Thursday, December 5, 2013
After the Storm
In my last few posts I spoke of how I love being covered in the Gray of the forest. But today, after the storm, I also find there is something beautiful in the sun shinning on the bright new snow covering the mountains with bright blue sky above. Even as I love the gray, I must admit, I also love the return of sun and the brightness of blue skies and white snow. But I think, perhaps, best of all, my favorite, is a mix of some blue skies, white snow, gray clouds, fog and rays of sunlight angled through falling snow in the high peaks. "There's a certain slant of light, winter afternoons". Emily Dickinson. Amazing to live in Colorado.
Monday, December 2, 2013
Loving the Gray Days: Enclosed in the Shadows of the Forest
There is something about the shadowy gray woods of
winter.
I feel drawn to the dim light of late afternoon,
away from the brightness, noise and lightness of the world.
This is the season when I shy away from all the silly
happiness of bright days.
It is when I slip away for a few moments,
Into the calm, quiet, womb of the gray forest where everything
has weight,
and everything has soul.
I feel the weight of the forest, under me and above me.
Roots that spread deep in heavy soil hold me from beneath.
Dense trees, heavy with snow protect me overhead as a
shield,
Overhanging branches laden with snow lean over me and the
path.
Here I am enclosed.
Snow is falling through the trees;
Snow on snow, heaviness on heaviness,
Even the shadows cover me like a thick heavy blanket,
I am loved.
I am in a place where I feel my own weight,
and I know my soul is more than what I am on bright summer days.
This is a place where I know and feel,
The weight of God under the gray,
The weight of God in my soul.
In this piece of prose, I tried to capture what I feel when I go into the woods and how I strangely feel protected and comforted in the seclusion of the forest. During such adventures, (in this case cross country skiing), I shy away from noise, brightness and lightness. In order for me to feel this "blanket" over me it has to be during certain times of the year (Usually late November and December), and most often when it is late in the afternoon and snowing. The gray blanket closes down on me and I feel almost "held" in some mysterious manner. I doubt this feeling could ever happen while in front of a TV. :)
Sunday, November 24, 2013
"As If Standing on Fishes": Reluctant Fly Fishing Guide Journeys On A Wintry Gray Day
There is a part of me that has always been a bit paranoid
about going on adventures. Most often there is a part of me that is somewhat
scared especially when I travel alone; a feeling that something might go wrong
and I will be stranded on the side of the road, get pulled down in a deep hole on
the river or buried in an avalanche. It
is a sinking feeling, “as if I am
standing on fishes” (Rilke).
This is a bit ironic because over the course of my life
time, in spite of this sinking feeling,
I still manage to launch many solo journeys into the mountains. But
before I go it often feels like a 50/50 chance I might just bag the plan. To
get out the door, I have just a strong enough intuition to know that most often
I have to rather abruptly, “just go”. I have to just take the first step and
let go of the risks and fear. Sometimes I have to just quickly load up the
truck and start down the road otherwise I will remain on the couch. And most
often, or at least afterwards, it feels right to push through and go. “Moving Forward” as the poet Rilke says as
the title of one of his poems.
So, on the first day of my Thanksgiving break I load up the
SUV and head west up Ute pass in spite of overcast gray skies, ice packed roads,
and a strong chance of snow. Oh, yes, how I wanted to use any thing for an
excuse to not go. But I went even as “my
feelings sank as if standing on fishes”.
Fear is a strange thing in a reluctant traveler like my self.
It makes me more observant. It makes me
pay close attention to things. I look for signs of changing weather and icy
roads. I feel things deeply and
strangely as though I am in a hyper-sensitive state of awareness. . And mysteriously, “I feel closer to what language cannot
reach”, namely God.
I look for other signs. As I drive up the pass through the
gray, I see a blue hole in sky. It is where I am going. I move forward. I feel more secure seeing a lake of blue in the sky opening up. “The deep parts of my life pour onward as if the river shores were
opening out”. I too open up as I
move onward.
But then as I move forward, the hole in the sky closes off
and disappears. I drop off again into the deep gray. “My feeling sinks as if I am standing on fishes”. Once again I feel
I am on shaky ground and, indeed, a slippery road.
As I head through South
Park and up Hoosier
Pass, the snow deepens. I am
surprised to see so much snow on the south side of the pass. Usually it dumps
on the other side. Nothing is as predictable as I want it to be. Such are adventures. My wheels slip in 4 wheel drive. I think of
the small snow shovel I brought just in case. I wonder to myself, “Should I
have come”?
Where was I going? Was it to fish? To ski? To spend some time alone? To see? “To
feel closer to what language cannot reach”? Maybe it was to simply get off
the couch and push through the gray to a pond in the sky.
“I climb into the
windy heaven, out of the oak, and in the ponds broken off from the sky”.
And as I drop over the other side of the gray, Still, “My
feeling sinks as if standing on fishes”.
Still not sure I should have come.
Friday, November 22, 2013
What Color Is the Sky In Your World Where You Fish?
Well, for me, it depends. I kind of live in a bubble of my
own.
I choose this bubble because for the most part I find our
culture to be quite flat. Since I am a part of this culture I guess that
flatness is also my fault. I am just not sure what to do about it. So, I often stay
“inside” my bubble and insist the sky is the color that I see.
I find this inner world I often live in to be quite rich. It
is most often quite richer than what lies outside me. It is different. In my
bubble I see images from long past or from far ahead. They are preserved in my
mind and heart. They remain.
I often wonder if others see the same images. I wonder what
color the sky is in their world. I wonder if others have inner worlds of their
own.
I know some poets who have the vision to speak of the
importance of these inner images. As Rilke said, “The man who cannot quietly close his eyes certain that there is vision
after vision inside, simply waiting until nighttime to rise all around him in
darkness- its all over for him. Nothing else will come; no more days will open.”
To not see these internal images is to have only this world,; this flat culture we live in. In that sense, if this is all we have, "it is all
over". As Christians we should have the richest collection of images because, at least in theory, we have "seen" some of the kingdom. "We came into this world trailing clouds of Glory", and those glorious images need us to remember them.
Perhaps the images need us as much as we need them. The images need us to continue to hold on to them and reflect them in the world. If we think this flat superficial Christian culture is all we have for our inner worlds; if this is all there is to the kingdom, then we have settled for a form of religion. In fact, we have settled for a very boring form of religion.
Perhaps the images need us as much as we need them. The images need us to continue to hold on to them and reflect them in the world. If we think this flat superficial Christian culture is all we have for our inner worlds; if this is all there is to the kingdom, then we have settled for a form of religion. In fact, we have settled for a very boring form of religion.
These images I see before my heart give me hope.. They
comfort me. They are deep and loving
companions. They promise to rise before me as long as I invite them, wondering if somewhere the sky is a deeper blue.
A deep, deep blue sky over the rivers I fish.
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Casting Shadows On The South Platte River: Reeling in Projections
I remember thirty years ago my first adventures up into Cheesman
Canyon. I quickly noticed how if I
cast my shadow over the fish they were gone. Spooked.
Over the years I have done my share of spooking fish by carelessly
projecting my shadow on to the waters I fish. I continue to do so. I have also
done my share of casting shadows on people and have scared some folks away.
Projecting my own shadow on to others quite simply means I
take what I don’t like or accept in myself and cast it on to someone else. Many
of us are pretty good at this and we don’t even know we do it just as often
times we don’t know why the fish have moved out of a particular run.
The Christian church (and I include myself), has done its
share of projecting. We all have. Show me a group of any kind and chances are
they project their disapproval on to others. What bothers me the most is not
that the Christian church projects but rather we seem to largely be unaware about
the issue in spite of some rather strong teachings from Jesus. Maybe this is
because Christians are often paranoid of forms of psychology. Some times I get
the feeling that if I were to start talking about casting shadows, projections
or mention the name of Carl Jung that people would think I was being
“unbiblical”.
Yet, ironically, I find no better argument on this topic
than in what Jesus said. He spoke of first taking the log out of our own eyes
so we can then see clearly. He spoke of the fact that when we judge others we
will be judged with the same measure.
How could I be judged with the same exact measure? I have
wondered what this verse really means. I
don’t think this verse means that God will personally judge me “back” or that
people will judge me back with the same measure in which I judge others. That
sounds too petty of God. Perhaps what it means is that the same measure will be
used to judge myself because IT IS I WHO IS DOING THE JUDGING ON MYSELF WHEN I
JUDGE SOMEONE ELSE. I am really judging
myself. I am really disliking myself. I am really disgusted with my self and I
don’t even know it. But I am doing it with the ‘same measure’ because when I
point my finger at you I am really pointing it at myself. It is in exact
measure. Insult for insult; condemnation for condemnation.
In some sense I know this is not rocket science but why is
it so difficult to pull back the projections. Why is it so difficult to reel it
in? Why is it that 30 years later I am still casting shadows all over the place?
And why can’t I approach that pool with big rainbows laying
on the bottom with out my shadow being cast all over the water?
We need a different approach. Anyone have any ideas?
Saturday, November 9, 2013
Winter Enduring Foliage: One Season In Our Inner Year
“Let my joyfully streaming face make me more radiant; let
my hidden weeping arise and blossom. How dear you will be to me then, you
nights of anguish. Why didn't I kneel more deeply to accept you, inconsolable
sisters, and, surrendering, lose myself in your loosened hair. How we squander our hours of pain. How we gaze
beyond them into the bitter duration to see if they have an end. Though they
are really our winter-enduring foliage, our dark evergreen, one season in our
inner year, not only a season in time, but are place and settlement, foundation
and soil and home.” Rilke
Last week I wrote about the melancholy nature of the Fall
season and how at least for me is a time to allow myself to contemplate. It is
a time to slow down and deal with some of the pain in life. It is a time to not
“squander my hours of pain.” It is
a time to grieve over what I have lost. It is a time to consider my failures
and disappointments.
As I try to contemplate during this Fall season it occurs to
me how difficult it is to do this in our
fast paced superficial culture that forever wants us to stay “positive.” It is almost impossible and men particularly
are told they can never grieve. With our elder system largely dismantled, most
of us have not been taught how to grieve. We lack a ritual to move us into and
out of deep sadness.
Without such a ritual we are left to figure it out on our
own or ignore our disappointments all together. My guess is that many don’t even consider
such a process and just “keep going”, living each day ‘outside’ their inner
souls, cheering on their favorite football team, staying positive and keeping a
perpetual smile. “I’m doing fine; thank you very much.”
Rilke powerfully speaks to this lost opportunity and how we
often “squander our hours of pain”. It describes how when pain or sadness
enters our lives we just “gaze beyond
them into the bitter duration to see if they have an end”. My feeling is that “gazing beyond” is not the
same thing as “going with” or “being with” one’s grief. It is not the same as
what Robert Bly describes as “eating ashes.”
What do we lose by this squander? What do we lose by never
deeply feeling and dealing with our grief? All we have to is just look around at our
culture and look within our hearts. The poet suggests we will regret the lost opportunity, “How dear you will be to me then you nights of anguish" for not tending to the development of the very foundation of our souls, . "Though
they are really our winter-enduring foliage, our dark evergreen, . . . but are place and settlement, foundation
and soil and home.”
We need a ‘season’
to deal with our hours of pain so we can put on our winter-enduring foliage,
our dark evergreen, our place, settlement and home. Without such a season we
will remain naked, thin and flimsy, wondering what happened to the foundation
of our souls.
The great wind is
coming. Time to put on our winter-enduring foliage.
Saturday, November 2, 2013
Casting Out of Tune: Late Fall, Over-Taken.
There is something about the Fall season that pulls on me. The
cool air, strange smells, the changing
color of leaves swirling on the ground. There is an “otherness” in the air that
seems to grasp at me.
Poets understand this otherness and grasping at the soul,
“We are grasped by
what we cannot grasp”. Rilke
Robert Frost felt something tugging at his soul in his walk
in a yellow woods on a Fall day as he lamented a path not taken. “Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, sorry
I could not travel both”.
And in another poem he describes the grasping as a pensive call to come in the woods,.
“Almost like a call to
come in
To the dark and
lament.”
Sometimes, the sounds of geese overhead seems to call to us.
But often we are out of tune with this call, and late to respond,
“We are not in
harmony, our blood does not forewarn us like migratory birds. Late, overtaken,
we force ourselves abruptly onto the wind and fall to earth at some iced-over
lake”. Rilke
Trying to fish on some iced-over lake late is a metaphorical
indication that I might be forcing my way in life instead of being in harmony. I
am abrupt rather than flowing with the seasons. I am trying to force fish to
take the fly when there is no hatch. The fish are resting and recovering. Perhaps,
I should let them be. Perhaps I should do the same. I feel out of tune.
As Paul Simon wrote, “Like
a poem poorly written, we are verses out of rhyme”. Sometimes I fish like a “poem poorly
written, and like a verse out of rhyme”. I am not timing my casts. I am just
casting and casting aimlessly. I’m not even sure I should be there. Perhaps, this is what
I need to lament; To know how out of tune
I am.
Perhaps for me the Fall is a time to be metaphorically
alone. For me, late fall no longer feels like a call to be grasping at fish but
it is more a time for restless contemplation. A time to wander;
“Whoever is alone will
stay alone,
will sit, read, write long letters through the evening,
and wander along the boulevards, up and down,
restlessly, while the dry leaves are blowing”. Rilke
will sit, read, write long letters through the evening,
and wander along the boulevards, up and down,
restlessly, while the dry leaves are blowing”. Rilke
With our rivers that have been over fished all summer long, perhaps
it is time to give it a rest. Time for the shadows to lay over places like the
Dream Stream and Eleven Mile
Canyon and Deckers.
“Lord: it is time. The
huge summer has gone by.
Now overlap the sundials with your shadows,
and on the meadows let the wind go free”.
Now overlap the sundials with your shadows,
and on the meadows let the wind go free”.
Let the winds bring snow and a message on the wind that helps me be in tune with the greater "otherness" of my life.
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