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The Hidden Spot

Written by: Jana Moon
Published on: April 8, 2022

I chased my heart out of my chest and into the woods.

I hid her in the shadows of old growth trees,

beneath brambles enough to entangle rabbits.

I sat with my heart amid the leaves and vines,

holding her until fires died and birds went to nest

and coyote mothers called their pups to move

in the darkness. Undetected,

my heart and I were perfectly silent,

still as stone.

I learned to leave her there

nestled in the moss against a large oak

of many years my acquaintance.

And without intention, I walked out

and left her as she rested.

I decided to sit with my heart

in the woods again, forgetting

that I’d left her until I found her

there in that hidden spot.

I fell in love and wrapped her in my arms.

Placed her gently in my chest.

Reclaimed.

Categories: Splashing About, Sweet Words

Laughing Leaves

Written by: Jana Moon
Published on: April 7, 2022


Sit with me

while the leaves fall

like laughter on our bodies

and our souls grow strong like the trees.

Categories: Splashing About, Sweet Words

Empty Now

Written by: Jana Moon
Published on: April 6, 2022

Nothing inspired and nothing expressed

Time stops as a vacuum forms inside

It envelopes the universe

Breathing, I recall, creates movement

I notice I can’t move

Can’t return

Can’t go beyond

This stillness holds no memories

No future plans

Just now

This empty now

An electric fan whirring finds my ears 

Notes from the radio seem to drop

One

By

One

As unrelated events

I listen for lost heart songs 

Once made of memories and future plans

The fan again

It seems so loud just now

In this now

This empty, empty now

Categories: Shaded Woods, Sweet Words

I can’t take much more of this. Or, can I?

Written by: Jana Moon
Published on: April 5, 2022

[an “egg” from November 27, 2013]

 

Since the end of October, the 27th at 1:00am, my daddy (I’m Texan and that makes him a daddy, not a dad) has been in the hospital. And my family and I have run the gamut of emotions while caring for him and tending to his needs beyond what hospital staff can do or are doing because of overwork and poor communication. Fear, worry, sadness, hope, joy, relief, and anger are all a part of that. And stillness too. At least that’s where this is taking me; to that still quiet place of introspection that has long been the safe harbor in which I moor my tiny ship when seas are rough to make sure I’m navigating in a way that brings the most peace, health, effectiveness and joy. Sometimes seas need more harbors. And sometimes the absence of safety for a time teaches the ability to choose calm and continuation.

And then another harbor comes in time. It was in this last respite, one desperately clung to when I had reached my seeming end of coping with all the demands placed upon me by my heart wanting to care for Daddy, my work requiring my physical presence for income creation, and my social community in which I submerge myself for joy and comfort with friends and family that I found a new thought emerging. A still, small utterance within me . . . whispering a special story just for me; my truth regarding this experience:

Does the feeling “I can’t take much more of this” really define a limit? What does it really mean to feel oneself at the edge of capacity?

I was engulfed by the emotion, the awareness that I was dwelling on the edges of my capacity to continue in reasonable form; eating, drinking, sleeping, bathing, dressing, working, being present with the tragedy that was rising and filling all the spaces between the cells of my existence. It’s scary emotionally because you feel on the brink of collapse. It’s frightening physically because you get in touch with the primal drive toward survival that moves us forward in ways both egocentric and communal. When they are at odds, the psychological stress grows more intense.

So feeling that going on is not an option is an interesting experience when viewed from the back side. Once the stress dissipates – food is eaten along with the luxury of actually tasting it; sweet sleep restores the body and rested the spirit; space returns between the cells to breathe in and breathe out absent of the fight-or-flight response – that moment of knowing, really knowing, that continuing was simply not an option when recalled seems misunderstood.

That moment was not the end of capacity, though it seemed critically necessary to acknowledge it as such at the time. I have gone on, and I will continue. The limit that loomed like an executioner with axe was not truly the edge. It was the limit of capacity to function within the selected criteria (this much food, sleep, work, etc.), but not the limit to function in some way. That was found. And is found in moments of crisis. The “I can’t take much more of this” feeling is signpost marking the entrance to the land beyond the idea of what is necessary for sustaining the self. Beyond that border is continuation in another form. Or death.

I find it interesting how intensely the over-burdened central nervous system indicates that the border is the actual finish line; the end. It amazes me how perfectly attuned we are to our own survival and to how the survival of a communal member affects our own, creating a willingness to go beyond our borders to sustain one another; to walk up to that edge and squeeze just a few more feet or inches into the distance to our own decline.

I think that’s the critical piece. Part of what we call love. And part of that deep river of innate knowledge that in helping one another continue, we continue ourselves. The limits of life are held collectively within the cells and souls of each person.

Categories: Shaded Woods, Sweet Words

Letter to a Friend

Written by: Jana Moon
Published on: April 5, 2022

[and “egg” from May 26, 2014]

 

Until I learned to appreciate someone’s soul, and found myself willing, even grateful, to let them go though my heart was torn apart to do so; I didn’t really know anything about love. I wrote this letter to my friend, one of my true believers, after his passing in July of 1997. He was 33. I was 30 at the time. He taught me how to rise to the occasion of real love rather than fall, no matter what happens.

I like to think my friend read the letter over my shoulder from his new vantage point. I think he knew the time together in his last week mattered to me more than these words could possibly convey. He taught me how to honor the moments that really matter and to make sure people feel better having spent time with you even if you don’t do anything for them. That’s love. Love for all. He knew that, and I do too because I knew him.

Today is Memorial Day. He was not a military soldier, but he soldiered on through some difficult situations in his life. I’ve been thinking about putting this here for a while, and somehow the timing seems right. In honor of honor:

Dear Kent,

I know you remember all of this, but I want you to know that I too remember; often and well. Part of this story I didn’t witness, but you told it to me so tenderly that I could see you, a boy of 17, nursing your father. You watched him suffer from colon cancer. You felt him ache with the sorrow of having to leave you. Then one day you became a wise man in your seventeenth year. It was the first day of deer season; the day you and your dad always bought your hunting licenses together. You went to his room and saw him lying there, struggling to hold on to life, to you. I saw the image of you bending down to kiss your dad. I saw your beautiful blue eyes fill with tears that never were allowed to spill over and wet your lashes. You were brave. You told your dad that you would get the licenses for both of you that year and that you were leaving to do so. It was your tradition to go together every year. Then you did the most amazing thing for such a young man living alone with a father that you loved and cared for through the long painful days and nights of cancer. You leaned in and said to him, “Dad, I’m going to get our hunting licenses, and I don’t want you to be here when I get back.” You kissed him and left.

I’ve wondered about how you found the strength to give him permission to go. That must have been an agonizing drive to buy the licenses. I wish I could have been there to hold your hand when you went back into the house. You knew he’d be gone. Just as you knew he wouldn’t leave as long as he was worried about his boy. But a grown man could take care of getting a hunting license. And a grown man would be okay without his dad. You spoke the lovely language of allegory all the time I knew you. Teaching other people about themselves through story. Bless you, for that. And bless you for being so fine and strong for him. I know how much you needed your dad, a need that never left you until you saw your own time shorten. I suppose your need must’ve changed to anticipation.

I witnessed the rest of this story. You, of course, were there too, but I want to tell you how you changed me. Do you recall that last week when we spent time together? Maria called me to come three times that week; you were in a great deal of pain and the bodywork treatments eased that for you.

Monday we talked while I worked with you, offering therapy. I said how glad I was to be able to help you. You said you were mostly glad for the time spent. You showed me how the fluids were collecting in various places on your body and described in detail how having your intestines rerouted felt. We talked the nuts and bolts of your illness. I mourned for you that day and wished to be able to carry the cancer to the end of the earth and throw the demon into the abyss. I would have walked for years to do that. Then you told me about the things you’d been seeing. You knew your were letting go and looked forward to it, I think. You described that peaceful bedroom without windows. Three soft blankets, one blue, one oatmeal, and one mauve, were folded across the foot of the bed. A light in the room that came from nowhere. I knew then, you needed rest.

Wednesday, you said you were losing time. You couldn’t tell when moments passed or follow the flow of events. I didn’t understand, so you explained. I was at your left side massaging your shoulder. Then I walked around the bed to your right side. You said you knew when I was on your left and on your right, but your weren’t aware of my moving. In your awareness I was in one place and then appeared elsewhere in the same moment. Once you’d told me this, I watched you slip into that timeless place, and I followed your eyes as they watched things moving around the room above you. I saw your happy face and felt you relax as you saw whatever you saw. Later you told me about the spring green field and trees that were parted by a white gravel road. A white school bus came down the road toward you. A little girl dressed all in white got off the bus and waited. She must have been your angel.

On Friday, your mom and wife were very sad. I went in to give you treatment. You were not able to talk to me that day. I tried to help you, but you motioned as if to shoo me away. You tried to say something, but I don’t think you were talking to me. You seemed to be concentrating. I felt I was interrupting your conversation with someone else. I wondered if it was your little angel. I kissed your forehead and told you to rest.

On the drive home, I remembered the day you told me you were sick, and I cried. You said not to worry, death was just part of life. You saw the whole of life as a journey and the good, the bad, the happy and the hard was all just part of the trip. You relished the voyage more than anyone I’d ever met. You kept your mind open and your heart tender. You taught me the importance of looking off the cliff before you jump, so you don’t miss a thing on the way down. And if you crack up on the rocks, well, that’s just part of the journey. The most important thing is to keep your eyes open and enjoy the view.

I keep you with me in memory every day. I miss you dear friend, but don’t doubt that I’m enjoying the view from here.

Love much, always,

Jana

Categories: Shaded Woods, Sweet Words

Pears and Possibilities

Written by: Jana Moon
Published on: April 2, 2022

[and “egg” from September 8, 2013]

 

Walking through by neighborhood earlier in the summer with a friend. We passed by one of the many well-cared for and redone mission style houses in town. In their side-yard was an old, large pear tree laden with ripening pears. They had a hand-painted sign leaning against the trunk of the tree. It read, “Please don’t pick our pears. Thank you.”

My friend and I laid eyes on it at about the same moment. His response was “That’s the wrong attitude. Look how many they have. They should share!”

My response was a bit different. I saw several things at once before I settled on something. First, I thought that these are their pears, and they are not obligated to share them. Then, I thought they must have experienced their tree being stripped of pears in secret more than once to feel the need to post a sign. Then I thought they certainly did have more than they could possibly eat, but perhaps they can them in jars as gifts each year, or give them to people that they have agreements with. Standing in the street looking at the lovely, fruitful tree there was no way for me to know their circumstances in order to decide what they should be doing.

I mused that if it were my tree and I needed pears for canning or to make income, I would place bushel baskets filled with the extra pears near the curb with a sign offering those to passersby.

I shared these thoughts with my friend. He saw the possibility of other possibilities. That there could be many scenarios that would make that sign not an expression of selfishness but of self-protection.

“There’s always another way to look at something,” I said.

As we walked along, it occurred to me that it’s divisive to decide what anyone else should be doing. I don’t mean this to include protection of our own and others’ safety in cases of egregious harm such as abuse or violence. But in this case, I’m speaking of our daily responses to one another’s choices about which we are ill-informed. Even if they share their reasons with us, we don’t know the completeness of another’s heart. Many past experiences, beliefs, and desires go into choosing even simple things.

So back to the pears. My friend’s lovely desire, the framework of his point of view, is for a world where people share and give and create goodness for themselves and others when they experience bounty. That’s a lovely paradigm. Until is is placed on another as a rationale for judgement.

I’d like to leave you with this: Perhaps holding an open and safe space for others to have their own moments of loveliness and fear, response and reaction would help allow room for understanding and therefore to create a more lovely world for ourselves and others.

Categories: Bright Meadows, Sweet Words

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