(from 19 June 2013)
Yoga.
In certain balancing postures, we learn to press different parts of the body
into each other to find strength as right and left side body go on that journey
to find harmony; sole of right foot against left femur in tree, thighs snuggle
torso in crow. We also learn to
establish a drishdi – a stationary focal point – to help find equilibrium by
quieting the mind.
Truth is, right now harmony eludes me.
There is no focus. I can’t
write. I can’t revise. When I sit to write, I imagine my characters
suspended in some shitty fiction purgatory, waiting for me to complete
them. They’re unfinished entities wandering
around a half-written world bumping into each other, smacking into trees
without tops that are planted next to one-dimensional buildings – like the
houses on a back-lot studio tour in Los Angeles. The characters, my characters,
sometimes they try to get my attention. They
whisper suggestions. Make the laundry bag full of weird cat
t-shirts, you know, the laundry bag you had me take from that complete
stranger? Or I realize I’m just the parrot in the story, but I think I have more to
say.
But I can’t listen. Or don’t.
I try. See for me, there used to
be a quiet that joined me when writing.
This quiet was both external and internal and it allowed me the
stillness I required in this world, in this reality, to hear my characters from
their far away universe, to be fully present and observe the unfolding tale,
and let the noise of the story world – wacky, sad, angry, confusing, funny,
gross – all of it, warts and all, to come screaming to life on the virtual
pages of my Mac. The peace I had in one
world allowed me to let all hell break loose in the other and therefore create
balance, equilibrium between the two.
I miss this good friend quiet.
We're all seekers of harmony, aren’t
we? At least on some level? I am. I acknowledge the unending shift left to
right, right to left; sometimes something crummy is flung from the left, so I
shift right to restore balance. Sometimes
leaning into the crappy thing is what creates equilibrium. We all try to balance the good with the
bad. Some days you’re the windshield,
some days you’re the bug. So with some
wavering and awkwardness, we still mange to stay upright on one leg.
Somewhere though, over the past several months, I lost the ability to
keep-up with the constant shifts and my harmony was replaced with a galactic cacophony
of pots and pans and wooden spoons.
My good friend quiet faded away.
I sit to write and can’t find her.
My right side is pre-occupied
with the ongoing shit being flung from that direction.
I don’t want to talk about it or write about
it.
My left side is busy ducking and
weaving from the unexpected stuff – the woman in the oversized planet hating
SUV who changed lanes into my poor little hybrid; the call that came in too
early to be good news – a family member hurt, but recovering.
And the realization that when I just want to hide my face in the soft
fur of my beloved cat and have a good cry, now she’s just a metal box covered
in a tacky floral pattern sitting next to the lamp on the end table.
I stopped dreaming about my characters.
I miss that because it used to help me get to know them in a different way
and sometimes, they spoke and to hear them
was awesome. I stopped dreaming about
my cat and the dog I had growing up. In
every dream, my cat and dog were actually the same soul. I miss that because in the morning when my
cat would lick my face until I woke up, that first look in her eyes I saw my dog
and I loved that.
But I stopped dreaming all together.
The heaviness of this world, of my reality, leans far to one side. There is no counter-balance of the dream
world or that world where my stories and characters call home.
So I’m thinking right now, that
I just need to fall. Stop trying to correct. Find strength in surrender; by
just giving in to the clusterfuck that is the backdrop of my life – let the
horns blare and dogs bark and doors slam - and maybe then, in the moments after
I let the muscles relax and face-plant on my mat out of crow pose, there will
be room for my dear friend quiet to take a seat next to me.
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