Sunday, February 26, 2006

Friday, February 24, 2006

My beloved

This from my beloved, in a day of troubling times:

"My soul reaches out to you in the deepest love."

Thursday, February 23, 2006

Holding the 4th Chakra



I haven't written about Chakra's in awhile, but that doesn't mean I don't experience my life through them everyday. I am currently pondering the lesson of how to hold others in my heart rather than give my heart away. It's just so difficult to not come unhinged when walking around with your love center outside of your body. So, how do I learn the practice of letting others in and flowing love out, without my guts lurching because I can't keep my love in my body? I've have habitually given it away! This is a huge test for me and I don't know who the teacher is, but I'm ready for him/her if you're out there. I have faith that the answer will be revealed to me in due course. And then I can go about being a more effective healer because I'll be keeping that power in my body. That's my hope anyway.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Healing with an Open Heart






I continue to grow as a healer. I have been called to minister to the dying by singing to them. It is a deeply profound experience each time I do it. I recorded my first experience with George several posts ago. The second time I sang to a woman named Martha who died within ten minutes of my singing. I had sung, then left the room as her hospice worker checked on her. When I returned she was gone. Let me tell you that it was a profound affirmation that I had found a new calling. I sang to Ann on Sunday. She died yesterday. I sang to Shippie yesterday, and I hope she lingers on this earth longer, so I can spend more time with her beautiful spirit and loving presence. I don't mean to make it seem like it's about me, it is not, but I do seem to have the essence to bring a peace and calm into a room and embrace death with open arms.

I have grown in my own ability to love, to open my heart and to risk having it broken, over and over, if necessary, because an open heart is a vulnerable thing, and I continue to survive heartbreak and then always, I'm rewarded with some amazing new treasure, once my tears have dried, that elevates my spirit to a new level. I have learned that we must approach the wounded in what ever language they are fluent in, and then allow the love to flow out of us into them. I have learned that love is NOT give and take, it is only give: and give, and give. I take comfort in the knowledge that when love received makes it way back, it will undoubtedly be transmuted and tranformed into something more beautiful than anything we could recognize as originating from self, because in fact, it didn't originate from you or me at all, for we are only channels; the conduits of grace God chooses to broadcast the message through. For this I am ETERNALLY grateful!

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Romantic Nihilism?






I met the most fascinating young man this week. We got into a philisophical conversation and I'm just speechless over his self-definition as a romantic nihilist. I've thought about it a lot and am still at the "isn't that an oxy-moron"? phase. What are love and a life with no meaning doing in the same definition? I DON'T GET IT! But then again, what second sight shows me is a heart with scars, a brilliant mind with a penchant for philisophical wanderings and desire to make sense of a chaotic world, where none of the institutions held dear in our society hold any real value for morality or ethics or anything to beleive in. I also see an artist who, if he were actively creating, would find meaning and purpose to his life.

Romantic: "inclined toward or suggestive of the feeling of excitement and mystery associated with love".

Nihilism: "the rejection of all moral and religious principles, often in the belief that life is meaningless."

What is even more intriguing to me, is the life journey that leads to an embrace of a philosophy that says, "there's nothing here that's important, this whole thing is meaningless". What led the "gen next" generation to an apathetic response to this gift we call life? How much effort does it take to be cynical? Any more effort than it does to live a passionate and self-directed hopeful life? Romantic Nihilism is rocking my world, I'm telling you.

And this is my question: if you found out on the last day of your life that everything you said, did and thought had tremendous meaning, how would you spend the last day of your life??

May all be honored in their quest for meaning in this life.

Connie

Response to Singing to the Dying


The following is excerpted from a longer message received today from a neighbor and friend. His daughter drown last June. She was 22 and a young mother.

"Reading your essay on singing for the dying has got me thinking. It got me thinking what I wouldn't give to sing to my daughter when she left this world. I would give everything I have and everything I will have to have been able to sing her to heaven.

Instead of singing though ... what I got to do is take her out for a scrumptious meatball sub the day before she died and have lunch with her and listen to her excitedly tell me about her new job. And listen to her protests when I slipped her some cash because as a young married couple I knew they needed the money.

I got a huge big hug when I dropped her off and I got to poke her in the sides and make her jump one last time like I always did for some strange reason whenever she hugged me hard. I got to hear her tell me that she loved me and would call me later as we she walked away.

No I didn't get to sing in her ear and hold her hand as she left this world but I guess we all have to take what we can get and for that I am ever grateful."

Who would you like to be singing to as they die, inviting them to gently let go to the sound of music? Call them, write to them, rollover and tell them you love them.

Namaste`,
Connie

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

There are No Words, Only Love



To my Beloved: there are no words, only love that leaves me speechless.

Happy Valentines Day

Namate`
Connie

Monday, February 13, 2006

The Disappearing Walls






When I was pre-school age, I had my first mystical experience. My sister Kim and I shared a bedroom in a huge Victorian house on Plum St. in Santa Cruz. It wasn't a place we lived in for long, but for a couple of years we did move around alot, apartments I mostly remember, one in Mtn. View even, where my innocence was stolen at a tragically tender age. I remember the sash tearing on my red velvet and chiffon dress with the embroidered cherries on the bodice. I LOVED that dress. I identified with that dress and when it was no longer whole, I began to forget a lot. Memory is such an illusive friend.

So, in the Victorian house one night, I woke up to a house with no walls. I could see through the entire first floor, into each room, and they all seem empty and dark. I have been trying to make sense of this apparition for over 40 years. Today, I got it. I was given the ability to see what isn't there, the sight to see beyond the walls that people build up around themselves. I see through to the heart of people, that's what the vision has been teaching me all these years. And that's probably why I tend to scare folks with my intensity. I don't mean to, it's simply a result of my type of sight. Kind of like a blood type: Open Sight.

The really strange thing was that the next morning, when I woke? The chest of drawers that stood between Kim and my bed was turned so that the back was facing my bed, the front facing hers, thus obscuring my view of her. And that is probably a pretty decent metaphor for the journey Kim and I have been on. I've never understood her and have only just begun to see through to her heart, which, like mine, was broken at a very early age when our father left us. I'm grateful for the opportunity to reconnect with and share love with my only sister.

Saturday, February 11, 2006

Baby in a Buffalo Stampede




I had my first spiritual/philosophical crisis at about age five, in the grocery store dairy aisle. I remember stopping dead in my tracks and thinking, "how can it possibly be that we are born, we live, and then we die? That can't be all there is to this life thing." I don't remember sharing that question with anyone, and perhaps if I had, someone might have gotten a clue that I was not an average kid. But that isn't how my childhood went. I didn't know anyone who asked deep spiritual questions, and certainly didn't have access to people with ANSWERS to deep philosophical questions and thus became lulled into a spiritual apathy that took me years to wake up from.

My sister and I spent many a weekend afternoon in front of the television. We had the first color t.v. on our block in the early 60's but old movies weren't filmed in color so I have memories of watching black and white westerns on sunny afternoons in Santa Cruz, again, lulled into an apathetic, passive approach to a day off in a beautiful coastal town, just a half a block from the beach; there you could find Kim and I, splayed out on the sofa watching T.V.

I have a very specific memory of a snippet of film, several frames long: an infant native indian baby on the ground in the midst of a buffalo stampede. This memory is so vivid, so profound, that it has taken on archetypal meaning for me, wildly symbolic of the state of grace that we are all born into. I know nothing else about the movie, no plot, no time frame, nothing. But the image of a swaddled baby in the dusty center of a buffalo stampede, wailing and squalling has stayed in my conscious mind all these years. I've always wondered how to find out the name of the film, in order to find out the overall context of this deeply profound spiritual memory from my childhood.

What happened to the baby? I don't recall from the film, but I've always assumed she miraculously survived.

Friday, February 10, 2006

What it is to see.




I have begun to ponder the concept that sight is a construct that can only be described as innately personal. Color-blindness, for instance, how is a man with color-blindness ever going to understand what it is for me, to see vast numbers of colors, some of which may look entirely different to me than to any other individual? My eyes are brown, does that mean that I see shades of brown that green eyed people don't see? Wouldn't it be cool if I could see the world out of your eyes for a day? Wouldn't that tell me everything I need to know about you?

In the world behind my eyes, all colors are visible and when I close my eyes, and focus on my third eye I get a dot of purple, that shifts to green and back to purple. What do you get when you close your eyes?

Tuesday, February 07, 2006

Caroline Myss quote



"If I could place one jewel of inspiration in your soul, it is to tell you that every thing you do, say, think, feel, and all of your actions - are channels for grace in this world. You are a channel for and of grace. I wish people could experience the truth of that statement for just one second. Treasure your life and the gift of life on this planet. We are all we have..."

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Personal Theology




I received a copy of Caroline Myss' January Salon newsletter this morning. (myss.com) Her subject is Soul Stamina and she lays it out very clearly that the key to that illusive door is congruency...when your personal theology and your actions are in alignment, then your soul is in a state of congruency and impenetrable to negative forces. This makes a whole lot of sense to me for I surely have learned the vulnerable side of incongruency. She suggests getting down to the business of writing down and defining ones own personal theology. This is where I'm beginning:

Anything is possible at any moment and that includes the seen and unseen, the ordinary and the extraordinary, the imagined and the "real". I believe the forces of good and evil exist in this universe; I put my faith in my personal knowledge that GOOD will always win over evil. I believe that suffering is an integral part of the evolution of the soul. I believe that our souls do not die when our bodies do, but can be reborn over and over until a level of enlightenment is reached at which point it becomes absorbed into a great energy field of wisdom, perhaps something that could be called "GOD". On this planet, at this time, I believe that love is the most powerful force on earth for healing. I believe in karma, simply: that what comes around goes around and the more I can keep that balanced in my conscious life, the happier I will be. I believe that we live as we die and we die as we live and everything else is learning and loving. I believe that historically there have been many, many wise teachers and prophets and that each and every one of us is capable of being channels of DIVINE light and energy and wisdom.

For this I am truly grateful,
Connie