grandma's
wisdom
by deAnne hampton
Yesterday, at the end of a long day, within a life that often
feels too full of change to find any real rest...I had an image
of myself closing my eyes and slipping slowly beneath the water's
surface.
No struggle. No desperation. The sense was that of a need for
more than just sleep.
I
was slipping beneath this calm, peaceful, timeless well of wait,
to be soothed in my surrender.
Perhaps
some inner divine grace, seeking my growth and becoming, was
asking me to enter the question instead of following it around
each day.
Turning
it over and over in my mind like a leaf that gets caught by
the wind and seems to have a life of its own. The question that
summons us from a deep and holy place within, like the animated
leaf, is just an illusion that busies our mind and keeps us
unaware of the source.
God
often puts truth in unorthodox places.
Slipping
beneath the water for deep rest and renewal from the constant
questions of my life, I found a long ago and forgotten memory.
A memory of my grandmother and me.
Though
shes been gone from this life for over twenty years...I
still consider her to be one of the wisest and purest people
I have ever known.
I remember spending the night with her, as I often did, lying
in a double bed together after the lights were out. She told
me a story, as she often did , but on this particular night
I could not get to sleep. I, in my seven or eight year old body,
was fidgety, antsy, uncomfortable. Something wasnt right.
I felt an ache in my legs that I was doing my best to hide.
But the tears and small sniffles gave me away. The moment grandmas
voice of concern came out of the looming darkness, I cried.
As was always the case with the woman I believed had a direct
line to God, she assuaged every false assumption that something
must be terribly wrong with me and began to massage the
little legs and ankles and feet that wanted nothing more than
to be able to fill her shoes. She assured me that the prickling
needles and twisting that felt like vines gripping the ability
to walk right out of my legs was growing pains.
And from her treasure chest of wisdom that awes me to this day
she added, Sometimes it hurts to grow. God often
puts truth in unorthodox places.
I might add then, and now, sometimes it is scary, too.
When the aching breaks into our lives, through the stretching
skin of a small child or the shedding skin of an emerging soul...
we must somehow find the courage to say yes.
Just let the questions go and say yes! Go right to their center
and LIVE the questions out loud.
I
feel a shift occurring from that deep well of holiness that
provides both respite and the seed of my becoming. A shift from
the collective they to the individual I.
I
think the first half of our lives is spent developing the ego
and following a rapid flowing river of questions. The second
half we get to develop the soul.
Enter
the question and sink beneath the still waters in wait. An incubation
of sorts. And somewhere from within the stillness I am reminded
of the words of Henry David Thoreau: Nothing can be more
useful to a man than the determination not to be hurried.
Waiting can be a time of fertile emptiness.
Sometimes
we cannot get in touch with what we really know until we let
go of what we think we know. About life. Its meaning. Our purpose
within it.
It
is a cultural myth really that waiting is doing nothing.
Often busyness and speed can be a way to avoid the inner conditions
of our lives the secret yearnings and quiet desperation.
I
am beginning to believe that in my waiting, I meet with my bravest
self.
It
is NOT doing nothing. I am giving my soul permission to grow
into its magnificence and allowing love to transform me. Again
and again.
In
transformationwe collaborate with grace and determine
to BE the answer to all of our questions.
DeAnne
Hampton is a former teacher and is currently in private practice as
a therapist. She sees herself more as a light on the path
for those inspired and yearning to change, yet in need of a
support system. She has just completed a book she on Interior
Joy! She can be reached at 828-296-0630 or mtnjoy2@cs.com.

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