Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Last summer I went on a backpacking trip to Lake Eleanor with my daughter and friends. We hiked four miles in to where there were only occasional other humans - some boyscouts on a far shore whose campfire was kind of comforting to see at night, and a few folks who kayaked in to our inlet. I wrote a fragment of a poem about swimming there, heading out into the lake further than I was really comfortable going, across to a spit of sand. Halfway across I started having lots of thoughts about drowning. So it was a bit victorious to clamber up the shaly sand of the spit and look back over the water I had crossed. The fragment I wrote about that day lay dormant in my notebook for months. Something about striking out bravely. Something about pushing through fear.
As I reworked it the other night, I added a fire, and then the fire burned through all the driftwood I had amassed as a shelter. I thought about how we try to protect ourselves from the forces we fear, how fragile those 'protections' often turn out to be, and ultimately how liberating it can be to watch them fall or get consumed by the very forces we feared, and realize that we are still alive, still standing.
This winter in California was fairly brutal. After years of drought, record rainfall brought hillsides crashing down, destroyed homes, and forced many road closures. In concert with the weather, I was enduring a giant mudslide in my own life.
Spring has dawned, supremely welcome and, as though a special reward for all those storms, bringing with it the most fabulous wildflower season. I'm hardly an original pairing Spring with feelings of hope and rebirth, but that's what is happening in my house right now and when I finally reworked that fragment into a full poem between 3 and 5am the other night, these are the themes that emerged: not only facing adversity, but learning to embrace and learn from it; opening yourself out to optimism and possibility after a period of hunkering down; allowing light in after all the darkness.

Grace

"What will survive of us is love."
                          - Philip Larkin

I swam from the shore to the sandy spit
and on the way I dreamed of drowning
but I swam through the fear;
I walked up on the shaly sand
and my life was waiting for me there;
I lit a fire, violent at its heart,
it burned with ease through the driftwood
I had piled up as a shelter from the dark.

We came from desert,
moved through perpetual rain
that liquified the parched hills
and brought them tumbling down
with houses, trees, power lines;
as fast as everything fell apart
the good green world poured out
her liquid heart into the flood

and when the power went out
and the batteries ran down
I learned to wrap both arms
around the liferaft of the dark;
I learned that it’s about
not being swallowed by the night,
that it’s about letting the night storm
on and on, till out of a blue dawn, grace

a world washed clean and calm,
and look now! April comes sailing in,
creaming over the sandbars with her
wildflowers in jamjars and her sudden
fern forests taller than a man, no more
anguish in the night, she turns
cold love inside out till you
can scarcely bear the heat

and the doors that were being pushed shut,
the doors are opening now, each day
in its own way a preparation.
If what will survive of us is love
then I will open too, I will allow the white
froth of trees, the four falling notes
of the mourning dove and the high
white clouds to make me unafraid,

For we are round the brighter side
of the sun, every revolution takes us
further from the Fall chill, the Winter
wet and stripped. Space opens up,
there’s room for promise and for hope,
and though my fear was clean, and meant
something, I get up every morning now
and I laugh as I shrug the wings on.