Tag Archives: MSC

MSC 2018

Midwest Shaman’s Conference, 2018, driving home. Pouring rain, Amber sleeping in the passenger seat, behind a truck trying to pass a truck, getting hit by both of their spray, having trouble seeing ten feet in front of me. It was a little scary, and we had left early, skipped the Sunday classes because we knew the rain would make the commute home longer. In that moment, although I was glad we had left early, part of me was still there. These are heart-friends…people I trust with my well-being because that is “how shaman do.” The function, the nature, the calling, the pull, the drive, the yearning…it’s all about healing, the different natures of it, cultures of it. It is the truest definition of “safe space” that I can think of, where your ugliness can be pulled out into the open like it was midwifed, and loved into being and wholeness, forgiven, cleansed, and given back to you like a new creature. Transformed through care and forgiveness. It’s a beautiful thing.

I was thinking, you see, of what one of the Elders had told me. He gave us all messages, personal ones, and I was thinking, “Should I share this? Is this even appropriate to share?”

At that moment, that VERY moment, the tiniest of spiders dropped down from my visor in front of my face and hung there.

“I know what that means. Yes, I will share. But this is not safe space, little one.” I caught her by her web and pulled her farther away from my face and she caught on my steering wheel, dangling in the space where I look at my odometer. This was not good. I slowed down and reduced some splash, but I couldn’t have her running around my car while I was driving in the rain…it could get us all killed, Amber, the Spider and Me. I caught her on my hand and put my hand out the window, letting the wind take her, wishing her safe travels…and if she landed in my back seat that was fine…just please don’t mess up my driving.

The message (or at least part of it, the part of it I’m supposed to share…I didn’t get permission for the rest so you just get this) is, “See yourself the way we see you and Rejoice, the way *we* rejoice when *we* see you.” After ritual I thanked him for his blessing and for his presence and his teachings, and he thanked me, said he was grateful for me, (for all of us, not just me, I’m sure) for our willingness to hear the lessons and learn them. I knew he meant it, and that was amazing to me. Grateful for me? Why? I did not contribute, I only absorbed and listened. I am a gnat next to a giant, who is part of a long line of giants and ancestors with a family of creatures I do not know and cannot name. But like I imagine all natural things in the Native world, even Gnat is a brother who has a place and a lesson to teach.

From that moment forward, I became very conscious of how people looked at me, what they said of their experiences of me. So glad that they met me, they said, I was delightful they said, I had such good energy they said….even the ones I didn’t spend any time with. How did they come by this opinion of me, I wondered, if they didn’t spend time with me? If we didn’t have conversations? If they really didn’t know my opinions, or if I was a jerk, or anything? Were they listening to my conversations with other people and deciding that way? How did they come to that conclusion?

I’m not sure that matters.

I think what matters is like, just like when I was figuring out that I wasn’t ugly, that there is a swell of a particular type of compliment. Everyone tells me I give good hugs…that’s pretty standard. The people who tell me do not know each other. They are not making group agreements to all tell me the same thing. There is not some mass conspiracy to make Mowgli believe she is a good hugger, that would be absolutely ridiculous. THEREFORE, it must be true. I must be a good hugger. That’s just logic.

There are some people who just wear their joy on their face. It has nothing to do with me, they just do…and if they light up when they see me, then logic dictates my presence makes them happy. I need to just accept that.

When I was younger, my parents tried to kill me…I’m not dead because the mechanics of making that happen in a way they wouldn’t get arrested created opportunities to survive it…but there is this undercurrent of belief in my life that, it doesn’t matter if people are nice or help provide for my needs….deep down inside, they really just want me to go away. I fight it all the time. It’s a voice I know that lies, it finds small pieces of accidental rejection and tries to blow them into massive truths that are hurtful. I do not bother people with this, I know that it is my Shadow that does this to me, and there is no hole anyone else can fill to make this go away, that it has to come from me. But it’s really not serving me, and I feel like any other junk that I’ve been working on has been resolved enough that I am now ready to let this piece go.

I’m listening now, and watching. I’m ready to believe you. So why is it this piece and no other of the message that I was given that it’s okay to share? Why tell you all this?

Well, duh. Isn’t it obvious? Because you can too. Because all those people who surround you with love on a regular basis, all those people who enjoy your company…they don’t have an ulterior motive either. No conspiracy. They just like you. For realz.

Look for that moment when they see you. Do they light up? If they do, just trust that. They are happy to see you.

And anything else is kind of immaterial, isn’t it? If they love you, then they do. And for now, as you are learning your awesomeness, as you begin to believe that you’re not so terrible, that is the place to start. No one fakes that startled surprise look because it’s almost impossible to fake. When your presence turns up unplanned, that look is Truth.

I can’t speak for anyone else, but I can say that just about everyone on here, I am always always always glad to see, and hug and hold and love. Thank you for being patient with me as I learn this thing that you have all learned so easily….how to love ME, accept ME, hold ME. Thank you, collectively, for being happy to see me. I am grateful for this lesson you teach me.

I’m a little late to this particular party, but I’m getting ready. Blessings to you for holding the space until I get there. Sorry I’m late, but I know you don’t hold that against me. Your love is so much bigger than I knew, and I am so sorry I doubted you. I know you forgive me, but I am so sorry.

Gods, you are all so very big together, and I keep crying…but it is a joyful healing cry, and it will stop eventually, and then we can all laugh.

Thank you for holding the space until I can catch up. I am very grateful.

And I will hold the space for you, until you get here. Because you held it for me, and because I love you, and because you are wonderful and strange and unique and confused and loving and doubtful and hurt and looking for light.

I can’t wait for you to get here. Love you so much, and you’ll know that when you see me.

Just wait ‘til you see the look on my face.

How do I explain? The second thing.

The second thing I learned at the Shaman event had something to do with seeing, and being seen. There is something complex here that has to do with all of us being in the rush of our every day lives, and something to do with being unclear at communicating, and something to do with a dysfunctional view of love that we’ve been given our whole lives. It’s consciousness and mindfulness on a larger scale, or maybe a smaller one.

When the Elder said, “We see you. We see you doing the work, and we know you are alone,” there was something so powerful in that.  There is an unspoken piece for us as Women (predominantly white women, in my experience.  I can’t speak for other cultures and whether or not it is the same there, but I suspect it mostly is…at least, everywhere that has been colonized, which is most places)…we know the Men are never there. We know when we go to these retreats there are rarely men who follow, it is almost always women and we don’t speak about that. It’s a secret we all know, it makes us all sad, but it is the world we live in. We live in a place where we have to defend our bodies because the Men are not reliable to protect and defend. We wish it were not that way. We know if they came things would change. But how can you get them to come when they relegate Spirit to a place where only women go? If we can’t get them to see our pain, who are actively suffering, how can we make them see their own potential joy? They cannot see the Actual…how can we inspire them with the Potential? We just do not speak of it and continue to do the work. It needs to get done, and if they will not help us, we will do it alone. We know it means they will fall behind. The thought saddens us. We do not stop.

He voiced something we all had seen and none of us were talking about. That the men were conspicuously absent. We had a larger number of men than usual at this gathering, around 5 or 6, not counting presenters. Bless them all, every one of them. They were kind and open and respectful and there to learn and grow. They were unsure and determined. It made them beautiful. We need so many more like them.

There was something about being seen in that moment. Seen as we were, alone, doing the work, and the hope that someday, someone will come to relieve us. That the warriors will come to help us. I can’t explain it, like such a burden was sliding off my shoulders, I was so grateful. I did not know how much I was carrying. I did not know how important it all was. There’s a reason that message spread so far, so fast. Because it speaks to us.

It seemed like everything the elder said made me cry. I felt so helpless, so hopeless in the face of everything. They told us stories of their travels through different states as they went to Standing Rock, or to Flint, how they were chased and isolated in a state where the laws have changed to make it legal to hang Indians (his word). How their lawyer had to travel with them. They were laughing and joking about how they got away, but i was so horrified at the events taking place so recently, at the fact that it was so commonplace for them, that this was their day to day lives as they did the work that was meant for ALL of us…Water really is Life, and water companies were prepping for this long before Flint became news…I remember reading articles in my news feed about it, claiming that drinking water isn’t a human right, it’s a commodity. The less it becomes available, the sooner we’re all paying through the nose to survive.

Anyway, I tried to talk to the elder about my tears. I felt selfish….there are members of various communities that feel that some people use tears as a way to avoid having to fix things, kind of a, “look, I sympathize, and I’m overwhelmed by your pain, I’m a good person, you can see that because you’ve moved me to tears, but I’m not going to change anything today….it’s all too much.” That’s not who I am. I wanted some direction, I felt like that poem where the girl is looking at the map saying, “show me where it hurts,” and the answer is, “everywhere.” Where do you start? How do you begin? There’s this moment in Wonder Woman where she’s pulled in all these different directions because there is pain everywhere she looks. I thought he could tell me where to start.

He took my hands and looked into my eyes and said, “Don’t heal the pain of others to avoid having to deal with your own. Heal the self and the way becomes clear.” I was crying, i mean really snot-crying, and i wanted to pull my hands back to wipe my nose. He didn’t let my hands go. He kept talking.

There’s this thing about talking to elders, an etiquette. You don’t interrupt them…sometimes they take a long time to say something, and if you interrupt them they may not continue, you may lose the opportunity to hear something truly important, so you have to kind of ride it out and try to follow, even when it’s complex and involved. So there I was, with my very poor memory, struggling to remember everything, knowing I wouldn’t, wanting to wipe my face, wanting to grab my notebook to write down what he was saying, and realizing I was just going to have to surrender in this moment.

I realized then i don’t think I’ve ever let anyone see me like that. Snot on your face is very naked, and this moment was about pain, so let it be about pain.

“I will do the work,” I said. ” If you point me somewhere, tell me what to do, I will say the prayers, I will do the work, but there is so much! Where do I start?” And the answer I got was to start inside. Not the answer I was hoping for. But an answer. And I will do the work.

In that moment, I was really SEEN. I had never allowed that level of exposure. There was something healing in that moment, of having my hands held and just being seen and heard. There was something important going on I wasn’t understanding yet.

We had a sweat lodge. I had been asking questions about language and he said that the younger Natives still referred to it as a Sweat, but that sweat is something that happens within the lodge, it is not what the lodge is about. It is about purification, and that even the “pi” suffix refers to having people inside it, that a tipi is really just a Ti until there are people inside, then it becomes a Tipi, just like an Inipi is really just an Ini, until there are people inside, then it becomes an Inipi. There wasn’t enough room for everyone, so he split us into men and women. The women went first.

It wasn’t my first lodge, and what goes on inside the Lodge is intensely personal….some people have visions or hear voices, some people just sweat, some people learn things about themselves, or hear the voices of their ancestors. The most important thing for me happened after the lodge.

We went in the late afternoon, and we came out around sunset. The men had been expecting to go in with us, so they just sat outside and waited. When we came out, they were there, not waiting for us, but waiting their turn. It was kind of nice to see them sitting there, waiting patiently and peacefully, even if we didn’t interact, really. Most of the women went on to do their processing, and i realized when the men came out it would be dark. They would be alone. I think Amber was the one to voice it, “that’s so sad that they’ll be alone. Can we wait for them?”

A lodge simulates the womb. It is hot and wet and round, and bodies are cramped against each other. The door is small and low to the ground, like an igloo, and to get in and out you have to crawl. In another Lodge i was told that in some tribes there would be a “midwife” at the door who would wipe your face down like they do for babies, and who would welcome you into the world. I hated the idea of them being reborn to emptiness and silence. I knew i would have to wait for them, no matter how long it took. We asked if we could sit vigil for them, and Tree (assistant to the Elder, there were two) seemed pleased. She said we should hug them and hold them when they came out, welcome them into the world.

We waited. I was bit by a bazillion mosquitoes, and I waited. We watched the fire that held the stones, and made sure to leave a channel for the spirits to come into the lodge. It got dark. We waited.

One of the men came out early. This happens sometimes….sometimes it’s because the heat is too intense, sometimes because claustrophobia kicks in, and sometimes because someone sees something, has a vision that is so intense they have to leave. I wanted to tell him he was okay, he wasn’t alone, that we were there, but he isolated himself on the other side of the lodge. He looked a little shaken by something. It seemed he wanted to go through it alone, so I let him be.

Eventually they came out, and on each of their faces i saw the same thing play out, over and over. One at a time they would crawl out, realize it was dark, look sad because they were alone, look up to see they weren’t, smile, happy to not be forgotten, arms open to be hugged, awkwardness at the realization of how sweaty they were, stiffness as i took them in my arms apologizing for their wetness. I held them and said, “All babies are wet when they’re born, and we hold them and love them just the same,” and their bodies relaxing into that moment, accepting it. The last to be hugged was the one who came out early. I remember thinking he was a premature birth, I hope I said it. He seemed to feel he didn’t deserve to be hugged, but babies are born premature all the time. (I’m two months preemie myself, they had to incubate me.) I hope I voiced that.

But here again was this moment of being seen that was so relieving to them. Being seen is more than something that just happens. It is something we crave, it brings meaning to things that are otherwise meaningless. The creation of art needs an observer. A dancer can dance for their own joy, but that same performance can multiply the joy with observers. A painting without an audience might as well be a rug.

And our pain, our weakness, our frailties…without an audience they are Shame or Doubt. But WITH an audience, they are Compassion, Sympathy, Humanity. There is a connection that happens when we are seen in our entirety, a circuit closes and some sort of electrical thing happens that is emotionally moving, and is literally

Emotion

moving

from one place to another,

transforming from Pain to Hope.

We can do that for each other if we will just be still. If we will hold each others hands and look into each others eyes and say, “I see you. I see what you’re going through, and I see that it hurts you, and I am so sorry that you are having this experience.”

We can have this for ourselves if we will allow ourselves to be seen.

Going back to Spirit(s) for a moment, they really just want to be seen. Your ancestors, the tree in your yard, the animals and plants you’re eating, they want to be seen. Forgetting the politics of meat eating vs. vegetarians vs. vegans…..forgetting all that…an animal died or a plant died so you could eat, and that’s part of the life cycle, animals always eat other things. But think of how rude it is to never say thank you, to never even recognize that something was once alive before it was on your plate. There were fields of thriving plants that were cut down for harvest. Couldn’t hurt to say thank you, right? It might change the taste of your dinner. It did for me. My coffee especially.

When your kid comes home stressed about school, or their latest crush, or some other thing you have entirely grown out of and now want to roll your eyes at, see what happens if you meet their eyes and say, “I see you going through this thing. I am so sorry this is happening to you. What can I do to help?”

Try it. It’s a gift. For them and for you. For all of us, really. Because when we all do it, we all elevate. And that’s The Real Work.