Wordless Wednesdays – tiny fallen flowers
16 Wednesday May 2012
Posted nature, wordlessness
in16 Wednesday May 2012
Posted nature, wordlessness
in13 Sunday May 2012
Posted managing time, nature, resistance, wordlessness
inTags
damselflies, muse, rainbows, resistance, rituals, signs, The War of Art, wordlessness
I used to stand at the copy machine, running off tests or project directions or packets for field trips to the swamp or the marsh or the barrier islands. While I stood there, I would hold my breath. Not purposefully, but in the way where once you realize it you notice that you’re barely breathing. I get that way when I’m on a mission to get something done. I can be impatient with process – I want to finish! And so somehow my body gets an unconscious direction that nice deep regular breathing has to wait until everything’s complete.
I was doing it again today. I’ve been working on a beautiful wordlessness kit to share with my people (that’s you!) and I am so close to finished. But I’ve been forgetting to breathe during the process itself, and that’s so silly! As I write this I’m taking big slow expansive breaths to try to make up for today’s earlier oxygen deprivation.
I’ve been away on a three-day retreat. I had three big goals for this retreat: grieving (more about that in a future post), being wordless and then letting ideas and plans flow and percolate, and finally doing the work to get some big things done! (That’s where the breathing kind of fell apart…)
I started at my favorite getaway– my dear friend Rachel’s land in Mississippi. Thursday afternoon and evening was for grieving, until the sun went down. A fire at the beach marked the passage to the next phase: planning, plotting, preparing, filling the well until all my creativity would overflow today.
I just discovered Steven Pressfield’s The War of Art. Speaking of flames, it’s great for lighting a fire under you and giving you absolutely no excuse to submit to resistance or procrastination. I decided on Friday, rather spontaneously, to mark a new commitment to fighting resistance with a ritual dip in the creek.
You need to understand why this was a challenge for me. I hate to be cold, and the creek was a bit cool. I watched my resistance get to work once I made the decision to swim, not just to wade (resistance said wading would still count.) I placed my palms together, took a breath, submerged to my waist, and asked for a sign. (Resistance said, “Really, that’s good enough – we’re getting goosebumps here!”) I looked up and there was the most beautiful green damselfly perched on a branch looking right at me!
It looked just like this, although this photo is from years ago. The damselfly was like my muse, saying, “You can do it. Beat resistance. You’ll feel so great!” And I did it. And I did feel great. I plunged under the water. I floated downstream. I sat on a big fallen log, taking my time before drying off.
I will remember this ritual submersion when resistance tells me to wait until tomorrow. (Or when I’m in a hotel room for part two of my retreat, and it says, “Go ahead and turn on the tv for just a minute” – only to discover that Pretty in Pink is on, along with a New Orleans version of that bad behavior girls dating show on VH1. Resistance has many weapons!)
In the middle of a particularly annoying photo resizing session, after I realized I’d accidentally created a 32 Megabyte pdf, I had pretty much stopped breathing altogether. And then for some reason, I looked out the window of my hotel room and saw this.
09 Wednesday May 2012
Posted the moon, walks, wordlessness
in02 Wednesday May 2012
Posted wordlessness
in
Wow. A week’s gone by so quickly! Lots of cool news coming soon, but until then, please enjoy this beautiful spring photo from my friend Debbie in Spokane, Washington. She writes, “Spokane has this amazing park called Manito Park that includes several gardens…this one is the Japanese garden. Every Monday I walk through each garden, ending with this one, where I sit in wordlessness for a while. My voice lessons are right by there each Monday, so after singing, I walk here, then get a tall glass of juiced fruits and veggies at this cool health food store, then get my kids from school. I love Mondays! It’s a happy day.”
25 Wednesday Apr 2012
Posted nature, walks, wordlessness
inTags
Another short video to relish today. My Saturday Wordless Walk was rather rainy! A couple of last-minute cancellations and some staying away because of the weather forecast meant that I was on my own. I’m so glad I went anyway. The woods were just beautiful. I settled in under my favorite tree (same one where I saw the turtle) just before the downpour, and I had an umbrella, so I ended up surprisingly dry while it poured and poured and thunder rumbled in the distance. And then eventually it brightened up – like someone turning a light on – and the birds started singing again. After the rain stopped I walked back to the car on a trail peppered with puddles — a completely different scene from the walk in. Enjoy the raindrops on the palmettos!