Saturday, November 19, 2011

Golden Moments: Italy

Picture this. Montelone Sabino. 2011…

(I’ve always wanted to start a story like Sophia from the Golden Girls!)

Having missed the grape harvesting season, I still felt compelled to roll around in leaves and bask in the fresh air of the Italian country side. It was olive picking season, so I searched high and low for opportunities on someone’s farm. I considered “WWOOFing” it, but I didn’t have a week to devote to farming. So, I checked Couch Surfing for activities in the area and found the Ozu Cultural Center. Their post offered the opportunity to pick olives, make olive oil, and learn to cook with it during a weekend in Montelone Sabino. It was a 3 for 1 type of deal so I signed up and scheduled a pick up at Rome’s airport.


Good Morning, Sunshine! - Ozu in the morning.
When we met at the airport and I realized it would be all women, I knew I was in for a treat. One of the ladies, a writer from England and mother of young children, has taken the weekend to de-stress and do some research for her next project. Another woman, a land conservationist and empty nester from Washington state, has taken three months to explore Europe and forget about work. The last, Paola, is Ozu Cultural Center’s director. She and her husband set out to build an artist’s retreat in the absolute middle of nowhere. We drove for two hours, telling stories, laughing, and getting to know each other. When we finally make it to Ozu I get out of the car, take a deep refreshing breath and smile, knowing that this will be a weekend to remember.
Getting our water for lunch!
See... something happens when women get together. I think this is one of the reasons why the Golden Girls stayed on the air as long as it did. People recognize the complexity, drama and absolute comedy that can occur when women come together and it strikes a chord. They remember sitting around the table while mom was cooking and talking to her girlfriends. Or they remember sitting in a salon and laughing their heads off at some off the wall story. Coming from a large family of mostly women, it definitely strikes a chord with me.
I understood early the power of women working together. As a child, I recognized the solidarity and the capacity to both build and destroy. As an adult I acknowledged that when mature women get together, we harness the ability to restore ourselves, while simultaneously nurturing each other. Beyonce understands this concept; Oprah understands it; and the Golden Girls definitely understood it. So now, when I get involved in group activities and notice that there are going to be a lot of women, I get excited because I know I’m in for moments to cherish and an opportunity to learn. This time, however, I was surrounded by married women, which made me take an even deeper breath and send up a silent thanks.
Olives almost look like grapes...

You see… During the planning phase of my trip, most of the responses I heard from people were that “married women aren’t supposed to do these types of things.” I really became discouraged at one point, but thankfully, while shopping with a friend in a second hand store, she noticed a book entitled "The Marriage Sabbatical: The Journey that Brings You Home.” “You have got to get this,” she exclaimed handing it to me. I read it and the timing couldn’t have been any more perfect.

The Marriage Sabbatical by Cheryl Jarvis is about women who leave their families for a period of time to explore their dreams, rejuvenate themselves, and simply take time. For some of the women interviewed in the book this time of exploration consists of taking a weekend course in another state, going on vacation solo, or taking an extended trip away. There are many examples of how women are taking marriage sabbaticals; however, the point of the book is that women, especially married women, must take opportunities to go and rediscover who they are.
The author’s theory is that, adhering to all of the cultural mores attached to being a “married woman” can create a lot of pressure and cause women to lose themselves to the responsibility of upholding their role. So instead of being a person with personal dreams and goals, you simply become Mrs. So and so and the family’s dreams and goals eclipse that of your own. Layer on the added pressure of working, raising children, taking care of extended family and trying to stay sane, and now you are Mom, Cook, Cleaning Woman, Geriatric Caretaker, and Therapist.  The author acknowledges that many of these jobs are a labor of love and she does not refute the importance of the role and responsibility of wife. She does, however, discuss the issues that occur even in a happy marriage. These are the things no one else wants to talk about: depression, weight gain, feelings of being loss, etc.


Tired? Olive picking is hard work!
The book is a good read and I enjoyed it, but the thing I got out of it the most was when the author discussed how our society has a tendency to reinforce the view that married women shouldn’t leave their homes or families and vacation alone. In the books, the author says that when married men leave home for an extended period of time, it is deemed acceptable; they are working, hunting or doing whatever it is that men do. No one bats an eyelash. When women leave, however, red flags go up. To highlight her point, the author points to movies like Thelma and Louis. Two women vacationing without their husbands will most definitely end up in trouble and have to commit suicide. Nothing good can come from it! There are very few if any positive examples of women leaving their families, going way to take me time and then coming back rejuvenated and whole. This example, this concept, really helped me understand what I was up against in terms of resistance and it helped thicken my skin and reinforce my mindset. “I’m going to go!”


You missed a spot!
Like finding that book, there have been all of these moments throughout my journey where I wanted to step back and say, “Hey God, I don’t want to remind you how to do your job, but you’re supposed to work in mysterious ways.  All of these outright lessons, directions, and blessings are really starting to scare me.” Meeting all of these married women, who were essentially doing the same thing I was, was also one of these moments. I hadn’t met many married women who were traveling while I was out and I was starting to feel like a unicorn. Where are all these women taking marriage sabbaticals?!

The answer is that they are picking olives at an artist’s refuge in Montelone Sabino!


Enrico can burn!!
Walking into Ozu we were wowed by all of the “stuff”, so Paola offered a tour and presentation. What is now Ozu Cultural Center use to be an abandoned candy warehouse before her and her husband, Enrico, “pimped” the space out. Now it consists of several very large studio spaces equipped with tools for every type artists: painters, photographers, videography, ceramist, dancers and writers. The place is also filled with computers, records, magazines and art books from every generation used as inspirational resources for the artist. Sleeping accommodations on sight include a dorm, two private bedrooms, as well as the family’s living quarters. With all of this space, it’s interesting that the nucleus of the entire place is still the kitchen. The kitchen… wow! Enrico can cook his butt off and his kitchen is designed for this purpose alone. Large pots, homemade wines, olive oils, and jams line the open cupboards and an enormous dining table repurposed from old wood sits on wheels in the middle of the kitchen waiting for large groups of people.
Someone tell the baby that he's not going anywhere.
Then they started to come…

After getting acclimated and comfortable, Paola mentioned that she didn’t get enough volunteers to help with this season’s first olive picking, so she invited friends. Over the next few hours, many more people started arriving. Families, some with children, begin filling the place and English, Italian, French and Hungarian could be heard all around. It was a very homey feeling and at some point I kicked off my shoes and really settled in. Of course the women congregated in the kitchen around the table and we ate, we talked, and enjoyed each other’s spirit immensely.



Eat and talk! Eat and talk!
Over the course of the next few days, this same feeling and scenario would be played out over and over again. The women talked incessantly while picking olives and laughed openly when people fell, rolling down the hill.  We gabbed during breakfast over cereal, toast and homemade marmalade. We shared deeper stories during hikes along the lake and gushed while cracking walnuts for homemade pies. Most importantly, we actively listened and nurtured each other’s soul in between big forkful’s of our first and second courses of dinner. Something happens when women get together…
I left Ozu one day earlier than everyone else because I needed to see the Vatican before continuing on my journey. However, I will always remember this period as a golden time when women of all ages, races, and nationalities got together and communicated words of encouragement and inspiration in a language only we could hear.












3 comments:

  1. Sounds like an amazing time! Great read....this is Shanita.

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  2. Mom says, Cakes you look great! I'm so proud of you and your decision to make this trip. Because of you "Our" world view is so much broader. Thank you for being a trailblazer. Can't wait till you come home. Hope to help you close your trip in NY for News Year at Time Square! By the way, you all look like imigrants on that photo in the olive groves (tee-hee). Love You!

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  3. ...hey Davita... I really like what you wrote.
    I will continue to read you!
    Antonio, BBQ Manager!

    ReplyDelete