Thursday, May 24, 2012

Words


I have had a love affair with words all my life.  One of my most powerful memories is of a Carrie five years old, sitting cross-legged on a kindergarten floor, book open in front of her, suddenly unlocking the mysteries of the words previously locked from her, unfolding the story of a child’s bedtime.  From that point on, words became my refuge, my holy grail and my solace.  Words flowed into me like the rising tide of the ocean, creeping ever upward on a beach, bringing beautiful trinkets from the deep, to be turned over, fondled and set upon a shelf until the time came to pull them out again and use them to define myself, and my world.

Words carried me through my formative years and into the tumultuous years of puberty, when, it seemed, no one understood a word I said sometimes, and I would take refuge in one of the journals that would someday chronicle my growth much as time elapsed photography chronicles the unfolding of a flower, or the growth of a sapling.  Words were the underlying current of my very foundation, no matter how dank and musty that foundation might get, words were the pillars I set myself on as I struggled to make rhyme or reason of my thoughts and feelings.

I had a sense of the power these words contained, even then, but even after a lifetime’s onslaught of words that stung, that often took me to my spiritual knees, I still did not fully realize the power of words.  Unitl now.  There is always truth in what I write, but sometimes the truth is more contained in the things I do not write; in the silence lying, impenetrable, between the lines.  These truths cannot be written for the public eye, but only in my journal, or spoken deep in the workings of my mind where they can hurt no one but myself, and there is no redemption from these words.  There is only the boldfaced truth, freshly scrubbed and smarting, never to be seen by the likes of this world until they are cajoled (and often dragged) out by only those closest to my heart, to be examined and either mercifully accepted or, even worse, rejected.

This love affair took me to South America, where I learned word upon word in a different language, as many as I could fit in a mouthful at any given moment.  For what is language if not more words, to be constructed in a whole new way, with new, beautiful sounds and syllables traipsing off my tongue and teasing my brain like a New York Times crossword puzzle?  It has also taken me to the darkest times I have ever known in my life, and I have felt betrayed by the words that I also love like another child, or a spouse.  For how can you feel truly betrayed by something you do not love fully, and without reservation? 

Words have been my safe harbor, tumbling out in the lines of poetry, defining Me and my world with their boundless combinations and unending variations, and flowing into me as a river spills into an ocean, feeding my soul in ways that few other things can.  Words have, quite literally, saved my life – saved me from a depression that has threaded its way through my veins like a drug at various points in my life.

It was a simple phrase in a rote prayer that took me out of the confines of the Catholic church and set me hurtling, a 13-year-old Black sheep, onto a path of spiritual discovery that I am only now beginning to make sense of.  Words can be more powerful, even, than a smack in the face, of that I have no doubt.

It is this love affair with words, I am only now coming to understand at the tender age of 41,that has also prevented me from attaining the very things I have sought since I was an early teen  – a balance in myself between my faith and all of the things that I eschew about that very word.  For I have discovered that some things can only be felt in the absence of words.  When we silence our minds, and our words, we only then begin to really hear our hearts, and the Divinity that resides within.  I am slowly learning this through a very difficult time, when the words I love so very much seem to have betrayed me.  It is only when I can sit them aside and lock them tight in a box that I can even begin to hear that which my heart holds and I can see a clear path forward.  When I let the words back out, I lose focus, and the path becomes muddied.  So I have taken to sitting beside my rose bush out back, after the morning rush of school and work departure has subsided, and simply try to rid my mind of all these words, one by one, placing them in that box until all I can hear is the sound of the birds and the hum of a neighbor’s lawn mower.  I try to hear the Divinity I know is within my heart, because I have heard it before, in those rare moments of stillness in my mind -  have felt it come crashing into me like the proverbial bull in a china shop, blindsiding me with its fierce love and devotion. 

I have called this feeling many things in my lifetime, always avoiding the moniker God because of its myriad connotations in my mind.  I have called it the Sacred, the Divine, the Universe, the Gods.  But it is over the past year that I realize that all these names all point to the same end, that we all, whatever paths we choose, wind up ultimately at the same spot, and I finally have become comfortable calling this thing God, and letting it into my life as such.  Funny how one word can be so many things at once, yet the same thing.  And this thing, which I search for in the silence of my heart every morning after I wake, has come to be that which sustains me, and keeps me sane, in a way that all my words have failed to do.  That feeling of peace that I find each morning is all of the beautiful words I know rolled into one and it is this beauty that I reach for when all my words have failed me.  For they do fail me, sometimes, even in all their glorious beauty and poetry, when that foundation upon which I have built myself buckles and it is the silence of my heart that is my only recourse. 

And so it is that you will find me, beside my rosebush in the morning light, searching for that thing that is so much more than myself, that is the essence of love and peace, yet myself at the same time.  And you will hear no words.