I want peace. I can do the busy, crazy, hectic, frantic chaos that is daily life only if I stop in-between-times to be and to create cosmos for myself. So I'm taking this moment, the few brief minutes between class and work, to stop and reflect on my internal state. I feel crowded. Not merely hedged in on every side by living partners, but also crowded with things, with noise, with bustle. I think I'd like to spend some time on top of a mountain, just for the sake of sitting in open air and silence--not surrounded by possessions, not distracted by disorder, just given the chance to be.
It's Lent, and I'm hardly aware of it because the chaos that is around me is entering my soul. I can't hear the voice of God over the screechings of audible and visible clutter. I often wonder what it would be like to live with all of my possessions on my back. Like a fairy tale character, my kerchief tied to a stick, holding within it every thing on this earth I call mine. It sounds so sweet and free sometimes, to live this way. I would often like to have no blanket but the stars, no pillow but the earth, no lullaby but the dance of the planets. I've been thinking so much about eternity and the weight of the world. I don't believe the body is bad, as Plato does, but the body is so prone to gathering things about itself, things that weigh it down and prevent it from glimpsing what is meant foremost to be seen.
Lent, when I remember it's Lent because someone offers me a cookie--reminds me of the cumbersome nature of possessions. Giving up "pleasure foods" in some ways isn't even hard, because I'm still surrounded by so much real, natural, healthy food. Abundance is with us still. I think it's the abundance that bothers me, that hinders my being, because it's of the wrong sort. It isn't the abundance of charity, of peace, or of beauty; it's the abundance of worthless items crowding the vision of my heart, body, and brain.
Turn my eyes from looking at worthless things; and give me life in your ways.
"You're glumping the pond where the Humming-Fish hummed!
No more can they hum, for their gills are all gummed.
So I'm sending them off. Oh, their future is dreary.
They'll walk on their fins and get woefully weary
in search of some water that isn't so smeary."
Well said. As usual, Miss Ayodele. Where is that poem from? I really like the line about "smeary water".
ReplyDeleteThanks, Mrs. Clarke. It's from The Lorax, by Dr. Suess.
ReplyDeleteWhy did you not tell me you updated your blog??
ReplyDeleteI know what you need, a good nunnery.
Oh Ayodele, reading this blog brought all the memories of living at Campillos rushing back. The fun times, lonely times, overly goofy times, frustrated times and the NEEDMYSPACEEVERYBODYBACKOFF times. I often wished the connections in the house could have run more deep but I know that so many of us were in different stages and struggling with different things. I think we were in survival mode, which often causes you to not be aware of the ones around you & their needs. I often felt like you did. I hope now, where ever you are, you're finding that time of peace and reflection that you need.
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