Clean White Pages

I began a new journal this morning.  I use a large book (about 8×11 inches) for writing and sketching.  Each time I use up the last page in my sketchbook journal it feels like a momentous occasion — like a huge goal has been actualized.  When I sit down to start a new book, I feel like the first page can set the tone for the next section of life I write about, for the designs I dream up in metal, for the hopes my soul brings to light as my pens and pencils drift across paper.

This morning, I lit a gritty wand of marvelous coconut incense* I found at a local shop, wedged the smoking twig in the deck railing and simply watched the smoke curl and twine as it burned down.  I looked out at my river valley and the snowy peaks beyond and felt tranquil.  Unhurried.  I found myself thinking, “I am supposed to be here, and so here I am.”  I felt so completely intact, whole, cognizant of where my body begins and ends, aware of the capacity I have to shine, intent, content, unhindered.  My palms felt full of light.  Some tightly closed door in me fell open and I felt fully dimensional — utterly vibrant in essence — I saw myself in that smoke, the way it unfurled freely from the glowing tip of the incense as a white, expanding ribbon of perfume, pushed and pulled by an inconstant breeze.  I saw myself there, waxing and waning, full and thin.  I liked what I saw.  The drift, the pull, the gravity of sinking and rising ribbons, the spooling and looping of a wisp.

I’m thankful to have finished this journal.  The contents of it are weighty, at times, but light and exploratory, at other times.  But the weighty content, I have felt, deep within.  In some ways, traveling with it and toting it around the world with me was a heaviness, a burden of sorts, I will feel lighter when I set it on the bookshelf in the studio and only refer to it when I need to see the thoughts and sketches of the past.  I closed that journal this morning and thought about how I can be guilty of trying to keep a dead thing alive when it really belongs in its grave, at rest, forever.  I’ve been carrying something, permitting myself to press (and access) a deep bruise over and over again.  I’ve been rejecting the healing that is offered to me every moment of every day, the healing that comes with laying down my hurt and letting it fade away in its grave.  I thought something was repeatedly hurting me, breaking me, harassing my soul…but the truth is, I was keeping a dead thing alive, instead of laying it down in its grave and saying goodbye.  We’re all doing something like this, every day, so I’m not beating myself up over it.  To hang onto our hurt is such a human act.  In fact, I’m so thankful that I realized what I am guilty of this morning when I shut another bound edition of my life.  I cried a bit, from the realization, from the relief of suddenly seeing and comprehending my mistake, from the hope of seeing so many perfectly white pages opening up before me.  I suddenly understood and the billows washed over me.  Deep cried out to deep.

We can be so busy living in front of ourselves or behind ourselves, but never really in ourselves.  We have to look up, look around and realize that we’re exactly where we’re supposed to be, and so here we are, body mind and soul, in the land of the living.  We can let the dead sleep with the dead.  We can lay those things down and allow them forever rest.

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I’ve been meaning to write about all the books I’ve been reading and some of the music I’ve heard but I’m going to save it for tomorrow.  I hate to exhaust or overwhelm you!  Go forth today and be courageous in all you do.  Be brave.  I believe in you.

xx

*I was never fond of incense until I was on a climbing trip in Squamish, hiking through an old growth forest with my climbing partner and girlfriend, and I caught a random whiff of scattered Nag Champa smoke.  The scent was so musky and elusive.  The forest was so green and silent.  My friend and I ran through the forest, following the smell, until we found where someone had lit a rod of incense and placed it in a mossy tree stump.  It was gorgeous treasure.  I felt like I had bodily passed through a dryad, like a ghost walks through a wall.  It was a beautiful moment and I’ve loved to burn incense outside ever since that day.  I don’t like to be surrounded by the thickness of incense smoke in a closed space, but I like to catch a tiny flicker of it on the breeze from time to time, while I garden or write — it feels like delicately holding the frayed edges of a wise secret between pointer finger and thumb.

Comments

  1. Beautiful words, again. I so desperately needed to hear these words today, so desperately. I am glad for your revelation in the closed journal, in the realizing of the holding on to hurts, glad for you, and glad for me, because your revelation has made me see my life in a new light.

  2. You are divine my dear. I am so very guilty of keeping dead things alive. Thank you for this. Today, it was exactly what I needed to hear.

  3. Thank you for this, Jillian. I have been working on something Big here, emotionally, and this is just so good to read and feel. Thank you.

  4. You said it so beautifully but yes…I try to live in the present and let go of what has to go but sometimes it sticks to me and I let it…what can I do, I was born that way, sticky!

    I have never liked incense, I take it back. I only like two kinds of incense. There is one that I bought while in Acadia and it smelled like a cedar forest and the other is actually not incense but a certain plant that Ancient Zoroastrians would burn along with murrh and it crackles and smells like smoke, pure smoke. Others are too sweet for me altho I do like to look at them.

    Your earlier picture of indigo blue reminded me of how much I like blue but what if one had to choose, blue or white? or blue or green? Thankfully we are given all the colors.

    I commend you on your filling your notebook. You are a brave woman to do so. xx

  5. So beautifully written! I have to get ready to go out, but thought I’d just say that I will now be burning my incense on the back porch! I have quite a few types, but house mates don’t appreciate it, what a lovely idea to burn it outdoors. Thank you.

  6. Catherine Chandler says

    You are incredible. Divine. Human.

    I know so much of what it means to lay something to rest. I have done that recently–relegated someone to the dead, though they are very much alive, and it has made a world of difference in my emotions.

    I love the turnover of journals. Each one full of different adventures.

  7. Since I was child blank pages of paper have called to and fascinated me. It’s an indescribable feeling to have wide open canvas stretched before you, a world of possibility at the tip of your pen. It’s a beautiful thing. Thank you so much for sharing your heart.

  8. I’m proud of you.

  9. So poignant for me at this very moment, this realization you’ve had about holding onto hurt. I just decided two days ago that I didn’t have to hold on to something incredibly painful to prepare myself for future pain… Good goddess- it is FREEING. Thank you for all you share, thank you.

  10. no
    no need to beat yourself up
    it is life
    it is learning
    we don’t learn unless we are pressed upon the rocks
    you might find some truth in the words I wrote yesterday on this very topic
    http://loveandlight-cat.blogspot.ca/2012/06/late-night-journal.html
    the learning to let something die
    we must learn to use this muscle, as we use the muscle to create
    it is what makes us whole, complete and fertilizes that which is to come
    what an amazing lesson you have learned….many never do
    so celebrate and dance a dance of joy sister for you have found a pearl in your wound : )
    and I say right back to you…Go forth today and be courageous in all you do. Be brave. I believe in you.

    love and light

  11. i’m at the end of a journal, also.
    i look at the worn cover, the corners lay’d bare to the cardboard skeleton, the binding gone all wonky from cards and pencils wedged into the pages.
    from you i have learned this process.
    with you i go forward: i have spent to much of myself on the negative and now promise myself to stay in the moment….
    x

  12. For me, that first white page is the hardest. I feel hesitant on how exactly to begin? Because you’re right- that first entry sets the stage for what’s to follow, and you want it to be the “perfect beginning”. So, DO it. Put on that insanely gorgeous breast plate, you Indian princess of the Methow, and pick out a nice pencil, and bravely begin to loop and swirl and sway. Let your ideas and words fly!

  13. Re artificial life support–yes, alas, been there and done that. A ceremony is needed for this form of laying to rest.
    You know, I wear your “Brave in All Things” necklace whenever I need an extra touch–literally–of courage, and it works!
    x

  14. I like your thinking aloud 🙂
    Ive always admired ppl who write/draw journals and wished I’d be like that. I’ve even said it aloud many times. Maybe I really should teach myself that skill…

  15. my god, what beauty is in your words today……..xox

  16. Mmmm…. I’m letting your beautiful, real words wash over me. I’m in the thick of the smoke. I thank you for this reminder to lay dead hurts, let them rest in peace.

  17. Funny, you write this as I just picked up a new journal and about to embark on a trip up the North West to Oregon and Washington – my first road trip ever. I feel the burden of things that I too, have yet to let dissipate into their resting places. It’s a funny thing isn’t it? Holding on to that which hurts us so deeply. Forgiveness is a gift you give yourself, they say. I’m beginning to see that’s true.

  18. Thank you for this post, you have no idea how much I needed it today, your beautiful words speak volumes to me
    xx

  19. So beautiful and true.
    Thank you for your words, lady. They ring deep. xo

  20. I love your face, your brain, your heart and soul.

    xox
    Cat

  21. ..le sigh.. beautiful and profound you are (as usual)! What I wouldn’t give to pour over those treasured and tattered pages with a cup of tea in hand, and be further inspired by your insights.creativity.unfurling.
    To be honest, I have an almost ‘unhealthy’ delight in buying gorgeous journals/sketchbooks (thankfully I cant afford to indulge such hoarding on my part) because the TRAGIC part is I always get way to freaked out.intimidated by that big BLANK page staring me down… and never want to start it off on the ‘wrong’ note as it were. Totally the fear of making a mistake that blocks such a creative release… I know, my bad! ;o)
    P.S.. my post about YOU was supposed to go on my blog automatically this past week while I was away, and … it didn’t. poop. So THIS week… you’ll be there!
    xo
    Mel
    needle and nest

  22. Reading this gave me shivers because it struck a chord so deep within my being. Beautiful, beautiful Truth. Thank you, so very much, for sharing.

  23. Thank you ALL for these beautiful comments and for taking a moment to connect with me. I cherish what you have to share and thank you so much for being here. x

  24. Morning, beautiful!

    Laying down my pen for the day (it has been so well used these pass weeks) and had to pop in and say hello. (Forgive me if I soon disappear, again. Everything is humming!)

    I love your words. You know I do. And I love that they give me pause, to think, to wonder, to mull and chew. It IS so human to keep poking our bruises, isn’t it! I have come to realize that my poking and prodding forces me to go deeper, and even as my mind tells me to “get over myself,” it is my heart–my soul space–that is still feeling a little battered and bruised and just needs more time. When I recognize my thoughts for what they are, the ‘battle’ is half won. But I also know I still need time, and I may still rip off the bandaid to see if there’s any ‘progress’! (Hey, what can I say?? I used to pull worms apart as a kid because I wanted to see how far they could stretch!) And then a day comes, quite miraculously it seems, where my thoughts turn to what troubled me…and the pain of it has gone! The memory remains, but it no longer wounds. Miraculous, indeed.

    I found myself doing a bit of belly-gazing the other day, metaphorically and literally, and jotted down a senryu, of sorts. Not too sure how I feel about my findings, though:

    Lonesome naval gazing—
    As the years pass,
    two bosom buddies approach.

    Bear hugs!
    A xx

    • Cripes. These itty bitty boxes. I never know how much I’ve blathered on…until it’s too late! =]

      • Dear Bandaid Ripper,

        So glad to hear from you and THRILLED that things are humming. I’m going to come to your first official book reading, even though I’ll have to sit on the floor and cross my legs with everyone else:) Will you be serving orange juice and goldfish afterwards?

        GUFFAW!!!!!!
        LONESOME NAVAL GAZING!!!!!
        It’s a pity that *ahem* some parts of our bodies don’t stay 18 forever. HA HA HA!!!
        Lovelove,
        xx

        • Aw, you’re so sweet…if only it were “some parts.” Ha!

          Goldfish and orange juice. Check! (There will be pillows!)

          Off to the fridge to hunt and gather.
          xxx

  25. “I am supposed to be here, and so here I am.” Sometimes my mind resists the unknown which appears unfamiliar…but the now does feel soul good…thank you for your peaceful words, Jillian.

  26. Beautiful post. I especially like to hear that you’re not going to beat yourself up over your realization. I’ve never thought of burning incense outdoors. I might have to try it.

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