Hope in a Dark Time

Storms clouds are finally breaking up.

Storms clouds are finally breaking up.

It’s no secret the world has lost its mind. Bad news is everywhere, which we don’t need to rehash. I have found that sliver of light you’ve all been wanting to read about, so let’s talk about that.

I found an online literary magazine that gives me some hope. Not just because of its editorial focus, which is on hunger of any kind. But because rather than just drawing attention to (actual physical belly) hunger, it does something about it.

Word Soup (http://wordsoup.weebly.com) is a poetry magazine that welcomes submissions accompanied with a “submission fee” of a small donation (minimum $6) to any national, regional, or local organization that works to eradicate hunger. In other words, Word Soup says, as long as we’re talking about hunger, let’s do something about it.

Editor Kim Baker is on to something here! She obviously cares deeply for those who lack, but rather than merely “wax poetic” about the tilt of our economic table, she inspires others to be part of the solution, as she clearly is. Check out the latest issue here: http://wordsoup.weebly.com/issue-six-june-2015.html. Better yet, get your $6 and submit some poems here: http://wordsoup.weebly.com/submit.html. The next issue’s theme is “Paying It Forward” and in that spirit, Baker found donors who will pay the “submission fee” for 4 poets. So all you starving poets out there, head over for a generous serving of Word Soup! The rest of you can share your stories of similar collisions of art and generosity with Words Run Together in the comments below.

 

 

 

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Stillness. You should try it sometime.

Today I’m thinking of all the little things we do to avoid true emotion. You might think of the obvious: turn the channel, drink too much, eat too much, do drugs, chatter incessantly, watch TV, shoot things, opine, criticize, judge, etc.

Oh that big bag of nonsense we call “etc.” We all drag one of those around with us, don’t we?

Friends, it’s time to lay that burden down. Just stop doing what you’re doing.

Because I know how your brain is being trained right now. Streaming through internet content and social media updates. Oh look, here’s story on the earthquake in Nepal! The latest antics of apocalypse-advancing ISIS. Someone got shot by a cop (again). Quick, find me a stupid video of a cat knocking shit off a table so I can DEAL!

We can’t believe the horrors we read. We shouldn’t! There’s so much crazy shit going on right now, it’s like the world is boiling over with anger and madness. So we dive under a steady stream of shit we can handle. Distractions and rants we agree with. We splash on words and images like cheap cologne and think we are ready for the big dance, tripping over ourselves as we rush into the gym.

So what’s a girl to do?

How about nothing? How about just sitting with the ‘whelmedness of it all for just. a tiny. minute.

30 seconds even. I dare you. Just sit with it and listen to your breathing–not your chatty brain. Just listen to your ever-loving lungs. The ones who’ve been fueling your crazy self for all these years.

Close your eyes and just breathe for 30 seconds.

In through the nose, out through the mouth. Loud, breathy breaths.

No one is watching or listening, so if you do one thing right today, this should be it.

Shoulders back, open the chest, inhale.

I’ll wait here while you breathe. In fact, I’ll breathe with you……

….

….

….

….

That is all. Peace be with you.

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 Amazing mosaic by my BFF Amy McClure, artist extraordinaire. I was so moved by this gift that, for a moment or two, I was speechless. That’s saying something.

 

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Light a Candle

I was talking to a friend of mine today about the rough roads we sometimes travel on our journey from cradle to grave. We shared ideas of simple comforts that can make them easier. My friend mentioned that rituals or places where grief is allowed is a good place to start. A place where you can grieve–as deeply and as loudly or quietly as you need, for as long as you need–with no one to rush you or shame you or make you feel out of step with the rest of the world while you do this very important task, which is part of the burden and privilege of being a human.

“I wish we had a Wailing Wall,” she said.

I shared my opinion that Americans are not good at grieving. Even intelligent and sensitive people can still fall into the belief that after six months or so, you should be “over it.”

I wonder where that idea came from? It’s like a bad ad slogan that got into the collective consciousness and now nobody knows where it came from, but nobody can stop repeating it, either. Is it our manic and warped insistence on being happy and satisfied every gosh-darn moment of our lives? And if you aren’t, what the heck is wrong with you? Because it sure can feel like there’s something wrong with you if you aren’t sparkle-happy all the time. Even when you know better, even when you’ve cycled through the natural tide of feelings a few hundred times, you can still catch yourself thinking What’s wrong with me? Why am I (take your pick): in such a funk? unable to concentrate? overwhelmed? angry? forgetful? irritable? so…blah?

But I think it’s more than a cultural aversion to grief. I think it’s a complete ignorance of how much grief we all feel every single day, day after day. If you stopped to just sit and feel, you might find you carry an enormous amount of grief and never know it. Why?

In addition to all the grief a normal life can present, it’s very easy to get caught up in the merry-go-round (emphasis on merry) of staying busy. Busy is a virtue here. Over-achieving is a disease in every strata above the poverty level, where survival takes precedence over impressing whomever we think might be watching.

And every day we are bombarded with terrible events in the news, events that should make us tear our clothes and pour ashes on our heads, as people did in earlier times. But we don’t. Why?

I am willing to bet that, instead of recognizing that these things and more make us feel profound sadness, we have learned to go right to a) anger or b) helplessness, and eventually train ourselves to skip directly to c) what’s for dinner?

We are a people overwhelmed. But recognizing the symptoms is the first step toward healing. Fortunately, there is one thing you can do to get back in touch with your own feelings.

Light a candle.

There is something inexplicably calming and reassuring about a lit candle. The simple act of lighting one gets us immediately in touch with our Ur-self; it instantly fulfills our primal need for warmth and light.

I was raised in the Catholic church and I can tell you a hundred things I think Catholics get wrong, but they are right about candles. When I was growing up, every Catholic church had a votive candle rack, where you could go day or night to light a candle, kneel and pray, and feel comforted. And I’ve never found a candle rack that didn’t have space for my candle and therefore my petitions. No matter where I have traveled in the world, if I could find a Catholic church, I could light a candle and live to fight another day.

Today, right now, you can light a candle in your home and feel better. If you’re spiritual, you can let it waft your prayers to the heavens; if you’re not, you can gather those thoughts and give them a shape. Or you can light a candle and admit you know nothing…or feel nothing. No matter what, that candle will start to lead you out of darkness.

Tonight I lit a candle for my friend. It’s one of the best things you can do for another. And then I lit one for you, dear reader, for a little relief from whatever burden you carry today. Here you go:

2015-02-15 22.02.14

 

 

 

 

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