a
lost chorus
by rose sierra
After
being married for ten years, my friend Summer realized she had lost
herself somewhere along the way.
Summers
Antique Woman doesnt believe in her own autonomy or power. She
clings to a fantasy of how relationships should or could be rather than
coming to terms with how they really are. She keeps the truth hidden,
even from herself. She clutches to relatedness when the relationship
is no longer working and gives herself away in order to keep a marriage
intact. Summer loved being a part of a family and being a mother, but
she consistently put her husbands needs before her own, and denied
her instincts which, in the form of intuitions and dreams of her husbands
infidelity, told her that her marriage was in trouble. Nonetheless,
she ignored these signs. She was not willing or ready to face what it
would mean to let go of her marriagebecoming a single parent,
sleeping alone, the pain of separation, loneliness, letting go of the
idea of family, feeling like a failure. The consequence of suppressing
these instincts was that she doubted her instincts in general. She began
to wonder, Where have I gone? Where am I?
It was
the artist in her that led her back to remembering who she was.
Throughout her life Summer felt like an artist without an art-form.
She would often reach into the air, wriggling her fingers, kneading
the sky, trying to fulfill an unknown longing. In her twenties, her
vagabond days, she baked bread. She loved plunging her hands
into the soft, warm dough. She loved the sensuality of kneading and
punching, of working the muscles in her arms and back. But years later,
in the midst of the disquiet of her relationship, a neighbor offered
a clay class. When she put her hands in the mud of the earth, Summer
knew she had found what she was yearning for.
Soon after
she started making sculptures, she felt a sense of familiarity, as if
she already knew how to sculpt. She received positive responses from
others right from the beginning, but praise wasnt important. For
the first time in her life, approval and disapproval were irrelevant,
because the making itself was so fulfilling.
As her
work progressed, something unexpected began to emerge. She had done
a sculpture from an eighty year old model, a woman with a kind
and wise countenance, and when the piece was nearly finished Summer
brought it home and would move it to different spots around the house.
It wasnt long before she noticed that she had begun talking to
the sculpture, sharing her musings and personal dilemmas, and soon the
sculpture began speaking to her! This wasnt delusion. Summer had
a playful nature, and as a child she was often accused of having an
overactive imagination. She knew it was her own voice projected out
to the clay figure, a lost part of herself that needed to be heard.
As Summer
continued this unusual dialogue, the old woman told her to keep working
on her, and gave her specific instructions. She was now directed to
carefully scrape off the old womans hair, to hollow out the inside
of her head, to slice off the neck, and finally to lay the head face-up
in a sculpted bowl. When Summer was finished, the figure had been transformed.
She was now bald, and because the head was hollow there was a darkness
and depth through the portals of her eyes. Instead of a kindly, older
woman, she was now a powerful crone. Summer was witnessing a part of
herself becoming visible. Her husband was so disturbed by the sculpture
that he asked Summer to throw a cloth over the head, but women friends
who came by to visit were intrigued and strengthened by her.
The same
thing continued with every sculpture she made from then on. They all
spoke to her. Summer was now committed to following wherever
each sculpture would lead, no matter how unreasonable it seemed. If
she ruined it in the process, so be it. She stopped asking other people
for their opinions, and began to trust her own instincts once again.
If she heard one of the sculptures speaking to her, she wouldnt
question whether the directive was right or wrong, only whether it felt
right, she would follow it. If the figure beckoned her to cut off its
arms, she did. If it asked her to place a crown embellished with suns
and moons, birds and snakes on its head, she did. If it asked her to
lop off its feet, even when she had spent days painstakingly crafting
each toe, she did. If a male figure told her to carve a hidden womb
in his belly, she did. It was an adventurous experiment and as she proceeded,
she found that the directives were invariably right. Each
sculpture revealed a forgotten part of herself. She began to refer to
this creative impulse as her Do This Now Voice.
By listening
to her Do This Now Voice, Summer gradually began to realize
that she could no longer hold on to her illusions about her marriage.
As the truth of her husbands infidelity emerged and their marriage
began to unravel, with it came tremendous pain and chaos. Summer felt
directionless, jangled and close to madness. The dreams of her life
seemed shattered.
What was
previously masked by the strained and smiling face of the Antique Woman,
by her desperation to keep things together, was now revealed. What had
been buried was exhumed. Summer was willing to work with whatever emotions
came up. She had been lost for too long and she knew that if she sincerely
wanted to come all the way home, she had to be willing to experience
the pain of what she had denied.
Summer
was called into the underworld, and she followed. For two years after
she and her husband separated, Summer wore black clothes. She didnt
mask her anguish and restlessness by watching television, reading mystery
novels or shmoozing at the local cafe. She fought against a powerful
urge to keep herself busy when she felt sad or depressed. Trying to
fix what appeared to be broken, to lighten up and get
over it wouldnt work. She had to live through the unremembered
wounds of a lifetime that were triggered by the (eventual) divorce.
What had been restrained cried out to be seen and heard.
Summer
called this her composting period. Compost is garbage: wilted
cabbage and flowers, squashed plums, moldy bread, tea bags, dead leaves
and dirt, all piled together and decaying. Eventually, with time, moisture,
air, and worms, this mound of cast off stuff transforms into a rich
nurturing substance. I was an accidental seed that was buried
in the compost and it was only a matter of time before I was going to
sprout. I knew that eventually something would grow, but that it would
take time. I trusted myself enough now to know what I needed to do,
regardless of what anyone else thought. And what she most needed
to do was not to do anything, to lie fallow, to feel what she felt.We
must be willing to compost our grief, loss and powerlessness.
Sylvia
Perera, author of Descent to the Goddess, says that there are times
when we are suspended out of life. There is no rushing this
process. It must happen in its own timing. We dont know where
such experiences will take us, or how long they will last, but some
part of us knows that we must go down deeply before we can come up again.
We feel compelled to demolish the illusions of who we thought we were,
to let the obsolete vision die, so that a more honest one can arise.
If we have the intention, courage and stamina, the heat of the compost
will eventually burn out what is false.
Summer
allowed herself to compost for several years, despite the fear that
she would dive so deeply that she would never resurface. Instead, she
found in herself a strength and fierceness she didnt know she
possessed, as well as the ability to bear the unbearable. She no longer
had to strain to keep hidden the parts of herself that she feared. She
was no longer afraid of uncovering the truth, feeling her pain, and
speaking her mind. A sense of deep relief welled up in her, and she
knew that the errant seed had taken root.
Summers
home is now bursting with clay figures that she is in continual dialogue
with, that teach and empower her. This is her unearthed chorus of voices,
parts of herself made visible, parts that make up the whole of who she
is. Among them is the Crone who speaks to her of the deepest truths,
the Hermit who shows her the secrets of the cave, and the Hag who emboldens
her to be funny and bawdy. There is even a place for the Antique Woman.
Rose Sierra
is a Coach and Counselor who has been guiding people through personal
transformation for over 20 years. In addition to her private practice,
she has taught at Esalen and Omega Institutes, University of Arizona
Medical Center, Tucson Medical Center, and Portland State University.
She is also an artist whose paintings are in corporate and private collections
in the U.S. and abroad.
[ 828-687-6732; rsierra@rsierra.net;
rsierra.net ]