Monday, January 26, 2009

The Nests We Make


On Sunday, my son Gabriel and I stacked some wood that had been delivered to the house. As we were stacking, I recalled the big pallet of wood at our house when I was a teenager, which housed (my father discovered, when retrieving some wood) a nest of mice.

Maybe our stack will provide a home for a little furry thing, or maybe it will be a home for an array of spiders. Chances are, it will be some creature's new habitat.

With the onset of very cold weather, my instinct is to slow down, draw energy inward, and create...well, a nest. The other day, I sat down to write in my living room, and the whole setting just felt wrong. So I began to care for my creature self. I made a pot of coffee, I lit a fire, and I lit a pair of candles on the table I was working on. My drafty living room was suddenly warm, and light, with a freshly-ground coffee aroma.

I am remembering, these days, how much I am a creature, who needs basic creature comforts in order to be happy and productive. Warm lighting, snuggly blankets, a hot drink in a favorite mug. These are simple things, but they go a long, long way with this creature. Once I set up my "nest," I wrote for 5 hours straight!

The more I watch my own habits and the habits of those around me --including the mice-- the more I'm convinced that we are nesting creatures. Why not indulge ourselves in this instinct, as the mice do. I don't mean just designing a comfortable living room, or a snuggly bedroom, though that's important. I mean taking that extra little bit of time to tend ourselves in our spaces. To sit bundled in a warm blanket and listen to music. To luxuriate, over a hot cup of tea, in the comforts and blessings of a warm house on a cold winter day. To share, as we are able, our spaces with others. For this creature, anyway, these are essential things for winter happiness.
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Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Delight is Creative and Generative


As the calendar turns, there is new energy poured into our lives, and we take stock of what has been and make some steps toward bringing in the new.

It is a good time to ask the question, "What brings me delight?"

Some months ago, I was drumming and chanting with a friend, and we both entered this space in which our drumming and our chanting became what we later called a "laughing meditation," --we were so full of delight in what we were doing, that we could both feel this kind of chuckle emerging out of the sheer joy of it.

In that space of delight, I could see that a person could put any number of things into motion to be created. Delight appeared to me as though it were the singular creative energy of the universe.

I thought recently of Christ's words, that you must be like little children to enter (or experience) the Kingdom of Heaven. A child's world is full of delight. Children create out of delight and delight in what they create. Sounds like heaven to me!

Especially in hard times, it is important to tap into -- and DO--what delights us. It is what makes us buoyant -- and gives us that creative spark that can create moments, and days, and worlds we want to live in.