What if you thought the earth loved you back?

1.

Pamela & The Oaks

There are certain landscapes I walk through where I know I’m little more than a very brief visitor. You’re not meant to stay here, the hills and mosses tell me, and I respect them, making my footsteps lighter, my strides slightly quicker.

The landscape does not need me here, want me here, I know.

There are other places I pass through, buildings I see, stories I hear, and I feel an instant kinship. A part of my body knows, recognizes, and calls out, I’m so glad to see you again, it’s been ages. I’ve missed you. Despite the fact we’ve never met before.

We hear a lot of talk about the stories we make up, the stories that define us, the stories that limit us. But we don’t often talk of the stories we arrived with.

And I wonder , what stories are held in the earth of our bodies? What stories breathed us into being? What stories looked out through our eyes before we knew what we were seeing in an effort to be known in this form, in this life, in this time?

Stories looking to find their ending or be continued on.

When I walked through the Oak forest on a patch of land in Scotland, like Alice, falling down the rabbit hole, my body remembered.

Hi, it called out, smiling, we’re so glad to see you again. I wasn’t sure which part of me was talking, or what part of me heard them answer back.

I only knew that it was.

It was the same with Pamela. I already knew her. A deeper knowing than the more superficial workings of my mind could hope to understand.

In the 1930’s this patch of Scottish ground of which I speak- the one that holds the Oaks- belonged to a 25 year old woman called Pamela. Or more specifically, Pamela’s husband.

The estate had been lost in a gambling bet the generation prior, and Pamela’s money- an heiress to a not insubstantial sum- was wanted to buy it back. And so, the story goes, Pamela married a man looking to make good on a deal gone bad, and her money used to buy back the estate.

At this point, it would be easy to colour Pamela with a quick swipe of your mental paintbrush, to relegate her to a scene of Downton Abbey and to hold her in your mind as nothing more than another wealthy woman. I lament the amount of women throughout history who have been cast aside,dismissed for reasons various; whose fierceness, brilliance and intelligence were never given the same opportunities or platforms as their male counterparts. We can be grateful that at least in Pamela’s case, she had money to protect her.

But let’s continue on.

In predictable fashion, Pamela was soon surrounded by men in grey suits advising her on how to make good on her purchase. After all, if her money had been used to buy the estate, then it needed to somehow make it back. As though the land itself was responsible for reimbursing the price tag human’s attached to its head.

Conversation soon fell to the Oaks. We should cut them down, they said. Use the wood. Fetch a price. Cut them down.

It’s funny, isn’t it? That we can stand next to something of beauty and not see it. Not feel it.

But Pamela said no.

No. You will not cut the Oaks.

Pamela said no.

In the 1930’s a 25-year-old woman called Pamela stood in the Oak forest and said no. And since I heard that story, I’ve thought about Pamela every day since. I even feel, within the colourful depths of my imagination, that we’ve become friends.

I often think of what it took, as a woman of that time who by default had little power, autonomy, or voice, to say no to those men in grey suits. To say yes to those beautiful trees.

I’m filled with admiration and wonder at her feist, her determination, her strength. I’m filled with awe at the stately Oaks.

I’ve thought about the concept of legacy, and what it means to create one. What could be more beautiful, if nothing else was left to whisper your name, than to have the spirit of a hundred oaks to stand for you.

As I stood in that forest I looked up and said thank you to Pamela. You will never know me but my heart thanks you.

I saw your oaks, and I understand.

Pamela loved the Oaks, and the Oaks loved her back.

2.

Picking flowers

Yesterday, I dreamed of lying in long grass, covered in petals, so I could watch flowers undisturbed in their process of becoming.

Does beauty only exist if it is witnessed?

The answer slingshots back.

Of course not, she replies. Beauty exists for the purpose of existing only. The least you can do is pay attention.

The answer given generously, the tone kind and yet direct.

It felt normal, in my dream, to want to feel my plant-ness. To get closer to the answers un-thinkable and only all-feelable.

I look down to check my hands. Are they now tendrils, shoots looking for support, to reach towards the sun?

I hold them out, above me, arboreal. Still hands, I lament, my human-ness an expected disappointment.

I crawl closer to one flower: I have a question.

I take out my leaf paper, my stick pen, write down in soil-ey ink:

I’ve always felt conflicted about picking flowers.

I’ve wondered what right I have to do that?

Do I break the spell they cast the minute I break their stem?

My dream-state petalled self in the quietness of the green which speaks of dew and moss and tiny fern shoots hidden under logs, resting for an answer.

And it comes, my answer, matter of fact:

All you have to do is ask.

A pause.

With the intention, they add, of hearing the reply.

Why is it I’d never thought to ask?

Of course. All I had to do was ask.

A botanical lesson on how to be human.

3.

When the land remembered how to be a meadow

A ripped off cardboard sign hanging on an old farm gate. A number scrawled across in permanent pen. For sale, it said. We rang it, ended up in conversation with a man in a pair of shorts too tight for his legs sitting on the high seat of a tractor. The owner of the land.

We walked around, murmured, dodged the unintended graves of the dead, left to graze a patch of soil who had nothing left to feed them in return. I tried not to be appalled. Kicked the rubble with my feet.

Tomb size rabbit holes, the carcasses of a trapped top-heavy sheep. I imagine them back to life, launch a sheep rebellion. The farmer’s house fills with sheep and shit and grit. Held to ransom by a wooly flock of bandits asking only for fair dues.

I look around, scrape back the top layer of soil in my mind. Underneath, I see seeds, waiting in patient readiness for their turn.

We’ll take it, we say out loud. Hands are shaken.

Give it to me, I say more urgently in my mind. I send out a thin layer of hug across the land.

It was the thyme that came back first. Then the tussock, the oats, and the wheat grass.

Once, when walking, a hawk took off in flight, a swift acceleration upward into empty air. At my feet, eggs, a nest. I retreat, apologetic in my haste to get away.

Please come back now; I speak in the direction of the vertical migration. I didn’t know you were there. I’m sorry, I add, for disturbing you.

Ground now safe enough to nest on.

Later, in conversation, we turn and look. The once barren patch of land a velvet rug of cashmere and mohair grass.

We turn and look at the land, busy remembering how to meadow.

4.

Tracing the outline of mountains with my eyes

I don’t know how it began. I message my friend, Jack, the person I thought taught me.

Remember, I said, the practice of tracing the horizon with your eyes? I do it all the time, I told him. A landscape meditation.

I start on the left, beginning at the furthest point. I trace the mountains and the trees, the buildings, whatever I can see.

Up and down, up and down, up and down, mapping the heartbeat of the land.

I think, Jack tells me, it relates to a musical tune, in Maori called the rangi (which is the sky). It was said in the old day the rangi of each tribe’s song or chant was uniquely described by the ups and downs of the landscape against the sky.

The land and the sky together in a song I hear with my eyes.

Thank you, I tell him. I love that.

5.

Things to carry into October

A heart-shaped rock I found, and placed in my pocket
Longer daylight days
A new friend made this week
Bulbs to plant, in the hope it’s not too late
A bird’s nest, soft with moss and wool
Beautiful letters I’m learning to write, traced in ink
My home after many months of travel
My pillow, awaiting my return
The luminous oak coming back to leaf

This writing was inspired by the incredible Robin Wall Kimmerer and her question asking in her book, Braiding Sweet Grass.

To Begin With, The Birds

To begin with, the birds.

 

I step outside

and straight into a love affair,

the birds

arriving to the morning

with hearts

and throats

unzipped,

sweet talking the day,

owing nothing

but the song of

I am here.

 

 

To begin with, the birds.

I walk up the path,

their lifting songs

flung outward on the breeze

by the fanning,

multicoloured skirts

of the inlet, the mountains

and the trees,

clapping with delight,

an invitation

to slip between the names

inherited

And those I’ve given myself.

 

 

To begin, with the birds.

My eyes are closed,

their song a lengthening

of my spine,

a levitation of my feet,

a smile that appears without thought

or effort,

a quietening of all the things

that tell you

you are something

other than this,

a reminder that

your song is welcome here,

the only point being

for you to sing it.

 

 

This is my practice.

This is my practice.

This is my practice.

 

To begin with, the birds.

{Letter} How do I make peace with myself, when anger is what drives me?

 On the topic of anger.

It begins with a question. I thought I would answer with a letter.

Dear Jane,

If I had to describe myself, the first words that come to mind are angry and defensive. I’ve had much trauma in my life, which I understand has formed me. But here’s the thing. This part of me- the angry part- it’s also the part I use to create things. To do things. And when I really look at it, it’s also responsible for a lot of what I love in my life.

I don’t trust myself anymore to do anything without my angry, internal critic being the one spurring me into action. Is there a way to be ok with this and make peace with myself?

From,

Looking for a different way

Hi Looking for a different way,

I hope you don’t mind that I wrote you a letter. I realise in doing so, I’ve probably made this whole experience a lot more personal. The irony is, at the end of the day, all of the challenges we face are intensely personal and yet strangely not at the same time.

That’s the magic of it I guess. That we can take someone’s very specific problem, with all its nuance and detail and recognise it, also, our own.

Speaking of which, a note to self: We need to remember more often that we are all running in parallel, all heading essentially in the same direction, even if the width between us sometimes makes it hard for us to see each other.

I have a lot to say on the subject of trauma. It forms a huge part of the daily conversations I have with people my “other work”. I could break what you’re experiencing down into its composite parts to help you make sense of it, should that be what you desire. But I’m not sure that it is. I say this to let you know that myself or others are available to you to help, should you seek it.

When I really read your question- when I read it with my whole body-  I get the sense that to speak about trauma is not what you want from me right now. And to answer in that way would be a missed opportunity for us to hold hands, move to the edge of the diving board and pin drop into the vortex together. To explore things from a slightly different perspective.

So where-ever you are listening to this from, I suggest that we do exactly that. And while we’re at it, let’s invite anyone else who finds this question, these words or this conversation relevant to them to hold hands with us also.

Let’s jump together now….1, 2, 3… Jump

So, we’ve jumped. Welcome to considering yourself from a slightly different perspective. Welcome to the Museum of your Emotional Insides. The MEI. You have a season pass, it turns out (in case you didn’t realise).

If you’d just come with me to the far corner over here, I’d like to you stop at Exhibit A.

Exhibit A, I admit, is slightly ephemeral… you might have to snatch at the air to grab it, because it’s actually a question.

And the question that is wanting to be asked is, how do we make this into something beautiful?

 How do we take this anger, this self-criticism, this lack of trust, and alchemise it?

You don’t have to know the answer to the question now. That’s part of the gift.

Just asking it will change you.

But in the asking, what you do have to embrace is the possibility of being a person who would ask such questions, and in doing so, realise that everything that has come before holds the possibility to be nothing more and nothing less than compost for everything that you wish to hold, create, feel and experience after it.

So for a few moments, consider what you’ve asked and sit with the question:

How do we make this into something beautiful?

Now, let’s move on.

We’re going to walk along the corridor and make our way to Exhibit B.

I think you’re going to like this one, but if you need to go to the toilet, now is a good time, because the presenter we’ll be talking to is kind of intense and isn’t known for her brevity (that’s me).

When you’re ready, sit down. You’re in the museum theatre now and you’re sitting in front of a big, white screen. The screen lights up and you see a flash of images that feels impossible to keep up with. There are animals and nature scenes and people that you know and people you don’t and universes and galaxies and fields and spaces and colours and all forms of different light that flash past your eyes with kaleidoscopic speed.

All these things live within the clay of your body. All these things travel with you.

Just when you think it’s getting too much, the screen goes blank.

You pause, slightly confused. It’s dark now. A voice says out loud:

 

You write that your trauma that has formed you. But this was never the case. Your trauma has informed you. It has led you to have some of the experiences you’ve had. And for those, we are sorry.

But formed you? No. You were always bigger than that.

You were formed- are formed- by something much more primal and ancient. By something elemental and at the same time greater than the sum of its parts.

A constellation of forces, longings, desires, sadness’s, loves, losses, wonders that pushed you into this life.

I don’t say this to be poetic. I say this with the understandings that to attribute your trauma to your formation is to force yourself into skin that’s too small for you. And to live in skin that’s too small is not to live at all.

You, asker of this question, have many skins, many animal bodies that are waiting for you to inhabit them.

They tell you that up until now you’ve miscredited all you’ve achieved and much of what you love, to the driving force of anger. We would like to tell you that this is a falsity.

Anger or no anger, it was you all along. All the good in your life, you created. All that you love in your life, you created.

As a matter of interest, the Irish language doesn’t describe anyone as being an emotion. Instead, they say, ‘the emotion is upon you’ like a cloak that you take on and off.

If we took the anger you have written of, dear question asker, then we could not say you were angry. We would say anger is upon you, implying, of course, that it’s capable of being taken off you.

We hope that the invitation you are seeing is to notice the you behind the emotion. You with the fire, you with the water, you with the earth, you with the air. You.

We hope these thoughts let you hold the anger a little more lightly.

We are hopeful that you might be able to see a tiny shimmer of something more beautiful already.

 

——-

 

Exhibit C is a series of flash cards. They’re lined up on the floor. Please, if you choose to, pick them up along the way.

If you look down, you’ll see the first one at your feet.

It says:

Hi, I’m not sure if we’ve had a direct conversation before, but I’m anger. Pleased to meet you. I have a feeling there’s some misunderstanding going on between us that I’d kind of like to sort out. I never wanted to convince you that I was the creative energy behind all the good you’ve created. I mean, don’t get me wrong- I love being the front woman. But I was only ever interested in stepping up when the matches felt too damp to start the fire, when something was needed to burn away the pain that was getting in the way.

We were never meant to be at war, you and I. We are on the same team. I am the sentry, the protector, the boundary that gets built when soft edges don’t feel like enough.

And it’s ok. To let me go does not mean I disappear. It doesn’t mean I can’t be accessed when I’m needed. It just means, for right now, in this moment, you’re exploring a slightly different way.

Even if you don’t know what that looks like right now.

Love, anger.

___

 

You keep walking. Another card. You bend down, pick it up and start reading.

 

Oh hey. So this is awkward… anger is a pretty hard act to follow cos you know, all up there in your face and stuff. I’m self-trust **waves awkwardly**

I’ve been asked to share one fact about me that you might not know… I settled on this one.

I’m something that has to be practiced. A lot of people seem to think I’m black and white but it’s really not like that. You have to work at developing me. And why people don’t want to believe that so much is because it’s a process of trial and error.

We don’t like trial and error so much us humans. We like certainty.

But like all things worth practicing, the frequencies of self-trust need to be re-tuned, tweaked, adjusted. Sometimes, you’ll get it wrong, and that’s ok. But more often than not, you’ll get it right. And you’ll start to understand what it feels like in your body when that’s the case.

Self-trust doesn’t land heavily. It tip toes in like a colourful mist of different colours, hues and shades. You’ll start to recognise which is which and what’s what the more you pay attention.

And that’s really what it comes down to- paying attention, playing with trusting yourself.

Hold the conversation you have with yourself more lightly. Let it not be so serious.

___

 

You turn a corner and find one more card. You pick it up. Questions again. You start to wish you’d never asked one in the first place.

 

On it is written:

 

What are you going to allow to come forward?

 

How can you practice gentleness?

 

Will you let yourself learn to be human, over and over again?

 

Thanks for holding my hand, lovely question asker. I’m glad we got to have this conversation.

All my love,

xx Jane

Overnight, a simple miracle

It wasn’t my intention

to talk to the night

and wonder how it was

we could be friends.

 

 

The night, she told me,

in the last few moments

while you slept

the Morepork eggs

have hatched

and the mother’s body

with the brilliance of a living thing

now waits

until the tiny naked beings

are all feathered

before she’ll leave the nest.

 

 

And I understand that

when the time comes,

the night

she’ll turn towards

the light,

and whisper to the dawn,

it was in the early hours

a simple miracle took place,

before stepping back,

and gently

handing her gifts

to the sun

for safekeeping.

The Glimmerings

The glimmering, this one young, keen, a force, an energy that does not have a body and requires that of a human form to make its presence known, looks over and says, tell me again what it means to be human?

Imagine, they are told, a pair of hands capable of holding a found stone, its tender heaviness a reminder of the infinite space from which you came and the gentle threads of gravity that hold you to the earth.

Imagine living so fully that the map of your travels tells its stories through the lines on your face. The cartography of the land you’ve travelled showing up in tears that have pooled as lakes at your feet over the course of your years, tracks you’ve have walked, secrets you’ve whispered, laughter you’ve shared to the point where the breath escaped your body leaving nothing but a gasp, a silent love letter lingering in the air, before the next peal of happiness can escape .

Imagine, if you will, bellybutton fluff, of brushing your eyelashes on the cheek of another and naming it after kisses of a butterfly.

Imagine, walking, bending down, picking up a leaf that caressed the ground as it fell, holding it between your forefinger and thumb, and rubbing it gently until it releases the magic of its perfume like you’ve rubbed the genie right out of the bottle.

Imagine noticing freckles for the first time, delighting in the difference of someone with skin colour a different shade to your own, falling over together both at once to graze your knees on a rock and realising the blood you shed was the same.

Imagine when you stub your toe being legally obliged to blame the closest person next to you as the reason for your pain, even if they are in the next room over. Imagine having a bone called your funny bone, with the experience of knocking it being about the most unfunny thing you can think of. Imagine how confusing that must be.

Imagine your insides split open to make space for something that defies the logical shape and dimensions to follow the allotted exit route, who takes your organs and sets fire to them, pulls and tears at your muscles until they’re left like overstretched elastic, the noises made unrecognisable as your own, only for a baby to be born and have all signs of pain instantly forgiven.

Imagine a heartache so strong you wonder where you fit, if you are made for this world, if this place where you rest your head wants you, so consumed with doubt and sorrow and grief that you didn’t hear the grass, the trees, the muddy, sodden earth that shouted back, when you screamed to the hills, asking if anyone loved you, we said yes, we said yes, we said yes.

Imagine, in the presence of fear, lungs that wrap around the heart in a protective hug, a rib cage that braces and demands to the world, come no closer, the toll bridge closing its gates at the pelvis to trap blood in the legs, sending messages of love all the way to the toes, you must run, words of power to the hands, you must fight, a full body survival memo scribbled on every cell and passed around by the messenger of your blood, please, you must live.

The glimmering paused, thoughtful and said, tell me again what I must do.

And they were told,

You are the very specific yellow of midwinter light that make the eyes feel like their being whispered intimate secrets of the world.

You’re the taking off of shoes, skin on bare wet ground, the tingle of realisation sprinting its way to the heart, shouting finally, we understand, there is no need for pilgrimage, the ground on which we rest is already holy.

You are fingers reaching out, unpicking the bumble bee from the web, carrying them gently outside to rest in a shaft of sun, smiling with the need of the gentle creature that you were able to fulfil, but realising all at once it will never be as much as you needed them in return.

You are just the right amount of darkness to find your shadow in the moon, the feeling of someone lost standing next to you and giving you a hug, the sheer curtain between the world in which you stand and the next one over, thin as a moth wing, the keening breeze and the taste of salt from the spray of the surf a magic carpet ride that carries you right through.

You are the finding of people, of things, of places who make their dance on your insides, the holding of your heart in a way that reminds you it is worth being held, the mementoes, the clues, the reminders from people before, leaving tokens on the land to say, stop here, pay attention, this is a place that will hold you if you let it.

You are the sights, the feelings, the sounds, that crack your heart open like a sun baked seed, the liminal spaces where there is no need to put your ear to the ground, you’re desire the only requirement needed to hear the land talking right back.

These, they are told, are the glimmerings.

The glimmering paused once more and said, tell me again about the funny bone.

What is the message you want to share with the world?

 

Last year, I was invited to speak at a podcast summit run by some very dear friends of mine, Warwick and Robyn Schiller. In crafting our presentations, they asked us to consider the following beautiful question…

What is the message you want to share with the world?

At the time, I remember squirming in my chair when I heard this and thinking, aye kaboosh! I’m still getting schooled by this thing called life, I’m not sure I’m ready for my message to the world quite yet. I’m not grown up enough!

I only settled on the topic and content of that talk the week before. I went with what was probably most predictable given my line of work, but also something I’m deeply passionate about; our relationship to movement and its connection to vitality, robustness and how it is we show up in the world.

What I didn’t know at the time is that I would be given the opportunity for a round two. That a second summit would be held in Melbourne, and I would have a chance to again share a message on the stage.

What I’m sharing with you now is the talk I wrote, and one that I believed move me closer to truly expressing my answer to that question.

Writing it was also a big part of deciding to do The Another Beautiful Question project, so it seems only right that it’s the first question to kick us off. Here it is for you now…

*******

Paper Cuts

The way she broke a heart

was in the form of a paper cut.

A simple post-it note,

the sticky side sitting with

obvious reluctance to the

shiny surface of the table

unpeeling itself over

and over

and over

in a threat to make hidden

the words

she could

barely get out.

 

She felt a strange

dullness as she wrote

and wondered where

exactly she was

in that moment,

the scratchy sound of the pen

hitting the table

under the thin piece of paper

a clue to her still current

aliveness.

 

She wanted to say,

here it is,

this inch of paper a

letter to the world

of a life that has

strayed

far

from the

original,

imagined

intention.

 

She wanted to say,

here it is

this inch of paper

a letter to the world

of a life

so far

unexpressed

unwild

un-gotten.

 

She looked down at

the inch square of paper

the last place she

expected

to launch a bid

for freedom

 

the last place

she expected

to cast a vote

for herself

 

the last place

she expected to

find

relief

 

Her thumb pressing,

the skin around the nail

turning white,

sealing,

the note to the table

so the draught

would not

dislodge it

from the closing of the door

behind her

as she walked out

 

the short square

of words

covering over

what had been

a life.

 

 I wrote this poem that I called Paper Cuts after listening to a conversation with David Whyte, an English poet, on heartbreak. He described a scene where someone had left their partner by leaving a note on the table and walking out the door. When he recounted the story to his wife a bit later, she said to him, sometimes the note on the table is the only means we have to save our own life in that moment.

I was so moved by that story, and ultimately by that response, that I imagined that person, in my mind a woman, and what she might have been thinking as she left the note and said goodbye- or more to the point, didn’t. And beyond that I’ve held onto the notion of saving our own lives, and the everyday ways we go about it.

When I thought about speaking with you today, I knew that I could speak about the nervous system. About the many beautiful ways that our bodies act in service of our survival, to help keep us around on this planet for just a little bit longer. I could talk to you about the effect of your nervous system on your posture, and how if we understand more about movement, we can recognize it as a self-healing portal to move forward from trauma.

But I’m not going to. At the base of it, all our reactions and responses are no more than a combination of everyday ways we seek to save our own lives. As we get older- as we become hopefully wiser and more skilled, we can meet the transitions of our lives more gracefully and artfully. Where we have more choices than the notes on the table but can be present for hard conversations, hard truths, and recognize them within the fullness of our vitality.

I’ve often wondered what drew me to the places that I have always lived in. At my core, I am a worshipper of the sun, my battery solar powered, my bones craving the warmth that only a steady form of heat can provide.

Up until recently, I wondered why me, a creature of the sun, was born into a place with such an untamable weather system as the Blue Mountains. And further perplexing still, why the home that I return to lies close to the Antarctic, prone to southerly blasts that pass through you as if you were nothing more than a sheer curtain.

What’s more, I have always gravitated towards large bodies of water- lakes of unfathomable depths, wild oceans, tidal estuaries, and yet if asked to describe myself, I am a creature of the forests and the mountains. In the water, I recognize myself as alien. I am comfortable only holding respect and admiration from the sidelines.

When asked why I live where I do, or more precisely, why I stay, my answer always threads back to the particular parcel of land on which I live. This question comes up not infrequently with those who I most love and confide in, an extension of the fact that the community in which I live I’ve never fitted into. Here, I am an anomaly and I crave the connection that I feel with those dear to me scattered in other parts of the globe.

Why then, I have asked myself, as a sun loving, community craving creature do I feel so attached, when the place in which I dwell provides neither of those things? The answer has only come to me recently.

I stay because my home, the piece of land that has held me the most amount of time on this earth is a thin place for me. Thin places are places on the globe where the veil between heaven and earth are especially porous, where you feel so close to the other side that the separation in paper thin.

More often than not, we experience these thin places in areas of meteorological fierceness; where the weather and the elements remind you constantly of your smallness, where you cannot rely on the sky nor the temperature staying the same colour from the morning to the night.

They are also often found near bodies of water, where the land rises up or where the landscape holds itself in a presence that cannot be overlooked or denied. I realise I have sought out these thin places because they speak to my soul. But not necessarily to my comfort.

Where I am called to be a part of nature and revere it, lest I get taken down by it. My body may be drawn to the warm, but my soul is drawn to the places that are thin, and where the air around me calls me to remember something that is bigger than myself.

In life, I have come to realise we are always operating in one of two streams, and perhaps they are ultimately the same. Our actions, be they conscious or unconscious, are the everyday ways we seek save our own lives. Or, they are about following the glimmerings.

Glimmerings are reminders of who we are, what we came with and what we are looking for. They might be the light catching the water in a way that makes you stop a moment, that calls your attention back from what you are doing.

They could be the geese taking off in formation, or the number 49 that was the favourite number of the person you loved who passed away, and now you see it everywhere.

Glimmerings are found in the things that move you, that the things you love, in the things that call you. And it is my belief that no matter how strong or weak they seem, our glimmerings are clues that, if we follow them, show us the essence of our aliveness, often by taking us to places where we realise how easily life can be taken away.

When I’m asked what do I think the purpose of life is, I always reply it’s to follow the things that you love. But equally I get asked, how do I make time for that? And the answer is, you have to steal it. For me, I am a wife and a mother, I run my own business and I am the breadwinner of my family. But these are only facets of who I am. They do not define me. And I know that the way that I love, my capacity to love, is only made true by following the things that I love.

I have come to understand that this belief, especially for a women, is a subversive one.

I’m going to share a quote by A S Byatt, an English critic, novelist, poet, and short story writer. She says:

 

I think of my writing simply in terms of pleasure. It’s the most important thing in my life. Making things. Much as I love my husband and my children, I love them only because I am the person who makes things. I am, who I am, is the person who has the project of making a thing. And because that person does that, all the time, that person is able to love all these other people.

 

For me, I have always been a fierce defender of my riding time, sometimes to my detriment. I remember standing in my arena with a young horse, my first son only two months old, and weeping. I was exhausted and needed to be in bed. But I had a strong flame within me that said, don’t let go, don’t let go, don’t let go, of the thing that were and are important to me as I took on the additional role as mother.

Looking back now, I want to reach out and hold that woman in the arena. She was desperate, exhausted, frustrated, and so, so hard on herself. But she did know- her actions in that moment might not have been what she needed but she was holding on to a higher truth. You have to tend to yourself. What you love and moving towards it is not a luxury. It is not a selfish endeavor.

It is a radical act. And act of resistance to a system that has you bleed the land, and you, dry in service of profit. But beyond that, it’s an act of service. Service to yourself so that you may be in service of others. For those of us in the position of privilege that we are- to be having these conversations, to have the headspace to ask ourselves the question, what is it that I love?

We have a responsibility to follow it.

Up until this year, I denied myself the space and time to write beyond that which I believed related to my work. I convinced myself that writing, and specifically poetry, was a decision that I was allowed to deny, reject, and pack away. But glimmerings don’t work like that. Glimmerings hunt you down. They sit in the back of your mind and tap their pencil on the desk. The show up as yearnings, as hunches and soon they rattle the windows and bang at the gate until you have no choice but to pay them attention.

Poetry, to me, is not just writing. It’s an incantation, a spell, a portal to another world. when I read good poetry, I am not just moved, I am teleported. A part of me wakes up. On the page, I find another thin place, a place that allows me to make sense of myself and that cares not for whom or what they are written. They only thing that matters is that they are.

It is for this reason, that the rest of my talk will mainly be in poems. I don’t know if they are good or terrible, but I do know it doesn’t matter. I’m doing this to show you, that please, if you too are the writer of terrible poems, or the rider who is yet to return to the saddle, or the gardener whose hands have stayed clean for too many years, now is the time to get dirty.

A poem for you now…

The Glimmerings

The glimmering, this one young, keen, a force, an energy that does not have a body and requires that of a human form to make its presence known, looks over and says, tell me again what it means to be human?

Imagine, they are told, a pair of hands capable of holding a found stone, its tender heaviness a reminder of the infinite space from which you came and the gentle threads of gravity that hold you to the earth.

Imagine living so fully that the map of your travels tells its stories through the lines on your face. The cartography of the land you’ve travelled showing up in tears that have pooled as lakes at your feet over the course of your years, tracks you’ve have walked, secrets you’ve whispered, laughter you’ve shared to the point where the breath escaped your body leaving nothing but a gasp, a silent love letter lingering in the air, before the next peal of happiness can escape .

Imagine, if you will, bellybutton fluff, of brushing your eyelashes on the cheek of another and naming it after kisses of a butterfly.

Imagine, walking, bending down, picking up a leaf that caressed the ground as it fell, holding it between your forefinger and thumb, and rubbing it gently until it releases the magic of its perfume like you’ve rubbed the genie right out of the bottle.

Imagine noticing freckles for the first time, delighting in the difference of someone with skin colour a different shade to your own, falling over together both at once to graze your knees on a rock and realising the blood  you shed was the same.

Imagine when you stub your toe being legally obliged to blame the closest person next to you as the reason for your pain, even if they are in the next room over. Imagine having a bone called your funny bone, with the experience of knocking it being about the most unfunny thing you can think of. Imagine how confusing that must be.

Imagine your insides split open to make space for something that defies the logical shape and dimensions to follow the allotted exit route, who takes your organs and sets fire to them, pulls and tears at your muscles until they’re left like overstretched elastic, the noises made unrecognisable as your own, only for a baby to be born and have all signs of pain instantly forgiven.

Imagine a heartache so strong you wonder where you fit, if you are made for this world, if this place where you rest your head wants you, so consumed with doubt and sorrow and grief that you didn’t hear the grass, the trees, the muddy, sodden earth that shouted back, when you screamed to the hills, asking if anyone loved you, we said yes, we said yes, we said yes.

Imagine, in the presence of fear, lungs that wrap around the heart in a protective hug, a rib cage that braces and demands to the world, come no closer, the toll bridge closing its gates at the pelvis to trap blood in the legs, sending messages of love all the way to the toes, you must run, words of power to the hands, you must fight, a full body survival memo scribbled on every cell and passed around by the messenger of your blood, please, you must live.

The glimmering paused, thoughtful and said, tell me again what I must do.

And they were told,

You are the very specific yellow of midwinter light that make the eyes feel like their being whispered intimate secrets of the world.

You’re the taking off of shoes, skin on bare wet ground, the tingle of realisation sprinting its way to the heart, shouting finally, we understand, there is no need for pilgrimage, the ground on which we rest is already holy.

You are fingers reaching out, unpicking the bumble bee from the web, carrying them gently outside to rest in a shaft of sun, smiling with the need of the gentle creature that you were able to fulfil, but realising all at once it will never be as much as you needed them in return.

You are just the right amount of darkness to find your shadow in the moon, the feeling of someone lost standing next to you and giving you a hug, the sheer curtain between the world in which you stand and the next one over, thin as a moth wing, the keening breeze and the taste of salt from the spray of the surf a magic carpet ride that carries you right through.

You are the finding of people, of things, of places who make their dance on your insides, the holding of your heart in a way that reminds you it is worth being held, the mementoes, the clues, the reminders from people before, leaving tokens on the land to say, stop here, pay attention, this is a place that will hold you if you let it.

You are the sights, the feelings, the sounds, that crack your heart open like a sun baked seed, the liminal spaces where there is no need to put your ear to the ground, you’re desire the only requirement needed to hear the land talking right back.

These, they are told, are the glimmerings.

The glimmering paused once more and said, tell me again about the funny bone.

***

Most likely, in order to follow the things that we love, truly and whole heartedly, we will have to undergo a reckoning. One night, over the last few months, when I was going through a particularly hard time, I was nervous to go to sleep. I had been having nightmares and waking up in the early hours. And so wrote this poem:

 

Overnight, a simple miracle.

It wasn’t my intention

to talk to the night

and wonder how it was

we could be friends.

 

The night, she told me,

in the last few moments

while you slept

the Morepork eggs

have hatched

and the mother’s body

with the brilliance of a living thing

now waits

until the tiny naked beings

are all feathered

before she’ll leave the nest.

 

And I understand that

when the time comes,

the night

she’ll turn towards

the light,

and whisper to the dawn,

it was in the early hours

a simple miracle took place,

before stepping back,

and gently

handing her gifts

to the sun

for safekeeping.

 

 

That poem, the birth of the morepork babies, a native owl to New Zealand shows that there is beauty in the dark, it’s just a matter of facing the right direction to notice it, and of allowing our eyes to get used to seeing in the shadows.

I’ll share a final poem with you now, a prayer that I consider my daily practice.

 

To Begin With, The Birds.

To begin with, the birds.

I step outside

and straight into a love affair,

the birds

arriving to the morning

with hearts

and throats

unzipped,

sweet talking the day,

owing nothing

but the song of

I am here.

 

To begin with, the birds.

I walk up the path,

their lifting songs

flung outward on the breeze

by the fanning,

multicoloured skirts

of the inlet, the mountains

and the trees,

clapping with delight,

an invitation

to slip between the names

inherited

And those I’ve given myself.

 

To begin, with the birds.

My eyes are closed,

their song a lengthening

of my spine,

a levitation of my feet,

a smile that appears without thought

or effort,

a quietening of all the things

that tell you

you are something

other than this,

a reminder that

your song is welcome here,

the only point being

for you to sing it.

 

This is my practice.

This is my practice.

This is my practice.

 

To begin with, the birds.

 

 

 

What’s in a beautiful question?

The ability to ask beautiful questions, often in very unbeautiful moments, is one of the great disciplines of a human life. And a beautiful question starts to shape your identity as much by asking it as it does by having it answered. You just have to keep asking ~ David Whyte

 

This quote from David Whyte inspired me to be a huntress of beautiful questions. If you too are interested in beautiful question hunting, what’s important to know is that this is not an adventure undergone in isolation. Something you’ll no doubt discover yourself. In fact, I’ve come to understand that I’m nothing more than a co-conspirator in the creative process of both question asking and answer seeking.

It’s the same for all of us.

Embodying this understanding is both delicious and liberating. Once I let go of the idea that I, alone, was responsible for ideas, thoughts and the tumbling of words that accompanied them (writing is my vehicle of choice when it comes exploring the undergrowth of a beautiful questions), I was free to allow the process of creating, question exploring and the writing itself to be elemental.

To participate in the constellation dervish of ideas, possibilities, wonderings, inklings, and musings who, when ready, made their way to the edge of the slippery slide, sat down with their legs straight, feet slightly lifted, arms raised, and with a swift nudge from forces unknown, slid their way into my consciousness.

What’s more, I began to understand that these creative dalliances were not entirely random. That in fact, one could conjure their presence and inspiration through the quality of thought being entertained in any given moment.

That they came through the asking of consistently more beautiful questions and then, from paying attention.

Beautiful questions sit outside the usual, cognitive processes. They arise from a place that is visceral, where something more than the mind is engaged.

When I ask a beautiful question, my eyes seek the horizon.

Beautiful question asking is wonder seeking and connection making. And beyond that, I believe that it’s in the asking of beautiful questions, again and again, that we begin to have deeper, more interesting, and more expansive conversations; that we can better understand our place within the landscape we’re a part of, of the non-human world that we share it with, and the magic and mystery of our own animal body.

With that in mind, Another Beautiful Question is an internal pilgrimage; an act of activism as I seek answers beyond the questions traditionally asked; a means of practicing the discipline of more beautiful question asking; and of both meeting myself and allowing myself to be known, in part, through the words I share on this page.

It’s also a love letter to words themselves, and to honour the commitment I believe we’re all bound to, which is to follow the things that we love.

And for me, writing, poetry and beautiful questions are things that I very much love.

Staring October 1st (and with some goodies in between), I’ll be sharing a poem + essay each week dedicated to another beautiful question. If you have a beautiful question you would like to share, I would love to hear it.

I’m so looking forward to adventuring with you, to question asking, and by default, magic seeking.

Thank you for being here.

❤️ Jane

 

Paper Cuts

The way she broke a heart

was in the form of a paper cut.

A simple post-it note,

the sticky side sitting with

obvious reluctance to the

shiny surface of the table

unpeeling itself over

and over

and over

in a threat to make hidden

the words

she could

barely get out.

 

 

She felt a strange

dullness as she wrote

and wondered where

exactly she was

in that moment,

the scratchy sound of the pen

hitting the table

under the thin piece of paper

a clue to her still current

aliveness.

 

 

She wanted to say,

here it is,

this inch of paper a

letter to the world

of a life that has

strayed

far

from the

original,

imagined

intention.

 

 

She wanted to say,

here it is

this inch of paper

a letter to the world

of a life

so far

unexpressed

unwild

un-gotten.

 

 

She looked down at

the inch square of paper

the last place she

expected

to launch a bid

for freedom

the last place

she expected

to cast a vote

for herself

the last place

she expected to

find

relief,

 

 

her thumb pressing,

the skin around the nail

turning white,

sealing,

the note to the table

so the draught

would not

dislodge it

from the closing of the door

behind her

as she walked out

 

 

the short square

of words

covering over

what had been

a life.