11/4/20
Why is stillness so tough for some? Maybe because it requires you to feel, see, and experience all youâve been running from. Patience is a virtue Iâd love to embody when all I can hear is the voice in my mind thatâs saying in a Trump-like voice âshit or get off the pot.â Sometimes youâve got to give things some time. Our culture went and got itself into a chronic case of . .. running.
I remember M. telling me âI think Iâm just looking for something a little more fast-paced,â when I asked her about her reasons for quitting as a caregiver for a 94 year old woman â the job I felt called to do. Slowing down feels like a welcomed change of pace most of the time for me, especially when caring for someone who is approaching the completion of their life. I owe it to them. Donât we owe it to the wise old souls within us as well? Canât we learn to give ourselves that?
Sit, calmly and contemplate that same old question that same sneaky question that creeps in any time Iâm in the presence of a dying one. . . âWhatâs not dying?â
Thereâs some sort of divine thread between me and the person on their deathbed thatâs the same. Itâs quiet, but bold. Itâs thin, like a veil, yet present, tactile and more real than any errands or preoccupations or past-time I can let my attention get flooded with. Itâs presence. I trust it, when I let myself. Itâs free like a child dancing to music at a party with adults gathered around the little being who hasnât yet learned self-consciousness or separateness or its ability to hurt others or be hurt by others. Itâs wild in its natural understanding of the creative. It doesnât know about all these words. Itâs silent, or loud when it needs to be. Itâs listening to birds, the roosterâs call, the breath, and the heartbeat. Itâs here, alive and well.