Tuesday, August 29, 2023

From the Stars (WC)

 


(Wendy Cabell, August 29, 2023, feast day of Our Lady of Valverde (above; "With his right hand he blesses the bystanders looking at them lovingly, and with the other caress a small crane, which shyly hides in the left hand of the beautiful Virgin"), Our Lady of Clermont, Our Lady of the Guard, Our Lady of Tears, the Chortkiv Icon of the Mother of God, of Saint John the Baptist (beheading), Saint Jeanne Jugan, Blessed Teresa Bracco, and Beatrice of NazarethOn Jewish calendar today continues the Seven [Weeks] of Consolationand reflection for the upcoming High HolidaysImage from here.)


From the Stars

(in gratitude for the gift of movement)



desire (v.):..from Latin desiderare "long for, wish for; 

demand, expect,"...[from] de sidere "from the stars"

–etymonline.com


Around 300 BC... Chuang-tzu [wrote about] ‘walking like a bear and 

stretching their neck like a bird to achieve longevity.’... [And] it was Hua Tuo

who developed the first complete set of animal-imitating qigong exercises...

[saying] 'If you feel out of sorts, just practice one of my Frolics’.

--GeneChing, Kung Fu Magazine Forums



I want to move like owl

look right look left–-take it in


I want to move like bear

rolling lumbering, from 

this cave where all begins


I want to move like cat

stretching twisting 

uncurl, meet kin


I want to move like monkey swing slide glide give now a spin


I want to move like dragon

seacliff topping

unstoppable my swim 


I want to move says heart

whoosh-thump out 

whoosh-thump in


I want to--




*From combined prompts: Freewrite as inspired by etymology of “desire”, and by “I want” by Jordan Jace. From Lisa Freedman’s Imagination and Justice (via IWWG) BreatheReadWrite, August 29, 2023.


Wednesday, August 16, 2023

Homing Prayer (WC)

 


(Wendy Cabell, August 16, 2023, 
Afterfeast of the Dormition/Assumption of the Mother of God, and feast day of Our Lady of Trapani, Madonna of the Peaks (see pg. bottom there; related image here?), and (above) Saint Ugolina of Vercelli. Jewish calendar today continues the Seven [Weeks] of ConsolationImage from here.)


Homing Prayer

(a “mini” variation on the Creed, for the afterfeast of the 

Dormition/Assumption and traditional plant blessing time, 2023)



I believe in the Father, who makes me.


I believe in the Son, who shapes me. 


I believe in the Spirit, who keeps me.


I believe in Heaven (its garden now and here)

where my Home bee.


Amen.


Wednesday, April 26, 2023

So How Are You Today? (WC)

 


(Wendy Cabell, published in the Canadian Journal of Mental Health and Disability Theology, Spring 2024 issue; composed April 26, feast day of (above) Our Lady of Good Counsel, of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception (Chile), and of Saint Alda/Aldobrandesca of Siena and Saint Paschasius Radbertus. On Jewish calendar today State of Israel Proclaimed (1948), and Preparation for Shavuot Begins; Twenty-One Days to the Omer begins tonight. Image from here.)


So How Are You Today?



Sometimes as greeting.

Yet a question.


Mask I wear, it answers: “I’m good”. 

Alternatively: "About the same”. 


When I remove the mask, swirling mix. Positive spins–-God’s Angels are around us, His Saints. Most of all Our Savior, Our Blessed Mother. All true. And true this overwhelm, this will this pain ever stop, this nervous system miswired, jolted. Rerouted, confused. Never know when the monsters will roar in there, pull up carpet, can’t make plans. Open target–-CRASH, BOOM. Ground hits hardest when folks don’t see it's happening. When don’t see the monsters are here. 


And if I’m being honest, I need help. Your help. Caregivers, doctors, priests, neighbors, friends, family. I need you to see how things are for me, look the monster in the eye. Not sympathy so much as empathy, and your solid true (to feel, to do) “take my hand--and we’ll get through this”. 

“Tell me about your despair and I will tell you mine”, says Mary Oliver.

“Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air”, she continues. 

As I continue to hold both these things. And wrestle

how to say this,

how to answer

how I am today. 



[Added later as part of a journal submission's guidelines:


Author's Note 



It still happens, that queasiness in the stomach when I’m asked how I'm doing today. First the sensing, does this person actually want to know? Do they care? Then the sifting, do I share the hurt in hopes of some comprehension? Do I share the light in hopes of its expansion? So common it can be to minimize another’s pain or need, not wanting to see it, especially if it’s complicated. If it’s not an easy fix. And mine isn't. For one, I have Complex Regional Pain Syndrome [CRPS] a rare physiological and neurological disorder making pain signals both amplified and ongoing. It’s nicknamed the “suicide disease”, considered the most painful condition one can have. Terrifying then, to be alone, unseen. And one’s in danger if restrictions and accommodation needs aren’t grasped. Yet what is focused on grows, carves a path, a tendency of glance. And what I long to grow is the light. The warmth of that deep nestled spark, “Lifeforce Love” a friend calls it. Mine…and yours. 



Questions for Group Reflection



1. One thing that bridges the gap between expressing the pain and embracing the light is the simple awareness of one’s body and experience. Are there related practices you might incorporate into your daily routine? There are things like mental tracing, scanning your body upon awakening, an act of gratitude really, a prayer. There’s a nudge to mindfulness as go about day, short pauses, just looking round, settling in, breathing space. There’s infinite ways the Spirit may be whispering. What are you hearing just now?


2. A way we can honor the complexity of our disabilities, while also honoring another’s need for simplicity, is to present concrete accommodations. This takes some ground work, prioritizing what is most important to you and brainstorming the most doable ways to meet this need. Not always easy! But is there a short list you might compile of specific accommodations? For example if one is heat sensitive asking to be seated near the air conditioner—something in this vein makes such a difference to well being yet is fairly simple when it comes down to it. ]




1 Mary Oliver, “Wild Geese”, in The Atlantic Monthly Press, 1986.


2 For more on CRPS, see ComplexTruths.org, in particular “What is CRPS“ at https://complextruths.org/what-is-crps/, and “McGill Pain Index Measures CRPS Pain” at https://complextruths.org/mcgill-pain-index-where-is-crps-ranked-and-why/. ]


From combined prompts: Freewrite, giving honesty the focus and giving yourself permission to “write bad poetry”, about your mask, using above entry points (The mask I wear, When I remove the mask, And if I’m being honest); from Matthew Cuban Hernandez’s Free Verse: Removing the Mask (Hope At Hand’s Jax Poetry Fest 2023). Also using prompt of Mary Oliver’s “Wild Geese”, from Reverend Dr. Victoria Marie’s Art As Spiritual Practice group, April 26, 2023. 


Friday, April 21, 2023

A current manifesto. Because I need it. (WC)



(Wendy Cabell, April 21, 2023, Orthodox Bright Friday, Rosh Chodesh (new moon) Iyar, and feast day of the Holy Infant of Good Health, the Life Giving Fountain (Spring) of the Mother of God, the Appearance of the Icon of the Mother of God “The Footprint” at Pochaev, Our Lady of the Rosary (Phillipines) and the Conceptionists. On Jewish calendar today is 16 Days to the Omer. Image from here (Akathist here too)



A current manifesto. Because I need it.



When hearts grow cold

(within or without) –- forgive.


When chaos swirls round

(within or without) -- look up. 


When what is soft-warm-kind, is forgiving, is looking up,

is: attacked -- turn to Mary, She knows it all too well.


When anywhere Mary is remembered, revered –-

a Door!




*From prompt: Write free verse around a chosen experience, bring in senses, edit out the unnecessary and aim for fresh words/lines. From Carrie Voigt Schonhoff’s Unleash Your Inner Poet (Hope at Hand’s Jax Poetry Fest 2023).


Sunday, April 16, 2023

Through Heart's Swinging Door (WC)

 


(Wendy Cabell, April 16, 2023, Orthodox Easter, Divine Mercy Sunday, and feast day of the Unfading Flower Icon of the Mother of God, the Weeping Illyin Chernigov Icon of the Mother of God, Our Lady of Victories of Saint Mark, Saint Bernadette of Lourdes, Saint Withburga of Dereham and Holkham, and of the Virgin Martyrs Agape, Irene, and Chionia in Illyria (connected with Great Marytr Anastasia), and Holy Martyr Leonidas and Companions of Corinth. Image from here.)



Through Heart's Swinging Door

(imagined bequeathment, Rev. Dr. Howard Thurman) 



Once inside,

bypass you'll find:


You're loved always,

no matter what.


So love always --

no matter what.


Amen.




* "Through heart's swinging door" is an adaptation of Howard Thurman's quote: “To love is to make of one's heart a swinging door.”


*From prompt: Inspired by The Mystical Heart: Love As a Creative Force (Abbey of the arts, 2022-23 series), especially Lerita Coleman Brown’s class on Howard Thurman and Christine Valters Paintner’s class on Saint Anthony the Great. 


Sunday, April 9, 2023

Bioluminescence (WC)

 



(Wendy Cabell, revisited Easter, 2023; from February 11, 2022, World Day of the Sick, feast day of Our Lady of Lourdes, and of Saint Gobnait (also called AbigailGobnet or Gobnata; patron Saint of bees and beekeepers), Saint Theodora the Empress and Saint Caedmon. Image from here.)bc


Bioluminescence



careful of the rocks, a shell settles

anyway -- prime real estate for wee

folk -- its path well worn and smooth 

to the welcoming Light




*From combined prompts: Freewrite as inspired by etymology/concept of release,

and as inspired after hearing Sharon Olds’ Stag’s Lemention of Japanese garden history.

From Lisa Freedman’s BreatheReadWrite, February 11, 2022. 

Sunday, March 26, 2023

Breath’s To-Do List (WC)

 


(Wendy Cabell, March 26, 2023, Leavetaking of the Annunciation, and Synaxis of the Angel Gabriel. Image from here.)


Breath’s To-Do List*



The bridge is narrow…

but it runs all the way to the other side.

–Yehudis Golshevsky, on Likutey Moharan II:48



narrow bridge, in fact, this whole world is

point being not to fear at all, point being breath’s

fine familiar road –- and whence

it’s from




*After the song ”Kol Ha'Olam Kulo” attributed to Rabbi Nachman of Breslov.


**From prompt: Freewrite as inspired by the etymology of “relax”; from Lisa Freedman’s BreatheReadWrite, March 26, 2023. 


Monday, March 6, 2023

Emergence Notes (WC)

(Wendy Cabell, published in Network: Fall 2022, a journal edited by Michelle Miller and team, International Women’s Writing Guild, 2022. Piece from July 25-27, 2022.)


Emergence Notes

(notes on Margie Ann Stanko’s “Emergence” series, 

IWWG Conference, July 25-July 27, 2022)



1. Day one, “Unknowing”



Change Greets Me With Love

(from cave’s signpost)



soft glow, scoots 

edges out of hiding: 


                   emergency supplies, 

                   apologies, 

                   medical records; 


hands note an interweave:


                             hot tea, 

                             lullabies, 

                             click of Rosary beads–-


                                   hold them now.  



2. Day two, “Resilience”



Eye Witness



What does it take to start looking inward 

and outward like an artist (or even better an 

heARTist) and sense what yet has to emerge?

–Margie Ann Stanko



Great Grandma Ginny, softest touch, “See this,

Honey?,” pulling out her Scapular, or setting out 

chocolate chip cookies, or ushering me into her 

quiet, breezy room. I can nestle here as the family 

chats--booming staccato. As I snooze before our spaghetti

dinner, spot a cloud or two just outside. As inside the flutter 

settles, eye blinks. Later, young adult eyes upon my therapist,

who says “Honey, what did Grandma Ginny do?" Nudges

consider this in current scene, my feeling powerless

can only offer hand when asked for help–-

listen, hush--as a memory’s up, of mask’s

slip, gentle hands having loosened its grip

                                                 

 not with speeches or with stuff but with


            space, a Presence–-


                it is enough.



3. Day three, “Thriving”



To Love Truth



To love truth

is true strength

is strength for peace

is peace beyond that of mind

is of another kind--

kindness, tender touch

being what touches

truth. 




*Images above, being part of each day’s prompts during the Margie Ann Stanko’s “Emergence” workshop, are photos of sculptures from Frederick Franck's "Pacem in Terris", a contemplative sculpture garden in Warwick, NY.