|
February 2021 (Vol. XXXIV, No. 2)
|
|
Dear Friends ~ I have been living with Rainer Maria Rilke's poem "Gravity's Law," letting it percolate within me while the events of this past month weigh heavily upon me. How do we keep our inner hearts alive and well while this national heaviness and crisis grips and pushes each of us?
 |
|  | Unsplash Images |
Merton speaks of "a point of nothingness at the center of our being," a point of absolute poverty, the small thing within us that Rilke says is being pulled by "gravity's law" toward the heart of the world. When we surrender to gravity's law and befriend our own poverty of being, "we rise up rooted, like trees." The knots of our own making are untangled. Our struggle, our loneliness and confusion, our entanglements are held in place within the heart of the One who holds all things together.
Like children, we begin again to learn from the small things, which live in God's heart. Gravity's law teaches us to fall and to trust our heaviness. We see the beauty in our brokenness, the power of our poverty, the fuel in our falling, the holiness in our heaviness. Like a baby bird who has yet to fly, we are at the edge of the nest, and the mother bird pushes us out. We trust our own heaviness. And we start to fly. What is your heaviness teaching you? ~ Bob
|
if each day falls inside each night there exists a well where clarity is imprisoned. we need to sit on the rim of the well of darkness and fish for fallen light with patience. ~ Pablo Neruda from "Seeking Clarity". Read more in THE ESSENTIAL NERUDA
|
Battered; ill; aghast - Lost in my own ruin - Sometimes I am weak enough To enter You.
~ Rumi. Read more in THIS LONGING
|
 |
|  | Unsplash Images |
As swimmers dare to lie face to the sky and water bears them, as hawks rest upon air and air sustains them, so would I learn to attain free fall, and float into Creator Spirit's deep embrace, knowing no effort earns that all-surrounding grace.
~ Denise Levertov from "The Avowal". Read more in THIS GREAT UNKNOWING |
God of light and God of darkness, God of conscience and God of courage lead us through this time of spiritual confusion and public uncertainty. Give us the conscience it takes to comprehend what we're facing, to see what we're looking at and to say what we see so that others, hearing us, may also brave the pressure that comes with being out of public step. Give us the courage we need to confront those things that compromise our consciences or threaten our integrity.~ Joan Chittister from "Prayer for Conscience and Courage". Read more in THE TIME IS NOW
|
What we choose to fight is so tiny! What fights with us is so great. If only we would let ourselves be dominated as things do by some immense storm, we would become strong too, and not need names. When we win it's with small things, and the triumph itself makes us small. What is extraordinary and eternal does not want to be bent by us... This is how one grows: by being defeated, decisively, by constantly greater beings. ~ Rainer Maria Rilke from "The Man Watching", translated by Robert Bly. Read more in SELECTED POEMS OF RAINER MARIA RILKE
|
It's 3:23 in the morning and I can't sleep because my great great grandchildren ask me in my dreams what did you do while the Planet was plundered? what did you do when the Earth was unravelling? What did you do once you knew? ... I want just this consciousness reached by people in range of secret frequencies. ~ Drew Dellinger from "Hieroglyphic Stairway" in LOVE LETTER TO THE MILKY WAY
|
How surely gravity's law, strong as an ocean current, takes hold of the smallest thing and pulls it toward the heart of the world. Each thing- each stone, blossom, child - is held in place.
 |
|  | Unsplash Images |
Only we, in our arrogance, push out beyond what we each belong tofor some empty freedom. If we surrendered to earth's intelligence we could rise up rooted, like trees. Instead we entangle ourselves in knots of our own making and struggle, lonely and confused. So like children, we begin again to learn from the things, because they are in God's heart; they have never left him. This is what the things can teach us: to fall, patiently to trust our heaviness. Even a bird has to do that before he can fly. ~ Rainer Maria Rilke from "Gravity's Law" in RILKE'S BOOK OF HOURS, translated by Anita Barrows and Joanna Macy
|
So stay. Sit. Linger. Tarry. Wait. Behold. Wonder. There will be time enough for running. For rushing. For worrying. For pushing. For now, stay. Wait.~ Jan Richardson. Read more in CIRCLE OF GRACE
|
The art of being lost is not a matter of merely getting lost, but rather being lost and enthusiastically surrendering to the unlimited potential of it and using it to your advantage. The shift from being lost to being found is a gradual one. The way to encourage that shift is to first accept that you don't know how to get to the place you want to be and then opening fully to the place you are until the old goals fall away and you discover more soulful goals emerging. Then you are no longer lost, but you have benefited immensely from having been so.
~ Bill Plotkin from "The Art of Being Lost" in Soulcraft Musings #30 August 11, 2017. Read more in SOULCRAFT
|
It is I who must begin. Once I begin, once I try - here and now, right where I am, not excusing myself by saying things would be easier elsewhere... - to live in harmony with the "voice of Being," as I understand it within myself - as soon as I begin that, I suddenly discover, to my surprise, that I am neither the only one, nor the first, nor the most important one to have set out upon that road. Whether all is really lost or not depends entirely on whether or not I am lost. ~ Václav Havel. Read more in SUMMER MEDITATIONS
|
How difficult seeing the truth is. How lonely thinking the truth is. How brave speaking the truth is. And, how warm is the hand Which is held out to people crying in the sad wind Behind the lie. How kind is the heart Which accompanies people who cling to The homeland in their hearts.
~ from Tsunangari (Connection) in The Kentaro Sato Choral Series. Listen to the music HERE
|
There is a brokenness out of which comes the unbroken, a shatteredness out of which blooms the unshatterable. There is a sorrow beyond all grief which leads to joy and a fragility out of whose depths emerges strength. ~ Rashani from "The Unbroken". Read more in ONLY ONE SURRENDER
|
|
The monthly Friends of Silence Letter is sent free to thousands worldwide both in print and via email. Please consider donating this year to keep its wisdom and encouragement coming to you and to all. Click on the donate button above to give whatever you can. Thank you.
|
|