Aoradh daily meditation- Justin’s lovely poem…

After a short break, Aoradh have continued the daily meditation by e-mail thing.

I think we had a break because life gets in the way of such daily production- particularly when only a few folk are really keen on the discipline of writing daily, or creating daily.

But we have started again- with help! If you would like to be added to the circulation list, and so receive a (more or less) daily e-mail, drop me a line

Thanks to the joy of the internet, connections are possible over hundreds- even thousands of miles, so it is that we have had two ‘guest’ contributors to our daily meditations last week and this week.

Last week we had a lovely selection of quotes and pictures from Dorothy Neilsen.

This week, poetry by Justin Heap (from Nashville, Tennessee, USA) which I am really looking forward to as, well- poetry is my thing! And also because Justin can write like this- his first meditation of the week…

You will die. Let these be words

to prove hope in light of faith,

words to grow heavy on the chest

to prove light in hope of faith,

that resurrection always

follows death in this kingdom.

Take what you will, taw and busk,

for rich soil always welcomes poor

seeds looking to change, to live.

Thanks Justin- beautiful!

Aoradh meditations, Psalm 148, Saturday…

Praise the LORD from the earth…
11 kings of the earth and all nations,
you princes and all rulers on earth,
12 young men and women,
old men and children.

You powers of the government
Bow down
McDonalds and the CIA
Bow down
Economists of the IMF
Must bow down
.
You powers of the killing machines
Bow down
Pinochet and Stormin’ Norm
Bow down
You who live by the sword will all one day
Bow down
.
You powers of the media
Bow down
Makers and breakers of kings
Bow down
Celebrity cooks and reality Queens
Bow down
.
For I have walked the wild country
And watched the sun slipping slowly down
Turning green to gold
Working alchemy before my very eyes
.
I have seen the mountains
Lifting up their faces to the sky
Gathering in the starlight
So beautiful it makes me want to cry
.
And I can hear a voice- its calling me
Can you hear the voice?
It says-
.
Look upon my works you mighty

And weep

 

 

Aoradh meditations, Psalm 148, Friday…

Praise the LORD from the earth…

wild animals and all cattle, 
small creatures and flying birds…

 

Sometimes I am an eagle

Catching the high cliff thermals

High and wild and free

.

Sometimes I am veal

Factory farmed and tenderised

Machine fed and chemically mutated

.

Sometimes I expand like the empty sky

Other times I burrow deep

Searching for a safe place

.

Wherever I go

You are there

Aoradh meditation, Psalm 148, Wednesday…

7 Praise the LORD from the earth, 
you great sea creatures and all ocean depths, 

I watch the waves in the distance, hoping for a glimpse of a sea monster

And ponder all that life down deep

All those colours invisible in indigo darkness

Alive in creations overflow

And it is all too big-

Unfathomable

.

Cuttlefish

Alien flashing transparency

Reduced somehow to parrot food

In another world

.

Whale

So big that movement seems tectonic

Impossible

.

And me- eyes watering in a wind whipped in from the arctic

Am a grain of blown sand

Dancing

thisfragiletent- 1000th post!

This is my 1000th post!

So I want to mark it in some way- beginning with a word of thanks for those of you who have visited and engaged with some of my meanderings. At present nearly 180000 of you.

Or perhaps one of you 180000 times.

I started this blog in June 2008- for reasons which are slightly lost to me now- something to do with reaching out, and also reaching in. It was a means to flex my writing muscles and a place to post photographs. It was my stab at significance in the full realisation that the internet was full of millions of voices doing the same. It very quickly became an addiction.

Or perhaps you could also say it has become a good habit (jostling with my many bad ones) as it has also provided me with a rather precious space- a Spiritual place, in which I deliberately seek to go beyond the surface of experience, into something that is deeper, richer, more meaningful. To me at any rate.

How much longer I will maintain the almost daily average post, I am not sure. I really need to put some time towards some other writing projects. But at present, it continues to be- important.

And whilst I know that there are so many potential draws on your attention in this age of mass communication, I am grateful that some of you still think it it worth visiting.

Michaela suggested that I should celebrate by listing some of the things that have inspired me. It seemed like a good idea- until I tried to make a list.

It would be a long list- and I would anguish over it. But how would I do justice to the breadth of inspiration that comes to me? How can I account for the chinks of God-light that I see in so many things?

So I will not make a list. Rather I will offer you a poem from one of my favourite poets- Edwin Morgan. He died last year, aged 90, but when he hit 80 years old, he wrote this poem. May it capture something of our future my friends, as we head out again into the unknown ocean…

At Eighty

Push the boat out, compañeros,
push the boat out, whatever the sea.
Who says we cannot guide ourselves
through the boiling reefs, black as they are,
the enemy of us all makes sure of it!
Mariners, keep good watch always
for that last passage of blue water
we have heard of and long to reach
(no matter if we cannot, no matter!)
in our eighty-year-old timbers
leaky and patched as they are but sweet
well seasoned with the scent of woods
long perished, serviceable still
in unarrested pungency
of salt and blistering sunlight. Out,
push it all out into the unknown!
Unknown is best, it beckons best,
like distant ships in mist, or bells
clanging ruthless from stormy buoys.

Edwin Morgan

Blackpool rock…

The glass is half empty again.

Strange that I should feel so ‘down’ after being part of such good things recently- but it is part of a familiar pattern, and this too will pass.

Because I set myself to some kind of honesty here (or at least a nod in its direction) I will practice the old vulnerability of poetry.

Forgive the mawkish self pity- and worry not- all the best people are broken. And I am more broken than most.

Oh- and forgive the bad language. Not something I would normally resort to, but in this instance, it seemed apposite.

Blackpool rock

.

There are words that run through me

Like a stick of Blackpool rock

Revealed again at each teeth jarring splinter

Slickened in scornful accusation

They say;

.

Failure

Fool

Fat

All f****d up

.

Better not to let you bite

At this broken edged circle

Lest you read me clearly

.

And God is gone

Even if the space he left behind

Still resonates

Still-to-come, coming…

I have been writing some things for an up and coming Aoradh Wilderness retreat. We are heading off to the McCormaig Islands at the head of Loch Sween in a few weeks- 12 of us this year, and so I have been preparing some resources.

Here is part of a set of dispatches…

You are wrapped up in me

And I am bound up in you

.

We are held together by soft binding

Like tender shoot and stake

Like gift and gift giver

Like mud and gentle rain

Like worn shoe and weary foot

Like hot tea and cracked pot

.

Like universe and all those flickering stars

Like ocean and rolling wave

Like field and each tender blade of grass

 

There is now

And there is our still-to-come

.

Coming

 

I blinked…

I blinked

And the weekend

Went by

These days-

Like feathered things

Fly

Song of the old dog…

Sometimes when I am walking, I pace out the words of songs and poems. I am not sure whether I am unusual in this, as I have never asked anyone else if they do the same. It can be quite meditative- almost like the intonation of a prayer-mantra.

It is something I only do when on my own- or gathered under waterproofs in heavy rain and in steep country- because then, even in company, there can be little conversation.

At times, I try to be deliberate about my choice of words- as a deliberate prayer- but more often the words just appear as half-memories, like wind blown dandelion heads to which some seeds remain stubbornly attached.

There is this one poem that is a regular companion to my solitary walking, and it is one of the first I ever remember reading at primary school. It had a rhythm and tone that captivated me. So much so that still remember lines of the poem.

I even remember the teacher who read it to us- Mrs Purvis. Who beat me with a scholl because my spelling was poor. Or something.

More than this (although I am  sure I never knew this then) I remember the poem because it expresses something that I felt about myself. I was an outsider, a paid up member of the awkward squad, uncomfortable in my own skin- and as such, in school (and in life) a most unattractive being.

The poem suggested to me that to be alone and outside could be a positive choice, and that out of the crisis might come virtue. Not all animals hunt in packs- no matter how hard it can be to be alone.

As a much older dog, I have a deep appreciation of the fireside and your companionship around it. But I went looking for the poem…

To discover that it was written by an obscure poet called Irene Rutherford Mcleod, who published a few poems around the time of the first world war. Little is known of her, although it seems that her daughter married Christopher Robin Milne- yes that Christopher Robin.

Here it is-

Lone Dog

.

I’m a lean dog, a keen dog, a wild dog, and lone;

I’m a rough dog, a tough dog, hunting on my own;

I’m a bad dog, a mad dog, teasing silly sheep;

I love to sit and bay the moon, to keep fat souls from sleep.

.

I’ll never be a lap dog, licking dirty feet,

A sleek dog, a meek dog, cringing for my meat,

Not for me the fireside, the well-filled plate,

But shut door, and sharp stone, and cuff and kick, and hate.

.

Not for me the other dogs, running by my side,

Some have run a short while, but none of them would bide.

O mine is still the lone trail, the hard trail, the best,

Wide wind, and wild stars, and hunger of the quest!

.

And just in case you find this too bleak- Rutherford also wrote this- which also resonates in my soul-

Song

.
How do I love you?

I do not know.

Only because of you

Gladly I go.

.
Only because of you

Labor is sweet,

And all the song of you

Sings in my feet.

.
Only the thought of you

Trembles and lies

Just where the world begins

-Under my eyes.