The
last time I stayed up all night I was so excited about getting up before 3
a.m.
to chant psalms at Vigils that I couldn’t sleep. I sat on my bed in my little
room in the guest house of the Trappist monastery in Kentucky where I was on retreat and
read a little from Kazantzakis’ novel about Saint Francis of Assissi and tried
to meditate. Saint Francis has always been a vitally important and iconic
figure for me, singularly compelling even before I began this part of my
spiritual journey. I remember reading part of the Kazantzakis novel, for
instance, back in Athens , Georgia , in the spring of 1996, not
long before I left town on what felt like a whim to me at the time. I had been
full of fear and despair then, and the book had been inexplicably comforting to
me. I think I put it aside pretty fast when I moved in with my mother in the
little mountain town where I still live now, some seventeen years later. At any
rate, I didn’t sleep at all last month, that first hot July night on retreat at
Gethsemani, even though I was exhausted from the long drive. I went into that
odd, liminal space where shadows play games with the edges of a person’s
eyesight and sounds sing songs that aren’t there. I know I was just really
tired, but I felt keenly alive and powerfully happy. Almost giddy with joy,
really. The monastery church there has a specific scent, as does the one in Georgia , an aroma that is both earthy
and austere, but in a totally different way from the granite and evergreen and
moss of Arabia Mountain . Not wild like a landscape
but not exactly domesticated, either. I went into the church a little early and
sat in the back, where the retreatants sit during the liturgy of the Hours, and
just waited for things to begin. It was very dark, very quiet. The silence was
broken by almost nothing, only a few small sounds here and there, just the
settling of wood, the whisper of small wind against glass, and the breath of
the body of everything, dark and kind and unknowable and empty in the absence
of song and speech.
Monday, August 5, 2013
the last time
It was last season, before all the leaves fell. I sat by a fire and renewed it when it diminished and read poems and wrote some things down in my notebook. I listened to the quiet. I held my old gray cat against my bare knee and rubbed his head. I thought about my grandmother and her painting and how she didn't start doing it till she was over fifty. I took some pictures of small things: a silver pendant, an old acorn I found under a tree in
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About Me
- Laura
- Georgia, United States
- I live at the edge of the forest in a little town in the north Georgia mountains. I teach sixth grade Language Arts and am writing a memoir of sorts about family, spirituality, and narrative. I am also exploring a possible writing project having to do with contemporary lay contemplative experience and how it might be informed by the Desert Fathers and Mothers of early Christianity. I am a relatively recent convert to Roman Catholicism and an admirer of Pope Francis, Leonardo Boff, Joan Chittister, and Richard Rohr. I'm a Lay Associate of Our Lady of the Holy Spirit Monastery in Conyers, Georgia. I am interested in indigenous cultures, narratives, and spirituality, especially how these can inform my spirituality as a lay contemplative. I write, read, take pictures, play around with creating ephemera from paper and cloth and other organic things. I cook, hike, watch wildlife, and collect random bits of interesting oddness, both tangible and abstract. I am a seer of smallness and a caretaker of ridiculous minutiae. If you want, e-mail me at riverrun67@gmail.com or lksorrells@hotmail.com.