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Author Topic: coolwaterflows  (Read 6599 times)

Offline coolwaterflows

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coolwaterflows
« on: March 06, 2008, 06:40:01 PM »
I have been through a lot-- too much, actually, to go into depth here.  But I am at a loss in trying to explain where I am at now, currently, without first explaining where I have been.  Surely, my present will make little sense if not colored by some of the events that have lead me to this very place.  And really, our past is not all that separate from our present-in the same way that the last sentence of a great novel is meaningless without everything that came before it.

About ten years ago I had a psychic earthquake that reduced me to rubble.  My very foundations cracked and I was left destitute.  Horribly depressed, broken, and alone, I made a definitive choice to rebuild.  Not knowing exactly what that entailed or how long it would last, blind, I began to feel my way towards recovery.  But before long, I found quite unexpectedly, that I had help-- though it wasn't necessarily through friends or family.  Strange coincidences began to occur on a somewhat frequent basis.  They blew my mind.  I tried to explain the phenomena to those around me, but no one had any clue as to what I was talking about.  And the more I became aware of them, the more I began noticing them.  But even more than that, they seemed to be filled with meaning.  They seemed to propel me ahead.  They seemed to be trying to communicate.

So I learned to listen to them and trust them like a confidant. They lead me to teachers who would aid me in my rebuilding process.  As I followed the synchronicity, I began to notice that in every situation, I could glean something.  And as I began to grow and heal, this new world opened up to me and seemingly no one else.  Despite all of my egoistic, subversive efforts, if I just quieted myself, listened and followed, I would benefit every time.

Still, recovery was slow.  But after ten years of lots of ups and downs, I managed to find a sort of stability.  The coincidences lead me to Jung and I read with absolute amazement that many of my experiences were already on paper, detailed to the finest.  I found, much to my relief, that others lived a similar path.

Two summers ago, I road tripped with a friend to the Grand Canyon. Halfway, we stopped at an Indian reservation to cool off in the Colorado River.  The river was swift and murky, as if some mountain hundreds of miles upstream was melting into it.  We walked a half-mile up the river and waded in.  Before I even knew it, the current had sucked me in.  I didn't panic, not at first, as I treaded water all the while watching the banks rushing by.  A huge eddy, the size of large swimming pool pulled me into its clutches.  And there, I was left to fight against the current.  But I quickly realized that my strength was nothing compared to the might of that great river.  No matter how much energy I expended, I could do nothing.  For the first time in my entire life, I was utterly and completely powerless.  My fate was solely in the hands of the river.  I couldn't swim to shore; it was futile.  So I gave up.

And its funny, the exact moment I surrendered, the river, like the Great Mother embodied, picked me up in the palm of her hand and carried me to shore.  It seems all I had to do was stop fighting and I was saved.

When I got home, I made a black bracelet.  Though I wasn't conscious of it at the time, I think it signified my death.  Somehow, even though my life was spared in that river, I died.  Or maybe my old self, the one that was devastated so long ago in that psychic earthquake, was finally put to rest, leaving a new being in its place.

***

But since then, little has changed.  Life, in all its duality, still pulls me in opposite directions.  I still find myself seeking, but I have forgotten what exactly I am looking for.  Something still lies out there for me-- or within me.  In the time that has elapsed since the incident, I have deduced that my whole Colorado River experience was a lesson.  It wasn't just a random, scary accident devoid of meaning.  No, somehow it was a metaphor.  A metaphor for how I'm supposed to live this Life.  After all, aren't we all floating on a river, waiting for it to eventually spill into the same vast ocean?

littlefeather

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #1 on: March 06, 2008, 06:47:49 PM »

No, somehow it was a metaphor.  A metaphor for how I'm supposed to live this Life. 


I like how the swift and murky river turns into cool water flowing.  Very nice.

Offline mayflow

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #2 on: March 06, 2008, 08:05:37 PM »
Ego crouches and pounces. Me? Eh' whartever. The whole thing seemed as egobound as egobound can be, though. No offense, but that's my take.

Ick.


Endless Whisper

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #3 on: March 06, 2008, 08:08:39 PM »
Hi CWF,

Yeah, the Colorado river is being threatened with its own extinction if the good old southwest doesnt begin getting better rain, out of the drought they've been in for years. Glad to hear Mother floated you safely to shore. She probably hasn't done that for everyone, welcome ;)

Offline daphne

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #4 on: March 06, 2008, 08:31:41 PM »
Ego crouches and pounces. Me? Eh' whartever. The whole thing seemed as egobound as egobound can be, though. No offense, but that's my take.

Ick.



What "whole thing" is it that you are seeing as egobound, Mayflow? Do share!

Offline daphne

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #5 on: March 06, 2008, 08:35:47 PM »
I still find myself seeking, but I have forgotten what exactly I am looking for. 

I can relate to that!  heh..  memory's a bugger!

oh, btw welcome to our happy abode, coolwaterflows... (lost my manners too.. somewhere...)
« Last Edit: March 06, 2008, 08:37:37 PM by daphne »

Endless Whisper

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #6 on: March 06, 2008, 08:42:55 PM »
Ego crouches and pounces. Me? Eh' whartever. The whole thing seemed as egobound as egobound can be, though. No offense, but that's my take.

Ick.



Well lets not be judging someone from one post. Technically the portal is to make your statement, about you. So there's gonna be some ego mixed in it. Its all good.

Offline mayflow

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #7 on: March 07, 2008, 03:02:37 AM »
Ha! I kept thinking about this too. Then I had a vision. I was floating down a river in a canyon, then went down a waterfall and it was exhilerating, but I never hit the bottom, but instead turned into a luminous being in the mist of the waterfall, and I looked around and there were many other luminous beings there as well. Cool waters flow. Also, these luminous beings would shoot out somesort of somethings into distant galaxies much faster than the speed of light and these somethings would return and go off into many other galaxies again and return and they created a vast and always glimmering luminous web. Very pretty!

Then I said "Siddhartha cannot free me but only I can and I cannot free another but only they can" and a Zen master said to find out who it is that binds me and I said "No one!" and he smiled and flew off like a bird.
« Last Edit: March 07, 2008, 03:04:42 AM by mayflow »

Offline coolwaterflows

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #8 on: March 07, 2008, 05:49:10 PM »
Ego crouches and pounces. Me? Eh' whartever. The whole thing seemed as egobound as egobound can be, though. No offense, but that's my take.

Ick.



Wow.  Ouch. 

Honestly, I was pretty taken aback to get such a response.  I don't know what response I was expecting, but not something so, um, biting.  I thought for quite a long time how to respond to such a statement.  After all, I do respect everyone here, all the posts are quite enlightening... I did read all that I could before I posted.  And I thought that my experiences would meld with the others in this forum. 

Egobound...  Ok.  Maybe so...  Maybe that's how I came across...  maybe I am.  Point taken.  But maybe not as much as you think, based only on a post.

I was unsure if I would post again.  Tail hanging between my legs, I thought much about your words, Mayflow, last night and today.  And then I came across a quote.  Not from the Buddha, the Dalai Lama or any other wiseman, but from Larry Bowa, the Los Angeles Dodgers' new third base coach.  In today's LA times, he says:

"First, if you are a kid and that sensitive about a veteran's comments, shame on you,"

So I faced your thoughts, internalizing them.  Looking at them. 

Then, Bowa says "But second, if you are a veteran and have a problem with a kid, you need to lead by example, work hard every play, run out every ground ball."

Ego crouches and pounces?  Ok.  But surely ego was not the only animal on the prowl.

littlefeather

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #9 on: March 07, 2008, 11:04:34 PM »
"First, if you are a kid and that sensitive about a veteran's comments, shame on you,"

 

"But second, if you are a veteran and have a problem with a kid, you need to lead by example, work hard every play, run out every ground ball."


Good advice.
 ;D
I am going to remember these words.  Thanks coolwater.

Endless Whisper

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #10 on: March 08, 2008, 12:01:15 AM »
Tigers crouch :D

Offline mayflow

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #11 on: March 08, 2008, 12:43:33 AM »
Wow.  Ouch. 

Honestly, I was pretty taken aback to get such a response.  I don't know what response I was expecting, but not something so, um, biting.  I thought for quite a long time how to respond to such a statement.  After all, I do respect everyone here, all the posts are quite enlightening... I did read all that I could before I posted.  And I thought that my experiences would meld with the others in this forum. 

Egobound...  Ok.  Maybe so...  Maybe that's how I came across...  maybe I am.  Point taken.  But maybe not as much as you think, based only on a post.

I was unsure if I would post again.  Tail hanging between my legs, I thought much about your words, Mayflow, last night and today.  And then I came across a quote.  Not from the Buddha, the Dalai Lama or any other wiseman, but from Larry Bowa, the Los Angeles Dodgers' new third base coach.  In today's LA times, he says:

"First, if you are a kid and that sensitive about a veteran's comments, shame on you,"

So I faced your thoughts, internalizing them.  Looking at them. 

Then, Bowa says "But second, if you are a veteran and have a problem with a kid, you need to lead by example, work hard every play, run out every ground ball."

Ego crouches and pounces?  Ok.  But surely ego was not the only animal on the prowl.

This Bowa guy is a coach so it is for him to bring out the best in the players. To be a helper, an enabler I suppose. So, we all have internal coaches I would think. Like something in you didn't just lay down and quit, but took to the challenge. But that comes from within you as well as if you would have just walked away would have come from within you. Hidden Tiger.

Offline daphne

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #12 on: March 08, 2008, 12:45:04 AM »

I was unsure if I would post again.  Tail hanging between my legs, I thought much about your words, Mayflow, last night and today.

Don't be overly concerned, Mayflow has a pattern of biting new people..   ;)

Offline Michael

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #13 on: March 08, 2008, 11:58:44 AM »
Ego crouches and pounces. Me? Eh' whartever. The whole thing seemed as egobound as egobound can be, though. No offense, but that's my take.

Ick.



Ick May! Still killing wild cats?

Offline mayflow

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Re: coolwaterflows
« Reply #14 on: March 08, 2008, 05:20:37 PM »
Ick May! Still killing wild cats?

No, I am better now. I've been working on making them into baseball players, but they are just not very good no matter how much I show them how to run out all the ground balls. Still, we seem to have fun together, and they have taught me that winning a baseball game is not as fun as playing it. They just suck at rules, but I can't help loving them anyways.

Oddly, it seems that the more I try to teach them, the more I seem to learn from them.