in my classroom had told me during our informal discussion about Navajo mythology. He said, “If Coyote crosses your path, turn back and do not continue your trip. If you keep traveling, something terrible will happen to you. You will be in an accident, hurt, or killed.”  I thought about those words and wondered if I should turn around and go home. I decided that the Navajo cultural beliefs didn’t apply to me.

I was the only person around for miles and miles. Of course, if the car broke down, I probably would die from dehydration. But, given my youth and adventurous nature, I was not thinking about those things. All my focus was on this magical place I had entered.

The rutted tract ended at a little spring. I kept driving a few more miles until I came to what looked like a sanctuary of rock formations, a perfect place to stop and explore.

Feeling sure that no one else was near, I took off my shoes and all my clothes, relishing the warm air caressing my skin. I climbed up the sandstone slabs with my bare feet, entranced by the red rocks, the enormous sky, the incense smell of cedar. After scrambling around the rocks, exploring caves and crevices, I came upon a little pool of water, a catchment basin for the infrequent rains—a natural bath in the middle of the desert. I cupped my hands and splashed my face, soothed by the cool water. I slipped into the pool and pointed my face directly at the sun with eyes shut but still feeling the brightness streaming in. After what seemed like a long moment of timelessness, I lay down on a warm slab, spread eagle on my back. All my senses were alive. I turned onto my belly and spread out my arms, crazed with love for the land—and grateful for the solitude.

When the sun went down, a chill quickly settled over the rocks. I put my clothes back on, but not the shoes. I wanted to continue feeling the rocks on my bare feet every moment. I hopped from one slab to the next, on a path that seemed to be laid out for me, keeping clear of the sharp spines of the cactus.

Having no flashlight, I wanted to be sure to find the perfect sleeping spot on a flat rock to spread out my pad and sleeping bag before it got dark. But it actually never got dark—the moon was full overhead, bright and electrifying.

I sat up in my sleeping bag and sang songs to the moon until the goddess of sleep overpowered me.

I dreamed I was in one of the sheep and goat corrals belonging to the family of a Navajo student. We were in the corral looking for a sheep to butcher for a ceremony. There were a few goats, including a billy goat that smelled rank with the strong scent of musk they have during sexual maturity. We moved through them, trying to catch one of the sheep. The smell of the billy goat grew stronger and stronger.

The smell was so strong, it began overpowering all my senses. When I felt my back on the rock, I realized I was not in a corral, but wide awake and in my sleeping bag. Yet the smell of musk had followed me out of the dream and was still filling my nose. Before I could open my eyes, I heard a sniffing sound right next to me.

Without moving, I opened my eyes, and— Oh My God, I am being sniffed by a mountain lion, inches from my face! His head was so close, I could see his black whiskers in the moonlight, the white fur around his mouth, and the tawny colored hair on the rest of his face. I closed my eyes, frozen in fear, waiting for his claws to dig into my skin and tear me apart. Nothing happened. Why doesn’t he hurry up and eat me and get it over with?

I was barely breathing while my heart pounded loudly in my chest. I stayed paralyzed for what felt like hours. But nothing happened.

By the time I found the courage to open my eyes, it was daylight; the sun had appeared on the horizon. Amazed that I was still alive, I filled my lungs with air and let it out ever so slowly while I looked all around me. There were no tracks visible on the sandstone rock. When I began stuffing my sleeping bag into its sack, the hair stood up on my neck. The distinct scent of musk wafted up to my nose—the only remaining evidence of the lion’s presence.

I drove to the nearest town forty miles down the road and, at a gas station, I told the attendant of my experience. He said, “Ma’am, you’re one lucky gal to be alive. Them cats can rip you to shreds in no time. The reason that damn cat didn’t kill you is cause you were too scared to move.” The attendant said if I had fought the mountain lion or tried to get away, I would for sure have been killed. “Mountain lions go after things that move.”

For months I remained obsessed with thoughts of mountain lions, seeking any information I could get from hunters, park rangers, biologists and other people who had close encounters with them. Mountain lions populated my dreams night after night for weeks. I awoke from the dreams with the feeling the mountain lions were trying to communicate something to me that I didn’t fully understand. When I drove to Gallup to go grocery shopping—a two-hour drive each way—I stopped at the library and checked out books about mountain lions. All the stories I read confirmed what the gas station attendant told me. I knew it was true what I was being told, but something was missing. Why did that mountain lion sniff me up close—right next to my face? Is there another reason he didn’t rip me apart and eat me? Am I still alive simply because I didn’t move?

A few weeks after the encounter with the lion, one of the Navajo teacher aides in the boarding school invited me to visit her grandmother who lived alone in a hogan deep in the canyon where she tended her sheep. We spent the afternoon sitting outside eating mutton stew and fry bread. My friend and her grandmother caught up with each other’s news, which included the story of the mountain lion. The old Navajo woman took a few puffs from her tiny hand-carved pipe as my friend told the story. Toward the end of the story, she looked at me with a toothless smile that lit up her ancient and deeply lined face. Her dark eyes were laughing. For the first time during the visit she looked right into my face and spoke directly to me, no longer diverting her eyes in deference. My friend translated her words.

The old woman said I was “really lucky” the lion came to me. He was my spirit guide. He came to give me his courage, strength and intense focus because I would need that for what lay ahead. She said I would face obstacles in my life, some big and life-threatening, and, if I lived through them, I would have a strong heart and powerful medicine to give to the people.

The three of us sat in silence as we watched the sun drop behind the canyon wall, followed by the fading light.

This is what the mountain lion looked like when he sniffed me.

 


Comments

Memoir Sample — 41 Comments

  1. Well told Erica! The excitement comes through just as clear in your written word as it did in your voice when you told me this story in 1976 (Smoky Mountains, Antioch wilderness training). So glad I stumbled across your blog after all these years. I’m going to have to keep reading now! BTW, I live in Albuquerque, soon to be Corrales. Feel free to reach out directly if you’d like to catch up one of these days. I’ll buy the coffee!

    • OMG!!!! How did you ever find my blog post? That’s so amazing. You remembered after all these years!!! I’m bowled over.
      I think you might enjoy my memoir, “Medicine and Miracles in the High Desert: My Life Among the Navajo People.” You can find it on Amazon.

  2. Beautiful to have been touched by a spirit and to be then guided by a wise one early in your life . Not to suggest that one cannot be touched at any other age of life right up to the moment of ones passing! Your experiences and storytelling abilities are inspiring. Thank you for sharing so much of yourself.

    • Thank you for your kind words, Rita. I hope you find the blog posts useful. I’m terribly sad about the fires in your part of the country. I can only imagine what all of you have endured. With many blessings, Erica

  3. Erica,
    This is an amazing story. I think I myself would have passed on to the next world, dying of fright, had I awakened to see a huge carnivore only inches from me!!! Oh my goodness.
    I just wanted to say THANK YOU so much, for your stories, for your healing. I learned about you via another blogger, Carol Carnicom. She highly recommended your book. I dove in and researched you and your work. Again, thank you for your time and energy in communicating with us.

    • Dear Beth, thank you so much for your comments. I’m happy that you have found my writings and hope they will be a source of inspiration to you. With many blessings, Erica

  4. Erica, this is an amazing story and so glad you lived to tell it and write it so beautifully. I just heard about you and your blog from Joan Borysenko, who spoke on a teleclass. She mentioned your website and blog. I live in New York City and had a blog on meditative musings, and am now writing a memoir. So your title and medicine wisdom is of interest. Thanks for your generous gifts across the airwaves and from the earth. I am grateful for your osteoporosis or bone health tips.
    Sheila Lewis, (co-author, Spanda Cards for the Entrepreneurial Spirit, & co-author, Stress-proofing Your Child).
    Best Blessings!

    • What a pleasant surprise to get your comment, Sheila! I’m so happy that your are finding my blog posts useful. I had no idea that Joan Borysenko mentioned my blog posts in one of her teleclasses! I just published a memoir that you might enjoy, called “Medicine and Miracles in the High Desert: My Life Among the Navajo People.” It’s available from Amazon. I recently posted a blog about the book. Joan Borysenko wrote the foreword. Thanks again for your lovely comment. Many blessings, Erica

  5. When I originally commented I clicked the -Notify me when new comments are added- checkbox and now each time a comment is added I get four emails with the same comment. Is there any way you can remove me from that service? Thanks!

  6. I have a Native type connection to the Natural World. By synchronicity, Ann and I watched a coyote from her windows this morning. My favorite author is Nevada Barr, a National Park Police Officer who writes mysteries in her various parks. She is poetic and the environments take on a depth of character I’ve never found in anyone else’s writing. I have read all her books and have been at a loss. Ann recommended your blog. It did not disappoint me. It was such a pleasure to meet you at her birthday party. I hope we will one day have the opportunity to get better acquainted.

    • Hi Kathryn, I’m so happy that you enjoyed the blog posts. It was great to finally meet you after hearing stories about you over the years. Many blessings to you, especially for your service in Africa. Love, Erica

  7. Upon reading again, this piece is just as fresh for me, thrilling me to tears….I find myself looking forward to holding the physical book in my hands for the next reading…..thank you, dear Erica.

  8. Beautifully crafted story! Just superlative. It is a privilege to share in these remarkable experiences. Can’t wait for more!

  9. I loved this story its sounds like you had a unplanned vision quest. I will have to tell about an experience of mine someday. What a beautiful adventure.

  10. Erica, your mountain lion story took my breath away! Christine and I were once sleeping out under the stars behind our Tesuque home when we were awakened in the middle of the night by two mountain lions mating. There was a fence between them and us but they could easily have jumped it had they not been otherwise engaged. In our case, we did run and very rapidly into the safety of our home. I LOVE this posting and look forward to more!!

  11. Erica, I am happy to have found your site. I really resonate with your approach to healing and am excited to see someone courageously following such an approach. Your story is marvelous and obviously your life experiences have made you the healer you have become. Thank you. Lakshmi

  12. Dearest Erica, Merci, Gracias, Danke, Thank you…for sharing your life and adventures and wisdom and sweet and strong heart with me and so many others. What joy to read!I think of a Rumi quote, “No end to the journey, no end ever. How can a heart in love ever stop opening?” With love, Sherie

  13. Oh, Erica— I cried many times as your story took me back to feeling connected to the earth in such deep ways. Your experiences are so rich and so wonderful to share with us all. I can’t believe how courageous you were so young — but you are all about courage, love, wisdom, healing and more. The world needs to hear your experiences —
    your story gave meaning to many things I sense but don’t quite know what to do with.
    Your stories of your time with the Navajo people help bring that meaning to the world so in need of that . I can’t wait to read the rest of your writings.

  14. A truly stunning story, told in exquisite, descriptive language, that had me share the experience with you emotionally. Thank goodness for your “youth and adventurous nature,” which enabled you to believe you could go through all that happened and that you would survive, although apparently there were moments of doubt that you would live to tell or write the story. What a meaningful learning experience, even for those of us who have appreciated it vicariously through your powerful and poignant prose.

  15. Erica:

    I have hesitated to comment on your blog, but Rez adventures have enticed me. At some point we must chat about our respective adventures living with Navajo families. I, of course, was on the Rez a few years earlier than you and was in the process of becoming a trained observer of Navajo life and a trained translator of it. Those days, weeks, months and years have always been my touch stone in teaching and writing.
    You could not have had a better start!

    Terry

  16. the mountain lion sniffing your face was shivery. his black whiskers in the moonlight – what an image! and, what an astonishingly powerful way to meet your guide. I laughed out loud (with both relief and delight) at the last sentence of that paragraph: “Why doesn’t he hurry up and eat me and get it over with?”……. you really know how to tell a story!……a natural-born writer.

    this is a such a gift from you – one of the most generous, compassionate, perceptive and courageous women I know.

    keep going! you have so very much to offer this world. and, I completely look forward to reading more and more.

    I am so grateful for you in so many ways.

    with much love,

    sidney

  17. Erica, How wonderful to read your riveting and moving (hmm, that sounds like a contradiction but in your case it’s true) writing again! I look forward to having it (and you) in my life once more.

  18. Dearest Erica, beautiful, simply beautiful. Your story excited my senses and filled my heart with your courageous spirit. It is no surprise to me – your mountain lion – you walk together. You are deeply gifted, Erica, with the charms of sight, sound, vision and generosity. And, most of all, with love.

  19. what a wonderful story, erica.
    so glad i found your site, your insights, musings,and not least your medicine.
    the mountain lion story is amazing, and your connection to the earth and to the elements
    is powerful. more, more, i want to hear more. and cuba! how very juicy! i can hardly wait.
    i will be doing qigung with master gu in april in santa rosa, and expect to experience some juicy connections to the chi that be..would love the music of cuba there as well.

  20. You’re not a run of the mill person you know. Your existence is special. Life finds you as you lay belly up for all it has to offer. I look forward to the next reflection of your essence. 🙂

  21. Thank you, Erica, so much for sharing yourself and your experience with me/us. I move myself richly and deeply as I read and imagine myself in your adventure. I also appreciate knowing more about you as a person—-which I have be an enrichment of your gift to me/us. Thank you for who you are. Warmly, Rebekkah

  22. I’m delighted to be on your mailing list. Captivated by your mountain lion experience,and very interested in your Cuba information.

  23. How very wonderful that you are sharing your experience for many of us who have not lived with such great memories. Your story of you dancing around in your bare feet-and body and the visit with the lion was so exciting. You are truly blessed and I look forward to more of your past in your book. Thanks and my love to you. Jacquie

  24. Oh my God, Erica, how marvelous! I squealed with fearful excitement to the lion’s whiskers in the moonlight, and the musky smell as it sniffed you……. Thank you so much for gifting me with this experience! I’m glad you were frozen stiff with fear, but as you say, was this what saved you? did you need saving?

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