The language of tears

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The Language of Tears. It would make a good title for a book, even if I don’t want to put that kind of pressure on myself just yet. As I laid next to my cat in the loft this afternoon, I made an apathetic list of chapter titles, too (titled by tear characteristics). I thought about how, supposably, the Eskimos have hundreds of words for ‘snow.’ An elaborate vocabulary created to express something so integral to their day to day life. I’m finding that such linguistic extravagance would be useful these days. Tears of deep grief are made up of an entire assemblage of body movement (or lack of), emotion (or lack of) and moisture (or lack of). Within the never-ending combination of these elements is a difficult and extensive dictionary yet to be written. This conversation that I’m having with myself seems to trail around with me. I climb down the ladder from the loft and realize that the conversation continues outside while standing on the porch, too. This whole experience–like a secondary self–accompanies me endlessly, simultaneously a light and a shadow.

“How are you doing?” This question, surprisingly, does not bother me. More times than not, the person asking truly cares and is really wanting to know. I take a moment to survey my inner landscape, then layer it with what I’ve experienced in the minutes/hours/days/weeks leading up to that moment. Then I filter it through whatever hopes or impossibilities that I imagine might lay ahead. It’s a complicated process of distillation to answer such a simple question. And more often than not, I’m just as interested to know the answer as the person asking it. You see, I’ve been mapping my journey. I don’t know why. So that I won’t get too lost, most likely.

Trying to memorize Carl is like trying to memorize yesterday’s sky. But I try because, over time, I am afraid he will slip away from me. My attempts at language and map-making are equally impossible. I stand at the edge of this ocean of tears and pray that I will not be left in this desert forever. How can I be existing in both places at once? And then, in another moment, I realize that I am right here, next to the pine tree brushing the horse or doing the dishes. I eat cold beans from a can. I try to remember Carl’s smile, even the shape of his teeth. A million combinations of elements create this strange existence. I take three naps. I’m still sick. I feel immense gratitude in the obvious and the least expected. The ancient Chinese had many words for the temperaments of the wind. These names for things are magical. They allow us to know a lot about the many moods our tears or the sky might take. So many combinations of elements, constantly changing. The Sami have a thousand words for ‘reindeer.’ There are nearly 800 languages spoken in India, with more than a thousand dialects beyond that.

Grief is the most complicated language I have ever known. A love language made of tears and sky, earth and snow and memory.

I love you, Carl, in every language and all landscapes. Yes, even this one.

{originally published Dec 13, 2014}

song, a prayer.

As this baby girl wakes up, mama sings for her. Such beautiful magic. It brings tears to my eyes this morning. I cry for the baby girl that Carl and I didn’t get to have together, but I pray that he’ll help me find a way to her, in whatever form that might take. Song…it is so much like prayer. I breathe into this life so that I might remain open to where ever it is that God wants to bring me.

{originally published Dec 12, 2014}

nascent.

10854854_10205569329423294_3931277483734858796_oToday I am a small fawn. I need to be tender with her.

I’ve been sicker than a dog most of the week. Bad cold or strep-like stuff. It was an emotional trip. There was comfort and there was difficulty. I am glad I went. And now (I think) I’m ready to be back. I miss my dogs, the horses, my bed and my cat. I miss my studio. Somewhat recently, I arrived at an inner landscape that I can neither avoid nor travel away from, no matter where I go. I seem to have been dropped off in the middle of nowhere. A vast place. Like a desert, but without the tell-tale and dependable signs of weather that give one understanding or sense of place. Sand or snow, it’s all the same right now. My newest home has revealed itself to be the great expanse of all the tomorrows stretching out before me…and it is such a bewildering place to be. I’m left with no alternative other than to simply let it be what it is. I’m better off not fighting it. When I fight it, I become a caged animal. I felt that way on the plane, nowhere to go, no way out. It happens other times, too. It’s a horrible, sufficating place to be. A place that you can’t even scream or fight or cry your way out of.

Last night I dreamt about Carl. It was a kind, gentle dream…nothing so much happened in the dream as I just felt “touched” by his spirit. I wish I could remember it better. He laid a softness over my lungs so that I would stop coughing and find my way to sleep (I’ve had to sleep sitting up for the past two nights). Needless to say, I slept good. He helped someone else as he was taking care of me, too. Just like Carl to be so sweet and thoughtful. Not just to me, but to others, too.

I’m grateful for my time in Florida. It didn’t solve anything, but I’m quite certain that it helped me in ways that will continue to quietly, mysteriously reveal themselves over time. With my return to this northern landscape, I wonder how I am to navigate the world in the form of this fragile fawn-like self. This is not the me that I’m used to. My usual action-oriented ways probably aren’t going to save me this time, at least not any time soon.

This morning I went searching for images of newborn fawns and, despite extreme vulnerability, what I noticed the most in all of them was a nascent sort of resilience. Nascent is a beautiful word. It means to display signs of future potential. It is embryonic, budding, young. Despite the barrenness of this current landscape, I will trust that the rain or the spring might bring forth unimaginable beauty in even the tiniest of flowers. For now, I curl and pray into that thought. I am helpless, but breathing.

I love you, Carl. You…still so alive, even in your absence.

Image credit: Joanna Powell Colbert

(originally published Dec 11, 2014}

Oceans.

Sitting at the Miami airport and all I want to do is cry. I am worn and weary, smooth as stone. I play with words to avoid the jagged tears that have already begun to spill
over the edges of things. I let the sounds of song and surf soften me so that I might feel held closer to the center of something. And so…

2 things:
**this video of my last visit to the ocean earlier today
**this song that keeps me from drowning:

“Oceans”
You call me out upon the waters
The great unknown where feet may fail
And there I find You in the mystery
In oceans deep
My faith will stand

I will call upon Your name
And keep my eyes above the waves
When oceans rise my soul will rest in your embrace
For I am Yours and You are mine

Your grace abounds in deepest waters
Your sovereign hand
Will be my guide
Where feet may fail and fear surrounds me
You’ve never failed and you won’t start now

So I will call upon Your name
And keep my eyes above the waves
When oceans rise
My soul will rest in your embrace
For I am Yours and You are mine

Spirit lead me where my trust is without borders
Let me walk upon the waters
Wherever You would call me
Take me deeper than my feet could ever wander
And my faith will be made stronger
In the presence of my Savior

I will call upon Your Name
Keep my eyes above the waves
My soul will rest in Your embrace
I am Yours and You are mine

I love you, Carl. Let me not leave without you.

{originally published Dec 10, 2014}

we dance.

Just like in his earthy life, Carl continues to create the most gorgeous connections. This song sent from a friend, today she was chosen to be a conduit for such great love. A song from Carl. A gift from Spirit. I love you, baby. You are the path through these mountains. You, all along, it was you.

“We Dance”

You steady me
Slow and sweet, we sway
Take the lead and I will follow
Finally ready now
To close my eyes and just believe
That You won’t lead me where You don’t go

When my faith gets tired
And my hope seems lost
You spin me round and round
And remind me of that song
The one You wrote for me

And we dance
And we dance

And I’ve been told
To pick up my sword and fight for love
Little did I know that Love had won for me
Here in Your arms
You still my heart again
And I breath You in like I’ve never breathed ‘till now

And I will lock eyes with the One who’s ransomed me
The One who gave me joy for mourning
Oh I will lock eyes with the One who’s chosen me
The One who set my feet to dancing

{originally published Dec 9, 2014}

goodbye 39.

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Tonight is my last night of being 39. Tomorrow I will be 40. Oh, this birthday. This was going to be a special one. In a way, it was going to both our birthdays. We were really looking forward to spending this time together. This celebration was gonna be extraordinary because it would set the tone for this new phase in life, one marked by all the Hope and Possibilities and Dreams of a life that we were stepping into together. We would move to Alaska. We would live a life of good work and big adventures. We would start a family. We would learn and grow in a million ways. So many challenges of the past were finally going to be put behind each of us. And Carl, he was ready as ever to make sure that I would have a positive start to all of it. That man believed in me. And I believed in him. Somehow he made everything in the world feel possible, and maybe I did the same for him. We filled in the missing parts of one another’s once singular lives. Goodness grew in places where we didn’t even realize that something had been missing.

Not to mention, that guy made me laugh SO much! Wow, we laughed hard. Carl made me laugh more than anyone. He loved happiness. He thrived on it. He wanted to share that happiness and, asking nothing in return, he was genuinely committed to making sure I was happy, too. My niece took this picture of us somewhere at the edge of the universe along the Gunflint Trail. She was laughing as she took it. Carl was being a goofball and I was, of course, loving every minute of it. Oh, that smile of his! It lit up the world.

It’s been one month since he’s been gone. How can that be? I find it amazing that I am only just barely beginning to comprehend how to walk and talk and breathe without him in this world. He’s still here, but wow…this requires me to learn an entirely new language. It’s like learning sign language in the dark. Blindly, I try to make sense of this untouchable brail. But, miraculously, it does happen. Even if only briefly. I’m still such an infant in this new way of being and so getting through each portion of each day remains nothing short of a challenged phenomena. How is it possible that so much time has already passed between us? I’m finding that healing comes in increments smaller than the finest grains of sand. Even that feels too generous. I’m still upside down.

Ok. But tomorrow is going to happen and when Carl was alive he told me that, although he didn’t know a lot of things, the one thing he knew for sure was that he would be with me on my birthday. I’ve already done my fair share of crying today and maybe I will tomorrow, too. I heard the difference in his voice and I trusted it. And you know? I guess that trust is still worth everything.

And so–for Carl, for my birthday–here is a poem from a very beautiful book gifted to me by a friend…

“For Celebration”
Now is the time to free the heart,
Let all intentions and worries stop,
Free the joy inside the self,
Awaken to the wonder of your life.

Open your eyes and see the friends
Whose heart recognize your face as kin,
Those kindness watchful and near,
Encourages you to live everything here.

See the gifts the years have given,
Things your effort could never earn,
The health to enjoy who you want to be
And the mind to mirror mystery.

~by John O’Donohue :: To Bless the Space Between Us

I love you, Carl, my beautiful smiling man. Thank you for helping me to see the beauty, laughter and light, even when I don’t think it’s even remotely possible. You will always make me happy.

{originally published Dec 8, 2014}

sipping coffee.

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Love bears all things, believes all things, hopes all things, endures all things.  ~1 Corinthians 13:7

…a magic sea bean found on the shelf near my bed in this sweet little guest house I’m calling home for a little while + jungle strength, my view as I sip my morning coffee. Today is soft and raining. I am grateful.

I love you, Carl. Always, I am choosing love.

he speaks to me in music.

Oh, Carl, you’ve done it again. Sending me music so perfect, I can’t help but believe.

“Across The Sea”

I see your face across the sea
You’re in the waves, surrounding me
I hear your voice call on the breeze
On this ship out on the ocean

Sailing across the sea on a big ship on the ocean
The moon is rising in the east the stars hang down around her
The bow is arrowed to the hearts of the ones we wish to come home to
But the newly lit night directs this flight singing the ocean road will guide you

I see your face across the sea
You’re in the waves, surrounding me
I hear your voice call on the breeze
On this ship out on the ocean

When I wake I’ll cast my anchor down and dive below
I’ll dive into my lover’s arms we’ll warm the ocean’s cold
Across the sea and to our home we’ll meet again so soon
You’ll be with me across the sea on this ship out on the ocean

I see your face across the sea
You’re in the waves, surrounding me
I hear your voice call on the breeze
On this ship out on the ocean.

I haven’t turned on music since The Avett Brothers, “Live and Die” song he sent me. But after an afternoon spent on the beach of the ocean, I turned on Pandora once more and this is the first (and only) song that played. Oh, sweet music. Carl’s favorite thing. I. Am. Blessed.

{originally published Dec 7, 2014}

grief paced like tides.

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Once again, I do not know where to begin. I have been away from the depth of this daily writing ritual for too long. Even just a few days of writing absence (replaced by short posts) makes me feel upside down and asunder. I’ve spent the past several days simply holding out for a quiet space to rest in. Traveling and Miami Beach did not offer such luxuries. There were other gifts, but time and space to give myself over to the untangling of grief was not one of them.

I am relieved to be far away from the commotion and noise of Miami. To witness my friend, Kristine, achieve such high artistic success, that is why I was there. To spend an afternoon alone at Art Basel, led by Carl through a maze of some of the most powerful artwork I have ever seen, that might have been the other reason I was there. Moved by art in ways that I have never been moved before. I was stunned into deepest silence, an inner place, at moments causing heavy orb-like tears to roll down my face. I will not forget that. It changed me, as though I were some kind of soft rock being so gently sculpted. And possibly, there are even other reasons that I was led to Miami Beach, reasons that I do not yet know or even understand.

Yesterday I picked up a rental car and got outta there. It felt good to drive–windows open–through a complicated urban jungle of Miami roads and freeways. But after awhile, even that became too much. I’m too sensitive for such loudness and movement right now. Even the air traffic flew too low and loud. Nothing felt real, everything manmade. Finally, finally, finally…the landscape gave way to a gentler kind of jungle. One made of greens and blues, golden yellows and cocoa colored browns, moss and palms, sea oaks and sunset. I found dirt roads, unexpected pastures of horses and cows, orange groves and overgrown gardens.

The roads led me all the way to a sugary sweet cottage appropriately called the Heart Bean House. On it’s front porch, in a white rocking chair, sat my dear friend, Cynthia, waiting for me. I don’t even know if we said hi, but what I do remember is that I got out of the car and she wrapped her arms around me, her hand so tenderly holding the back of my head like a small child’s, and I let myself cry in her arms until the Christmas lights adorning her house became remarkably bleary and bright.

We gathered ourselves and then walked the block and a half down to the ocean to watch the moonrise. Dear God. The heart is such a small vessel in comparison to a full moon just beginning its ascent over such a salty sea. I felt peace. Utterly. The ocean, so full that it seemed a miracle that it didn’t just completely overflow. And it did. We walked along the moon bright beach for a long time, until the incoming tide began washing all the way up to our legs. A mysterious lunar pattern of waves…coming in just a little higher each time, then rushing back towards the moon with dizzying speed. The motion, much like Carl’s current presence of spirit and, at the same time, so similar to his swift exit from this earthly place. An ebb and flow. The tide, a rhythm that simultaneously, contrastively buoys and then steals the ground out from underneath. We walked and, as we did, I accepted this motion for what it is. It is what it is. I felt peaceful. Somehow held by something uncontainable. How that much salt-swelled water doesn’t just spill over its edges is a terrific wonder. How I (or any of us) survive this much love and loss is the greatest mystery I’ve ever experienced.

There are a certain kind of tears that I have been avoiding. I have mentioned this several times and, until losing Carl, I did not know there could be such an extravagant difference between the tears of profound grief and those that reach even deeper. You see, I have done my fair share of crying. I understand the great need for letting grief flow through me. So that I can heal. So that I can experience this fully. So that I might be made whole, both now and moving forward. But there is a certain place of tears that I have not been ready for. They will come. It’s unavoidable. But the tears that I flounder to prepare myself for, the tears that I sometimes must avoid…they are a place of God. They are the tears that reach all the way to heaven. They are a place of such extreme depth and BIGNESS that only angels can bear the expansiveness of it. It is the tears of great Love. I am too frail for this. Surely, going there will break me. To cry from that place is to experience God. Completely. It is no wonder that it’s written:

“You cannot see My face, for no man can see Me and live.” ~Exodus 33:20

And so my grief is paced like the tides. My tears come often, sometimes in dry wracking sobs and other times in fat watery drops. And then there are those moments that I just need to bolster myself to the weight or numbness of things, doing whatever it takes to hold myself to some form of steady. Other times I smile or talk, eat or even walk in a way that resembles something of a normal person. Teetering somewhere between vastness and being held, day and night, time and space, sun and moon, heaven and earth, ebb and flow.

The photo is one that I took last night. An outrushing tide. My heart being sucked out to sea, but also an old friend at my side.

And so we make our way, however precariously. My dearest Carl, I love you. Thank you for bringing me so close to God.

{originally published Dec 7, 2014}

2,000+ miles to peace.

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Finally, I found some peace today. (1.) Carl’s sunset. Windows rolled down in a little blue rented Fiat. Exploration and healing on the back roads of the Florida coast. (2.) Comfort found in the Great Mother, a full moon rising over an equally full ocean. (3.) A place to rest my weariness in good company next to a warm hearth, complete with a sleepy old dog at my feet. And now? To sleep. Grateful for what this day has brought me. I love you, Carl.

{originally published Dec 6, 2014}