Getting the Darkness

It’s one of those mornings.  When you’ve already brewed a second cup of coffee and the sky is clouded over.  You are not sad, because you like rainy weather.

You are not melancholy.  You aren’t crafting a story to be accompanied by violins.  You are curiosity embodied as thoughts stream in about all those epic moments someone let you down.

Not just unreturned phone calls or a rain check on a dinner date.  No, more like when your boyfriend proposed marriage only to renege after you started talking about the ceremony.  Or that note, hand delivered by a local villager in India, penned by your travel companions, telling you that they’d left town and are sorry they couldn’t find you to say goodbye.  How about the time your water broke at 1am and when you called the midwife she told you she was on another island and wouldn’t be able to reach you for at least 6 hours?

You think about how you spend your life setting up everything so as to depend on no one.  Maybe Buddhists would say this is an illusion, since we are all interdependent in this connected universe.  Still, it seems that you have worked a lifetime at being self-sufficient.  Taking any extra someone offers as a bonus, not expectation.

Yet every once in a while, in those key moments, when a sweeping gesture has been extended, you’ve reached out your hand to trust.  Let go to rely that someone’s words, their invitation, their very presence would be there to meet you.

And there have been those times when you grasped for that extended hand and found it had been retracted.  That sinking feeling of falling.  The body attached to the withdrawn hand becomes smaller as you plunge further, left to hold your own.

Maybe they meant no harm, they simply could not be what they thought they could.  You may understand this as you plummet.  But the fact is, you thought you had a hand so you didn’t bring a rope and now you’re falling swiftly with no back up.

This was the case when giving birth to your son at home without a midwife – but that’s a long story.

So long of a story that it becomes a piece that evolves at a recent writing workshop.  The crux of the event wasn’t the fact that it took forever to wake your son’s father once contractions started.  Or even that your midwife was unavailable for the first half of your labor.  It was that after hours of pushing, your son’s head engaged but not emerging, you were instructed to call upon god, “…or whatever you need to call upon to birth this baby.”

And that when you did call upon every saint and deity you’d ever come to commune with in this life, not a single one of them were there to meet you.  This was quite disturbing.

At the workshop you share your rough draft with one of the writers (a Buddhist teacher who had once been blind and then regained sight) expressing your confusion and dejection at having called upon god and only experienced darkness.  For the seven years since your son’s birth you’d been grappling with the fact that you had somehow birthed wrong.  You had prayed wrong.  God had not come to you when you counted on it most.

The teacher says to you with awe, “You got the darkness?!”

“Yes, that’s all there was.  Just nothing.”

“Oh, not everyone gets the darkness.  That’s a gift.”

courtesy of The Chopra Center

She explains the story of the Buddha under the Bodhi tree.  How he sat and waited for enlightenment, determined not to move until he finally knew god.  He waited and waited, to no avail.  He became utterly discouraged.  He broke down.  He gave up.  That’s when the darkness came.  So black, so vacant, that despite all will, he simply surrendered.  And as the story goes, it was in this moment of the enveloping nothingness that he became enlightened.

In your little parable, your child did eventually reach your arms in healthy perfection.  Though you were overwhelmed with the fragility of life and death, you did not achieve enlightenment.

Perhaps each time someone has let you down they are offering a gift.  One more chance to free-fall unexpectedly.  One more time to feel the annihilating sense of fear and doubt.  One more chance to let go completely.

Perhaps they are an unwitting messenger, bestowing some hidden opportunity to know Grace deeply.  Beckoning you to rest into the nothing.

Windows

There were some windows on Sunday.

Moments between bagging three month’s worth of recycling and hauling it to the transfer station.  Time after I pulled out boxes and steamed-cleaned floors, trying to trace the scent of a dead animal in the closet (never found it).

There were windows with Radiohead, alone in the car.  Walking out of the art supply store with a fresh journal.  Opening the post office box to find a check.  Spraying countertops clean with the scent of lavender.  Pouring water into a new filtered pitcher.  Making popcorn with melted butter and Hawaiian salt.

courtesey of http://www.primitiveways.com

In the late afternoon, Jeb and I pick 80 Ti leaves so he can make his Hawaiian skirt for the school graduation ceremony.

“We need more!  They’re going to be able to see through it!”

By day’s end, I’m exhausted but organized.  Anticipating Monday but dedicated to the moment.  We take an evening stroll.  We walk slowly and choose the long way.

Sometimes he’ll hold my hand.  Sometimes he’ll practice cartwheels on the grass.  Sometimes he’ll hang on me like a jungle gym and drive me nuts.  I have to remind him that’s he’s big now, three-fourths my size.

Jessica Dofflemyer ~ all rights reserved

On the way back home he gets ahead of me.  It’s ok now, these days, for him to be a bit on his own.  He beats me to the house.  I arrive at the front door as he opens it from inside, a red ginger flower outstretched in his hand.  It’s the third flower he’s picked for me today.  I put it in an old glass honey jar.

We settle in for bed and read a chapter from Roald Dahl’s  “Danny the Champion of the World.”

Gotta love a Sunday with some windows.

Basic Elements

This morning I wake at 4am in a different bed.

It is quiet here but for the ocean waves at the cliffs nearby.  Rain drops trickle in the water lilies outside the window.

Yesterday I came home from work imagining the luxury of a 20 minute afternoon cat nap.  Instead my street was flooded with water and I learned that my house had none.  There’s a fear the water in my neighborhood may be contaminated.  No one should drink from the tap.

Oh, the things we rely upon and often take for granted.  Like clean, running water!  Instead of slumber, I spent my afternoon packing.  I was grateful that my friends had an empty house, as they were on a rare, one-night camping trip.  I focused on my thankfulness that I had a haven available with hot running water, just down the road.

I packed light with hopes that all would be back to normal at my place within 24 hours.  The mental list of all requirements flooding my mind in a muck.

Bring food for breakfast and a school lunch.  Oh, I’m supposed to supply produce for Jeb’s contribution to the school’s farmer’s market.  What are we bringing?  He’s got that sleep over on Saturday…I’m supposed to call them back with a time.  That cough of his isn’t going away.  Do I make a doctor’s appointment?  Ah, and the dentist.  I’m supposed to call to reschedule teeth cleaning for both of us.  That’s $100 each…when will we fit those into our schedule?  Can I afford that right now?  Teeth are important…gosh, I’m afraid he doesn’t floss enough…I’ll call them back…And that meeting I have with that potential new client…ok, that’s tomorrow.  But now my timing’s all off because I’m not going to be home…should I cancel?  What if the water is not back on by tomorrow?  You know that neighbor said that he thinks the situation could take weeks to resolve.  Where would we stay?  And did I take that flower essence enough times today?  It’s supposed to calm me and heal my ovary.  Am I calm?  I think I’m pretty calm despite these circumstances.  I’m supposed to be practicing that Inner Smile meditation for my womb.  Can I really dissolve this cyst?  What’s it all about anyway?   I can’t think about it now.  But then when will I give it attention?  Am I giving it enough focus?  Too much?  Can I handle all of this flux and still maintain the Archives?  Can I still make it to yoga practice tomorrow? Ok, what time is it?  I have to go pick up Jeb.

All of these thoughts pool and eddy into this mother head of mine as I unload gear from the car and walk it into my friends’ empty house.  I am barefoot, moving through grass, when suddenly a sharp pain jolts all mental chatter.  I lift my foot to see a metal screw dangling from my sole.  Fairly bright and new – not rusty – I pull it from my foot and give thanks I’m near hot water.  I doctor my injury (try to remember the last time I had a tetanus shot – I think 10 years ago before India.  That’s pushing it, I know) and take a deep breath.  I ponder this misstep.  I rarely hurt myself.  What’s going on?  Maybe I’m just displaced and ruffled.

Well, that was yesterday.  Now, it is a new day.  Morning in low light with pen and paper.  My foot is clean, dry and protected.  I’m still here at the Archives.  My friends’ house is so rural, there is no internet.  I know at some point today I’ll find a way to get this post online.  These rambling words sourced from the dark time before sunlight in a different house.  A new locale.

Soon, I’ll be bagging lychee for the farmer’s market.  Cleaning up traces of our overnight reprieve.  Readying myself for another morning of practice at the yoga studio.  Yes, I think I’ll make it.

I see that I can move through life with so many assumptions.  Like something as elemental as access to running water.  Then, suddenly, circumstance can turn things upside down.  Nothing is guaranteed.  In that free fall, I’m left to seek what’s most fundamental.  Appreciation seeps for things like a bed to sleep in.  The gift of a hot shower.

My little life curveball here, is temporary.  I’ll have water again.  This shut down can offer opportunity.  A new way to start my day.

Pen and ink and different shadows.  Distant waves sounding.  Roosters crowing in the quiet.  The trickle of water droplets falling from the roof.

Jessica Dofflemyer ~ all rights reserved

Soaking in this magic hour, I do not know what this day will reveal.  But I’m trusting that I can move through it – one breath at a time.