~ The Holy Ground of Sorrow and Joy ~

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~ SWEET REMINDER ~
Ponderings, Poems & Practices
    for Living Your Brilliance!

Holy Ground

Where there is sorrow, there is holy ground 
Oscar Wilde

Hello Beloveds,

I’ve been longing to write about death. And grief. And joy.   Lately I’ve been touched in different ways by the death of beloved loved ones and sweet acquaintances.  Isn’t this true, when someone we cherish leaves their body we are changed forever?
 
We use the word “grief” and “sorrow” as if we know what those words mean; but anyone who has grieved well could tell you that those words are too shallow for what they are living into.  Grief weaves itself into the fabric of our being … and we are changed forever.

Death. It’s where we are all headed; each precious breath, moving us closer to the only certainty of a life.  Yet, vulnerable conversations about death seem rare.
 
A couple weeks ago I receive a blog post from a dear and very wise friend, Tom Garcia. The subject line was The dwelling place of joy and sorrow…    That blog post was richer and deeper than anything I would have written.  I reached out to Tom and he generously gave me permission to share that blog with you.
 
Before we jump to Tom’s piece, I offer you three quotes (one is from Tom’s blog) that I have a been sitting with:
 
From the writer Frank Kafka, “The meaning of life is that it stops.”
 
From the Jesuit priest Gregory Boyle, “We are not meant to stare at our watches, awaiting death’s arrival. “
 
And from the French philosopher Montaigne, “We do not know where death awaits us; so let us wait for it everywhere.”

Grab a cuppa Joe or tea and give yourself some time.
There’s a lot to sit with here.
With love to you and gratitude to Tom,

Sharon

The dwelling place of joy and sorrow…  
By Dr. Tom Garcia

Irish poet and playwright, Oscar Wilde, wrote, “Where there is sorrow, there is holy ground.”

Recently my friend, Jeff Markel, passed away. Jeff was like an older brother to me, a mentor. I was able to be with his family, my wife and daughter, and a few close friends, for a ceremony to see Jeff off into the Mystery.

Jeff was a bright light. He had friends all over the world. His intelligence and sense of humor were only surpassed by his love and generosity. He had a huge heart. It was a blessing to know him. 

I am no stranger to death, having lost both parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, and several close friends.

With each passing of a loved one, gone from this life, I feel tempered by the experience, less fearful and more accepting. I am compelled to go deeper within to a dwelling place of sorrow and joy that could only be called holy ground.

In this hallowed place, there’s a sense of reaffirmation, a more profound connection to the Source of Life; an abiding gratitude for the true gift it is to be alive. Practically speaking, I am humbled by the specter of my own death, and more grateful for my life.

As loved ones make their transition, we have an opportunity to deepen our relationship to the Source of Life. It’s my belief that those we love who have left this physical plane still hover near us and remain in our vicinity in a way that defies explanation. Closer than ever, they become our angels and guardians.  

Truly, we are never alone.

The French philosopher Montaigne wrote, “We do not know where death awaits us; so let us wait for it everywhere.”

Figuratively, I think of throwing my arm around the shoulder of Death and pulling it in close to say, “I know you are there and I am not afraid.”

For me, to be alive is to experience loss and to sorrow for something. The nature of life is one of impermanence and change; in short, death. Every day we experience things that threaten our peace of mind. But we can learn to accept these upsets with equanimity, whatever their magnitude, because ultimately they are small in comparison.

Our culture, the way most of us are brought up, leaves us far removed from the experience of death and wholly unprepared to deal with its eventuality. Intellectually we know death is inevitable, yet we struggle mightily when it happens to those closest to us. And it’s ok to be awash in grief for a time. We must allow ourselves to grieve, and to grieve well.  

With regard to our own death, most of us never know when, or where, or how–it’s a great mystery. But we do not have to carry this awareness alone. We can lean into each other right to the end. It’s possible to imagine that when we cross the final threshold, gentle hands await to receive us on the Other Side.

Every transition holds a choice for us–to let go of the control we think we have, surrender to the unknown, and trust the way that opens before us, or to hold on in fear.

When we cross over from this life into the next, the burden of a body is shrugged off and the spirit is free to soar. It continues on its journey to realms that exist only in our dreams, but never far from the loved ones who’ve been left behind.  
 
One of the great gifts of grief is that it changes us. Tempered by loss, grief helps us to mature and more deeply appreciate life.

Grief seasons us.

To grieve well is a deep practice out of which arises a fierce determination to live with more joy and greater acceptance.

In the midst of grief, we might remember our reason for being. When we question Life, we might remember that Life gives Itself without question, to be lived fully, and that’s the purpose of Life.

Love and Blessings,
Tom

Jeff & Tom

Jeff and Tom ~ Friendship
Tom is a mentor, guide and teacher, working in a shamanic way at an elemental level with energy, nature, spirit and the human condition.

“I listen to the fire as if it were speaking to me,” he says, “and in the silence clear messages come into my mind—different from my thoughts. My gift is to listen in a way that makes the intangible, tangible—putting into language what is difficult to express—drawing the mundane and the sacred together in a way that can be understood and appreciated.”