Storytelling

On the Edge

A snake slithers
A river meanders
The wind surfs the hills and valleys
As rain falls the soil drinks
Birds chirp

And I’m here
My awareness moves like snakes out of my body into everything around me

Sensing
Interpreting
Contracting
Expanding
Burrowing
Hiding

Expressive in places familiar
Estranged in places not understood

New languages
Less expression
Less flow

More ideas
More certainty
More Protocols

Organizing
Expectations
Holding my breath.

Rigid


How do I evoke the courage to bring myself out into these watering holes?
I fear my language won’t be understood.
That I’m unwelcome.

I’m not being met.
This is a certainty.
Currently.

I stay quit.
Interpreting.
Gauging words.
Feeling out certainty of thought.
Studying for fluency.

Striving for connection.

When I collide with new worlds
I’ve never been the one to be proud or certain.

I’ve stayed quit.
Tried to learn the prestige of fluency.
Worked to build bridges for entry.

It’s been 11 months in a new land and I’ve just gathered some materials to begin building.
My hands tremble.
My heart aches.
My mind scrambles.

I work to contain my awareness.
To sit and let it weave together meaning for me.
Maintaining a container for this process is trying.

Discipline.
Restraint.
Moving in and out of the Chitta mind into Jnana wisdom.

In this world I’m in today the Wisdom of the Heart seems to not have a welcome space.
So I cultivate it inside.
Inside my sanctuary.
In my gardens.
My altars.
My journals.
My relationships.

I sit and crash up against the edges of my own heart centric assuredness and pray that the nature of things will move through me.

Sometimes I look down at my journal and weep.
Surprised at what is written and shared.
Thanking the Mother for having not forsaken me.

To have the bridge built for me, through me...revitalizes me.
I keep on praying that Ill be able to connect these worlds and walk them.
That I’ll understand the other languages soon.
That I won’t feel wrong in intellectual spaces.
That I will meet those on the edge and that they, feeling familiarity

Will help me through the thick fog.

Ushered to My Seat by Remembering  (Smarana)

I’ve been called back to council

My day to day tasks have been sidelined

My pleasure delayed

The sun is out 

I’m affirming this life

As the day goes on the knock of the staff gets louder

Outside of my eyes are my friends and my activities

But behind my eyes

Deep in the cave of my heart 

The women are gathering

My actual floor creaks

My window budges open

A presences passes  

Today, I unknowingly prepared 

Cleaning the house

Opening the windows

Clearing the space 

Caring for myself

Now I’m here. 

Seated. 

Initiating my sacred

Evoking Reverence for the now that has passed

In each moment I lived today.

It takes me a long time to get warm even though the fires are lit

For the world outside of me has my attention. 

I’m sitting, reeling it back.

I’ve willingly gone out beyond my recall

Offering my practice up to be forgotten

Having faith, I will remember. 

But not knowing when remembering will return. 

Now I’m here seated. 

Being ushered to my seat by my remembering 

There are others who sit in council with me. 

Angelic voices who serenade. 

Singing into our space a living presence from a world long forgotten  

There is even a smell. 

Sweet. 

Robust. Buttery. 

Earthy, like dirt but magenta in its richness.

As I relax my jaw, my shoulders are pulled back 

My hair is being braided 

I’m being prepared 

Cloaked 

Refilled

As I come to sit

It’s an initiation every time. 

A Homecoming.

The forgetting is longer. 

And the heart inside of my chest burns. 

When I come home to council, I sit. 

I sort information, experiences, personality types, my responses to a new daily life.

I am in dialogue with those who I sit with. 

Receiving information, epiphanies, advice, direction, support

Then the sensation of closure comes. 

It’s time to go. 

The fires are put out. 

The warmth leaves.

And I’m left with a knowing. 

That I’m not alone. 

That forgetting is coming again. 

And to trust it. 

 

Trust is a different type of timeline.

Ancient Grace

There’s an ache in my chest 

She speaks to me through Feelings

Gasps I take 

Bolsters I lay over

Salves I spread 

Always present, never not there

To soothe this I’ve begun singing 

It’s here that the ache in my chest speaks to me 

She quivers with delight as she sees her potential liberation 

This ache knows me so well

She’s seen my attempt to love her 

To care for her writhing 

To ease her colicky ways 

She’s ancient Grace

A gift planted deep inside 

Abandon

Complete Abandon 

Her yearning to be freed through sound is unbearable to me. 

Her roots sprout and slithering through my body deep down into the earth. 

Preparing me to be anchored as I open to the power of prayer through song.

She’s teaching me. It’s amazing. 

Two parts.

Grounding in

Opening up 

At the same time 

Soaring with oblivion 

Steadied in rich soil

A body full of breath 

A familiarity with awareness

I manage this Instrument of Wonder. 

Sing sister sing.

Let me serenade you

Hold you.

Take up space around you 

I am just getting to know this wisdom

This ancient Grace

It’s part of me

But right now I don’t call it mine

This wisdom is that of those that came before me

I can feel them in my throat 

The effervescence 

The ache in my chest 

This portal has awakened 

When asked what it is I do 

I’ve always answered… 

I sing but with energy. 

I am anchored in awakening

Being pummeled by my forgetting

And by an Ancient Grace being loose in my uptightness. 

The Watering Hole: Nurturing the Feeling Self

She woke me from my sleep.

It was still dark outside so there was time.

Pulled me, by her moans, out of bed.

Whispering into my hips and groin that she needed to talk with me, that she needs me to listen.

So I went softly, sleepily out onto my mat and I sat. I waited for her to show up again, she always comes to get me then plays her games to see if I’ll wait for her.

So I sat.

I’ve honestly never been in this much physical pain before from an emotional trauma.

First, she showed up in my groin. Intense, throbbing, thick, pulsing. So I began my movement there. Slow, supported, jaw unclenched.... breathing.

My breath is my voice in this relationship; it's the bridge and the opening, the offering, to a dialogue yearned for by another part of myself. As I moved into and out of the pressure in my groin, I began to see, in my mind’s eye, the beginning of a map.

Circuitry.

My body, the flow of its language. Not often traveled. Especially right now. I’ve just gone through a dear friend's unexpected death and I nanny a teething 8 month old. My parasympathetic nervous system is dumping chemicals and they trickle down into the sinks within my body.

Today, I rise to soak in them.This is where we meet. My darling.My girl. The one who sits on a swing inside my rib cage. She’s ready to talk to me. I pause in my movement.

Supported and prepared. 

Steadying my breath so she knows I’m prepared to listen and paying attention. As my breath stills, my chest begins to burn. It’s that same feeling I’ve been feeling. Grief. I’ve said it’s like I’m being suffocated.

Like there’s a weight on my chest that I can’t escape.

Today, after 30 days of grieving... I’m blessed with the story of this feeling. As she swings, she begins to sing and I observe in awe. My darling innocent one. Pure emotion. Contained in reaction and response. Tell me your ways. The intensity of her song grows and I feel my heart well up with emotion.

I bow, keeping my jaw unclenched as she continues. I’ve learned by now that this opening is the resurrection process. The awakening of an internal attention.

My circuitry.

From the swing in my rib cage, she climbs up into my back and spreads out. The muscles in between my ribs in my back body are aching, swollen, and saturated. Saturated with feelings and chemicals that flushed my body and found a home in the sturdiest part of my form.

My posture.

They marched up through the bones of my spine, into the muscles of my neck... spread out into my jaw and settled in the back of my head. Seated and folded forward I begin again to breathe supported by blocks, arms raised, collar bones broadened...

My mouth open for this pressure needs more room...

Her dance feels like an uprising, like a swelling, like a drumming beat. I pause here and wait as my breath expands into these contractions like waves rushing onto the seashore then being pulled back out into the sea. 

Then it comes.

The rumbling and ricocheting, tumbling in from a dimension only my body’s wisdom knows exists. A weep. The kind of weeping only the strength of your strongest muscles can endure. To meet this sensation I just keep breathing. In and out. Slowing down.

Moving a bit as needed. Finding the edge of my body’s endurance and breathing into it. As I bear witness to this power it depressurizes. But it takes time. I’m so relieved that she comes to wake me up to tell me how she is.

As the weeping subsided she takes me by the hand of my awareness into the shoulder girdle, the underarm,  breast… Here she whispers and stomps, pointing exasperated.... tired she finally sits.

I know this part. This is the gift. This is our special place. Somewhere we get to by working together.

I’ve moved through this body with her guidance, her name is Wisdom. Now we’ve arrived together at the place we both need. The watering hole.

As she stomps and points I know what to do... I begin to turn and open the faucets. Moving my arms back and forth... now reclined over a wheel, my head supported with a block. I move my arms back and forth, turn my hands as if they’re turning door knobs, flutter my arms as if I’m a bird, turning my head left and right all while breathing steadily. Sometimes, I need to bulge my eyes, stick out my tongue, exhale with a hiss to midwife this process along. 

I continue and she waits. 

She waits, she’s tired.

Now it’s my turn to show her what it’s like to be a body. I continue my practice, and finally the faucets open, the levees break, the clogs, the stuck, the stored energy begins moving.  This is the most intimate part of “my practice”.

This is the sex of yoga.

As my faucets open, my breath collaborates to initiate an ushering. Right along this way please.... good day to you Great One, oh life. As this prana is directed into the engine of my heart, the circuitry initiates. 

Wisdom and I now sit back into one another and experience the wonder of an awakened heart.

We follow the circuitry powered by the breath as it flows through the heart and begins to drop into the roots of its beating. Its depth is not of this world. As this prana pours, I sit and witness a symphony of dimensions, a complexity I cannot compute... 

My heart beats, my eyes blink, I breathe, a bird chirps, a door slams, my friend texts me. With each beat the connection to the other worlds take hold. And I re-member myself, my selves, life, this life.

Here and now... but also then and there. The singing, the sacred, the wisdom of this path. I’m so glad she woke me up this morning. To be with the feeling of this story.

A Love Song for Creation, Pt.4

You knocked but I couldn’t let you in yet. 

I was experiencing the taste of love unified

I’d come from nothing, just an urge to be

All the way to this feeling, Love

I was in the space between the leaves as they rustled

I was the wind that blew through her hair

I was her relief and also her breath

As she danced in my divinity, I danced too. 

I wasn’t ready yet to let Love go. 

But it was time.

You knocked.  

You drew me back from my immersion 

Into the visceral 

Into remembering

Ananda, Spanda, All of it, Everything, I am

You whispered your musings to me and told me it was your turn

You told me it’d be different

My urge to be had created this

My longing to feel

You knocked again, and this time came in

Terror, Love’s sister.

Here to sing your song

A Love Song for Creation

Your song being part of the totality of this Great Truth

Equal in right to be here now.

The other side of Love. 

But Different. 

You were to come in as Love was being hanged 

You caught her at the end of her gasped and strangled exhale

And held on

And as she passed you entered into the world through the hearts of each person who watched their Mother be hanged. 

It was a new day

A dark day

A day the people were told not to grieve

While this was supposed to be your birthday

It became the day you were exiled.

The day you were rejected

The day the map disappeared.

The people did not mourn the lost of Love

They never felt their feelings

They buried them

And as a result

Another emotion was born

This was the day Hate came

The people hated what they felt

They hated Terror

They hated you

Instead, of feeling you Terror, they cast you away

They never realized what they felt

That, that Hate was for the one who took Love from them

I tell you this story now to share the way I saw it

Terror, you are part of Love. 

There can be no love without you.

You are strong in your purpose

You make people feel. 

You wake people up. 

What happened on that day I was hanged 

The pendulum swung fast and far 

And the hearts of the people got stuck halfway through their pain

There was no grieving. 

There was no being held. 

The process of evoking you was not fully completed

The knowledge and map that comes from traversing through you, Terror was never experienced. 

I tell this story today, so that the people

Can welcome you once again, Terror

On their knees

Just as they revere and pray for Love

So that they may release Hate

And come full circle 

Back to their Mother


Through Love's Eyes, Pt.3

My father used to always tell me that loving God and having a good heart was our religion

We would read scripture together daily

He was a preacher and I was in training

While we both knew I’d never be allowed to be a preacher, that was a man’s job

My father treated me as if I were apprenticing for that duty

I didn’t go to school like the others 

Instead, I spent my time with family, learning the intricacies of devotion

Whether through song, prayer, or worship in the woods around our town

Sometimes, I’d sit out under my favorite nectarine trees just gazing out into the tall grasses

My mother, who taught me to sing, would always tell me that God was in our breath

And all we had to do to be with God was breathe

I did that a lot. It came naturally to me

To sit, especially in the woods or under those trees, and be with God

Sometimes I’d wake up out of my seated prayers and see that the school kids were looking at me

I never knew how long they’d be there but I didn’t mind

Sometimes at night when my mother would brush my hair she’d ask me why I didn't want to play with the other kids

I'd tell her different things, but it always came back to the fact that there was too much noise

I could never get motivated to go out beyond my recall and into the world of others

 I was happiest while studying with my father, singing with my mother, or praying with my grandparents

I liked the way it felt after a couple of hours of deep devotion 

Silent

The air viscous 

It buzzed as if it was alive

I liked that, the interference

I’d look out my window and see the lightning bugs and think they too could feel this holy place. 

My mother got pregnant when I was 17

My sister was born, a beautiful little girl

But my mother died during that process

My father was old, so I raised her. 

I was to be a mother only

It hurt to know that I would never be the preacher at our church. 

I knew all the hymns, the stories of the bible

I knew where our community had come from, was made up of, and who was in it.

I’d spent my whole life preparing to take over for my father

We both thought the community would be happy with this

My father told me a few years later that he’d been talking with the townsmen and had told them he wanted me to preach and that they’d laughed 

We’d find out a few months later that these men had taken it upon themselves to get in touch with the Baptist Church to see about replacing my father. 

My father died during this time. 

My sweet little girl and I would go out into the woods and cry and sing and pray for him.

We’d pray to the Earth, let her hold us as we cried and watered the ground with our tears.

Sometimes we’d stay out into the night and be overcome with grief. 

Like little foxes, we’d circle our fire and howl and yip out our pain. 

It was like cry singing, howling. 

Sometimes we’d see some of the townspeople at the edge of the woods where we were

I always thought they were there to commune too

We’d stopped going to church at this point.

A new man had come to town 

He threw away our holy books for new ones

He was stern and cold. 

He talked a lot but his words were so empty. 

It was like he was trying to talk his belief into being 

But all he really did was severe his connection 

My connection

To that which was right there waiting in the silence

One time, while he was talking I was overcome

His noise was unbearable. Empty.

As if to stop him from continuing, I extended my arm out to touch his chest, to place my hand on his heart

Nothing.

I felt nothing.

I was stunned

I’ve always felt everything so strongly, even the faintest of things

Without hesitation, I asked him to put my hand on his heart

Which he did, surprisingly

I told him to stop talking.

That he was using words to try and evoke the feelings he knew he needed to feel

I told him that he needed to feel the feelings first and then learn to describe them second.

That his words were hollow.

That they distracted me from being with God.

(My father was a man full of feelings. His sermons captivated our hearts. He really was just an Instrument for the Divine.)

This new preacher slapped my hand away from his chest and rebuked me. 

Warning me to never speak to him again. 

I speak a lot with my presence so I just thought what he meant was to go away. 

So I did. 

I took my worship out into the woods where I could trust being left alone 

Where someone else's words couldn't sever my connection to the Divine

And I was left alone until one day the new preacher came and got me

I was kneeling down onto the Earth watching butterflies dance between the dandelions when he came

He put his hands on my wrists and pulled me up from my altar. 

“Townspeople want to see you.” he said. 

It always takes me some time to come back to myself after praying. 

It took a little longer this time because I was pulled away while in prayer.

When I came to my senses I had a rope around my neck. All the townspeople were in front of me. 

I looked at the preacher and for the first time could feel his heart. 

The feeling I felt shocked me. 

I caught eyes with the neighbor boy and felt sadness.

I saw him struggle to breath, like something was caught in his throat.

Funny thing is that I had a tinge in my through too…

In that moment I heard my mother

She told me to welcome this feeling called Terror

So I did

Then the floor fell out from under me.

(Continue to Part 4)

Growing Up with Love, Pt.2

We’d grown up with her. 

We would all be playing and we’d see her skipping rocks by the river or singing in the front pew at church. 

She was the preacher's daughter. 

She was kept separate from most of us kids. 

She and her mother practiced singin.

Her father and her studied scripture.

Her grandparents taught her how to pray.

We didn't really know until we were teenagers that she was different than us.

It was like she couldn't function socially. 

Sometimes, we’d be walking by her house and she’d be sitting under the nectarine trees

We’d try to talk to her but when she’d look up she wouldn't speak 

Her eyes always seemed distant, like they were portals that belonged to somewhere else

Eventually, we stopped talking to her

Years later her mother had another daughter and in that birth, had died. 

Naturally, she raised the girl. 

By this time most of us were married, some with children, others with children on the way. 

We got to see a new side of her because of her litter sister. 

She was so in love.

She would run, just as she did as a little girl, through the woods 

And skip rocks with her little sister

We would hear them laughing and singing… sometimes we would even come up on them praying in the woods.. 

 We didn’t understand her. 

She was rather peculiar.

She was like a child, but she was an adult.

Our entire town knew her from the church and because she was the daughter of the preacher I guess we all just assumed that she was always talking with God.  

When her little sister was about seven, their father died and we got a new preacher. 

Our new preacher was fancy and he valued fancy things. 

Being country and hill folks, we found our value in each other not in fancy things. 

He bought the church new hymnbooks. 

We did not know any of the songs in these books.

Most of the songs were solemn, void of much feeling.

But, we followed our preacher's direction and sang them solemn songs.

What was once a vibrant community became hollower and hollower over time. 

I guess the solemn songs were not the way she wanted to grieve her dad’s death or worship so instead of coming to church, she’d take her little sister out into the woods and together they’d sing the old songs. 

Honestly, some of us would skip church and just sit on the outskirts of those woods to listen. 

They sounded so beautiful. 

Some of the girls would be teary eyed listening to them. 

We’d see them twirl and spin and sing and cry and pray. 

Sometimes, they’d lay down onto the Earth as if it was their Mother.

Sometimes they’d be out there all day and even into the night.

And at night sometimes, we’d hear them howling. 

We didn’t know what to make of it. 

We just went along with our lives.

One day something felt amiss. 

There was a frenzied energy in the air. 

Seemed like something unusual was happening, so I followed the business and noise until I got to the center of our little town. 

I froze when I got there because of what I saw. 

There was the preacher in the town square on a podium. 

He had her with him. 

She had a noose around her neck. 

All of us stood there confused, shocked. 

We waited for the preacher to speak and while we did I looked into her eyes like I used to when we would see her under those nectarine trees.

But this time for the first time

(Not even at her father's funeral)

Her eyes, those portals, were closed

I flinched when I saw

A new feeling crept into me, it hurt my stomach

Clenched by throat

Something horrible was about to happen

In the place of her angel eyes was fear. 

The preacher spoke

“This woman is a witch.” he said. 

“She is possessed with a wild and dangerous spirit that is coming for each of your souls”

He looked at her and then out into the crowd and then to me. 

“For this she must die.” said the preacher. 

I looked back at him and then to her and we caught eyes. 

Then he pulled the lever, and she was hung. 

My breath got caught. 

I couldn’t breath.

I couldn’t believe this was Christianity. 

That this was Love. 

I’d never seen a lady, nonetheless a holy lady, be hanged before.

(Continue to Part 3)

Lost in the Divine Ambrosia, Pt.1

I was in a reverie brought on by singing a song of the Mother.

My heart open.

I was swirling in the arms of the Divine Dance.

Singing with Grace into Oblivion.

No separation.

Soothed by Faith.

I belonged. 

I was Lost in the Divine Ambrosia.

As I was lulled by this harmony,

I was offered this remembering…

A noose around my neck.

Terrified.

For the first time, I was separate from her.

Separation, a foreign feeling.

Before this I’d known no stranger.

Division had been summoned. 

And an unsung feeling was consecrated, 

Terror.

She coursed through my veins and seized my heart.

Then the floor fell from under my feet.

And I was hanged.


My body hung limp,

For all to see.

I was a sacrifice. 

The end of a ritual to evoke and unleash Terror.

A wake up call.  

She was here now.

And hearts were susceptible 

I relived being hanged.

Visceral.

Like the welling up when the need to cry comes. 

An unbearable pressure.

Up through my throat.

My teeth clenched.

When the floor fell,

A shock surged through my body.

My breath hung.

The Mother fled.

Out through the top of my head.

Stunned with this vision I wept. 

I howled. 

My throat burned with the remembering of the flow of power that was strangled out of me.

Then I heard her. 

The one who was hanged.

Her hands, one on the back of my neck, the other on my heart. 

She whispered.

“It is time, sister, to sing again.” 

“You’ve lived in Love. You’re living in Terror.”

“It’s time to heal this trauma.” 

“Build the bridge from heart to brain. Retrain.”

“Evoke Me Once Again.”

“Reclaim what was driven out of you.”

“Unify Love and Terror.”

“Lose yourself once again in this ancient longing.” 

“Embody Me.” 

“Lead Again.” 

“Sing.” 

** This writing has several parts to it that are numbered with title. I received these memories over a period of 12 months.

(Continue to Part 2)