Still Life with Chickens: Starting Over in a House by the Sea

Still Life with Chickens: Starting Over in a House by the Sea

by Catherine Goldhammer
Still Life with Chickens: Starting Over in a House by the Sea

Still Life with Chickens: Starting Over in a House by the Sea

by Catherine Goldhammer

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Overview

"Frank, funny and helpful."—The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

For the millions who loved A Year by the Sea comes a memoir of a woman who awakens at midlife to find wisdom in a most unlikely place
 

In this beautifully written and frequently funny memoir, Catherine Goldhammer, newly separated, along with her twelve-year-old daughter, starts life anew in a cottage by the sea, in a rustic town where live bait is sold from vending machines. Partly to please her daughter and partly for reasons not clear to her at the time, she begins this year of transition by purchasing six baby chickens—whose job, she comes to suspect, is to pull her and her daughter forward out of one life and into another.

An unforgettable story filled with hope and grace, Still Life with Chickens shows how transcendent wisdom can be found in the most unlikely of places.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781440628955
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 04/24/2007
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 192
File size: 166 KB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Catherine Goldhammer is a graduate of Goddard College and was a poetry fellow in the fine arts program at the University of Massachusetts. She has been published in the Georgia Review and the Ohio Review.

Read an Excerpt

IT WAS NEVER MEANT TO BE A FARM

I did not have a year in Provence or a villa under the Tuscan sun. I did not have a farm in Africa. Instead, my diminished resources dictated a move to a run-down cottage in a honky-tonk town where live bait is sold from vending machines. But as luck would have it, in a town where houses rub elbows, I came to live at the edge of a pond beside a small forest. I came to a place where a thousand dragonflies the size of small birds fly over my yard in the summer. In a town where everyone knows everything, I came to live in a place no one knows exists.

Five months earlier, newly single and about three tax brackets poorer, I was living beyond my means in the house of my daughter's childhood. A columnist for the Globe, who lived in a neighboring town and carried a wild and unspecified grudge, liked to say that "the lawns are green and the hearts are cold" in the affluent village my husband and I had moved to several years before, in the hey-day of our marriage, and I had always believed that he was at least a little bit right. I never felt blonde enough or rich enough or well enough dressed. My husband would have been the first to admit that he looked the part: tall, reed thin, and handsome in a J. Crew sort of way. He actually owned a cashmere jacket. But to be fair, clothes aren't the measure of the man, and he didn't belong in Hearts-Are-Cold any more than I did. He could, however, seriously pass. Now, a year after our amicable separation, Hearts-Are-Cold was no longer an option for me. The house was too big for my daughter and me, and hard to maintain. But mostly I just couldn't afford it. I had to seek new territory. Smaller territory. Cheaper territory. We would leave Hearts-Are-Cold and our rambling house on its beautiful hill. I would move my fierce and brilliant and utterly rooted 12-year-old daughter. I was terrified. But I was living off part-time work teaching reading, minuscule savings, and child support. Financial doom was visible at the bottom of the bank account, and other than selling my house there was no relief in sight. So I did what I had to do. I called a realtor.

And so it came to pass that a tiny blonde woman drove into my life in a really expensive car and became the midwife to my change in realty status, my shepherd. The shepherd -- I will call her Penny -- was in her late fifties and extraordinarily perky. On a bad day, she dressed better than I did on a high-normal day. On a day when she had to crawl around in basements, she might wear sleek black leggings and a fitted black jacket over a pristine white T-shirt while I wore what I called pajama clothes to the high-end market in Hearts-Are-Cold. Penny wore high-octane perfume, but she brought order to my life, which quickly took on the overpowering fragrance of Chanel No.5. For the five months it took me to sell a house, buy a house, and move, even my little Puerto Rican street dog smelled like Penny. I would become tired of her platinum hair and her perfume, her car and her merry blue eyes, but I would soldier on because Penny was a demon realtor and she would never let me believe that I couldn't do it, that I couldn't make it, that it wasn't possible to change everything about my life with a stroke of her Glinda-like wand. On the brink of signing the papers that would put our house on the market, I stared at her across the kitchen table. She waited patiently in her tweed riding jacket.

"I can't do this," I said. "I can't sell this house until I know where we're going." Where other realtors would have told me that was impossible, Penny didn't blink.

"Then let's find you a house," she said.

Finding smaller territory was not as easy as you might think. On a dismal, bitter day in March, yet another gray day in a long string of gray days, Penny and I drove around looking at houses for three dispiriting hours. My daughter was in school. I wanted to shield her. Before bringing her in, I needed to know the lay of the land.

It was the right decision, because the houses were not promising. The affluent town of Hearts-Are-Cold was surrounded by other affluent towns and those towns by more of the same. Houses in my new price range existed, but I didn't want any of them. One of them was pretty inside, mainly yellow, but sat straight up against a main highway-like road. One had a little brook in back, but the inside felt like the smallest bear's chair, tiny and broken. One of them looked as promising as a Cotswold cottage, on a postage stamp of land, but the owners refused to let anyone in. I had something in mind, a little cottage with clean white walls and a spacious floor plan. I had a faith born of a lifetime of finding good places to live: good karma in the housing realm. I don't know what clicked in me about houses, just that it did -- an unfailing sense of goodness, the ability to see the pristine apartment hiding in a farmhouse attic, the beauty in the abandoned home of an aged gardener. I can't say that my instincts had served me as handily in my choice of boyfriends, but in assessing real estate, I was gifted.

Now, after hours of looking I doubted myself. Maybe where I would live now would be cramped and dreary, with bad land and too much traffic. Maybe Penny wasn't listening, or maybe she was just doing the best she could in the circumstances, working with the dollars at hand. Maybe my luck had turned sour.

"Do you have one more in you?" asked Penny as we drove in the direction of what would soon no longer be my home.

I didn't. I was tired. The perfume saturation levels in Penny's car had reached the point where I actually wondered if my lungs might be permanently damaged. But my resolve had weakened house by house, and so we drove beyond Hearts-Are-Cold to a town set upon a six-mile peninsula bordered on one side by Boston Harbor and on the other by the Atlantic Ocean. Once the home of a large amusement park with a famous roller coaster, it had developed haphazardly, with recreation rather than posterity in mind. Big houses sat cheek by jowl with tiny ones, shoe-horned together on tiny streets. Some of them were beautiful and some of them were decidedly not. The seaside lawns tried valiantly to be green, but they were small, and some of them had remnants of the amusement park in them: an oversized pink teacup with bench seats, a faded turquoise bumper car. Six Mile Beach was a working-class town, a town with a twenty-four-hour Laundromat and a very busy police force. Clusters of elegant old Victorian houses congregated on a couple of hills high above the ocean and the bay, where the views were good and the crime rate minimal. Though in the midst of a slow process of change, this seaside town was the poor relation to the wealthy towns around it. It was insular and protective. The school system was not popular. You don't want to know what would happen to it in a hurricane. I had always liked it there.

The house she took me to was not on the Victorian hills. It sat at the near end of the peninsula, on the borders of Hearts-Are-Cold and its even wealthier neighbor, but one should not be fooled by proximity. We drove down two tiny roads, past a collection of ramshackle cottages, onto a dead-end lane, and past a brown house. My heart sank as we approached the brown house. My daughter, for reasons known only to her, hated brown houses and refused to live in one.

The next house (gray, vinyl siding) looked sullen and uninviting on that cold and overcast day, but Penny hopped out of her BMW (black, convertible) and we slogged past a battered monster truck and across the slush-covered yard. An empty house can be a pitiful thing, and this one was empty, cold, and in a sorrowful frame of mind. The floors were worn to bare wood and covered with black stains. The windows were opaque with milky vapor. A demented chandelier hung on a tilt from the ceiling. In two of the rooms, it appeared that someone had turned several children loose with hot pink and blue paint and sponges. Everything. Floor to ceiling. Moldings. It reminded me of a cartoon I saw once, in which a decrepit old man led a younger man down a long hall of paintings. "The next one will knock your eyes out," said the old man, as they were about to turn a corner. Around the corner, under the painting in question, was a basket full of eyeballs.

Smack in the middle of the peeling, sagging, dirty gray kitchen, hogging most of the rather large room, someone had built a chest-high, three-sided partition out of wallboard, finished it off with a nice polished piece of pine on the top, and put a rusted stove in it. By no stretch of the imagination was this an island. One could walk around it, but barely. (Workmen would refer to it for months in the future: "Remember that thing in the middle of the kitchen?" one would ask. "Yeah," the other would reply. "What was that?")

Then I peered out some sliding doors at a moldering deck. And there, beyond the stained deck and the huge, barren, snow-covered yard, was a large salt pond. The only thing separating me from the ocean was that pond and one-hundred feet of land. To the south stretched unexpected acres of pine woods. Such bounty did not exist in this town, and yet there it was. I turned from the windows with a different vision. I walked down a small hall to the back of the house and found two small square bedrooms. They were tidy and neat. The walls wore a blessedly new coat of off-white paint and the floors were wood -- the same bare boards with black stains as in the rest of the house, but wood nonetheless. I looked into the bathroom. One could walk into the room only by squeezing past the pointy corners of a huge broken-down vanity. The bathtub was worn down to bare, rusted cast iron. Half the tiles were missing from the walls and floors, and the grime of decades covered everything. But by then I had begun to dream. There was something not terrible about this house. This house was "before" waiting for "after."

Penny and I spent an hour prowling separately in the damp, cold rooms. Our paths crossed periodically.

"I'm thinking this might not be so bad," she said the first time.

"I'm beginning to like this for you," she said the second time.

"I'd buy this myself," she said at last. "I can definitely see you here. What do you think?"

I was not handy. I didn't want a fixer-upper. My father was dying. I was newly separated. I didn't need more stress. I wanted to sit still in a quiet room for a few months. But propelled by I am not sure what combination of emotions, I made an offer. The house had been on the market for a year, but an open house was scheduled for the coming Sunday. I was afraid -- and justifiably so, it turned out -- that someone else who saw what I saw would come along now. And someone did, as it turned out, but my offer had already been made and accepted: a full-price offer, which even so was half the price my house in Hearts-Are-Cold would end up fetching. I could not save my marriage or my father but I would save this poor, sad, good house.

We would move at the end of July. I spent the next four months making lists. Lists about money, renovations, windows, skylights, kitchens, bathrooms, gardens, fences, and dormers. I had enormous lists. They were all about hope. I made them over and over.

Friends were polite but largely silent, and I suspected that they talked among themselves about my folly. The ones who had propped me up during the final disintegration of my marriage surely thought that I did not need one more difficult thing. But contractors, builders, and carpenters stood with me in the cold and peeling kitchen. We made plans. We had ideas. We glowed. There was some supposition that they liked the house so much because they saw dollar signs written all over it. But I thought that, like me, they could see beyond its tawdry exterior into its radiant soul. The house was waiting for us -- the carpenter, the plumber, the electrician, and the dreamer -- to roll up our collective sleeves and bring it back to life.

And so I bought my cottage, my house by the sea. For the five months it took to finalize both deals I moved daily from joy to despair. I had found a house. A house I could work with. But look what I had done, the project I had taken on, what I had gotten myself in for. In the year that followed, I would sell one house, buy another, renovate it, move myself, my daughter, my dog, my cat, and six chickens, and become obsessed with the meaning of life.

It was never meant to be a farm.

This is the story of my foray into the salvation of one sorry house and garden and one slightly tattered soul. It is the story of a small house on a big piece of land, by a salt pond, nine-hundred feet from the great Atlantic Ocean. It is the story of a time that began as failure and turned into grace for a mother and a daughter and a small, determined dog. And, in what started as a bribe and then became a love story, it is the tale of my reluctant ownership of six two-day-old chickens who came to live with us here, on Dragonfly Farm.

Table of Contents


It Was Never Meant to Be a Farm     1
A Little Cosmic Je ne Sais Quoi     11
Chickens of the Mind     17
Actual Chickens     27
The Ark     45
Guardians     56
What I Left Behind     68
In the Beginning     77
Chickens on Trial     96
Ova     111
The Window     117
Transformations     125
Chickens in Winter     133
If You Can See the Ocean     142
Summer-Fall-Winter-Spring     153
Zen Chickens     166
Dragonfly Farm     174
Acknowledgments     177

What People are Saying About This

Ann Hood

Still Life with Chickens teaches the art of moving on ... and reminds the reader that—through friends, family, inspiration, humor, and a little chutzpah—anything is possible. (Ann Hood, author of Somewhere Off the Coast of Maine)

Joan Anderson

In wry and poignant prose, Still Life with Chickens offers a testament to new beginnings. (Joan Anderson, author of the national bestseller A Year by the Sea)

From the Publisher

When divorce takes [Goldhammer] . . . to a honky-tonk town with a preteen daughter and six chickens in tow, there is no still life! Only deeply felt, humorous, and, at last, happy life. (More magazine)

Reading Group Guide

INTRODUCTION

In this lovely, unconventional, and often funny memoir, Catherine Goldhammer wakes in middle age to find herself stunned, newly separated, and several tax brackets poorer, forced by circumstance to move from the affluent New England suburb of her daughter’s childhood into a new, more rustic life by the sea. Against all logic, partly to please her daughter and partly for reasons not clear to her at the time, she begins this yars of transition by purchasing six baby chickens—whose job, she comes to suspect, is to pull her and her daughter forward, out of one life and into another.

As she gradually transforms her new home—with its tawdry exterior but radiant soul—tile by tile, flower bed by flower bed; as she watches her precocious twelve-year-old daughter blossom into a stylish and sophisticated teenager; and ahs she tends to the needs of six enigmatic chickens, we accompany the author as her life slowly shifts from chaos to grace. Still Life with Chickens is an unforgettable lesson in hope, in starting over, and in the transcendent wisdom that can often be found in the most unlikely of places.

 


ABOUT CATHERINE GOLDHAMMER
Catherine Goldhammer is a graduate of Goddard College and was a poetry fellow in the master of fine arts program at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst. Her poetry has been published in the Georgia Review and the Ohio Review, and by Innerer Klang Press. Ms. Goldhammer has worked as a writer, trainer, and reading teacher. She lives in a small cottage on the coast of New England with her daughter, her dog, a cat named Monkey, and a small flock of chickens.

 


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS:
  • Why do you think the author agrees to buy the chickens? What finally makes her give in? What do the chickens represent to her and why are the essential to her new life?
     
  • Discuss the differences between the town the author calls Hearts-are-Cold and the neighborhood she moves to. Why do you think she is more comfortable in her new surroundings? What about the new neighborhood appeals to her? Why?
     
  • The author’s daughter is a major player within the memoir. Discuss how she changes and grows during this transition in their lives. How does she influence her mother? Why is she a source of such awe? Who in your own life plays that role?
     
  • On page 52, Tolle discusses the importance of feeling the inner body. He says we should "Make a habit of feeling the inner body as often as you can." Why is this so important to do? How is your inner body different than your outer body? What can we learn from our inner bodies?
     
  • Of all the houses the author sees, why do you think she chooses the one she does? What is she looking for? What does she find?
     
  • Discuss the following passage: "The logistics of moving, the yard, the legal documents, Penny and her perfume, these were temporary. The chickens were the thread, the real thing that pulled us, stumbling and fearful into the future" (54).
     
  • What is the role of the "Moon Women"? How do they contribute to the author’s ability to move on with her life?
     
  • When the author and her daughter are established in their new home, the author writes, "So what was is about chickens that made me want to set up my lawn chair out there by the chicken yard, sit down with a glass of lemonade, and watch? They are simple" (168). Why about the simplicity of the chickens is so attractive? Do you think the chickens are simple? In what ways are they simple and in what ways are they difficult for the author and her daughter?
     
  • Throughout the memoir, the author remarks numerous times that her house was made possible because others were kind to her. What are some examples of the kindness in the people she met throughout the process? How did they help her? What roles did they play in building the house and helping her start her life over?
     
  • In what ways does the author change during the renovation process? What literal and emotional changes occur? Do you feel that she has grown and changed by the end of the memoir? Discuss.
     
  • How have the lessons in this book helped you to identify who you truly are? How can you expunge negativity and unhappiness to find your true self? What techniques have you tried? What has worked and what hasn't? Discuss with the group.
     
  • Discuss the Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland quote at the beginning of the book. Why did the author choose it? How does it relate to her own story? Do you think that she has accomplished impossible things?
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