Whom
did I meet in Greece? Well, Jane Matthews for one. I’ve been tweeting
with Jane for several years and loved her book Have the Best Year of your Life (O Books). So the opportunity of
doing one of her courses was too tempting to pass by.
Jane’s
book is all about encouraging you to try different things, every day of the
year. Some are fun, some are comforting, some are nourishing and nurturing and
some aim to push you outside your comfort zone. I like that she’s not
prescriptive – it’s very much do what you can, do what you fancy, try things
out. Then again, she warns that, if something really pushes your buttons, if
there’s something you really really don’t
want to do – well, hey, that’s probably exactly the thing you need to do the most.
So, in lovely Nikiana, just three of us met, very informally, and talked and meditated together. Jane was as delightful as I'd imagined - warm, kind, supportive, generous in mind, heart and spirit.
She suggested some simple exercises – often just
asking a few questions that, yes, pushed the buttons. She asked us what we felt deprived of, what
we yearned for. ‘If you suddenly had a free day and no limits of any kind what
would you do with it?’ Oh.
One day Jane showed us a little canvas she’d painted – all bright and positive and
sparkly. I suddenly thought how nice it would be to do something similar for James. He had
asked for a Greek god but they were thin on the ground (seriously guys, you’re
missing a marketing opportunity here) so I thought I’d paint him a
picture instead. To show my love for him. Something pure and joyful.
It all started off
so well…I sat on my terrace and painted the canvas a cheery clear yellow. Then
added a bright orange and red heart. I
figured I’d simply put LOVE in big letters across the whole thing. Keep it simple. But my mind strayed…away from the pure simple love of a mother for her child...and my fingers followed
suit. The colours darkened; I gave up on
the brush and let my fingers smear paint while a fingernail tore spirals…
Oh
hell. And I moved back to the edge of
the sea, to that inbetween place, twixt sea and shore and watched the waves
again. And then I gave up on paint and
turned to words…which tumbled out like this...
Love
isn’t simple and neat.
It’s
not a pure red heart with sharp clean edges.
It
gets messy.
It changes shape, the
colours merge.
You
uncover things, you discover things…
about yourself, about the other.
It
isn’t always hearts and flowers. It’s
thunderstorms and ice.
It’s
turbulent seas, waves lashing the beach…trying to hurt the stones.
How
can you hurt a stone?
But
slowly, slowly, the sea dissolves …and the stone gives in…
Becomes
smaller, less stone…until finally, sand, it is swept up by the sea.
Raptured.
Is
it an equal partnership, this wearing away?
This dissolving, this giving in to a relentless battering?
How
would it be to be two waves instead?
Dancing.
Separating. Coming back together.
Never
ever truly apart…just differentiating from time to time…
Before
joining again.
Joy-ing?
8 comments:
This love poem of yours is a true beauty in deed.
I'm all ways inspired by the waves... :)
How would it be to be two waves instead?
Dancing. Separating. Coming back together.
Never ever truly apart…just differentiating from time to time…
Before joining again.
Joy-ing?
I like that a lot :)
This is SO beautiful, Jane! The waves truly inspire you.
My horoscope told me that I was going to be swept away by love today and it's been turning up all day. I guess it was right, after all.
♥
I think I need to get this book! It's so easy to go with the flow and not try new things, but how can we know if we don't give it a go? Read this blog post just at the right time, the tonic I've been searching for! I'm looking forward to the smearing of paint! xx
Si beau, quand c'est écrit comme ça avec talent.
J'aime.
Roger
I was captured by your poetry - wonderful and so thought provoking.
Lovely, Jane. You know I love the sea. And sand. And stones...
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