Between Here and There

Between Here and There

I don’t know the name of

that space between one

life and another—

between here and there.

When the leaves of your life

have fallen and you wait

for the spring bulbs

to emerge from the

crack in the soil

or your heart.

 

The night calls it twilight,

and the day calls it dawn,

that precious space

that means not yet—

 

Is there a name for the space

before the tide turns and

the dark circles mark the beach?

Or before the curtain falls and

the bright lights show our tears?

 

What do we call the

part of us that continues

reaching—

to pull ourselves up

to standing, again

and again?

 

Does it have a name?

Like kindness, or daybreak

or God?

© 2025 Gretchen L. Schmelzer, PhD

Just One Word

I have had so many transitions in the past few months and so little down time—but last week after a lovely afternoon with my niece I went for a long walk around a nearby lake. Part way into the walk I began to ponder what I was going to make for dinner but then my thoughts picked up speed, as they often do, careening downhill, gathering momentum from the simple thought of “I could get dinner” to “I could make dinner for the whole week—in fact I could make meatloaves and meatballs and sauce and then not only could I have dinner for the week but I’d also have enough to give my friends for dinner…” I imagined going to the nearby farm store and picking up beautiful ingredients and meal prepping for me and everyone I loved. My mind sped ahead to begin thinking of ingredients and a shopping list.

Lucky for me –the sun was setting and the light on the lake caught my attention, and I stopped to look at the lake and the colors of the clouds. Observing the lake prompted me to observe my thoughts and I started to laugh at myself.

I seem to complicate every idea I have. I get obsessed with what I have come to call my ‘triple word score’ mentality. In the game of Scrabble --there is the ‘triple word score’ where you put down a letter at an intersection of words near the triple word score and get a ton of points for ALL THE WORDS. One or two letters—A TON OF POINTS.  And on that walk, I laughed because I realized that I am trying to get the triple word score at everything I do.

Doing two things at once and being rewarded for it was part of my early training as a child care worker in the 80’s. In the residential treatment program I worked in the kids would get extra points toward their reward levels if they ‘used their time well’ and did more than one thing at a time. If they, for example, folded their laundry while watching TV, or worked on a puzzle during quiet time. We had a special acronym for this behavior, GUOT (pronounced gwat) that meant ‘Good Use Of Time.’ As a young adult I took this acronym to heart and taught it to my housemates.  We would all joke about doing our bills while watching TV getting extra points for GUOT and my best friend and I still will put on Airpods to talk on the phone to each other so we can clean the kitchen while we talk because, you know, GUOT.

And to be fair there were years in my life (and probably yours too) where GUOT was crucial, and the only way to survive. Years when I was working three jobs, going to graduate school and doing my training for psychology. The rare free hours I had needed to cover a lot of ground and doing three things at once was necessity---so I got a lot of practice at it.

But I may have also come to be addicted to it. Walking around the lake last week I realized I wasn’t doing the ‘triple word score’ because I had to, but because I had come to see that act as a form of ‘good’ or the right way to spend time. There’s an adrenaline rush that comes with that ‘triple word score’—but there’s also a cost.

On the last mile of that walk, I began to wonder: what it would take for me to be content with ‘just one word.’

Practically speaking, I thought, I could start with going to the store on the way home and just getting what I needed for dinner that night. I could be *radical* and even get some of the parts of dinner already prepared.

Which is what I did. I got some arugula, and some already roasted sweet potatoes and chicken, and an orange. And had a wonderful winter salad. Just one meal. No bonus points. And the world continued to spin on its axis.

Healing from trauma I have learned the power of saying just one true thing. The power of being able to admit how you feel in one word, even if that word was ‘lost’ or ‘numb’ –words that seemed to describe the feeling of not having words at all. But even these simple words, one word at a time, allowed me to be found and find myself. As much as I love the ‘triple word score’ –it’s never worked for me in healing, or really for anything I have done or accomplished that mattered to me. It may be that all important things, all things that are close to our heart—all things we love—can only be mended or repaired or built—one word at a time. One conversation at a time. One page at a time. One hour of practice at a time.

The reason I need to keep learning this lesson, or I keep forgetting this lesson is because I make the mistake of thinking that the simplicity of ‘one word’ means it should feel easy or get easier—and it never does. One word is actually always hard. One word is both small enough to hold, and big enough to feel. One word makes it easy enough to start, but then you feel the weight of staying committed. And one word is simple enough to understand so that you become seen and visible—with no place to hide—which is both terrifying and wonderful in equal measure.

© 2025 Gretchen L. Schmelzer, PhD

For more reading about one thing at a time an excerpt from Journey Through Trauma in Spirituality and Health:

Trust your timing.

Procrastination does not stop a project from coming to fruition, what stops us is giving up on an original idea because we have not got to the heart of the reason we are delaying, nor let the true form of our reluctance instruct us in the way ahead. To procrastinate is to be involved with larger entities than our own ideas, to refuse to settle for an early underachieving outcome and wrestle like Job with his angel, finding as Rilke said, ‘Winning does not tempt that man, This is how he grows, by being defeated decisively, by greater and greater beings.’
— David Whyte

I have been juggling a number of projects lately, some better than others, and I was reminded of my constant wrestling match with procrastination and timing. I am a perfect mix of impatient and driven combined with task averse which makes me really good at being anxious about what I haven’t completed. The problem is that all tasks aren’t the same. There are tasks, like mailing packages, or doing paperwork that really need a pro-active stance, and not a pro-crastination stance. But much of the creative world—writing, creating, healing, helping—is served by a more fluid style where the active and pensive are comingled and you can’t always tell them apart. And you can’t always see the progress you are making until it leaps ahead. But there can be so many days of self-doubt before that.

A few summers ago I read the biography of Einstein by Isaacson and I was struck by the weight that Einstein put on thought—on daydreaming—and how productive it was. The time for creative thought was the soil that helped grow his ideas. The problem with our driven and productivity-oriented world is that creation is rarely linear. Much of it is an organic growth process that has its own trajectory, its own wisdom. At best you can distract yourself with things that look like tasks that keep you out of the way while the real creation happens. At worst, you can interfere or give up because ‘nothing is happening.’

Some of the best things I have created happened much later than I planned. I had planned to be ready to go, ready to be finished much, much earlier. Yet, if I had finished the project too quickly they would never have become what they needed to become, or I wouldn’t have been able to shepherd them the way I needed to. The whole project—the idea, and who I was needed time to grow in to the project. It’s those moments I need to hang on to when I find myself frustrated that I am not moving fast enough—when I am not ‘getting things done.’

And don’t mistake my message. I am not opposed to productivity. The world is filled with false dichotomies—and this is one of them—this creativity vs. productivity split. I aspire to David Allen’s Getting Things Done as much as the next person. But clearing your desk is a means to an end. Not the end. And once it is clear, if you are engaged in a creative process, then the next phase is slower, is organic, it isn’t the same as getting through your to-do list. And of course you need the flexibility to be able to do some of both. Even on your creative days you need to ‘show up’ in some way—be engaged, follow your instincts, your interests. Minimally, you often need to get your butt in the chair--ready to work.

I suppose I wanted to write all of this to say that in the process of healing, in the process of bringing fragmented parts together, in the process of building whatever you want—there are times of progress and there are times of slowness and it is so important to trust your own timing. To believe in an inner wisdom that knows better than you do what you need to do now, what you need to do next. To believe and trust that there is growth happening even when you can’t see it. And sometimes in order for growth and healing to happen there must be slow times. It is required.

This time of year in the northeast is the perfect reminder for that. In our gardens, under the ground, are our tulips, and daffodils, crocus, snowdrops and scilla. All spring bulbs sleeping quietly in the frozen ground. It looks like nothing is happening. It would be mistaken for a waste of time. Yet without this cold winter they wouldn’t bloom. They rely on the cold of winter to trigger the biochemical process necessary to flower in the spring. Without this period of cold dormancy they would not become who they are supposed to be.

So take some time to appreciate your slow times this winter.  And take time to wrestle with your reasons for procrastinating. Both are important questions. Is it time for me to rest, to be dormant, to daydream? And is it time for me to climb back up, to push against the soil, to break through what is difficult and shine? The questions may be more important than the answers. 

© Gretchen L. Schmelzer, PhD 2024


Nest. Twig. Love.

Can you tell what the nest

is going to look like or feel like

with one twig, or two, or ten?

Which twig, exactly, makes a nest a home?

 

Is it even the twigs?

Or is it the tree,

the forest,

the moonlight?

Or is it your own song?

 

It’s a cold night

and a slivered moon

and I am surrounded

by books, boxes

pots and pans—

 

twigs all.

They aren’t yet a nest

though it may be

that’s it’s just too soon to tell.

 

Home was never a place

to return to,

just to flee.

I know how to jump.

I know how to fly.

But not how to slowly

weave all the branches together

into something that feels like home.

 

Must the nest be complete

to call it home?

 

Or is it enough to love

each and every twig?

To love the sunrise over

the mountain with pink clouds

and the light through the windows

and the pine woods and laughter

with friends over dinner.

 

Am I the nest maker

weaving each twig into a whole?

Or is it only love

that binds the twigs together?

I guess it’s simply

too soon to tell.

 

© 2024 Gretchen L Schmelzer, PhD