February 2013
Goa, India
I awaken to the sweet sound of songbirds chirping in the
coconut trees outside my hut, mixed in with the lapping of waves and crows
talking to each other. I’m overcome with a sense of bitter-sweetness. I’m both
happy and sad.
It’s happy-sad time. The end of an era. I am finally admitting to myself, filled with this
happy-sadness, that I’m going through a death process. Grief is hitting me hard
here in India, even while back home (yes, I am finally referring to the U.S. as
“home” again, for now) the new visions and renewed relations are so nourishing
and inviting.
I’m in a year of transition. According to numerology, my
Tarot card for 2013 is The Hanged Man. It’s about a complete change in
perspective, and surrendering completely. Letting go of that which we held dear
for so very long, with faith that Life Itself is bringing a new chapter in.
Things will never, ever be the same for me again. The last
twelve years were beyond the beyond for me, as I was spiritually COOKING.
Melting down in a crucible called India. That chapter has ended, the cooking
completed within the crucible of transformation as my two great gurus – Mother India and my spiritual teacher – were
the keepers of the forge.
The last three years encompassed the slow ‘n steady turning of the Great
Wheel of Life. This is the long reentry back to a more western-centric existence. But even if I know the turn of events is inevitable, my soul
is still playing catch-up, or come-down, as it were, and the sky is crying over
it.
Literally. It is raining off and on, unseasonably, here in Goa. The rains
mirror my grief, a washing of the soul to make way for something new. Sitting
here in my beach hut in south Goa, tears fill my eyes and my heart seizes.
India is one of my soul mates – imagine! An entire nation!
She will always hold a seat of honor in my soul. But my relationship with Her
IS changing. She has to step down from being priority #1 – “The One” – in order
to make way for new loves and horizons to emerge in my life.
Attempting to feel that old magic is futile. When we have
moved on from a life chapter, we’ve moved on. Like I said, this turning of the wheel, this
time of “closure” has lasted three years. Death can take a long time. As I feel a sense of an old identity
dying, I’m acutely aware that grief is an honest emotion. It is so pure. It is
critical in its place of creating space for the next chapter. But it need not
turn into mourning which is an emotional identification with the past, an
unnecessary clinging to “the way we were.”
Indeed, I could drop into reverie now of ‘the way things
were’ all those years ago when I first touched down in Delhi twelve years ago,
but those blogs have been written in real time and they’ve been compiled into
books. I could bitch and moan no end about the changes here in India and how
it’s just not the same – the skyrocketing prices, the disrespect to customs that
make for real eyesores, the love/hate of technology showing up – mobile phones,
Internet, and satellite television. And the newly emerging sense of consumption that India is inheriting from the West as it strives to speed up its
status on the developing nation stage.
Perhaps I will write more on these things. But for now, just
for today, The Sky Is Crying*.
I am so glad I recognize grief. It’s one of the gifts of
time, and getting older. Yes, the gifts. When we feel it fully, we know we’re
ending a life chapter. And, while we’re not fully stepped into the next flow,
we can trust through wisdom that Something New will emerge.
My first Big Grief was divorce at 28, representing end of
youth. The second Big Grief was death of my guru at 38, a transition into
becoming my own spiritual master. And now, here is my third Big Grief, the ending
of a long-term, all-encompassing love affair with a nation.
This particular 5-week trip is about honoring the work I’ve
done here over the years. It’s also about severing the ties. Making sure no
stone has been left unturned before I part ways. The power of new love, new ventures, new vistas back in the
U.S. holds promise. I am excited to get going on my second book (the Bindi Girl
sequel) and other projects and collaborations with others. But the
grieving process is a primarily solo, internal one. It does feel
vacuous, it is exhausting, and the whole point is that it can’t really
be assuaged. Perhaps, if it
could be lessened, it would mean that it wasn’t really over. And it is.
It can feel like you’re abandoning your lover, or that she
is abandoning you. The scythe hurts. Even if no one has done the abandoning – it’s just happened as a part of
natural life cycles – the leaving, the ending happened on its own through no
intention or fault. But the ending
process MUST be completely experienced. There IS a period at the end of the
last sentence of a life chapter.
Let us not forget: real love never dies. The story ends, but
not the love, nor the gratitude. No matter the external changes in circumstances,
in loyalties, in the love we shared with a person, a place, a time of life –
the love will endure. It is a flower in the heart. The tears water the new
seeds of growth which shall bear springtime blossoms. We are rich. And it
is beautiful.
*THE SKY IS CRYING
Can’t you see the tears roll down the street?
~ Blues standard (Elmore James)
India might not be your "lover" now, but India will always be your friend and will welcome you back with open arms as a long lost friend should you return. And yes, I agree about the modernisation of India. Very sad as I work with many young Indians in their 20s who have no spiritual interest at all. They are losing their culture and values to Western Globalisation.
ReplyDeleteThat is a touching and beautiful piece of honesty. Well done Erin... and Welcome Home!
ReplyDeleteThank you Erin for your inspiration. I can indentify with this profound process.
ReplyDeleteBright blessings,
Jill
Thanks Erin for sharing your airy Gemini desire to communicate with us! I am going through a similar process to you and it was really comforting to find that I am not going completely bats, because others go through the same thing and share similar feelings. Thanks too for your thoughts on India, a place I would really LOVE to visit before it becomes too unbearably consumerist. Good luck with your transition, and hope to be in touch very soon.
ReplyDeleteTake care,
Marg.
Well put, I can't wait to see where this takes you and I am very excited about a Bindi Girl sequel.
ReplyDeleteI am also very excited to see where this will take you! What new words will flow next?! Thanks for sharing your unique perceptions with us. Keep on rolling...
ReplyDelete