Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Beyond Words






More than two months have passed since I’ve written anything for this blog, or even for my own journal. In November and early December there were unanticipated family responsibilities that took up the time I usually saved for writing. But, even when I had done what I had to do and I found time to write again, I could not find the words I needed. Somewhere on my hard drive are 8 or 10 half-finished drafts of entries for this blog. So far I have not been able to complete any of them. It isn’t exactly writer’s block. There are lots of words on those pages. But as I re-read them, I find them..... irrelevant ... to what I really want to say.


What I would most like to be able to express is what it feels like for me to be with horses these days... what it feels like to connect with a horse, to hear him, to know her in this moment. But that experience, or rather, those fleeting, evanescent experiences that land like butterflies in the midst of our everyday interactions, defy my ability to capture them. The moment I try to put them into a pen of words, they escape, they disappear.... and leave me wondering if they ever really existed.


By its very nature, heart-to-heart connection is beyond words; the experience is richer, deeper, more multifaceted and multidimensional than words, mere symbols of “the thing itself”, can ever be.


Still, some writers, some poets, have found words to give others a sense of experience-beyond-words. Rumi was one of them. So, I’ll borrow his words -- which were not about horses -- to give a sense of what I’m struggling to say about what being with horses is like for me these days. (All quotations are from “The Illuminated Rumi”, translations and commentary by Coleman Barks.)


“Out beyond ideas of wrong-doing and right-doing there is a field.

I’ll meet you there.


When the soul lies down in that grass

the world is too full to talk about.


Ideas, language, even the phrase “each other” doesn’t make any sense.”





******


“There was a dawn I remember when my soul heard something from your soul.

I drank water from your spring and felt the current take me.”



*******







“Yesterday at dawn

my friend said, ‘how long will this unconsciousness go on?


You fill yourself with the sharp pain of love rather than its fulfillment.’


I said, ‘But I can’t get to you!

You are the whole dark night, and I am a single candle.

My life is upside down because of you.’


The Friend replied,

‘I am your deepest being.

Quit talking about wanting me.....’ ”











“Friend, there’s a window that opens from heart to heart, and there are ways of closing it completely,

not a needle’s eye of access. Open or shut, both ways are sometimes appropriate.


The deepest ignorance is not to know about this window...”


******



“You’ve heard it said there’s a window that opens from one mind to another.

But if there’s no wall, there’s no need for fitting the window, or the latch.”



******




...But for the way we have to go, words are no preparation.

There’s no getting ready other than grace...”



******



“From the hundreds of times I lost the connection, I learn this: your fragrance brings me back. Inside that I become a feast day with aloeswood burning, the pure empty sky around the moon. Then I make promises. I break them. And same as before, I try to find you by thinking and reading about finding. No help there!”



As Barks writes in his commentary on the above quotation: “..... Words and images can never give the experience. .... The dis-connection Rumi speaks of here, everyone understands. The re-connection.... can only be lived.”


******




“Let yourself be silently drawn by the stronger pull of what you really love.”



*******



“I have no more words. Let the soul speak with the silent articulation of a face.”


























9 comments:

  1. Kris, your post beautifully captures a mood i have been feeling myself lately---a lot. Silence becomes an ever more attractive option. I'm not sure exactly why this is, but experience tells me it's okay. Besides, it is utterly futile t combat this feeling :-)

    Right now I feel a longing to be in your snows scape--to experience the cool, crystal clarity and listen to the silence.

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  2. Once again you are writing about something I also wrote about, the inability to find sufficient words. There are none. But you are so talented in finding the right ones to describe that feeling of being unable to label.

    I love all of the Rumi quotes, I'd only read that one of the field beyond right and wrong earlier.

    Thank you once again!

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  3. Kris,
    What a perfect blending of appropriate Rumi poems with your evocative photos.

    This one held a special resonance for me:

    "“There was a dawn I remember when my soul heard something from your soul.
    I drank water from your spring and felt the current take me.”


    This is how it feels when I am out among our horses...they take me from my world into theirs, like a current and I become something more than human, feeling the connection with all the elemental entities which the horses are mingled with.

    Nice expressions all the way around. A beautiful offering for us here in Words About Horses. Thanks Kris!

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  4. I spent this past weekend with a herd of horses in California. On one very magical afternoon I had an in-depth conversation with a horse who appointed himself my gaurdian and host. Last night I began to write about it. I found myself up against the same inexpressable wall you speak about yet I kept going. Then I slept and I dreamed about someone holding me for hours on end. The dream expressed what I could not express with words. I will keep trying!

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  5. Thank you, Lori, Lynne, Jen, and Eva for reading and for commenting...

    Lori, I'd love to hear more about your host in California. Perhaps if you start with the easier (superficial) things -- what's his coat color, does he have markings, what color are his hooves? What did he do? What did you do? Did you rest your head on his shoulder -- how did he smell? Did he breathe on your face? Did you sniff his muzzle? How did that smell... Sometimes focusing on those physical things helps us sneak up on the feeling.

    Lynne, I know the feeling you mean, though I am sure you have the experience far more often and intensely than I. Khe-Ra, Kochet, and Desna are still very much in a human world; the horses of Ravenseyrie much less so.

    Jen, putting words to the experience we are talking about makes it smaller somehow.... and then it is no longer what we want to convey. It is the very BIGness of the thing that is so impossible to express. Keep trying, though. I will, too. :-)

    Yes, Eva, silence is blessed. One of the things about snow is that it stops traffic for a while... and that lets silence reign, even if only for a short time. It's amazing how different the world sounds when there are no car engines in the background.

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  6. I cant' recall if I've ever responded to your posts. I do know I always look forward to reading them.

    This post, that I read today, was particularly timely for me. I'd had a "bad" day yesterday and it seemed to follow me into this day. But when I read your post and this... "Out beyond ideas of wrong-doing and right-doing there is a field.
    I’ll meet you there."
    The tears that needed to come...came. My heart is healing. Thank you for your posts!!!

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  7. I have popped back to this post on different occasions to feast on those quotations. They are so profound that one at a time is enough for me.

    Words are hard to find but I do like stories. If I am right you started to describe your journey with your horses at the start of this blog? If you ever find words for that journey I would love to hear more.

    Thanks for those great quotes.

    Máire

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  8. Lucy, thank you for reading and commenting. I am glad to know that something written here helped you access and release some feelings you were holding tight. If any credit is due, it goes to Rumi. :-)

    Yes, Máire, you are absolutely correct. When I started the blog one idea I had was to write about my journey to try to convey how one thing led to another... and we went from a very conventional boarding situation -- kind of a garage for horses -- with emphasis on riding and competing -- to where we are now. It did not happen all in one "ah ha! moment." There were many of them... Anyway, I'm feeling like my Muse is on an extended vacation, or hibernating, or or feeling offended because I did not spend enough time with her, or something... :-) When she shows her inspirational face again, I'll write some more.

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  9. Kris said:
    When I started the blog one idea I had was to write about my journey to try to convey how one thing led to another... and we went from a very conventional boarding situation -- kind of a garage for horses -- with emphasis on riding and competing -- to where we are now.

    Did you make some new changes, improvement to your place so the horses get new opportunities for recreation, healing, resourcing, feeding etc...?

    Monica B.

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