Sunday, April 7, 2013

Blog #9 A Little Sadness Goes a Long Way


Flagstaff Hill, Schenley Park…Sunday, April 7, 2013 11:12 a.m...

This is the first day since we began these blogs twelve weeks ago that I come to this place of my own volition.  Each time I have been here previously, it was out of necessity, to fulfill a requirement. I have taken it seriously and have been the better for it. On each occasion, I have been granted a small dispensation of grace and well-being, and if for nothing else, I am thankful for the excursions and musings done here.

Today has been different. Today, I went for another reason. I went for me. I went because I wanted to and it wasn’t because of the weather. Schenley was warm today and enveloped me in an accepting kindness. Her reception was soft and gentle and abounding in hospitality. The abundance of generosity and wisdom in nature never disappoints. She is always there waiting to attend because she somehow knows before you do why you are there. The root systems within her flow down deep within the earth and extend its tentacles far and wide to pick up on the languageless vibrations that reverberate through the air and fall back to the ground.  Our feelings transmit directly to her before we are able to articulate and recognize what they are for ourselves. Without knowing it, I have cast out my sad nets and red signals to her waiting to be retrieved. I have heard the blaze of her invitation today and so I aimed my road towards her hope.

I had a vivid dream last night. In it I was drunk. It wasn’t a good or bad dream; I was just very drunk. No one was injured. It was just a couple of friends and I drinking. I woke up. I haven’t had a drink in for a while now, and I was curious as to the significance of this dream. Why now? Does it mean something deeper? I sat in bed and felt an undefinable emptiness. I felt weak and heavy, lifeless and prosaic, torpid and apathetic, somnolent and ache. I felt sadness. Cunning that little disease alcoholism is. I was experiencing an emotional pang and longing for something not in my grasp like a building love wanting to be sent out but not ready to be received remaining like an endless necklace wrapped around my heart. I hadn’t lost anything and wasn’t grieving but the feeling was certain. It must have been clandestinely accruing while I have been inundated with constant work and fatherhood. Feelings like this used to be triggers for wanting to drink in order to drown out the sadness and to not have to confront what it was, where it came from, how it felt, or what to do to assuage its demands. Not anymore. I get up and follow my morning routine to confront and disinter the causes.

 First, I kneel and give thanks and gratitude for the beautiful things in my life: my daughter, my daughter, my daughter, my daughter, my wonderful supportive and loving family, my best friends living in North Carolina, my home, myself, music, art, creativity, ideas, books, forgiveness, second chances, redemption, my recovery and the moment. I give dignity to my material poverty by naming the things that I have, that I need and remembering that I need nothing more, and although I may be monetarily poor, I am spiritually full and as rich as I could possibly be at this moment. After this ritual, I meditate, take a quick dive and swim around my nameless interior to check in and make friends with myself. This is my spiritual tool kit. But alas, I am still sad. The feeling persists like a solitary bell burning with echoes.

I have learned and trained in the art of letting go through searching for and acknowledging the derivations. I have made a call to nature today. Schenley Park offered her open womb for this ancient cleansing of letting go. I brought my sadness to her. I may be quiet and lethargic today, but I will not withdraw form life. Anchored and laying in the cool olive grass, staring up at the sky, I understand the unified cohesion of earth and sky. There is no separation save for our own imposed and illusory boundaries. I am reminded of the advice to always stay rooted to the ground, to stay down and not get too high with elation or excitement; to always stay grounded because it is the ground that will bring you up to the sky. I get it. 

Sadness is one of the most natural states of life and yet so many of us do not know how to cope with it. We as a society no longer allow people to cope with sadness in a salubrious and natural way. We are either taught to ignore it, hide it or suppress it when it expresses itself. Some families don’t allow their children to bear any semblance of it because they dash in to relieve it without allowing the child to experience and cope with sadness. Later on, when that “screened-off” emotion isn’t available to them when they need it, the loss of sadness will result in manic and unbalanced behavior. Sadness requires a great strength to bear and if we are constantly protected from it we will not develop the requisite endurance to cope with these essential, natural and unavoidable feelings. People will run out of ways to avoid the experience of sadness resulting in all forms of self-destructive acts. We have become a medicated pharmaceutical society. If sadness cannot be confronted organically we can bypass the whole notion of grief and wish it away through chemical drugs administered by Pfizer and the like. When an infant, child, or adult shows that he can cry from sadness you can infer that they have traveled a long way in the development of their feelings...like the wind blowing and whistling above me, sad crying is one of the main roots of the more valuable kind of music.

The park has bestowed a kind of solitude where I am not alone. Nature offers a place where I can be patient and attentive to my sadness while knowing something more than myself is also there to listen to it. There is a utility in staying with the sadness; this ground, this earth and sky, the sensuous warmth of the spring wind offers emotional support helping me to feel and endure this sadness. Lying on this ground, I receive from the earth, an underlying belief that the capacity to bear sadness wholeheartedly, without pushing the experience away, emerges as essential to being truly alive and engaged in the world. 
 
I have been coming here for a few months contemplating the ineffable powers, mysteries, and beauty of nature; wondered what our connections to it are, how we need it, take from it, destroy it, create it, are it, live with and without it. I haven’t found any answers that can be categorized or memorialized in writing; but today, coming to her humbly and vulnerably, not looking for anything, I finally may have touched upon a semblance of an answer.    

 

2 comments:

  1. Marc,

    These picture additions are wonderful! I love how you incorporate outside paintings and photographs other than pictures from your specific space. It adds another layer to your blog.

    I admire how honest you are in the beginning of this specific blog post: "This is the first day since we began these blogs twelve weeks ago that I come to this place of my own volition. Each time I have been here previously, it was out of necessity, to fulfill a requirement." I think there is definitely something about experiencing nature when you feel a sense of freedom and you have eloquently captured that something in this post. Perhaps nature offers more to us when we are not expecting something from it?

    Marguerite

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  2. I, too, admire the honesty and vulnerability of this entry. You've meditated - because all your entries are truly meditations - on feelings that we humans are not supposed to admit to. I was especially struck by your assertion that Sadness requires a great strength to bear." We often think about being sad as a weakness, but you've illustrated here how we can also take strength from, as you've said, being "attentive" to it.

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