Tuesday, December 9, 2008

A Story in Every Moment...

I was walking back into the woods, along the little ridge above the unnamed stream, when it hit me...

I hadn't noticed it in the three previous trips back to where I had cut down an old elm tree - trip after trip retrieving tomorrow's firewood...and the next day's...and the next...

IMG_8129

Yet, in a moment of awareness...I heard the stream - the rushing waters as they traveled past me and towards our home, on their way to join with the Mohawk River on the other side of Route Five. How could I have missed it? Me, the man who professes to love nature and all of her whispers...whispers that most never hear. Yet, a busy mind is a mind that blocks everything else out - stick to the mission at hand!

And a big smile came across my face...and heart, as I reveled in finding myself where I was...and when it was. Of course the moment didn't last long. My mind regaining its lost power - back down my mindless path to and across the stream to retrieve another log - the big ones one at a time up on my shoulder - alternating right and left each 300-foot trip so as to not cramp up. And once again I was in flow - lost in my work, a mindless dump truck hauling load after load without thinking.

And so it goes, as it has gone for most all of my life - lost in the flow of tasks and missions and preparations and following the lead of those who I've relinquished my power to...perhaps.

I've been doing a bit of editing over the past few weeks - following the trails of past expeditions into the woods and on the lake and on paths along streams, and I realized that the stories I write about come from the ordinary moments of each day. It is the ordinary moments of each and every day that have a story to share...with those who are ready to listen. Yet, in order to hear, you have to remove the distractions that race about inside our little brains - thoughts of yesterday and tomorrow and what you "should" be doing...in order to accomplish or progress towards...or...

We are a mission driven culture; we give our children agendas to follow and live by...as our parents and bosses did with us. So often we race from this place to that - this appointment or that meeting...running late...not as prepared as we'd like to be...wondering what you'll find when you get there...and down the road - and believe me, it's a short road, you totally forget what all the fuss was about, because most likely, it never really mattered in the first place - it only mattered to well-trained minds that follow a trail of breadcrumbs to a place called Oz.

And all along that walk or ride or while sitting completely still with a racing mind, the moment at hand patiently awaits to reveal what is…right now; the story that's always and everywhere unfolding before us - that we're too busy to recognize or revel in...or share with our children.

I've made a few more trips back into the woods on my favorite path this afternoon - the bright sun streaming through the leafless trees and the stream singing my favorite song in the background - water that will eventually make its way past the building of cubes down in downtown Albany where my eyes would often gaze if I found myself near a window on the fifth floor...and it hit me once again...

Here I was, walking through the woods on a Thursday afternoon - a beautiful late-autumn day, and I was walking in the woods along the stream...harvesting tomorrows' heat from the garden in my back yard; and...harvesting a warmth that comes from realizing how very wealthy I am, as I walk amongst what no man can create - heaven.

Three and half years ago, I would have been sitting in a ten-by-ten cubicle...with my back to the window, my neck crooked while on the phone discussing what no longer mattered...to me. Someone had to do it...and make the big bucks...and drive the shiny new cars...and live in a development with endless green lawns...but it didn't have to be me, at least...not any more.

And I think back to what I asked for as I left that building of cubes for the last time...it was "enough" - nothing more and nothing less, and I've come to realize that this is what I have. We each foretell our future...isn't it nice when we find ourselves in the heaven of our own making, which has always been there waiting for us to stop long enough to realize and revel in the moments where stories are born.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Lorelei Teaches Another Class...

We forget...sometimes, and need to be awakened by those who've not yet learned to focus on grown-up stuff - the stuff that seems to overtake our lives as we age...the stuff that takes up the room where magic once resided, or so it sometimes seems.

Joan and I drove up to camp with the grandkids yesterday; pulling the trailer with our Chevy Tracker in order to grab another load of logs...logs for the fires of the winter of 2008-09.  But it was more of an adventure than a work trip - a "field trip" that Lorelei had been asking for the last few visits; "Can we go to camp today?"

And so off we went, packing up the bare minimum and taking off, listening the whole way to Lorelei's never-ending chatter, which brings constant smiles to Joan and I.  Aydan would pipe in every once in a while with a toddler scream or blabber...and when Lorelei would squeeze her doll in just the right spot, it would cry or say "da-da".  The radio never came on - the entertainment sat in the back seats. And then the songs started - initiated not by Joan or I, but by Lorelei - first came "Mary Had a Little Lamb"; and then one we all joined in to sing together; "Old McDonald Had A Farm", where we went through the names and sounds of every farm animal we could think of (...with a moo moo here...)...while Aydan fell asleep.  How it brought back childhood memories from my own past...driving to Sacandaga River in a car filled with a family of seven...all singing, or searching for the next Beatle...or China...rides that seemed so very long - rides that go by so quickly now, unless a child is there with you to point out what we no longer see - extending the ride - extending time...

That is the way it works, you know...stretching time or doing away with it altogether, comes down to the way we interact with each moment of our lives - the more in touch we are with the moment at hand, the longer that moment seems to last.  A child doesn't hang on to yesterday or place all their hope in tomorrow, the way so many adults come to live their lives - young children see what "is" - right now...and as a result, time becomes irrelevant, or so it seems.

...And as we made it to the top of Bleecker Mountain, and took the right onto Lily Lake Road...and the pavement gave way to dirt and gravel, we watched for and found the giant "pink" rock (a rock at the end of an isolated driveway that gets a new coat of paint every other year) and then the yellow rock (another giant rock that identified another driveway) - landmarks that tell us...we were getting close.
When we got to the end of Goat Farm Road, we came to a stop, so Grammy could get out and lower the chain, which allows us to proceed down the "Little" road to our cabin - our final destination.

As we approached the final turn before arriving at our cabin, I pushed the shift forward on the floor of the Tracker, putting it into four-wheel-drive, getting ready to climb the extremely steep hill up to the cabin.  But as I turned into the driveway, I stopped and asked everyone to wait just a minute so I could disconnect the trailer and push it off to the side. After the trailer was parked, we were off - "Hang on!", I said and up the hill we climbed - all the way up, past the old outhouse and up to the generator shack, where we came to a stop...and then backed down to the cabin steps.

Aydan woke up during the ride on the bumpy climb - the last leg of our journey, and we all piled out of the Tracker with "Camp" enthusiasm!  We were here - the "here" that is far away from the mundane and ordinary...the place where the unexpected is the norm...the place where magic lives behind every tree and under every rock.  The place where water is everywhere in endless forms - the stream, the lake, and the magical puddles in the gravel road.

After a quick lunch, Lorelei and I headed down the hill together with a jug to be filled at the spring - the place where we get our drinking water. It's a pretty long walk to the spring and it's made longer because of the giant puddles that reside in a part of the road, around the bend, which is always filled with what cannot be passed - salamanders (actually red spotted newts).  These are the same ones I loved as a child - it's just that here, I get to see them in both of their stages at the same time.  You see, these newts have two stages of life - a juvenile terrestrial stage, where they live on land (they are bright orangey-red in this "red eft" stage); and a more olive-green adult stage where they live and reproduce in water (usually ponds).  In this giant puddle, we always find the "in-between" ones - those that are going through their physical changes - changes in colors, from orange to green, and the flattening of their tails in order to help propel them through the water.

...I didn't want to stop at the puddle yet - my adult mind still wanting to control our steps, and we pushed on past the puddles (walking in the grass on the side of the road, in order to keep our sneakers dry) taking a left off the road and getting our water from the spring - another adventure in itself...water coming out of a pipe that sticks out of the side of a leaf-covered hill, and the rushing stream from Kari's Creek another twenty-five feet below us...

But on the way back to the cabin, we stopped for quite a while at the giant puddles!  I caught one of the newts and handed it to Lorelei.  She held it with a bit of uneasiness, this being the first time in a while - another reintroduction to the realm of the unknown, where one wants to experience it, yet is still a bit uneasy because our mind cannot predict what's to come.  But, after a time she came to "love" the experience.  She placed the newt back into the water and it swam away.  With my hands in the water, I herded a second newt towards Lorelei's waiting hands at one end of the giant puddle and she was able to grab it and lift it out of the water.  She was so proud of herself and said, "I got it all by myself!"

Once again, she gently held and manipulated the little salamander - flipping it from one side to the other, examining its color and the endless spots; this one being a bit greener than the last. Finally, she let that one go as well...giving it a touch on its tail after releasing it into the water, which sent it wriggling off into the deepest part of the puddle, seeking shelter beneath a water-logged leaf at the bottom.

Back to the cabin we began walking and there on the road was Joan and Aydan, who had walked to meet us. Lorelei burst out with the story she had just experienced, calling out to Grammy - telling of the salamanders in the puddle, and most of all, of how she got one "all by herself!"

And as we got to our driveway, we heard a car coming - it was our neighbor Andy.  And we spent the next half-hour down by the lake catching up a bit.  I sat on Andy's row boat, while Lorelei and Aydan climbed all over the overturned boat...and in the background the wind whispered...it was time for naps. We said our goodbyes and headed back up to the cabin.

Lorelei started her nap in the downstairs bedroom, but then, after going potty...switched to one of the twin beds in the little upstairs bedroom.  I went upstairs and laid down in the other twin bed on the other side of the room and watched as she calmed down, which took a long time, and then the final turn-over...and she was gone...into a deep sleep - a wonder-filled camp sleep...and downstairs I went to find Joan putting Aydan down (he had fallen asleep in her arms as she rocked him in one of the old recliners)...and then there was silence...

While the kids slept, I went about my work, transporting logs from a staging point at the top of the hill behind the cabin, the culmination of my work two days earlier, down to the bottom of the hill where the trailer was parked.  Endless trips up and down the hill carrying a log in each arm or on shoulders each trip down, while panting on each return trip back up the hill.

I had the trailer all loaded and was able to cool down before we heard Aydan, who woke up first from his nap.  I went upstairs and sat on the bed across from Lorelei, who woke as I sat down.  I asked her if she had a good nap, and she said "yes" - and even better, she woke up in a good mood - a camp mood (sometimes she can be a bit grouchy after her afternoon naps)...and downstairs we went to continue our adventure!

She wanted to go back to the puddles in the road - to show Grammy the salamanders that lived there and so, Grammy and Lorelei headed out the door and down the hill, while Aydan and I watched.  Aydan and I played on the porch - stacking blocks, as Joan and Lorelei's voices faded...as they rounded the corner down the road...

When they returned, Lorelei had to tell me all about their adventure - again the highlight being the salamanders she had caught and held and examined..."all by herself!" And she wanted to take me back to the puddles with her...and at first, I thought enough is enough - we'd spent enough time with the salamanders and the puddles, but then I said, "What - are you crazy - don't pass up this opportunity to experience one more time, the magic that is shared when a four year old finds and learns to become a part of a new world!"  And so, out the door we headed - down the steps and down the hill; down the road and 'round the corner to the puddles that held that day's magic for anyone who would dip their hands in to feel and hold and experience what costs nothing...but a bit of time.

What a trip it was - this trip to heaven with little hands and minds who feel and see what we so often miss.

And now, it's time to tend to some grown-up work...but in the back of my mind I hope to remember, that it's the child within that makes every moment, one filled with potential.  If we look upon the task at hand with the eyes of our child - the one who knows that it is a moment that has never been and one that will never be available again (each and every moment is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity), we see what we've not seen before...and we enter a place called heaven where time slows to a crawl and everything is new, which is of course the reality we too often forget as we go through today, the same things we went through yesterday...as time races by...and so it goes.

Find a four year old and follow her around for an afternoon - to find what has been left behind in favor of grown-up paradigms, masks, roles, worries and anxieties...and find that reality is not what we've constructed in our mind - it's waiting to be lived; waiting to be discovered as we become parts of our world, rather than pretending to be apart from it - sheltering ourselves from all that might be...perhaps, maybe...

Tuesday, August 26, 2008

Moments Resurrected in my Strainer

It's funny how something will trigger a deep dive into a yesterday you thought was gone.  That's what happened, as I got ready to do the dishes this morning, shortly after Joan left for work...

Taking care of Lorelei and Aydan (our grandchildren) a couple days each week is an education - a classroom where Joan and I sit before untainted teachers who seek to fulfill their every curiosity - to make each and every moment count for something - to live every moment like it's the only one they have...which is the case in reality, or so it seems to me (that everything we've ever done and/or accomplished has taken place in "the moment at hand").

Yesterday I spent time with each grandchild alone...Lorelei (who's four years old) and I traveled around the yard, picking some ripe tomatoes from the garden; picking a bunch of apples from the ground, beneath two apple trees (one a crab apple tree and the other I think is a Golden Delicious variety - very tasty!); picking up some trash from the side of Sacandaga Road (trash others throw from their car windows in their rush to get there - wherever there is...); finding a wooly-bear caterpillar on the driveway near some tiny cherries that have begun to fall from the Black Cherry trees - a caterpillar that fascinated Lorelei for the better part of a half-hour; and time in the garage, where I had music playing from an old stereo...while I worked on an old chain saw - cleaning the spark plug and spark arrestor and air filter - and asking Lorelei for this screwdriver and that pair of pliers...and in between, she touched each tool in the toolbox - sorting and examining and organizing what was oblivious to me...

...And then there's Aydan, who at one year old, has to be watched to insure he doesn't eat leaves and grass...and rocks, while outside.  And he said the first real words that I understood - mimicking Joan after lunch was done saying, "All Done", while at the same time raising his hands into the air...and while Joan read a second book to Lorelei just before her nap, I held Aydan, here before this keyboard and computer screen - running my fingers up his leg to find a baby Buddha belly that triggered endless giggling - is there anything better than a toddler's laughter?...I don't thinks so...

...And yet - all that happened yesterday, while in the presence of my grandchildren (my professors), had been forgotten - lost to my morning fortune telling exercise, where I plan the steps I will take and predict their outcome...that is, until I found trapped in the sink strainer, a few things that reminded me of the importance of my yesterday...and before the thoughts and lessons left my mind once again, I sat down and wrote these words:

Moments Resurrected in my Strainer

I cleared the sink of dishes...and sippy cups...

     And on went the hot water...sprayed to clear the way...

And there in the strainer appeared a moment...

     Brought back to life - pulled from the archives of my mind.

A bean and a tiny piece of hot dog...and some tiny twigs...

     And into my time machine I climbed...Back to the Future...

Straining away the moments of my life...

     Some are too big to fit through the holes,

          They remain with me, placed into my treasure chest, 

               Waiting for the right time to reappear.

And that moment came this morning after Joan left for work...

     Leaving me to me and the Tuesday I call my own.

And there in the sink strainer I found a magical moment,

     A moment that now will be moved to a new place in my attic...

A place that is sheltered from the winds and rains and distractions

     Of a world that too often screams what should be whispered;

          All in the hope that we follow where they lead...

The bean and the tiny piece of hot dog...and the twigs,

     All came from Lorelei's plate - a child's plate.

A plate that had sat upon a magical tray,

     Inside a tent where we all ate supper yesterday...

A picnic supper of hot dogs and beans...inside my pack tent,

     On the lawn above the stream - Lorelei and Aydan...Joan and I...

Almost forgotten, while planning the moments of my new day...

     Telling my own fortune in my usual way...until

           I saw the bean...and my mind sought out the saved files

               And into my Now came yesterday...for a time.

Lorelei ate everything on her plate - so unusual in her picky stage...

     Supper in a tent changes everything - makes a meal special

          For Lorelei, Aydan, Joan and I...

Well, she ate everything but a single bean...

     And a tiny piece of hot dog that got left behind

          In the ketchup we call "dipping sauce"...

And the twigs...ah yes, the twigs...

     They came after supper was done,

          As the rolling and jumping had begun...

               Sending debris from the nylon-spun floor into the air,

                    And onto a child's plate and my attic's stairs.

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

The School of Nature

Nature offers what is needed to fully experience all of our senses – birds singing, water flowing, wind blowing through the forest canopy, the smells of flowers and the taste of a blackberry found along a path. Best of all, is the wondrous feeling of peace that falls over us when in the company of Nature.

Time with Nature, for so many in our fast-paced culture, has become a rarity. We have things to do and people to see and places to go and spending time with Nature…just isn’t an option. In fact, many would see it as a “waste of time” – time that could be better spent “doing” something that will lead to one more check mark on the to-do list that every overactive mind is busy tending to. And…this is the mindset we’re handing off to our children.

I’ve been reading a book by Richard Louv titled, “Last Child in the Woods – Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder”, which has helped to highlight the changes to children’s lives over the course of the last couple of generations…with regard to their relationship with Nature. Richard Louv writes, “Nature-deficit disorder describes the human costs of alienation from nature, among them: diminished use of the senses, attention difficulties, and higher rates of physical and emotional illnesses. The disorder can be detected in individuals, families, and communities.”

When I was a child, my imagination wasn’t restricted to written instructions or adult supervised, highly structured activities on manicured fields. For the most part, we made it up as we went. Nature provides all that is needed to entertain a child for hours – the child just needs to be introduced and what will follow is a life-long relationship that nurtures and fulfills and teaches some of the most important lessons of life.

The other day, my wife Joan and I were outside in the yard with our grandchildren, Lorelei and Aydan (ages four and one respectively). We were wandering about the yard, finding fairy houses (mushrooms) in the lawn and picking tree stars (maple leafs) while standing on the "big rock" when…the stream caught Lorelei's attention.

Lorelei asked, "Grammy, can we walk in the stream?"  Of course, Joan’s answer was “Yes!” – both of us always wanting to nurture our grandchildren’s relationship with Nature, especially the Nature that lives just outside our own front door.

While Joan went inside to get water shoes, Lorelei and I...and Aydan in my arms, walked through the yard down to our favorite spot on the stream. It’s a place where moss-covered rock ledges wear a thin coat of ever-moving water - water that slows to a crawl as it gently dives into a knee-deep pool.

And there in the deep area, I saw a little fish swimming and pointed it out to Lorelei.  And then, right in front of us, a frog jumped into the water - SPLASH! 

Joan was heading down to the stream, water shoes in hand, and Lorelei was calling to her - "Grammy, we saw a fish and a frog!!!" 

Sneakers and socks were replaced with water shoes and then Grammy and Lorelei walked hand in hand down the rounded rock steps and into the unnamed stream below. Back and forth across the stream they walked, and then upstream, and then back down to the deeper water in the pool below.

Lorelei in stream

I took off Aydan’s shorts handed him to Joan so he too, could experience the wonder of the stream…while I focused the camera and took a few pictures. Aydan was immediately at ease with the water that surrounded him. He splashed the water and grabbed some moss to feel its texture. Joan took the moss from his hands before it got to his mouth, which is the final destination for anything placed in the hands of a one year old.

 Aydan in Stream3

Their senses came alive as they walked through and sat in the crystal clear water - the way it feels as it kisses their legs and feet, the sight and sound of it as it flows all around them. They became one with the water – one with one of Nature’s main characters...and fell under a trance that they didn’t want to awaken from.

To me, flowing water is the purest reminder of life - a professor who teaches us how to achieve flow, free from attachments. Streams and rivers show by example that, without exception, there's always a way around every obstacle – one of infinite lessons taught by the tuition-free school called Nature.

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Growth in Nature...and in Ourselves

Spring is the time for new growth.  In the above picture, the new growth can be easily seen by the lighter and brighter color green on the end of every branch - most evergreens show their new growth in this way.

Even the tiny forest floor evergreens show how they've grown with the use of color.

How that caught my attention the other day - the fact, that regardless of the environmental conditions (too wet, too dry, just right...), that some growth always occurs.

In upstate NY, we have four distinct seasons. During the winters, the hardwood trees hibernate, as do many mammals, plants, amphibians, insects, etc. - they sleep through the cold dark winter, living off of stores of food gathered during the late summer/fall months when they gorge on what nature provides...

When I'm cutting trees up for firewood (all of them offered by death - whether blown down in a storm, or just those who've succumbed to disease), I like to look at the rings...

The rings on the log represent a visual timeline that tells more than the age of the tree. It shows, through the varied widths, which of those years were good and which were a struggle. It is the outside layer of the tree that grows - each year adding a new outer ring or record of the previous year's growth.

...And as with everything in nature, I like to compare/contrast what occurs in nature with our own human race...and with me.  I have to wonder about my own growth over the years...and how it might be measured.  It's not so much the lines that have become more defined upon my face - the wrinkles that welcome one into the next stage...or the gray hair...or the arthritis beginning to reshape my fingers - no, the growth I seek to measure is a bit deeper...

There have been good years and trying years; years that have included incredible suffering, as well as years that have been the happiest of my life...but each of those years was filled with the building blocks of every life - endless present moments that brought with them opportunities for new growth - opportunities to grow in wisdom - through new experiences, new teachers, and new beginnings.

Sometimes I learned and grew from this lesson or that early on, while other times...I needed to relive a particular lesson over and over until it finally sunk in; and some lessons, perhaps...I'm still struggling with, as I live in a world that too often preaches what "should" be or "might" be, rather than facing the reality of what "is". 

I used to like to use the analogy of the hour glass, as it pertains to life.  The grains of sand in the bottom chamber represent the moments of life gone by.  Some of them were very fruitful, while others were squandered. Some people spend their lives looking down into that chamber - lives that focus upon yesterday's happy times; lives that focus on past transgressions by us or against us - savoring the good old days or wallowing in a poor-me mentality; lives that focus upon "what might have been" had I only done this or that...instead of what I did do.

...Others like to look to the grains of sand that still live in the upper chamber. The young tend to see so many - "I'll live forever and time is in infinite abundance"; others may see too few grains remaining and suffer in facing the end of one's life - even though life has not yet left. In those grains are tomorrow's moments - and they belong to tomorrow, not today.

I've spent some time in each of those mindsets at one time or another during my own life and will probably visit them again in the future, although as long as I only "visit", I'll be alright.

I like to think that the magic resides in only one place at a time - in the grain of sand that is now falling from the upper chamber to the lower chamber. It is the grain that represents the NOW - the present moment, and it asks for our undivided attention.  The present moment is where our power resides.  The present moment is the only time anything and everything has ever occurred, without exception. 

The present moment is our "gift" - our opportunity to grow, in order to expand our current growth ring. When we spend the majority of our time with the grain of sand as it falls from the upper chamber and before it reaches the bottom chamber, we become focused; we become aware; we take control away from a mind who tends to dwell in the past and future; we understand the true concept of being born-again and perhaps most importantly, we maximize our chance for a big fat growth ring.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Falling Awake...

Falling awake - it was part of a Jethro Tull lyric that caught my ear...and mind. 

Not falling asleep - no, that's too normal - too routine - that's what we do when we get into bed each night...and perhaps, what we do when we get into the car each morning...when we finally sit at our desk...when we return the first phone call - we fall asleep; a deep sleep whereby habitual patterns of acting and responding are carried out without much awareness...cruise control in the modern world we've been immersed in.

Perhaps...maybe - fortunately not always...

And so, a topic in my mind, I wrote the title and then placed my fingers on the keyboard and let them roam...and here's where I ended up:

 

Falling Awake

In a dream, I was rubbing my eyes...

   Trying my best to clear what had grown there - a painful stye.

I would see glimpses of what I had missed,

   But opening "my" eyes, burned in the cultural mist.

Then there beside the stream I saw a little waterfall,

   One that had been born from the rains of the night before.

I bent down low and put my head beneath Mother's tears...

   And opened my eyes to let in what so many fear.

Through the falls I saw the green of a new world;

   It was singing a soft song as it danced with the breeze...

      My mind fell into the stream below and in my hand...appeared a key.

A mosquito dipped his reed into my back...

   And I flinched - sending the key flying towards the next moment.

And thinking I'd lost what might never again be found,

   I dove into the rushing stream below...

      The water parted to let me in and we became one...

         I was the key and the key was me...and we fit into the world...

            Yet, only if we find our own eyes...and see.

Downstream I went...no work required...just let go...and flow...

Thursday, June 12, 2008

A Clear Path

So often, we spend our time on clear paths...

     paths cut by those who came before.

And most every clear path is maintained by

     "What's Always Been"...in hope of permanence.

          They are pruned and weed-whacked and...

               Too often, devoid of any new growth.

New growth on yesterday's path...yesterday's words,

     Just cannot be tolerated - Heresy!

          And we sink our roots into that soil and breath in deeply...

               And so it goes; or so it seems...to me.

Sometimes I wonder...and sometimes I wander;

     About the world and onto a path not readily traveled.

          And there I find the sprouts and buds of new birth...

               And I have to ponder...before I swing my machete...

Who is it that asks for a clear path anyway?

     Is it a me that my culture grew?

          Is it a we that I lost an old game to?

               Or...is it a mind that finds peace in re-runs?

Today is a new day...as they all are;

     Will I travel the same route to the same places?

If I walk the clear path, then my destination is already known...

     Perhaps...so thinks the mind of Mother Culture.

          A safe and well lit path that gives what our mind seeks;

               The Known - the equilibrium the brain seeks shelter beneath.

But what of that new growth?

     What of those sprouts?

          Seeking nourishment from our shared sun...

               in this new day...this never before lived moment...

What do these sprouts of the new spring offer?

     Should I listen?  Should I dare to listen...and to see?

          Or - do I heed the warnings of those who cling...

               To yesterday's beliefs...to yesterday's promise?

Where does the true promise lie...is it a lie?

     Where do I place my foot next - is it up to me?

          And who is it I think is me?  Is it we?

Into the virgin forest I will walk today,

     And what I will find...will be; and perhaps...

          The me that will see, will find what's never been seen.

Perhaps...maybe...

     Wondering, wandering on or away from

          The Clear Path...once again.

Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Spider Webs, Gas Lights...and the Mind

Sometimes, it seems that yesterday's light  - a light that once allowed us to see clearly in dark times...has dimmed...or it flickers out of control, and what once acted as a tool that helped us to see...becomes a distraction - a blockage - that prevents us from seeing clearly. 

We feel safe in a well-lit place; it provides a sense of security and well-being. For so many (me included), the dark is a place filled with sounds that we cannot identify; secrets from the realm of the unknown - a place where fear patiently awaits to keep our mind company...perhaps. And in the darkness, the mind creates...and what it creates is fantasy - and minds...cannot distinguish between reality and fantasy.

Lights (whether gas or electric) are mechanical devices - like our brains.  They are filled with switches and pathways, and perhaps most importantly - energy that flows!  Lights (and minds) are both tools created to serve us; to help us see and understand; to help us grow and make sense of what we came to learn and be...or so it seems to me.

If the light is not working properly, then there's always a reason - the energy flow is blocked - why?

I took apart one of my wall gas lights up to our camp this past week because it was not working properly.  For a year it's not worked right and so...I've relied on the only other gas light we have...on the opposite wall. But, having a light that doesn't work is a distraction - and distractions like to find a home in the back of one's mind - always asking for attention...a task that needs to be completed before we can let go and move on - FIX ME!!!

And so, I did a bit of Googling, and found the schematic for the light fixture, and armed with that plan, I took the light apart...

And inside the narrow pipe, through which the propane gas flows, I found a tiny web - a web spun by a spider that long ago abandoned his home.  While the spider was gone, he left behind a barrier to future flow.  It was a lesson for me that the spider left behind - a lesson to grow from...and finally, I sat before his podium and digested my meal.

It wasn't hard to clean out the blockage, yet it required me to take action, which is something we too often put off till tomorrow.  There's always a reason - a blockage to the free-flow of energy; there's always a reason, whether it's a gas light...or a mind.  Sometimes we can clear the blockage on our own...and other times, we may need to ask for help.  Unfortunately, it is often seen (from a cultural view) as a weakness to ask for help - we should be able to fix it on our own - yet, I believe the opposite is true; that it is the strong who are capable of asking for help when they hit a roadblock...knowing a better world exists on the other side of the problem.

I've spent a couple over-nights up to our cabin in the past week - a couple nights where I've read beneath the gas light that for over a year...didn't work.  Now it's brighter than ever - not just because of the free-flowing gas - but also because I gave it a new mantle (the old one had a couple holes in it, which decreases the brightness of the light...and allows spiders access to the light's inner workings).  And, no longer does my mind dwell upon the light I avoided fixing; no, instead it revels in the light provided by the light I fixed!

And its brightness made me realize that the other gas light on the other wall...had dimmed...because it too, had a couple small holes in the mantle. And so, yesterday I replaced that mantle as well, which will make the room a bit brighter at night during reading time...and spiders will not be able to gain access to where they don't belong...for now.

Maintenance is important - gas light maintenance...and the maintenance of our mind. This experience has made me think a bit about the webs that tend to accumulated in human minds (including my own); webs left behind by spiders that no longer exist.  I listened to a passage from the book, "The Four Agreements" recently that went something like this: "Only humans pay over and over for the same mistake - we get punished or we punish ourselves for past mistakes or transgressions every time we "think" about them - or another reminds us about them, rather than being punished just once - suffer for it just once - learn from it once...and then move on."  And isn't it the same for perceived transgressions of others against us - we hold on to them long after the lesson should have been learned; or the experiences that "hurt" us (physically or psychologically) - experiences that left such a large rock on our path that we cannot find a way around it...and we become stuck in a place void of true happiness - a place that becomes stale and unfulfilling (some would call this place Hell).  Webs without spiders serve no purpose.  Webs with no spiders need to be cleared from our mind in order to allow the energy of our life to flow freely...and joyfully.

Lessons come to awaken us, or so it seems to me - perceived problems are lessons; not something to be avoided or complained about or clung to as an excuse for the way we live our lives.  Problems arise to help us grow in wisdom - they help to spur action and help us change course when old roads no longer bring us to desired destinations.  By taking action and overcoming perceived problems we not only learn and grow, but we also allow flow to resume - taking action is the way to clear blockages.  Sometimes problems arise to help us grow - alert us to webs that have taken up residence where they serve no purpose other than to block us from the light we need.  Like the Adirondack stream with ever-flowing water - there will be rocks to flow around or over...but they don't stop the flow.  In fact, it is the water traveling over and around the rocks that makes the flow visible and audible - that makes the music we so so love to be in the Presence of...perhaps.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Winter's Scar...(4-20-08)

Joan and I spent the day up to camp yesterday.  We had to park at the end of the town road and hike in because there was still too much snow to drive all the way in - still too deep on the little seasonal dirt road that leads to Holly Lake and our cabin.

It was a beautiful day - another beautiful day (it's been nearly a week of sunshine and warm temperatures) - and yet, the deep snow pack of the mountain elevations meant that the snow would still live on for another week...or two.  Even though the temperature reached up into the seventies (Fahrenheit), the snow refused to give up her grip upon the lands that live in the shade, which in the forest...is the majority of the lands.

As our day came to an end, with dusk falling and a full moon rising, we ended our journey back at our car - putting away the back pack...

And yet, as I opened my door...Joan asked for my attention...

Off to our right, a yearling walked wearily from the woods and right in front of us - no more than twenty-five or thirty feet away...

While the young deer was a bit scrawny, she was not skin and bones - she'd made it through one of the harsher winters we've had in the last ten years - especially during the months of February and March...so much snow fell - yet, only in the mountains.  Down in the valleys, we mainly got rain - yet, it always fell as snow up in the Adirondacks.

Always wanting to be the Dr. Doolittle, I walked towards the yearling and while she watched me, she did not run...and I talked to her in a soft language she's never heard.  And then a beaver crashed down his tail onto the pond's surface, just down the road and the yearling flinched - the beaver warns all his neighbors of danger, whether it's real or not.

And the deer took heed and walked off over an embankment and out of sight...a trance-like walk - a walk I will never understand, as another cold night was approaching to replace what had been perhaps the warmest day of the new season...back she walked to a place I will never know or understand. 

 

Winter's Scar 

I cannot understand...but I try

   As I watch yesterday's struggle to survive...today.

It's not the struggle - the actual suffering, I see,

   No, it's the scar that was left behind.

I can see it in her eyes,

   And I can see it in the way she walks,

I can see it in her lack of reaction to me

   As she walks...as she's walked for too many months...

Winter hung on a bit too long this year,

   Especially here in the mountains,

Where the rain of the valleys below, fell as snow...

   Where walking and finding food became so very hard...

And yet...this yearling somehow endured and survived,

   and now wears a blank weariness as her badge...

I revel in her life - the test I would not survive,

   And so it goes, way up high within the Adirondack snow globe...