Who I Used to Be |
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Alive, energetic, happy, hopeful. And then the world caved in and I hunkered down in my corner as best I could, laced up my boxing gloves and prepared to take on the world. But I was still a child and no amount of armor or helmets or big gloves could protect me. I sat alone on the bench girding myself for the next fight. Alone, alone, out in the rain, cold and alone. I walked through life doing my best to pretend I was human like everyone else, but always chilled to the bone with loneliness. I was a lone operator even though I pretended with the best of them. What was I afraid of? What would be the price of silence? What would be the cost of ending the momentum, of getting off the train? When I got cancer and spent a year sick, I lay on a pile of bones and I slept. I entered the underworld and made myself at home there. When my friend Bob Stahl sent out an email about a one-day retreat he was leading at the Santa Cruz mortuary, a Buddhist meditation on death, I emailed back right away, knowing that was the place for me to be. We spent the day doing walking meditation around the mortuary, walking through the graveyard, walking slowly and mindfully alongside the crypts and urns and statuary. Bob showed up photos of the stages of decomposition of a body. Death is real, the pictures said. This is where we are all heading. This is where we are all going to go. I was weak and tired from chemo, gaunt and bald, as I lifted and placed my foot, step after step, my mind and heart open to the awareness of death. People said I was nuts to go. They were horrified. Why would you want to spend the day looking at dead bodies? they said. Why do you want to spend the day walking among the dead? You have cancer, they were thinking. If you think about death, you must want to die. If you think about death, you will draw death to you. You have to think about life. You must not want to live if you are choosing to spend a day among the dead. And yet I knew I had to go. The naysayers were wrong. I needed a place to contemplate my death. I was the one with cancer. I was the one facing death. I needed a place where it was okay to sit with that possibility, too, not just that I would get better and live, but that I would get sicker and die. It was a lovely day. I can't imagine one better spent. Remembering that day reminds of the underworld where I spent a year of my life, off the wheel of life, freed from the responsibilities of mother, grandmother, breadwinner, friend, community activist, teacher. Freed of the past and the future. Forced into the moment, where for so many years I had been trying to go. I loved sleeping on those hollow, ancient skulls. For all the pain and suffering, it was a place I wanted to go. A place I still miss sometimes. Eyes closed, surrounded by bones. Now I am forced to walk in this bright, sovereign world with its demands, its schedules, its expectations and its speed. I miss the comfort of craniums and jaw bones, the open empty eye sockets giving me a place to rest my head. And then there was the triumph of survival. The triumph and pride of emerging from the underworld. And now, the limbo time which expands and continues. The scrambled brain, the empty places inside, the hole where ambition and creativity and words used to be. The empty chambers before me. It is a time of solitude and shadows even as I go through the motions of my busy life. Even as I teach and drive kids to school and make dinner and plans and see movies with my mother and devise curriculum and teach retreats and classes, there is the vast empty world inside. There is blank place, an empty place. This empty space does not comfort. It does not scare me. It merely is. I do not know who I am anymore and mostly, I do not care. Sometimes I want to reach back to what used to be, but what used to be is gone. And so I look up at the clouds, I reach up to the sky, not knowing what is to be. I go through my days with the empty place inside, the little man with the whip seemingly banished forever. Today, I am heading into five days of silence. I will drive up to the Land of Medicine Buddha for a five day retreat. Once again, I will sit in the stillness beneath the swirl of life. I will sit like a Buddha and explore the places I do not understand and cannot yet see. Trackback(0)
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written by patty freedman, May 20, 2009
I enjoy reading your blog Laura, I will return someday.
thanks for sharing the underworld
written by jenni fox, May 21, 2009
I will forward this to a good friend of mine who is a writer and who has stage 4 cancer. I think she will enjoy your words, as words are often her refuge. Thanks for your honesty. All the best that life can bring you, Laura. Jenni
Beautiful and bold journeying
written by Jeffrey Gerhardstein, May 21, 2009
Thank you for taking us along with you, especially to places few wish to go, those lands of the great questions.
jg
Who I used to be
written by Deborah Phoenix, May 21, 2009
Dear Laura,
I resonate strongly with your thoughtful words of introspection on death, on the you that you used to be, and how, getting off the wheel of life for an entire year has emptied that chalice of busy-ness. Now your cup can be filled with deep inner stillness and the grace that comes from the contemplation of your own mortality as a human being who once lived life as a human-doing. Yours is a profound path and you have been blessed with a great gift of simply allowing yourself to "BE." Write comment
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