Advent of Love

To announce the fullness of love,
you must first suffer
the pain of being
pried away
from the sweetness of things.
You must dance
with the withholding of desire
and brush shoulders
with the emptiness
of long nights
and lonely beds.

You must,
before giving yourself over
to the delights of love,
forsake the beating
of your own heart
and experience the nakedness
of being alone
in the crack of existence,
estranged even from God.

Before reveling
in the many raptures of love,
you must surrender all hope
for the outcome of your choosing
and allow, instead,
the wild tide of life
to crash over
your days and weeks
and minutes and hours
as it pleases,
chaos and all.

And that’s before
the real trial begins:
the letting-go of expectation –
the expectation
of a love fulfilled,
of a holy and sweet
communion
of compatible souls.

Yes, just before
the love breaks through,
you must sacrifice
your wish for it,
plunging into the darkness
of an uncertain fate
and a resigned,
but heavy,
confrontation
with the disappointing
realities of life.

It is then,
in the surrender
of all things dear,
that the tide turns
and washes over
the pieces of your life
in a furious, urgent sweep –
bringing together
the disparate parts
and carrying them to shore –
safely, intact, whole –
and you along with them –
a victory of resuscitation,
a narrow escape
from the waters in which
you would have drowned.

And now,
in the lightness of air
and on the firmness of ground,
you find yourself
coming alive –
breathing in slowly and shyly
the miracle of what has been
granted to you,
the discovery of
a joy
which ran so deep,
it nearly disappeared –
which, now,
in its quiet ways,
leads you
into the light,
into the sun,
into the place
where the love you sought
waits,
warm and unabashed,
longing to pull you in
with open arms.

Let It Be

I found myself listening to Joan Baez’s performance of “Let It Be” over and over as I drove my car through the city tonight. It was the most content I’ve felt in a while. My dog Lucky hanging his head out the back window, the full moon shining in the sky, the strangers walking down sidewalks, the quiet streets, the hushed workplaces, the children’s hospital lit up against the dark night, the thinking of sweet thoughts. “There will be an answer,” I wanted to call out to the people I passed. “Let it be.”

The Graveyard Book

The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman is excellent. I just finished listening to the audiobook recording (which happens to be narrated by the author himself – and that proves to be a perk, as Mr. Gaiman sounds like Snape from Harry Potter and his voice suits the tone of the book perfectly).

The book (written for children but certainly enjoyable for adults, as well) is about a boy named Nobody (“Bod”) Owens whose parents were murdered when he was a baby. Somehow, he ends up in a cemetery, and he grows up in the company of ghosts and other fantastical beings. Bod’s life is a wonderfully strange experiment in straddling the worlds of the living and the dead, and some surprisingly sincere and heartwarming relationships emerge from his adventures. I found myself feeling distinctly sad and nostalgic when the story ended.

(I should mention that this is only the second audiobook I’ve listened to. But I think I’m becoming addicted. It was such a comforting thing to listen to a story as I lay in bed at night, on the cusp of dreams.)

Highly recommended.

Brief Thoughts (No. 7)

Do we really need television screens built into our gas station pumps? Are we that enslaved to pixelated entertainment?

On a related note: The Shallows by Nicholas Carr is a good book to read if you’re concerned about the degree to which media use is hijacking our brains.

A Walk through the Woods: Part 1

“Find your way to me in grace,” said a voice one day as I was walking, alone, through the woods. I was surprised, pulled out of the elaborate web of thought I had been caught up in. But I wasn’t alarmed, despite seeing no one on the path or in the trees – perhaps because the voice sounded like the soft jingle of tiny silver bells and made me feel instantly warm and at ease.

“Who are you?” I asked, calmly, not sure which direction to turn my head.

“I go by many names,” came the voice, bell-like, from somewhere above me. “Too many to list. But I believe that, in your language, people usually refer to me as Love.”

“Ah,” I said, as if what I was hearing were the most natural thing in the world. “Love. Of course.” I paused. “But why, if you don’t mind me asking, are you here right now talking to me? … Er, Your Grace,” I added, clumsily.

I almost thought I could hear the voice smile at me, although I know the very idea seems absurd. “Well,” said Love, sounding kind. “Were you not just wondering to yourself a moment ago how to find me?”

“Um,” I said, and then I realized that I had, indeed, spent the afternoon meandering through the woods, anxiously thinking about how I would ever find love. In fact, it seemed I was always wondering about such things lately. “I guess so. But I wasn’t expecting to find an answer quite so … literally.”

“I often behave in ways you don’t expect,” said Love, simply. “Which is, I should say, very much to the point. For I believe you’ve been harboring some misconceptions about me.”

“I have?” I said. “What do you mean?”

“My child, forgive my frankness, but you’ve been trying to pin me down as if I were a bug on a plate, ready to be slid under the microscope for inspection. I’m afraid I don’t work that way.” I nodded my understanding. “If you wish to find me, you’ll have to give up your old habit of pinning things down and pulling them apart. All that analyzing will only take you farther from me.”

“I see,” I said, slowly. “But if I can’t track you down, what can I do? I can’t just sit and wait here for ages, can I?” I knew I was being bold, but I desperately wanted answers.

“What you must do, child, is something a little simpler, though perhaps not easier. You must contemplate your sweetest desire – your most fervent prayer – and move your feet in the direction your heart is drawing you. You may hesitate sometimes, and wonder whether you’re meant to turn left or right at some particular fork in the road, but in such moments, the best thing is to take a breath, remember why you’re walking, and very soon your heart, and then your feet, will recover a sense of direction and you’ll be on your way again.”

I didn’t say anything for a minute or two as I considered these words. They seemed to make sense, even if they were a little abstract. I could follow my heart, that was all well and good. But … what if my heart was wrong? How could I be sure it was trustworthy? Hadn’t following my heart, long ago, led me into a great deal of pain?

“Don’t be discouraged,” said Love, as if reading my thoughts, “if your travels take you through some raggedy lands. The path to me can be long and winding, and sometimes you’ll have to pass through rather treacherous terrain. The view to the east might be all cliffs and ledges, and to the west, barren desert that stretches on for miles with scarcely a living thing in sight.” I swallowed hard. “I must be plain with you, child: the journey won’t be easy. The road may at times seem impassable – so much so that you might drop your bag to the ground and wonder whether you shouldn’t just turn around and retreat. Many fine souls do give up, you know. That’s always a choice.”

“It is? But why? Why do they give up?” I asked, unable to restrain my curiosity.

“Some souls simply grow too tired or too hungry; they feel too weak to carry on. Others get angry or disappointed and they wind up impatient with me. And then there are some – I think you will understand this, child – who become overwhelmed by their sadness. They lose their spirits and decide that the journey isn’t worth their efforts anymore.”

“What happens to them then?”

“It depends. A few pick up their belongings and turn about-face, retracing the path they came by. Others veer off to the side, wandering aimlessly until they lose themselves in the fog. Others still, too tired to proceed, simply stop where they are and set up camp, vainly hoping that a passing wind will blow by and bring them news of better lands.”

“That’s sad,” I said, sincerely.

“Yes,” agreed Love. “It’s always hard to watch these souls give up the way. Something deep inside of them goes out, like a flame suddenly – or, in some cases, slowly and almost imperceptibly and only after a great battle – extinguished. You can tell by looking in their eyes – for it’s true that the eyes are the window to the soul – that their fire has died. Unfortunately, it happens more often than I’d care to admit.” Love gave a long, deep sigh.

“I’m sorry,” I said, not knowing what else to say.

“So am I.” I thought I heard that smile again, though this time it was sad. “But enough of that. I’ve come to talk about you.”

(to be continued)

Back to Top