Showing posts with label making space. Show all posts
Showing posts with label making space. Show all posts

Thursday, March 7, 2013

Spring Soul Cleaning

The Guest House by Rumi
This being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.

A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.

Welcome and entertain them all!
Even if they are a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.

The dark thought, the shame, the malice.
meet them at the door laughing and invite them in.

Be grateful for whatever comes.
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.

I've written before about poems like the one above that have been used so many times in workshops, retreats, meetings, that they've lost their meaning for me.  This Rumi poem was one of them until this week when I finally reread it for the first time in over a year.  It was as if The Guesthouse had been renovated and I could appreciate it again in a new way.

In the past I've always focused on that idea of how I can be open to those emotions and situations that I don't necessarily want to entertain, much less welcome.  This time, however, it was the idea of making space for new delight that really spoke to me.  Even though it's said that nature abhors a vacuum, I've come to realize that rather than rushing into redecorate when a corner of my soul has been swept clean.  I need some time to sit with that empty space, make sure all the vestiges of clutter are really gone, that I'm still not attached to the old stuff that used to be present before I can really be open to the new delight on the horizon. 

I feel like maybe I'm in that season of new delight.  The lemony scent of my previously polished soul is fading and now the empty space is finally ready.  For what, I'm not sure.  I'm waiting to see what new arrival tomorrow morning brings.

How about you?  What's going on in your guesthouse?  Is it a time of welcoming?  Cleaning?  Awareness?  Delight?

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Making space

One Art by Elizabeth Bishop from The Complete Poems:  1927-1979 (Farrar, Straus & Giroux)
The art of losing isn't hard to master;
so many things seem filled with the intent
to be lost that their loss is no disaster.

Lose something every day.
Accept the fluster
of lost door keys, the hour badly spent.
The art of losing isn't hard to master.

Then practice losing farther, losing faster:
places, and names, and where it was you meant
to travel. None of these will bring disaster.

I lost my mother's watch. And look! my last, or
next-to-last, of three loved houses went.
The art of losing isn't hard to master.

I lost two cities, lovely ones. And, vaster,
some realms I owned, two rivers, a continent.
I miss them, but it wasn't a disaster.

—Even losing you (the joking voice, a gesture
I love) I shan't have lied. It's evident
the art of losing's not too hard to master
though it may look like (Write it!) like disaster.



Lent, to me, is a time to make space, space in which I can be more keenly aware of the presence of the holy.  I can create it by letting go of stuff that's taking up space-- extraneous possessions, emotional baggage, not helpful habits.  Or, I can create space by adding to my life-- more silence, more reflection, more poetry.  Either way, it's my intention that makes the space.

Elizabeth Bishop's poem got me thinking about space that is created through no action of my own.  What have I lost?  What do I fear I will lose?  And how can space created through loss be transformed from absence to presence? 

Friday, November 30, 2012

The Space in Between

Lotus by Ruth Bidgood
Bryn, the round hill,
dips to a valley that accepts
others:  a place of joining.
No wind carries up
Conversation of rivers.
Old sheepwalks, hardly grazed,
Stretch to the verge of forest.
On this grey day
no smoke rises:
from the one gaunt house.
 
Surely the silent utterance
of this place is ‘Emptiness’,
its time ‘Never’?
Yet it is said
That not leaves, not petals,
but the space at the center
of the heart’s lotus
contains everything.

                                    Here
rivers out of sigh
have their rhythms,
like blood through the heart.
Stillness throbs with the flow
of unperceived lives.
 
This is a place of joining,
whose silent utterance is ‘Abundance’,
whose time is ‘Ever.’


A week from today I'll be in Wales.  I can't tell you exactly what I'll be doing,  but if it keeps raining there like it has been, chances are it will involve curling up with a cup of tea and a good book in this room:



or getting lost in my writing at a desk somewhere in this room:

 
Ostensibly, I'm going over to do some pre-scouting of some of the sites we'll be visiting in May on the pilgrimage I'm leading for Washington National CathedralThe recent floods in Britain might mean a little less hiking to neolithic stone circles and wandering around abbey ruins and a little more time spent sitting quietly inside ancient churches and old cathedrals. 
 
Earlier this week I was stressing  about not begin able to get everything on my "to do" list done during this trip.  Then I realized that the idea of having a to do list is itself counter-intuitive to pilgrimage.  Checking off sites is a trip for tourists.  For pilgrims, the journey is about creating space-- being in the landscape, settling into sacred places, opening up to the space, both literally and metaphorically. 
 
So that's what I will be doing next week.  And somehow it seems like a perfect way to enter into the first week of Advent, traversing a dark winter landscape,  looking for glimmers of light, listening, waiting.
 
 

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

I'm back . . .

After a brief hiatus from this blog (but not from writing), I'm back at it.  Beginning tomorrow, and continuing every day in Lent, I'll be posting a poem and a brief reflection.  

For those who mark this season, one on the church calendar that encourages a time of going into the desert in order to go deeper, hopefully the words you find here will be bread for the journey.  For those who simply stumble across the entries, hopefully they will provide a speed bump on the information superhighway that will invite you slow down, if even for a moment or two. 

For many years I compiled these poems and reflections on paper.  While others were eating pancakes and enjoying Mardi Gras celebrations on Fat Tuesday, the night before Ash Wednesday you could usually find me sitting in the middle of my living room floor surrounded by pages of poems as I decided how to best compile them into a booklet that I would frantically photocopy early the next morning so it would be ready for those who visited the Center for Prayer and Pilgrimage on Ash Wednesday and throughout Lent. 

Last year, however, I chose not to observe Lent.  No poems, no giving up chocolate, or cookies, or taking an extra dose of a spiritual practice.  My Lenten practice was not to observe Lent.  So as a bit of a pre-Lenten post, below is an essay I wrote about my experience last year.  It was an assignment for an essay class I took at the Writer's Center where we were given a list of words and had to write a personal essay based on one of the words.  The word I chose was dust.  It's much longer than any of the upcoming Lenten posts will be but hey-- Fat Tuesday is all about excess and indulgence before a season of sparseness so I'm going for it.

______________________________________________________________________________
Housecleaning by Terri Lynn Simpson
            Evidently it’s a myth that the major component of household dust is human skin.  It would have been more theologically significant for me to be cleaning on Ash Wednesday if that old wives’ tale was actually true.  I could have been reflecting on my own mortality while wiping away the dust from which I came and to which I will one day return.  Although now that I think about it, maybe the lingering scent of furniture polish wouldn’t have had the memento mori effect that going about one’s day with a forehead marked with ashes is meant to have. 
            The impression many people have is that Lent is a season of self-sacrifice or self-flagellation, but I’ve never been one of those.  For me, Lent has always been an invitation, an opportunity to enter a desert of my own creation, forty days to reflect on where I am, where I’ve been, and where I want to go in the future.  The beginning of this journey used to be my favorite day on the church calendar, but these days I’m not much concerned with the church calendar, or actually anything having to do with the church for that matter.  I’ve spent a lot of time wandering in the desert this past year, a result of circumstance rather than choice, and I’m not eager to go back any time soon.  So I certainly didn’t plan on observing Ash Wednesday this year by dusting.  As a matter of fact, I didn’t really plan on thinking about Lent at all. 
            I did plan on cleaning my room, however.  I tossed a can of Pledge and a few paper towels on the bed thinking that after I worked out and took a shower, then I’d dust.  That was last Friday or maybe the Friday before, I can’t recall.  I do know that in the realm of my ability to procrastinate, it wasn’t that long ago.  Usually my intentions linger in piles on my bedroom floor for longer than twelve days before I get around to doing anything about them.  Lately my favorite form of procrastination is purging, ridding myself of possessions I don’t need.  That way, the self-judgment I impose on myself for being lazy and unmotivated is mitigated by the self-congratulations on the virtuous endeavor of simplifying my life.  Plus, I feel like I’m being productive even when in the midst of avoiding the task at hand.    
            My latest urge to clean out something began when I was working on my dissertation.  Instead of sitting at the computer writing about the theology of the imprecatory psalms, I’d stand in front of my closet and curse the impulse that led me to spend too much money on trendy t-shirts and uncomfortable shoes.  Experts say that when cleaning out your closet, if you haven’t worn something for a year you should get rid of it.  That may be good advice for some, but not for me.  There are things I’ve worn recently that I know I shouldn’t wear again, such as the bubblegum pink t-shirt with the black skull that bears an uncanny resemblance to my brother.
            After culling my wardrobe, the compulsion to purge was still there.  I needed another project to tackle.  One morning when I actually was working on my dissertation, I had just typed up the bibliographical information for a text that I’d first encountered in grad school and re-read as part of my project research, when it hit me—not only did I never want to read that boring book with a misleadingly lovely title ever again, I didn’t have to.  In fact, I didn’t even have to keep it around.  Just as I’d bagged the shrunken cashmere sweaters and skull t-shirt, I needed to get rid of books that didn’t quite fit me any more either.
            For well over a year, I’d been meaning to organize my basement bookshelves.  When I first learned my job had been eliminated, my biggest concern as I faced unemployment wasn’t what I’d do for health insurance or a paycheck, but how I could make space in my house for the all the books that had lined the walls of my office,  In the end, I just crammed them into every available space so that trying to take a book from a shelf was like a giant game of Jenga. 
            It’s always been far easier for me to get rid of clothes than books.  Perhaps it’s because I look at the volumes that line my bookshelves—from the biography of the Brontë sisters to the Marcella Hazan cookbooks—and see reflections of who I am, or perhaps more accurately, who I want to be.  Getting rid of a book feels a little like abandoning hope.  I hesitated before taking the “teach yourself Gaelic” (and Italian and French and Czech) books off the shelf, but in the end priorities won out.  While there are many things I need to work at becoming, a self-taught conversational polyglot isn’t that high up on the list. 
            One theory about procrastination is that it isn’t a symptom of laziness but rather fear.  For months I had been putting off going through my bookshelves because I was afraid that in deciding what books to let go of, I’d also have to let go of possibilities for the future that had been my safety net for the better part of my adult life.  As The Moral Vision of the New Testament joined the language textbooks in the ranks of the rejects, it hit me that the boxes I was filling didn’t hold abandoned dreams, but rather the detritus of the past that had been obscuring a vision for the future.  After I finished clearing the shelves I stepped back to look at the new arrangement.  In my excavation process, I not only rid myself of several boxes of books, I also unearthed some long forgotten volumes that had been hidden behind the double stacked rows on the shelves.  I noticed that on my newly reorganized shelves there was a lot less theology and more space for poetry.             
            Last year I decided to get rid of one thing I didn’t need each day during Lent.   The idea was that in letting go of material things I would somehow create more space for God.  A year’s worth of unread New Yorker magazines went, along with the fraying t-shirts I saved to wear to the gym and the tights with a hole that could be hidden by my shoe if I put them on just the right way.  I don’t know how much space I created for the holy, but I did end up with more room in my dresser drawers.  On my nightstand where the magazines used to be I recently placed the copy of Pablo Neruda’s 100 Love Sonnets that I’d forgotten I had.