Transmuting Grief
Transmuting Grief
“I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if millions of voices suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly silenced.” Obi Wan Kenobi, Star Wars
I woke up suddenly on Monday night filled with a deep feeling of grief. I was almost overcome by that feeling, and yet it wasn’t a personal grief. I have learned over the years, that feelings like this are usually Goddess trying to get my attention. After tossing and turning for a bit, I got up, determined to explore and to write about these intense feelings.
Obviously, the past several months have been ones of great loss for many people. I have come through this time relatively unscathed. Although my husband and I have lost several friends to age and disease, we lost no one to Covid. The grief that we have felt has been real, but it wasn’t of the intensity that I was feeling during the night.
In fact, as a retiree, I am privileged enough to take advantage of the isolation of the past year to use it for a time of reflection and personal growth. So my thought was, “Who am I to feel grief for something I have not personally experienced?”
Yet the grief is there, it is real, it is heavy. There is so much death in the world, not just from Covid, but from fires and floods, heat waves, and deep freezes. There are wars on women, people of color, gays and transgenders, on truth – wars on everything that is deemed “other” by the patriarchy. It feels as if the world as we know it is crumbling beneath our feet, and there is nowhere safe to stand.
I am somewhat of an empath, and I can feel these deaths in the depths of my soul, in my very bones. I feel the deep grief, and yet it is not a personal grief, but a universal grief for the threat to our very existence as a planet. I am feeling overcome with grief for all the myriad losses in this world – whales, rainforests, butterflies, honeybees, glaciers, polar bears, people, truth. The list is infinite. The world is in upheaval and there seems to be little political or collective will to take steps to mitigate the damage. Will our planet burn up because of our foolishness?
I am tempted to push this grief away. After all, I am one person with little influence. The problem is too big, and I am too small. And yet, I feel this grief for a reason. I feel that I must sit with it, not block it or deny it. In sitting with it, in allowing it to flow through me, I am a vessel for transformation. I become the crucible for transmuting this grief into hope, wisdom, love, and deep connection with all things. I am called to live fully in my corner of the world, to make a small difference where I am by radiating love and by acknowledging that we are in essence all one. In the grieving, I am called to find hope in the fluttering wings of a butterfly or the cry of a newborn baby.
I believe that, to some extent, everyone on the planet is feeling this grief. They may not recognize it as grief. It may come out as anger, depression, anxiety, or physical illness, but in reality, it is grief for the death of the old world, when the new world has not yet been born. I choose to sit with this grief in the hope of transmuting it into something that can contribute to making the new world a better place.
Barbara Garland
August, 2021
Sitting in the Dark
Dark stabbing grief
A darkness so deep as to be impenetrable
No glimmer of light, no glimmer of hope
“But it isn’t even my grief”, I whisper in the dark.
It has nothing to do with me.
It has everything to do with me.
It is overwhelming loss -Loss of lifetimes, loss of the present
Grief for the world
For the downtrodden, for people of color, for women, for children, for animals, for plants, for the other, for Mother Earth herself.
I take it all in.
I sit with this grief
And in the sitting, it transmutes into the jewel of great price –
The diamond born of pressure and heat
Forgiveness and love pouring out into my small corner of the world.
But first I must sit in this dark place,
Allowing the wisdom of the dark to heal my broken heart.
Comments
Your voice comes to me clearly. I read every Friday and look forward to next Friday.
At this time in my own life, I’m grieving. Thank you for putting some of my thoughts on your blog, without knowing it.
Sleep seems impossible. Grief has taken over. She’s a horrible thing to battle.
She’s become a part of my life and won’t help with day to day chores and such.
My grief comes in the form of cancer. I already miss my old life. I’ll never be myself again.
She wakes me up and makes me sad. Something that I don’t have time for.
My cute little twins are what keeps me going these days. The brave face, the warrior that is inside…battling.
It’s nice to know others feeling the same.
Farah,
I am so sorry to hear that the cancer is back. I can’t imagine how hard it must be to come to terms with this terrible disease. Please know that I am here for you and am praying for you. I know that you are a warrior and are one tough cookie, even when you don’t feel like it. Sometimes all anyone can do is to sit in the dark and see what emerges.
Love you,
Babs