Showing posts with label John O'Donohue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John O'Donohue. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Inspired by John O'Donohue (again)



"I think it makes a huge difference, when you wake in the morning and come out of your house, whether you believe you're walking into a dead geographical location, which is used to get to a destination, or whether you're emerging out into a landscape that is just as much, if not more, alive as you, but in a totally different form—and that it subsists primarily in silence, stillness, and solitude.  But that if you attend to it…and if you go towards it, with an open heart and a real watchful reverence…that you will be absolutely amazed at what it will reveal to you."

 -John O'Donohue


I believe I owe Los Angeles an apology.  It has been years now, since our move from New York to LA…a move which was supposed to be temporary. A move which was supposed to create a parenthetical in our lives and not, as it has, a full stop. New sentence.

The landscape of New York is undeniable. I remember once, on a trip from my apartment in Brooklyn to my then-job in Times Square, counting all of the different environments I passed through along the way. 

1. quiet and cold and cobblestoned on the streets of my beloved DUMBO. 
2. smelling faintly of urine and punctuated by the scrabbling of rats on the Brooklyn side of the subway. 
3. silent—all of us headphones on in the train car.
4. boisterous and gruff underground in Times Square, a thousand elbows all trying to get up and out first.
5. even more boisterous and even more gruff, up street-side.
6. And finally, the dull hum of fluorescents and air conditioning and smooth steel corporate elevators, whooshing from floor to floor, inside the sound-thick walls of my office building. 

This, I remember thinking, is why we all keep eyes pinned neatly down as we make our ways from home to work and back again—could the body, if it were left alone to osmose all of this—could it even survive it? It doesn't seem likely.

Los Angeles is not like this. Los Angeles is a place of roads and yards, of 1920's duplexes upon duplexes. Of lines of impossibly tall palm trees. Of cars and billboards and surprising succulents growing roadside. It's a place of buildings and order and doorways. It's a place of pods. Pods with wheels and pods with porches and pods within pods within pods. Sometimes, when you're driving down a familiar street, on a day when the layer of smog and marine gust has cleared, you'll suddenly realize, as the peaks of the Sierra Madres tower into view, that you are in a valley. In a desert. In the bowl of a hundred mountains. The landscape of Los Angeles, just like its mountains, comes in and out of view.

I have not been kind to the landscape of my new (gulp) home.  Hence, the apology.

I realized the other morning, while curling around Tracy Street, slowing for the dip in the concrete, and for the cop who is always parked outside of the nearby high school, (the same high school where the final scene from the original movie Grease was shot)—as I was taking the shortcut, left down the tiny alley where it seems impossible that two cars might fit, and yet, they always do—it occurred to me, as I was driving these roads, that I have spent nearly all of our almost 34 months here, stubbornly untouched by the body of Los Angeles. 

Maybe it was the NPR interview, humming along in the background, with a local artist who was talking about her favorite parts of the city. Street corners and museums and cemeteries I have never been to—talking about them as if they were the soft spots and creases of her own anatomy. Maybe it was the whisper of worry in the back of my head about my husband, about how much he misses our New York, and about how hard it can be on him—the hours in the car, the hours in front of screens, the feeling of isolation that is so common in la-la-land. I was, in my head at that moment, making lists of things we ought to do. Ways out. Ways in. When suddenly it landed on me, like a rock might come thudding onto hard-packed soil…that it is time to honor the landscape that IS.

When we are children, loving the minutia of butterflies and sidewalk cracks and the sticky tar of pine trees around us, is simple. Natural. Like breath. It requires no commitment, because it just is what we know and have known and will know, and we have no fear that loving one landscape precludes loving any other. We drink it in, because it is what is there.

But as adults, what is around us becomes so tied up in what we are and what we aspire to be and what we need in order both to be and to proceed to be better, that it can become, in the words of John O'Donohue, "a dead geographical location". This is what we have done to LA, my husband and I—not just because, as it seemed perhaps at first, it is not our kind of city, but more than that, out of some kind of stubborn insistence on the preference of one landscape over another. And with it, a denial of the life of the landscape around us. And with that denial, it's so clear now, comes a denial of some part of our own life. And livelihood. How, really, can you thrive in a place that you refuse to fully breathe in?

Last week, my husband and I rose early and drove to a part of town we'd never been to before. A little suburb just north of LA where there is an "old town" and a Sunday market praised for its quaintness.  It should also have been praised for the enormous heads of cauliflower and dozens of varieties of hummus and fresh-caught salmon and strawberries nearly ready to burst, all on offer there. We walked up and down the long aisle of vendors, holding hands and taking pictures of chickens spinning on a rotisserie. (The smell of coal-grilled chicken makes me feel like I'm nine years old again.) And we ate eggs and bought hummus and talked about things we wanted, and how we might get them. And as we headed, happy and full, back to our car, the mountains, which had been hidden earlier by morning fog, rose up to cradle us.

Saturday, December 11, 2010

John O'Donohue...Big Celtic Siiiiiiiigh

I stumbled recently into the gorgeousness that is the poetry of John O'Donohue.  I have been reading this poem aloud to all my classes this past week and now, Shanti Town, it's your turn.  As a primer, the title, "Beannacht" means "blessing", and the word "currach" (found in the second stanza) is a kind of hand-made boat (um...I think). 

Enjoy, Shanti-towners, and please know that all of these things he wishes for all of us, I also wish...for all of you.


Beannacht/Blessing
by John O'Donohue

On the day when

the weight deadens
on your shoulders
and you stumble,
may the clay dance
to balance you.
And when your eyes
freeze behind
the grey window
and the ghost of loss
gets in to you,
may a flock of colours,
indigo, red, green,
and azure blue
come to awaken in you
a meadow of delight.

When the canvas frays
in the currach of thought
and a stain of ocean
blackens beneath you,
may there come across the waters
a path of yellow moonlight
to bring you safely home.

May the nourishment of the earth be yours,
may the clarity of light be yours,
may the fluency of the ocean be yours,
may the protection of the ancestors be yours.
And so may a slow
wind work these words
of love around you,
an invisible cloak
to mind your life.