Saturday, April 18, 2015

What do I know to be true?

My friend called a wisdom gathering of a few dozen women of whom she asked the question,

What do you know to be true?

~*~

What do I know to be true?

All is One. In every scale of the Universe, a complex harmony resonates. Each key flows seamlessly to the next. Allowing our vibrations to echo without alteration makes the music more beautiful, the song more complete. Clearing the plane for every melody to ring true and free makes the world more just and peaceful. Listening helps us to learn our next step.

Reality is a network of love-being. When we strip down to our most vulnerable place, we can touch bones of light, our shimmering foundation. Removing masks of pretense, shedding material comfort, relinquishing ambition, forgetting language - these are steps that move us back to the Source. Bounds of Self dissolve as we meet the deep gaze of another's eyes, the vast ocean of teeming beings, the elements forged in star bodies, the energetic swirl of galaxies and aeons.

This human life is an earthy experience of personhood that gifts us with the ability to reflect on this blissful union. Our work is to melt into the free form of love-being by living as who we are. Manifesting authentically is an essential step in the process of cosmic evolution. Being true to who we are, honest with what we understand, vulnerable with where we are growing, and loving to all Life is to remember why we exist at all.

When I remember that All is One, I honor that nothing is lost. I trust I am never alone. I envision broad possibility. I walk gently. I move gracefully. I create passionately. I love wholly.

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

Sacred Night

The night has always felt like sacred time. Sacred - from the Latin 'sacare,' which means cut off or set apart. When I wake in the dark and feel compelled to put the flow of my spirit wanderings to words, it is time separate from the course of days that can feel relentless. The spaciousness of a quiet and dim house blurs the edges of hours and obligations, makes me feel free to release with honesty and without worry about what I am not doing.
Although the bright sunshine charges my body, dreaming and pondering in darkness taps the well of undercurrent consciousness that waters my roots. Down, down below the surface of activity and effort is a place underground. This cave of solitude, cavernous respite, becomes a chapel for the simple ritual of connecting to myself.
Here, the inner becomes the outer. I am sometimes startled by my projections onto shadows as I navigate the physical darkness, for I assume they are as alive as my palpably present thoughts - they move like moonbeams bouncing off water onto on the walls of my inner temple. I imagine myself floating on a boat in this underground cave, light spilling from an unknown source underneath, wave patterns flickering on stalactites and crystals.
Sometimes, I meet guest-messengers here. Tonight, though, I am alone, and the task is to rest in my wakefulness. Sleep is evasive, but refreshment can come from claiming this sliver of time as a gift. I float, trailing a hand in the warm water, letting my soul be nurtured by the velvety blackness, the echoing sighs of my quiet breathing.
The confines of my cave open me to an ocean of transcendence. The crystals are stars in the firmament. The wall reflections are wave functions, frequency patterns of possibility. The light is the center of the earth, molten with energy, releasing minerals to strengthen my bones.
I am reminded of the dark sacredness I find in the daylight, as encounters with that deep place in people who do not fear the night. My companions, you are here with me. Our souls shimmer in the facets of gems and galaxies, reflecting fresh dimensions of beauty. Through the inward well, channel to the source, we swim out into the sea together. We ascend into the glittering cathedral of precious stone and insight. We rise into blackness, the cosmic horizon.

Monday, April 6, 2015

The Passion of a Wonderful World

The morning of Good Friday, my sleepy child hung on my neck and looked at me with expectant eyes, seeking a distraction from his runny nose. I looked at the gray skies out the window and, reflexively, began to sing – You are my sunshine…my only sunshine!  With a quick smile, he began to laugh and bounce.
Suddenly, an old familiar tune popped into my mind and flowed from my mouth:

I see trees of green, red roses, too,
I see them bloom for me and you
and I think to myself, 'What a wonderful world...'

My son's joy prompted me to search for and play the full song. Louis Armstrong's serenade swirled us around the room as we sang and danced. The final verse arrived and, before I knew it, tears began to brim in my eyes with an unconscious recognition; I fell silent and just listened to the poignant close:

I hear babies crying, I watch them grow -
they'll learn much more than I'll ever know,
and I think to myself, 'What a wonderful world...'

I sighed and pulled my boy a little nearer. Nothing has brought me closer to a sense of my own mortality than becoming a mother. I have never so fiercely protected a life as I have his, and I have never valued mine so highly until I felt his intrinsic dependence on me. I have said many times that he teaches me how best to heal this world, and myself. He has already been a natural instructor in letting things go. He shows, again and again, that each day brings new possibility, that each new death yields life formerly unimaginable.
The night before, the two of us gathered with community members to honor the beginning of the Triduum. Imitating the symbolic image of servanthood shared in the story that evening, the entire church took turns sitting to have their feet washed and washing another’s feet. Because it was unscripted and simple, resonant icons began to take form as person after person enacted the ritual. Elders washed the feet of young members. Children washed their parents’ feet. Those who needed assistance nobly enacted the foot washing, slowly but surely, with patience and help. Publicly-known disagreements, disputes, and differences faded away as, sitting and resting feet in a bowl or taking up a towel and pitcher, companionship was recognized in the mutual act of grace.
My son was fast asleep; I cradled him in my arms as I sat down. The woman at my feet was a lifelong friend, the mother of my childhood playmates, someone who has washed my feet before in many ways and times. We both shed tears as she gently poured the water over my feet, then dried them. I carefully lowered my son over the bowl and she washed his feet, too. He sighed sweetly as he dreamt, held in the sacred space of being tended to without reciprocation. We embraced, and she held my sleeping baby as I turned to wash the feet of another.
The next morning, dancing to Louis Armstrong, my boy sensed I was crying. He pulled back and looked me in the eyes, softly touched my face, understood beyond understanding. Silently, he opened his mouth and pressed it to my cheek.

I see friends shaking hands, saying, ‘How do you do?’
They’re really saying, ‘I love you…’

It is a magnificent mystery, the truth that my son will see farther into the future than I; his eyes will look longer at the world than mine. I sing to, clean, feed, comfort, play with, learn from, and love this little boy...but I will not know the extent of his expansion. Although I receive bountiful gifts from our life together, the direction of energy most often feels outward and into him. But I trust that this watering of his small spirit will yield seeds, then fruit; I know that my life is meaningful because I try, in futile but dutiful ways, to leave this world more beautiful for him; I trust that when my body finally falls into eternal rest, the continued animations of his life will be as close to a personal immortality as I can imagine.
When I gathered at the church again on Good Friday evening (this time leaving my sleepy little one at home in his father’s arms), a familiar story of suffering-love was transformed. Rather than hearing a story of a man’s self-sacrifice for a new world, I heard the story of a son, loved and lost. In my mind’s eye, all I could see was Mary at the foot of the cross.
Mary, Mother, looking up at a son to whom she gave her life.
Mother, gazing at her suffering son crucified unjustly…the eyes of countless women watching their sons shot, beaten, executed, sent off to war.
Mother, holding her child close…waking with him in the morning, dancing and singing with him, feeling his wet kiss on her cheek.
Mother, living beyond what her son would see – the cruel inverse of the right destiny of parents and children.
Mother Christ, borne through a woman who had to watch her son die, then live into the mystery of continued life.
Mother Christ, alive in women across the globe who have died to their old selves to give life to their children and the children of all future generations.
I listened as, in the circle of silence, the millennia-old story shifted to a litany calling those gathered to open their hearts to the people of our planet still crucified. Suffering people – a people of Passion, which means to hurt. Compassion – the place of suffering together. Community – a place where suffering is transformed through our oneness. 
The starving, the tortured, the poor, the oppressed…Christ borne as Children deserving of restoration of dignity so that they may live into the future they have come to manifest.
I watched as two women danced around a simple, wooden cross that had traveled across Louisville earlier that day, carried by pilgrims who stopped at living stations, places representative of the injustice that still harms our human family. The women danced, and I saw them as two spirits swirling around this wonderful world, burning with flames that held the hurting, blazing with fire to heal the harm. 
There is death…and there is resurrection. Life is unfailing and resurrection prevails. This is our Passion story of Easter hope: to continue to make the world new for our children.
Sunday dawned with brilliant sunshine. The birds sang, the light drew the curtains, and my husband, child, and I basked in the relaxed freshness of Easter morning. 
Spring always returns; babies continue to be born. The light always arrives after the rainfall. Eternity comes in moments; salvation, in love.

I see skies of blue and clouds of white,
the bright, blessed day, the dark, sacred night,
and I think to myself, 'What a wonderful world...'


To my astonishment, at my in-laws' house, there was a little board book in my son’s Easter basket with a familiar title. My mother-in-law said she just knew we had to have it when she saw it. Tears again filled my eyes as, Mother and Son, we read the Passion of this wonderful world – one of brokenness and blessing, of hurting and healing, of loving so fully that, when we let go, we know we will be reborn.

…Yes, I think to myself, ‘What a wonderful world.’


Thursday, April 2, 2015

A Day's Work

I find myself on the other edge of a night - closer to the moment of surprise when, nursing Oak, I glanced outside to see the round moon caught in the cage of budding dogwood branches. The laughter of playing children grew quieter; Oak's breathing grew heavier. Settling, the world dropped its shoulders and admired its work. I, too, allowed myself to step off the balance beam and fall into a more organic alignment, simply resting with my baby, content with what accomplishment I could attribute to the time since sunrise. As the sky darkened, I felt lighter.

I am sitting in the dark on the edge of my bed, already beginning to mentally measure the obligations of this new day, which still feels like tomorrow. These stolen moments of silence - when Oak is content to lay alone, when Robby's breathing from the other room leaves a small ache in my heart from the distance - are when I want to capture the moonrise of thought that sneaks up in a moment. My spirit whispers, "Write!" My mind races with anxious questions that narrow my scope. Can I get the work done tomorrow that I wasn't able to finish today? How will our family juggle sickness, childcare, work, community...rest? So, I type what is true and trust that making just a little space is a gift I can give myself in this time between days.

I hear Robby stirring in the other room - perhaps I woke him. There is a strange intimacy in darkness that brings everything closer. I can hear his movement like the taps of my fingers. Oak's sudden intake of breath is in my chest. These moments, like the moment of holding my baby close at the end of a day and trusting that I have done enough, throw into relief the power of moving one step at a time: noticing, not hoping. I will finish typing and turn off the screen. Sleep will return, likely in ample measure to sustain me through. This will not be the last glance inward I am offered. Everything is held within me - my work is always done, and not yet started.

Tears come to my eyes as I feel in my heart the innumerable parents cradling their children in the dark, the lovers forsaking sleep for a more physical union, the workers whose work will continue until sunrise: the body of humanity laboring away, making something new.

Robby comes to bed. Happiness is a full bed of sleepy bodies to warm you. I prepare to turn in again, to slip off the edge of knowing, to let my soul rest like the eternally evolving stars.