Then there was the day, a very sunny one, when I carried an old bedspread out to my small deck, spreading it out and sitting down. Almost instantly I heard a small rustle and noticed a branch-like form fall from a nearby juniper: a lovely Whiptail lizard. No longer than my palm, she wriggled through the rocks and fallen needles, approaching. Three steps separate my deck from the dusty ground below. The lizard arrived at the first of them. After a moment’s hesitation she scuttled up, tiny claws perfectly suited to scaling the rough texture of wood. A pause, a nod of that elegant head. Another bold climb, and then another, and to my surprise, a small perfect lizard faced me, only a yard from my legs.
Then she reconsidered, disappearing much faster than she had arrived.
Yet in a moment she returned, peeking alertly over the top of that third stair and stepping towards me.
She first paused at the border of my shadow, the contour of my torso shaped in shade by the sun at my back. I stilled myself and thought thoughts of welcome and peace and openness to whatever this creature enacted. I told her I wouldn’t move. That I would wait.
As if on cue, she approached my right foot, bare to the sun, then up onto my ankle and then along my entire leg, stopping only when she reached the hem of my shorts. She paused, nodding her head as I’d seen others do, unfolding that pillowcase. And then in a scamper, she turned and was gone.
I looked to a resource on Native traditions to ask what such a visit might mean.
Renewal, it told me. Renewal and regeneration, the chance to begin again, the ability to welcome change, to learn from newness, to push new roots down ‘til they tapped into hope. To regenerate a new self from the memory of an old.
I think of that now as my feet crunch their way to my quiet and lonely home, to the solitude I have come to love. The snow is thick near the base of the trees and the earth below icy cold. It’s in there that the lizards sleep, dormant and still in their hidden homes, yet remembering somewhere deep in their bodies, deep in their cells, deep in all of the memories and lessons that have led to their being, who and what they are. In spring they will emerge again, remembering. They’ll once more seek the sunny patches, feeling as if for the first time the warmth that enlivens their senses and travels through scaled patterned skin into their tissues, their bones, their souls. Like me, they will reawaken, soaking in the power of this place and the earth it is part of. And as if for the first time we will know who we are.
I wait for that – for the first surges of chartreuse defying the white-caked earth, reminding winter that it, too, is temporal, yet that it, too, will in its time return.
Out of nowhere, my surroundings become familiar again. I look up, greeting the angled peak of my rooftop with an “Ah. There you are.” I soak in all around me before heading its way, footsteps crunching toward the walkway to my door. A big snowflake lands on my glove. I hold it to the light, watching it sparkle. I smile. It is shaped like a star.