Author Archives: Paula Josa-Jones

balance

I saw these rocks walking on Philbin beach on Martha’s Vineyard last week.  I have been thinking about balance – about the dynamic, fluid, elusive quality of balance – emotional, physical, relational – about finding it, losing it, finding it again.  I am interested in the way that each action or event in our lives creates a series of reactions and corrections – a relentless, inevitable experience of fall and recovery.

When I was just starting to study movement and somatics, it was a revelation to discover that the simple act of walking was about falling out of and regaining balance.  I am curious about how much work I invest in not falling.  And what is falling?  Failure? Loss? Disappointment?  Fear?

Our oldest daughter’s announcement of an unexpected, unwanted (by us) pregnancy and subsequent TOTAL recalibration of her life path and our careful plans for her was a big fall. (An old AA joke:  Want to know how to make God laugh?  Tell him your plans.)

I wrote this in my journal a few weeks ago:  We are here.  She is poised at the precipice.  She stumbles, her body jerks and then her feet leave the ground and she is in freefall.  We stand below, watching her plummet.  I pray.  Is there a moment when falling becomes flight?

Yesterday we bought her the first little onesie and a couple pieces of clothing to accommodate her growing belly.  We are planning a wedding.  She is happy.  Over the weeks, we as a family are stumbling and teetering toward a new and unexpected balance, one which feels to me like flight, like swimming, like faith.

 

 

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shining moon

This is the daughter who lives right out to her edges, who gives herself to the moment, who is becoming, day by day,  the fiercest, boldest spirit I know.

She has called to my attention recently, the ways in which I have been a less than perfect mother.  The ways that my own obsessions and carelessness have wounded her.   A part of me aches and sorrows.   Another part is deeply proud of her courage in telling me.  A hard and painful mother-daughter moment.  And an opportunity for greater clarity and compassion moving forward. An opportunity too, to forgive myself.

I want nothing that I do or say to stand in the way of her greatness, her possibility, her love of herself and of the world she is moving into.  Her name in Hindi means “shining moon.”  And indeed she is.

another poetry angel

Thanks to Emma Gorenberg (herself a brilliant poet) for this poem

Inventing a Horse

By Meghan O’Rourke

Inventing a horse is not easy.

One must not only think of the horse.
One must dig fence posts around him.
One must include a place where horses like to live;
or do when they live with humans like you.
Slowly, you must walk him in the cold;
feed him bran mash, apples;
accustom him to the harness;
holding in mind even when you are tired
harnesses and tack cloths and saddle oil
to keep the saddle clean as a face in the sun;
one must imagine teaching him to run
among the knuckles of tree roots,
not to be skittish at first sight of timber wolves,
and not to grow thin in the city,
where at some point you will have to live;
and one must imagine the absence of money.
Most of all, though: the living weight,
the sound of his feet on the needles,
and, since he is heavy, and real,
and sometimes tired after a run
down the river with a light whip at his side,
one must imagine love
in the mind that does not know love,
an animal mind, a love that does not depend
on your image of it,
your understanding of it;
indifferent to all that it lacks:
a muzzle and two black eyes
looking the day away, a field empty
of everything but witchgrass, fluent trees,
and some piles of hay.

Meghan O’Rourke, “Inventing a Horse” from Halflife. Copyright © 2007 by Meghan O’Rourke.  Reprinted by permission of W. W. Norton & Company, In