Allison Hendrix

Oct 4, 20204 min

In Praise Of Water

DEEP BREATHS.
 

Hi, friend.

HOW ARE YOU???


 

Are you feeling Chaotic? Buoyant? Peaceful? Grounded? Head in the clouds? Stormy? Steamy? Thirsty? Refreshed? Courageous? Yearning?

I've been trying lately to find more specific, more acute, more creative words to describe my state at any given time. And to notice how quickly, how often, my state changes.

Its pretty easy (for me, at least) to fall into the belief of THE WORLD IS NUTS I CANNOT KEEP UP WITH THE NEWS I AM ANXIOUS ALL THE TIME WHAT IS GOING TO HAPPEN as my natural and never-changing state.

But.

My guess is, throughout each day, all of us run through a broader and more dynamic gamut of emotional and physical states.

Let's consider our ever-shifting states as water.


 

Consider the way water exists on a spectrum of fluid to solid.


 

Consider the way water takes on the shape of a container ( a moment ) without losing its essential quality of water-ness ( self ).


 

Consider the way flowing water moves with trust, ever-forward.


 

Consider the joy of splashing, the grief of tears, the peace of floating.


 

Consider water as the wave and the sea. The single drop and the entire body.


 

WHAT IS MY POINT.

Gosh, I never really know.

I start writing, and it goes somewhere, and then I try to find my way back to you.

WATER IS COOL BE LIKE THE WATER.

My invitation to us all this week is to notice when we become rigid. When something happens that locks us up, immobilizes or collapses us.

Rather than staying frozen, I invite us to remember the water.
 

Maybe physically - go drink some water and have the embodied experience of this connection; take a bath or a shower and FEEL the water as it moves across your skin. Maybe you're able to visit a natural body of water near you. Maybe you find a beautiful photo or video or painting of water. Maybe you read a water poem (like the one below).

Then pause and go in.

Let water move you first, cleansing, clearing, making a path for you.
 

Then pause and go in.

A few deep breaths.
 

Try to notice what was happening when you contracted. Name it. Find a creative, unique, precise name, that doesn't need to make sense to anyone other than you.
 

Name it.


 
And remind yourself that you, too, are made of water.

You can let this contraction flow away.
 

You can shift your state, or allow it to shift, or be curious about what might happen if you began to try.
 

Imagine yourself refreshed.
 

Imagine yourself cleansed.


 
Imagine yourself the wave and the sea.

Ride that wave of imagining along your inner voyage to feeling more fluid, buoyant, strong, malleable.

And know that we're all on the voyage together.

We are all waves.
 

We are all the sea, the river, the rain, the snow, the waterfall, the ice, the tears.

IN PRAISE OF WATER

by John O'Donohue

Let us bless the grace of water:

The imagination of the primeval ocean
 
Where the first forms of life stirred
 
And emerged to dress the vacant earth
 
With warm quilts of colour.

The well whose liquid root worked
 
Through the long night of clay,
 
Thrusting ahead of itself openings
 
That would yet yield to its yearning
 
Until at last it arises in the desire of light
 
To discover the pure quiver of itself
 
Flowing crystal clear and free
 
Through delighted emptiness.

The courage of a river to continue belief
 
In the slow fall of ground,
 
Always falling farther
 
Towards the unseen ocean.

The river does what words would love,
 
Keeping its appearance
 
By insisting on disappearance;
 
Its only life surrendered
 
To the event of pilgrimage,
 
Carrying the origin to the end,

Seldom pushing or straining,
 
Keeping itself to itself


 
Everywhere all along its flow,
 
All at one with its sinuous mind,
 
An utter rhythm, never awkward,
 
It continues to swirl
 
Through all unlikeness,
 
With elegance:
 
A ceaseless traverse of presence
 
Soothing on each side
 
The stilled fields,
 
Sounding out its journey,
 
Raising up a buried music
 
Where the silence of time
 
Becomes almost audible.

Tides stirred by the eros of the moon
 
Draw from that permanent restlessness
 
Perfect waves that languidly rise
 
And pleat in gradual forms of aquamarine
 
To offer every last tear of delight
 
At the altar of stillness in-land.

And the rain in the night, driven
 
By the loneliness of the wind
 
To perforate the darkness,
 
As though some air pocket might open
 
To release the perfume of the lost day
 
And salvage some memory
 
From its forsaken turbulence

And drop its weight of longing
 
Into the earth, and anchor.

Let us bless the humility of water,
 
Always willing to take the shape
 
Of whatever otherness holds it.

The buoyancy of water
 
Stronger than the deadening,
 
Downward drag of gravity,
 
The innocence of water,
 
Flowing forth, without thought
 
Of what awaits it,
 
The refreshment of water,
 
Dissolving the crystals of thirst.

Water: voice of grief,
 
Cry of love,
 
In the flowing tear.

Water: vehicle and idiom
 
Of all the inner voyaging
 
That keeps us alive.

Blessed be water,
 
Our first mother.

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