The Wonder and Mystery of the "Negatives" in our Lives.
*Art by Hilma af Klint
I penned a version of this essay on Mother's Day 2021. I invite us to consider the idea of finding our way into appreciating the gifts hidden in our impossible life situations, those things we cannot change, but deeply wish we could.
I penned a version of this essay on Mother’s Day 2021. I invite us to consider the idea of finding our way into appreciating the gifts hidden in our impossible life situations, those things we cannot change, but deeply wish we could. To shift our gaze and adjust our narrative about our difficulties and treat them as unfolding mysteries that we do not, cannot yet, comprehend but that we trust that one day, we will be able to make whole the fragments and brokenness of our individual lives.
As an example of that I offer you this piece:
“I have been well mothered in my life, but not from my mom. Instead true mothering came to me via my dad, my siblings, my friends and even from strangers. My own mother had considerable talents and gifts for cooking, for piety, for sewing and constructing things, and for creating order and structure in our daily routine, which was incredibly important with four young children all two years apart. But in addition to those things, another equally important part of raising children is the ability to mirror and align with the the child. To witness them and see them as distinctly separate from you. To see the unique intelligence and the destiny in the making, unfolding in this other human being. In this endeavor, curiosity and wonder are the coin of the realm. These were not my mother’s gifts.
But within 48 hours of her death, I realized that everything I love most about myself, arguably my very destiny was determined because she lacked the specific gifts not because she had them. Out of the suffering of not being seen, of being often criticized for my otherness was born a deep desire, honed over many decades, to truly see each human with a particular wonder about who their deep intelligence wants them to become.
I write this missive on Mother’s Day 2021 to remind myself and us all that the “ ideal” lives, parents, jobs, friends, partners, bank accounts, etc (you get the point) that we long for are not what will turn us into the lit angels we came here to be. I write this for everyone reading this who finds themselves in conditions not to their liking. I urge us all to consider stepping outside of that complaint and into the ocean of wonder.
Consider this “wondering” question: “If this/these conditions were created to help me give birth to something unique, a gift to me and others, what might that gift, capacity or action(s) be?” Pick one thing in the external world that affects you, that you struggle with, and apply that question to that thing.
Thank goodness that two decades before my mom died, I was finally able to give up the wish she would be different. I realized I was judging her as “less than” and how hurtful that was to her, and to me. I was doing exactly as she had done. Oh the irony! But it wasn’t until her death that I realized her soul gifted me with my destiny in a roundabout way. Our human personalities both suffered. Neither of us could attain the depth of friendship we both wished for, but we did retain our deep love for each other.
It has taken me this last decade to apprentice myself to her gifts of order and structure. With my random, creative brain, I can only approximate them, because while they were her nature, they are far afield from mine. But as I do this, I find increased empathy for what a challenge my nature may have been for her and how she steadfastly loved me, even though she didn’t often really like me. Even though our relationship felt and was conditional at times, (“mama doesn’t like you when you are sassy”), even at those times I still knew the love was unwavering. I knew she might rail at me for my mistakes, but I also knew she would never not love me. She struggled to like me. AND I always knew that. Even when I was young I would say to dad, “Mamma doesn’t like me but she loves me”. I don’t recall him ever making a response to that.
It hurts to live with that, and I really suffered when I was younger. When a child believes a parent doesn’t like how they are made, they are in a terrific bind. They need and are attached to the parent and they can’t do a lot about how they are wired. Although they might try. I tried. And in the trying I/we contort ourselves. And in the dissonance of that contortion, I/we have the chance to grow because of that very constriction. This is really the point I am making. The “negative” of my mother’s inability to truly like how I was wired hurt me, but the story doesn’t stop there…it also created Me!
Back to mom and me. How human of my mom, right? Don’t we, don’t you struggle to like someone so different from you when you have to do daily life with them, at work, or in your family? I sure do. I don’t understand why the world seems intent on delivering this experience to all of us… intent on giving us someone or something completely immovable to our desires and needs. The 20th century poet Maria Rainer Rilke who also struggled with a sense of exile from dominant society his entire life wrote:
“Winning does not tempt that man. This is how he grows, by being defeated, decisively, by constantly greater beings”.
“Winning does not tempt this woman. This is how I grow, by being defeated, decisively, by constantly greater beings.” Beings such as my mother, whom I could not bend to my will. But also, by conditions that I cannot change but must navigate. Personal health challenges. racism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, all the other ways we separate ourselves and disconnect from each other. They still break my heart as much as when I was little. As they should. These are the result of a civilization that fosters disconnection rather than connection. Many, if not all of us feel a sense of exile. Maybe from some part of ourselves that we have othered, and therefore banished, or from others, or maybe because we don’t seem to fit the dominant ideal.
But…another wondering question comes to mind: “How could it be true, that the very conditions or people that we feel imprisoned by or exiled from in our lives, are actually inadvertently helping us give birth to some new capacity that can navigate this reality and evolve us, into an ever more human and humane version of ourselves?” And what happens when we focus on this new growth within ourselves, instead of our complaints about our current circumstances?
I am not suggesting we deny our suffering. Nor am I suggesting that these negative conditions are made tolerable by what we can wrest from their grip. They are not. I would much prefer a lifelong connection and affection going both ways between my mom and me. Denying the level of impact of our suffering leads to negative psychological and biological costs. BUT I am suggesting we give ourselves something forward moving, (our becoming and our own growth) to focus on instead. Because really what else can we do that is life giving, in the face of our losses and suffering?
In the words of Rilke, “…until some distant day, without hardly noticing it, we will live ourselves into an answer.” An understanding or insight will find us, much as mine did 48 hours after mom’s death. Maybe it was a gift from her? I like to think so. BUT it was also a gift from myself. Those years of growing and becoming a woman who could love well even in the face of disappointment and disconnection set the table for that insight to find me so that finally both of our hearts were at rest.
Art by: Hilma AF Klint
There is always more to the story than meets the eye ~
Art by: Maurice Sapiro
The Winter Woods by Parker Palmer
The winter woods beside a solemn
river are twice seen—
once as they pierce the brittle air,
once as they dance in grace beneath the stream.
The Winter Woods by Parker Palmer
The winter woods beside a solemn
river are twice seen—
once as they pierce the brittle air,
once as they dance in grace beneath the stream.
In air these trees stand rough and raw,
branch angular in stark design—
in water shimmer constantly,
disconnect as in a dream,
shadowy but more alive
than what stands stiff and cold before our eyes.
Our eyes at peace are solemn streams
and twice the world itself is seen—
once as it is outside our heads,
hard frozen now and winter-dead,
once as it undulates and shines
beneath the silent waters of our minds.
When rivers churn or cloud with ice
the world is not seen twice—
yet still is there beneath
the blinded surface of the stream,
livelier and lovelier than we can comprehend
and waiting, always waiting, to be seen.
As our nation more deeply entrenches itself in a patterned reaction to the other side, my heart, maybe yours too has grown heavy and weary of this. Just as in a midwest January it is hard to hope for spring. Will spring ever come? Will we as a nation, ever mend? Or at least get to a place where our leaders think beyond the next election to the common good.
As I was reading Palmer’s new book: ON THE BRINK OF EVERYTHING: GRACE, GRAVITY AND GETTING OLD, his poem Winter Woods appeared and my heart took wing. It is the first thing that has comforted me since the impeachment trial began. It reminded me of something important I had forgotten. “There is always more to the story than meets the eye”.
I have felt so deeply sad at the distance between us as fellow citizens of this country. To my eye, it grows ever darker. Maybe some of you too, are experiencing the depth of winter in your own experience. I just loved his reminder that the stark frozen cold of my pastoral Wisconsin landscape was not the entire story. There is something below the surface. And so to the frozen cold between Dems and GOP is only half the story. There is yet movement, we can only glimpse or guess at but ephemeral as it is, it is also real. Spring will come.
When rivers churn or cloud with ice
the world is not seen twice—
The news and constant railing at the other side, is Palmer’s river churning, we cannot see then (and now) what is below the surface. But the poet tells us
yet still is there beneath
the blinded surface of the stream,
livelier and lovelier than we can comprehend
and waiting, always waiting, to be seen.
We will grow weary of our walls. This is not sustainable. Until the conversation changes, it is important that each of us find and become Sanctuary to each other. Not for agreement with your point of view whatever it is but rather seek in each other the sanctuary of our common humanity. Let’s commit to remind each other that “meanwhile” there are things of great beauty happening daily, there are acts of kindness given and received every where around the globe. We are not just our partisanship. We are not just divided and walled off. There are things we can agree to do together, even if our leaders cannot. We can start by focusing on the fact that the other side doesn’t like being apart from us any more than we like being apart from them. That’s a beginning. The rivers will run again, if we don’t let our hearts freeze up.
Dialoguing with a Poem
Dear Readers, I am an apprentice to David Whyte’s Invitas: A Path to Conversational Leadership. I have followed his work for nearly 25 years now. I have learned to be in dialogue with any and everything , so too, with poems. In fact listening to David recite and riff on a poem puts one in a dialogue with their own sweet soul as well as their heart and mind.This morning I decided to do the dialogue on the page (blog) in honor of Valentine’s day and the celebration of love. Hearing this poem almost 25 years ago with Leslie Lanes, ushered in my first experience of an ecstatic moment. A moment where everything belonged, including me. Just as it was. Just as I was. If that is not Love I am not sure what Love is. To be able "to gather all our flaws in celebration” is to truly unconditionally love all of ourselves, to love how we were made. To love how the world is made. In honor of Valentine's Day, I offer you this:The link for the poem without commentary can be found here. I suggest you read it first and then come back to the blog and read my dialogue with it. As you read it, note your own inner conversation. There is no single way to dialogue with a poem. There are as many ways as there are people.https://www.davidwhyte.com/where-many-rivers-meet/
The Faces at Braga by David Whyte
Commentary by Nancy C. WondersIn monastery darkness by the light of one flashlightthe old shrine room waits in silence. While above the doorwe see the terrible figure,fierce eyes demanding. “Will you step through?” Will I step through the glories of youth and a well-functioning body and quick intelligence into this new territory? The territory that holds decline, disease and disappearance? Will I? Good God this is hard. My mind knows I cannot choose anything else. I do not want my face to be the face of an old woman chasing a time that is decades gone. If that is what is behind door #1, it is not for me. It is humiliating. It is shame. I had so much of that in my youth at the mouths of my mother and the nuns. No, I cannot go that way. I cannot return to those youthful days when I barely appreciated the beauty of my form, the brilliance of my quick mind nor the grace of a body I did not have to pay attention to because it ran just fine! That is gone. But door #2? What waits there? And the old monk leads us,bent back nudging blackness,prayer beads in the hand that beckons. We light the butter lampsand bow, eyes blinking in thepungent smoke, look up without a word, see faces in meditation,a hundred faces carved above,eye lines wrinkled in the hand-held light. That’s true! So many more wrinkled faces than mine. So many more who went before me could I see them as … Such love in solid wood!Taken from the hillsides and carved in silence,they have the vibrant stillness of those who made them. Engulfed by the pastthey have been neglected, but throughsmoke and darkness they are like the flowers we have seen growingthrough the dust of eroded slopes,their slowly opening faces turned toward the mountain. So I too must turn my face toward the mountain of age, even with my youthful spirit, my body is asking other things of me now. It demands me love it, touch it, stretch it, move it.Carved in devotiontheir eyes have softened through age …oh please let me soften…please do not let me harden…and their mouths curve through delight of the carver’s hand. Delight? There could be delight in this paring back? This essentialism. BUT my life mantra has been DO NOT MAKE ME CHOOSE and it would seem this aging stuff is all about choosing. AND I have a lousy picker (chooser). It does not want to choose. It wants everything and mostly all at once. Sheesh…how can I possibly walk this road? I truly know virtually nothing about this way of being. If only our own faceswould allow the invisible carver’s handto bring the deep grain of love to the surface. Shoot, I knew it, what is going to have to go is my ability to skim along, to flit from flower to flower. instead I am going to have to pay deep attention to what I want above all else moment by moment. To choose and abide within my current limits.I do not have time to read the NY Times or the Atlantic Magazine from cover to cover. I can no longer follow all my lovely random curiosities. Well actually I can, but I must accept that this means something else will need to be sacrificed. It takes me more time to do what I did on almost everything. "If only my own face would allow the carver’s hand (aging) to bring the deep grain of love to the surface."If only we knewas the carver knew, how the flawsin the wood led his searching chisel to the very core, my flaw: my mind that does not live within limits…how?we would smile tooand not need faces immobilizedby fear and the weight of things undone. It is true, I worry about this more and more, “what am I forgetting?” The constant backlog of work or home responsibilities not tended to yet? When we fight with our failing. This was the first of David’s poems that I fell hard for. I had a transcendent moment and it began on this line. I (and others I might add) have fought with how I am made as long as I can remember. And…we ignore the entrance to the shrine itselfand wrestle with the guardian, fierce figure on the side of good. And as we fightour eyes our hooded with griefand our mouths are dry with pain. So much unnecessary suffering from this all my life…even still. But there is slowly emerging a small voice that talks back a bit to that fierce figure…there is not yet an Archbishop Desmond TuTu (Made for Goodness) residing within me that is FOR me on a consistent basis, but there is something that says: "Don't talk to my friend Nancy that way, it doesn't help her." And that is everything. If only we could give ourselvesto the blows of the carvers hands, I wonder, what is it I refuse to give myself over too? What if it is a kind of faith/trust in these very things I am struggling with?the lines in our faces would be the trace lines of rivers feeding the seawhere voices meet, praising the featuresof the mountain and the cloud and the sky. Our faces would fall away my face of productivity, of “earning,” of “the need to be deserving,” of competence…maybe if I could finally trust that as I am made, I am enough for my life…I could indeed grow youngeruntil we, growing younger toward deathevery day, would gather all our flaws in celebration to merge with them perfectly,impossibly, wedded to our essence,full of silence from the carver’s hands. May it be so." src="blob://www.nancywonders.com/1b966a48-e3cd-4ff8-8fd1-890eda11c993" alt="image001.png" class="Apple-web-attachment Singleton" style="opacity: 1;">
May I not become trapped ...
"May I not become trapped, caught or entangled in false inner networks of negativity, resentment or destruction toward myself. May I treat myself as the nest of God...." John O'DonohueMay I treat myself as the nest of God! What would that look like? The first thing that pops to my mind is the humility it would require. The ultimate "don't know" mindset. When I get really quiet and look at the Pride of Barbados flowers just outside my window, there arises in me an awareness of my being the nest of God. Just for a moment. Just a glimpse. I don't really know how to describe this. I have a hard time staying with it. It is wondrous and frightening too. My monkey mind slips into the experience by whispering something like "...danger, danger...move away, back slowly out of this room ... it isn't meant for you. You will get hurt." Or it says "Who has time for this?" Or "You can do this later, you better do X,Y or Z now"But who will I become if I am not a nest of God? And in these times, these difficult and fearsome times, when the news features children separated from parents at the hands of the US Government; I realize how much work there is for me to make of myself a nest of the divine. I must look into and be with my fears and my immense grief. How can I be a sturdy warm protection from the energies of hate, fear and shame that swirl around us all? For I do not want to cradle the Divine with the fear I often find in my heart these days. What is to be done with it? Surely this is what the Holy Spirit of my Catholic girlhood was for, to help me create a heart that is beyond the geography of fear and worry. Just that thought brings a measure of piece. I will seek to grow a heart that is a nest for God, a heart so open, so wonder-filled, so safe and warm that the Divine could indeed nest here. Is just the wanting this enough?"When the Guest is being looked for, it is the longing that does all the work." KabirI will nurture my imagination for that is what humans can do AND I will double down on my longing for a heart that is beyond fear and all constriction. A heart that could be the nest of God.
"I am from ... "
Anthropologist and psychologist Mary Pipher gets credit for this exercise: These “I am from” poems are an identity exercise. They are poems that includes something about place, religion, and food that trace back to where/how you are “from.” I chose to do this for my birthday this year, in honor of my mother whom I buried last year and all of the women and men I am from. Also in honor of the midwest, particularly Wisconsin where I lived my first 30 years. I am a woman who did not easily fit the land and people I am from. I loved them but my latin soul, was a bit too expressive and wild for the natural vibe of Wisconsin. I moved to Texas. Now, at a distance I can truly see what I left behind in Wisconsin. In Texas I could realize the positive side of the things that made me a "out of place". My exuberant soul and affinity for loud, joyful laughter. My tendency to always go for "more" and for the "fun" option no matter the cost, liked Texas a bit better. But in truth, I am both of these cultures. Writing this poem made me so grateful for all of me, for all of my roots, Wisconsin and Texan. I, like the skies of a Dallas sunset over Stevens Park Golf Course, dream big and believe anything is truly possible. God Bless all of America and all aspects of our unique and wondrous selves. The Exercise:Start each sentence with I am from...and write whatever comes to mind. You might want to consider, place, food and religion...anything really that makes your roots distinct.I am from army blankets ...as forts...as July 4th picnic blankets ...as warmth in Wisconsin winters.I am from Bob Wonders and Mary Skotske who recycled, resused and "made due".I am from prevent, control and tame.I am from Friday night lake perch tavern fish fries.I am from sheepshead, bar dice and bingo.I am from meat and potatoes ... chuck stew and mashed potatoes.I am from the place where ordinary and predictable are good and where wild and random are bad.I am from brooms, dust pans and carpet sweepers in motion everyday but Sundays.I am from gray, low skies, gray homes, gray buildings and steel colored lakes and rivers.ANDI am from where miracles are believed to be real. As real as daily rosaries.I am from damped down; cards held close the the vest.I am from ready help, if you ask for it. Sometimes even when you don't but it is obvious you need it, and we wouldn't offend by the offering.I am from people who stop for strangers.I am from regular or whatever is the opposite of distinct and particular.I am from next door to Prairie Home Companion, which is a little too flashy for my people.I am from navy blue, gray and tan as colors not as neutrals.I am from "people are assumed to be good and decent until they prove otherwise".I am from the first state to outlaw discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation...WISCONSIN!I am from a place where progress is slow on small things and fast on human rights ... on the things that endure.I am from love whispered not shouted. Loyalty ever present but not on display. And where prayer and religion were private affairs.I am from a land where people are trusted until proven otherwise. This poem is offered In honor of Bob and Mary Wonders and the family they created, the good they did and the values they passed on to their children.Nancy Claire Wonders