Photo: Sue Vincent
She’d needed this for so long she almost did not know what to do with it. The sense of expansion felt as if it would crush her chest from the inside. The freedom felt disorienting. The quiet deafened. The freshness of the air dug splinters in her lungs.
It was the yearning, really. The slow release of what she had compressed herself into, for absolutely way too long.
Like pins and needles of a ‘fallen asleep’ limb waking up, it was. Only that this was her soul awakening, her spirit that she’d squelched into an air-tight packet and had pushed into a too-small drawer. Her way to survive.
She’d done this to herself, in a way. She realized. Sure, she could blame others for the part they played, but in the end it was her own small choices to ignore and minimize and shrug off and explain away, that slowly but resolutely coiled herself into herself, and did it so completely that she’d began believing herself to be devoid of need or want or urges to do more than what was outwardly expected.
So she’d stopped taking time for herself. She’d stopped going into nature. She’d stopped asking what she loved, or inquiring what she lost, or still required.
Till that day, when the small worm of “maybe,” fed by events that almost forced her hand, led to a gap in her calendar, and to a decision she could not quite explain to herself. A caprice, it felt, to rent a car and go — without a definite plan or conscious understanding of its meaning — into the wilder parts outside the concrete jungle that had become home.
And with the first crunch of her feet onto the leaf-strewn path, something inside her belly and right above her heart began to crack.
She let the wind carry her tears in zigzags on her cheeks. She used her sleeve to wipe her nose, as heedless as a child and as contentedly miserable. She cried because she could. She felt the ache and wronged bewilderment rise in her, slow at first, then unrestrained in its demand to be freed from the confines of denial and regret.
When she’d first left the car at the makeshift parking by the hiking trail, she thought she’d just stretch her legs a bit and perhaps take a few photos of the foliage. She didn’t realize — or perhaps she had but her spirit guarded it a secret so that, too, not be squashed — that there was far more inside her that needed a bit of stretching out. And that once out of the box that confined it, it swelled and would not be going back.
The air around her rustled and a flock of geese curved a misshapen arrow overhead, heading to a warmer clime. She spread her arms and closed her eyes and twirled a slow circle around.
She’d needed this for so long that she almost did not know what to do with it. But she was going to find out.
As the space in her chest fought to accommodate the rise of feelings, the rush of hope finally allowed her to truly inflate her lungs. The leaves around her crumbled to the touch even as more of them floated down to crown her head and shoulders. Some things in her were crumbling, too, even as others — light as golden feathers — came to rest like beacons on a path back to who she was.
For Sue Vincent’s WritePhoto challenge: Copper
Na’ama, so wonderfully paced. I enjoyed your metaphors. Hear my cheer for this person as she breaks out of her box ❤
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Thank you, friend. So many get locked into the drudgery of day-to-day and the demands of what appears to be the only things that matter … and they forget the pace of other things, and the need for flow – not only of time and nature, but of their own requirements of soul.
A friend of mine recently found herself surprised by her own emerging needs – her nest empty, she did not know anymore what she was outside of the roles she’d played. She was on my mind as I wrote this, though it is so many of us, intertwined, in different times and ways, sometimes …
May we all find the path back to who we are.
Na’ama
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Wow, this is beautiful. I feel the swell of love (or spirit) released. I can smell the air, inhale deeply of it, spread my wings and fly. Your story carries me there
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Thank you, Crispina! I’m so very glad the atmosphere and the process was transmitted on the words. The photo was so beautifully conductive to this story for me! 🙂
Here’s to flying wherever it is one’s spirit needs to.
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Grins in delight! 🙂
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🙂
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Truly beautiful, Na’ama… Finding the way to be free, priceless.,.
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Thank you! So many are on their own hamster wheels, not aware that they are missing whole parts of themselves in the process … May more find their way to whatever their path back to themselves is …
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I’m sure that reading your poems will help those people a lot, Na’ama…
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Aww! Thank you – that’s such a lovely thing to say! 🙂 XO
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Reblogged this on anita dawes and jaye marie.
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Very beautiful, Na’ama. I wonder how many of us are so tight-wound and boxed that we don’t even realise how much we need this?
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Thank you, Sue! I suspect many of us are, to different degrees … And no better way to find out and release some of the scrunchness than to go out into nature, or do what one’s soul may be whispering one needs, and do a little maintenance …
🙂
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I am lucky to have a dog who needs to walk in the fields every day…but I still look forward to my monthly ‘escapes’ to the moors. 🙂
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Yep, sounds like good maintenance to me! I live a short walk from Central Park, which is my respite of sanity year-round, with supplemental beach/other-nature excursions as possible. 🙂
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I am very lucky to have fields over the back fence of my garden. I am always close to Nature. 🙂
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This is wonderful!
As NYC goes, I’m one of the lucky ones, given how close I am to the park. 🙂
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I ama city girl by birth, and love the buzz, but would hate to have to live in a city again.
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I hear you. It is a love-hate thing. I grew up in a small town, bordered by untamed fields. I love being close to nature. I also liked many aspects of the City, and I think that if I did not have Central Park almost in my backyard, I would wilt.
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I can understand that. It is all about balance in the end.
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Yep, all about balance, and life as it moves and flows and shifts and priorities may change. All for the good! 🙂
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Indeed 🙂
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🙂
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Gorgeously written. So evocative. Beautiful and moving.
Adele Ryan McDowell, Ph.D.
AdeleRyanMcDowell.com Adeleandthepenguin.com MakingPeacewithSuicide.com Channeledgrace.com
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Thank you, dear Adele! 🙂 XOXO to you, who knows the power of nature to connect heart and soul and spirit and mind.
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Thank you, Sue!
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I cried when I read this. My own journey—out of a corner office and onto a beach—felt like reclaiming something I never realized I’d so willingly given up. THANK YOU!
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Wow, Barb, this is the best kind of feedback! Thank YOU! I’m so glad this spoke to you, and I’m glad the truth of it resonated. We all need recalibrating, and sometimes we wait a bit too long between times of listening to our spirit’s needs.
I am so very gratified that my words spoke to you. “Not all tears are an evil” (as said Gandalf), and it seems those weren’t either.
Thank you again for reading and for this comment! Na’ama
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I like the way your story meanders like a forest path then goes on to find it’s core, it’s centre. Beautifully done.
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Thank you Suzanne!!
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We all need this. Thanks for giving us a glimpse and reason to seek it for ourselves. (K)
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So glad it resonated, and yes – what a lovely comment! – we all do need to seek ourselves, to ourselves, and course-correct or get some respite when we can. So we not lose our way. 🙂 Na’ama
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Thank you, Sue!
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