Do not stand at my grave and weep,
I am not there; I do not sleep.
I am a thousand winds that blow,
I am the diamond glints on snow,
I am the sun on ripened grain,
I am the gentle autumn rain.
When you awaken in the morning’s hush
I am the swift uplifting rush
Of quiet birds in circling flight.
I am the soft star-shine at night.
Do not stand at my grave and cry,
I am not there; I did not die.
Ann Frye
"Form Is Empty" (2009) |
In 2008 my brother suffered a brain stem stroke. Because he did not have a living will, since then he has been on complete life support. In 2009 he was pronounced brain dead. My mother is now in a nursing home with Alzheimer's, and my other brother has finally agreed to allow me to withdraw life support for Glenn, which we will do on the 15th of this month.
Above is a card I made for Glenn in 2009 when I created a "Dia De Los Muertos" Alter at Wesley as their resident artist. Below is one of the sculptures I made in 2009 for Glenn, honoring his long interest in Buddhism. All of them have tiles with words and phrases pressed into the clay, symbols and antique designs, all of them, like pottery shards, broken, disordered, "de-constructing". In this realm of being, words and symbols are what we construct our ideas of life from, the "shells" we create our identities from. In "Form is Empty" I saw the hand of the dying reaching through the shattering of form toward the offering hand of the Divine, the greater Self.
It's been such a long time that I have grown numb to it, to be honest, worn out. I've tried all kinds of strategies to come to grips with the situation, including calling in a medium several times who told me that Glenn was not in his body, and that he had "crossed over". I was comforted by that. Towards the end of his life Glenn was a bitter recluse, and I know that he was tired of the life he had. That made the situation that much more awful to me. I'm relieved that this is soon going to be over.
I suppose it sounds hard, but people take a long time to die, and after a while, you just have to go on with life, or you lose your life to the dying. I was my beloved grandmother's caretaker for 5 years as teenager, and I learned after a while to be "selfish" enough to allow myself an adolescence. To survive in a family with much dysfunction. In many ways, Glenn was the most sensitive sibling, talented and intelligent, and I'm not sure he did "survive" - so many of the things he wanted to do he never was able to.“If you bring forth what is within you, what you bring forth will save you. If you do not bring forth what is within you, what you do not bring forth will destroy you.”
Gospel of Thomas
I often think of the quote above from the Gospel of Thomas. I think Jesus was talking about the great creative drive that every being incarnates with, a kind of individual purpose or purposes we all have. We have to be responsible to the needs of family and tribe.........but we also have to honor what Joseph Campbell called "following your bliss", your unique path and calling. Sometimes the demands of family or tribe are wrong, the values inappropriate. Sometimes relationships keep us from evolving..............In examining my life, I'm glad I was both rebellious and "selfish". I wish Glenn had been able to do so as well, and I think of him free, and able to create a new life in the other realms.
Form Is Empty
"The Heart Sutra" (2009) |
One story I remember was in 2011, when I began to remodel my mother's house after she went into assisted living. My other brother, David, left Glenn's room exactly as it was, including a locked closet that was full of guns, reflecting the paranoia and isolation Glenn felt. David refused to open it. Finally, when he went back to California, I decided to clear out Glenn's room no matter what David thought, and I painted it a bright sky blue, as a ritual, to embody peace, and the open sky, release. As I was painting around the door of the locked closet.........it very gently opened!
I took the guns, sold them, and sent the money to a couple of charities, including sponsoring a girl in Nepal, which I felt was another way to change the energy, to "open the way" for Glenn's spirit to be free. I like to think, am pretty sure, that that opening door was Glenn's way of letting me know that all was well. Unfortunately, my other brother refuses to consider anything he thinks is "metaphysical nonsense", so he's unable to benefit from experiences like this.
In the 2nd piece, "The Heart Sutra", I used the hand of a 90 year old woman and a 9 year old child. The Heart is what lies between.
One of the things I hate about any kind if fundamentalism is the endless heavy footprint of patriarchal preoccupation with sin, punishment, torture, etc. The Old Testament tribal war gods have a lot of rules, and no mercy. I've met people so terrified of death because they feel they'll be tortured forever by some vicious god or devil.
How much wiser the Egyptian concept of Maat, who holds a feather and a scale before the door of death and new life. With "the Questions of Maat", the Goddess helps souls to weigh the lives they've had, to understand, to "fore-give" and be "fore-given". She is both grief and praise, and as I understand the word "forgive", it means to not hold on, but to release the energy in order to give it fore-ward, into new form, new love, new creation. When at last each soul is "as light as the feather of Maat", the door opens, and they can pass on.
"Holy Mother Take Me Home" (2009) |
A River Runs Through Us
"Then in the Arctic half-light of the canyon, all existence fades to a being with my soul and memories and the sounds of the Big Blackfoot River. Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of those rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs. "
Norman MacLean, "A River Runs Through It"
The last piece, "Holy Mother Take Me Home", is a prayer to the Goddess, the Source. I used a child's hand again, and the broken shards, with all the words, float down the river of light. We're all children, really, all children. She reaches out Her hand to take us Home. It doesn't matter what you've done, where you've been, what kind of life you think you've led or not led. She waits.
It's been a long journey Glenn. Be at peace.
"We have been raised to think that our body ended here, with this bag of skin, or with our possessions or education or house. Now we begin to realize that our body is the world."
Joanna Macy
This is a sensitive and loving post to your brother's spirit, Lauren. And courageous too. Thank you for trusting your readers with this story. We all learn this way, from one another, what might be the thing to do. Another poet's words might offer something, this from Roethke's "The Waking":
ReplyDeleteGreat Nature has another thing to do
To you and me; so take the lively air,
And, lovely, learn by going where to go.
This shaking keeps me steady. I should know.
What falls away is always. And is near.
I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow.
I learn by going where I have to go.
How lovely, Cari, thank you.
ReplyDeleteThis post is beautiful, Lauren, and a tribute to your brother's spirit. I'm glad your older brother has decided it's okay for you to remove him from life support. And it's fitting that you are the one who will do it. The story about the door gently opening...wow, powerful. Will light a candle for him on the 15th.
ReplyDelete
ReplyDeleteThank you my friends.
Dear One,
ReplyDeleteWe as children of God/dess or elements of divinity, whatever we call that indescribable constant force inside of us, we have tasks that no ordinary do. You are allowing a soul who has served his karma to move on to a state of perfection . Light , Grace the sound of silence where our souls swim in celestial sound. Your actions are more of birthing him into his next perfect place in souls journey . You NEVER cease to amaze me Lauren. I wish I was there with you and your cats.. but I am here to catch you and hug you and remind you how much so many of us care and admire you. I will light a candle ( white ) for you on the 15th and I continue to keep you in my thoughts..
With affection,
Mana
From "Eternal Echoes" by John O'Donohue, a lovely poem by Kathleen Raine.
ReplyDeleteDear angel of my birth,
All my life's loss,
Gold of fallen flowers,
Shells after ebbing wave
Gathered on lonely shores
With secret toil of love,
Deathless in memory save
The treasures of my grave.
Will keep you both in my thoughts
on the 15th.
Rain-in-the-Face
aka Anita Joy Glenn
Australia
Thanks so much to both of you for your comfort and words. Mana, I appreciate your thoughts going with us as we prepare to do this, which will still be difficult.
ReplyDeleteRain........thank you for the beautiful poem. Being a "raine" myself, perhaps we share the love and appreciation for these blessings of life, which fall from the sky upon the world, Grace.
A beautiful post, Lauren, thank you. I remember you telling me about your brother - and the lack of agreement about life support. Blessings to you.
ReplyDelete