Category Archives: moving, breathing, feeling

mountains & sprites?!

Jean-Baptiste Monge

For the past ten or so years, Pam and I have worked with a brilliant intuitive healer.  He has cleared monstrous cases of Lyme for a couple friends of ours, has peeled away the weird persistent onion layers of my allergies and for the most part helped us navigate some bodily stuff without the help of traditional medicine.

He is also plugged in to the unseen in other ways.  During a recent phone consult, when we asked why our house hasn’t sold, he told us that the resident sprites do not want us to leave.  They like us, they want us here.  Also, the mountains that surround us don’t want us to leave.  Oy!!!  What to do???

About six weeks ago I put out our dilapitated Thai spirit house to placate any resident unhappy spirits.  It was supposed to help them stay out of our way because they have a great place to hang out.  Was this a mistake?

I have no idea what to do about the mountains.  I tried talking to them today and they were completely distant and taciturn.  Dismissive, even. I have no idea how to placate a mountain.  Or a sprite for that matter.

Tomorrow I am going to meditate to see if I can tune into their frequency and explain why we would like to move on.  Perhaps create a little mountain and sprite dance.

 

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save this date!

All the Pretty Horses is nearing completion.  It has been two years in the making, what with the dreaming, the planning, the fundraising, the rehearsals.

Now it is so close that we can all taste it.  The cast includes horses Portia, Sonata, Angel, Charlie, Mandy and of course the brilliant Mustang, Amado, ridden by the equally brilliant Summer Brennan.  Riders include Lis Spoto (who also vaults) Christina Hinkle and young rider Julia.The humans are dancers Ingrid Schatz, DeAnna Pellecchia, Daniele DeVito, Nicole DeWolf, Amanda Michie, Sandy Gautier, Chandrika Carl-Jones and little horsegirls Gianna and Emmy.  Finally, there is the lovely Ryder Cooley who brings her saw playing and singing skills to the mix.

The performance is a benefit for the important work that Little Brook Farm does, including the rescue and sanctuary for abused and neglected horses that were sent for slaughter, and a second-to-none education program that reaches out to over 80 community organizations in the upstate New York area.

Date: October 6

Time:  3:30 pm

Where:  Little Brook Farm, 548 County RT 13, Old Chatham, NY 12136

Tickets:  518-821-5506  or 518-794-8104

wild woman

I have been saving this image.  It is a photograph of a painting that I bought in Stuttgart about ten years ago.  I was walking down the street and saw it in a window, and that was it. This is how I want to feel when I am riding.  Actually, this is how I want to feel when I am writing, or dancing, or swimming.

I want to feel like a wild woman most of the time.  That gets harder as I get older.  Why?  I think it has to do with expectations, mine and those of others.  I think it has to do with assumptions.  The ones that I make about myself, that are made about me.  The ones that I make are most damaging.  They are the ones that really get under my skin.  They inform the way I see myself, carry myself.  They are insidious, harsh, soul-killing.

The body-mind connection is real.  When the mind shudders or stumbles, the body does follow. Little fissures erupt along the fault lines.  Over time, they widen into chasms.  Unless we see it coming, notice the erosive little thought inroads and make a different choice.

That is why I need images like this.  They remind me of my wilder side.  They keep me in the saddle.  They keep me flying.  They help me to see my most glorious, most valiant self.

What keeps you wild?

 

a little story

A Mole Salamander

The house on Rockland Road where I was living at the time was small.  A cottage, really, with just a story and a half.  It was delicious lying in the bedroom at night, under a skylight that was just a few feet above the bed.  The stars seemed so close, so touchable, so intimate.  Like you could scoop them up with you hand, because the bed seemed to be floating in them.

In the basement lived a salamander.  I did not know it was there for many months.  The basement was dank and dark with ledges of rock at the back.  Cavelike, womblike – a damp, secret place.  One day I came down to check a fuse and saw a small head peering out from a small hole in the cement floor that was under a step.  I did not know what it was.  I watched it.  It watched me.  When I approached, it withdrew, shy, fearful.  I withdrew to the upstairs.  I started to visit it daily, sometimes more than once.  I wanted to find out who it was, why it was there, and if it was in trouble and needed rescue.

It felt odd to name the salamander, but I felt that was the only way to deepen our relationship.  I called it Blue.  I read about salamanders – this one is spotted, with blue-black oily skin and rows of yellowish, orange spots that went  from the top of the head down the body.  At least I assumed this. I could not see it.  I did some research:

The spotted salamander usually makes its home around hardwood forest areas. They must have a pond as that is the only place they can lay eggs. A spotted salamander spends most of its time beneath ground level. It hides in moist areas under moss-covered logs or stones. These salamanders are secretive and will only exit their underground home on warm rainy nights in Spring, to breed and hunt. However, during the winter, they hibernate underneath ground level. Their defenses from predators include hiding in leaf litter or logs, and a poison, which is not harmful to humans. In ponds or wetlands they hide near the muddy bottoms or hide underneath leaves at the bottom. They have the ability to drop their tails, to distract predators. If a predator of the spotted salamander manages to dismember a part of a leg, tail, or even parts of the brain/head, then it can grow back a new one, although this takes a massive amount of energy. The spotted salamander, like other salamanders show great regenerative abilities, even being able to regenerate limbs and parts of organs.

Why was it in the basement?  Lost, I assumed, and definitely in need of help.  Over the next several weeks, I began to feed it and leave a small plate of water.  Lettuce, small bits of vegetation.  When I came down, I would occasionally see it further out of its hole – almost half-way.  I would sit and wait, some distance off to see if it would come out to eat.  It did, sliding out, spot by spot, to pull the food back into its cave.

On the day of his rescue, when I went down to feed him, Blue was all the way out of his little cave, and I managed to gently catch him carry it to the nearby swamp.  The same swamp where my cat, Hari, had been killed by dogs.  I felt quite sure that the salamander would not attract the attention of the dogs.  They wanted bigger, warmer prey.  Loosed into the black, leaf littered water, he wriggled under cover.  I said good bye and good luck, little Blue.

What does the hiding salamander have to do with me today?  Blue is the part of me (maybe you?) that is hiding, that is not fully out, that does not want to be seen.  The part that is not quite at home.  The part that is making do.  Also the part that is pretty adaptable and can find a way to make it work under less than idea circumstances.  The mole-ish, timid part that nonetheless comes out every day. The lizard-self that has great regenerative abilities, that is growing, making new, despite  or maybe even because of, the tremendous effort it requires.

What about you?