sweet, sweet earth
by bam

it was gasping for air, really.
i’d loped to the garage, grabbed the crusty old trowel, grabbed my prophylactic spritz bottle of stay-away-squirrels spray, and headed out to the secret sinuous side garden where i looked for a desperate patch crying for hope. crying for something to rise up in the spring, on the far side of the harsh and impending winter.
i was armed with a battery of bulbs, bulbs in various girths, fat ones that promised me daffodil, itty-bitty wisps of bulbs who promised me the tenderlings, snowdrops and siberian squill, and those space-age globes of allium, in this case promising a puff ball of blue. as pretty a thing to bury my nose in as i could imagine.
i’d somehow gotten the itch to give back, to give back to dear mama earth what she so unfailingly offers me: tender and certain shelter, jolt of resilience, undying promise that even if daunted she’s not going away. not yet anyway. not if we can muscle the forces to cease and desist with the trashing of the one glorious blue marble long, long ago entrusted to us.
a few mornings before, amid the cleaning and clearing and worrying, i’d leapt into the old red wagon, the car that takes me wherever i aim it, and i’d motored over to the store with the rows and bins of springtime bulbs, an adventure that’s something like a trip to the candy counter, only without the threat of cavities. i’d filled my arms, judiciously putting aside the bulbs that would have cost as much as a pound of burgers. and then, when the urge struck, i’d be stocked and ready to dig, bury, and someday behold.
i’ve always found it sacramental, the dropping to my knees, gashing into the surrendering soil, shaking a powder of bulb-boosting fortifier, and then carefully lifting just the right bulb for the purpose: to tuck in for the winter the concentrated pouch of promise. the thing that looks like a dried-up onion, laying it to rest in the shadow of autumn, nestling it soft against the earth’s curve, the earth’s cupped hands, the earth’s promise: i’ll take it from here.
and all winter long, through the ice and the wind that will pound at my windowpanes, my bevy of bulbs will be silently doing their thing, shooting down roots, stirring within.
the tasks of autumn are the stockpiling tasks, the turning-in ones. slip on an extra layer of sweater, slow roast the last of the tomatoes, make them last through the long months ahead. upholster the garden with unseen but certain patches of promise.
when your heart hurts or is heavy, i’ve found, it helps to ply tender ministrations to whomever or whatever falls in my path. this week it was my paltry patch of earth. there’ve been times when it was one of my boys, one whose knee or whose heart had been banged up and bloodied. or a friend who needed little more than a hot mug of tea and an hour of listening.
but the taking care of this holy earth is bigger even than that. it’s understanding how sacred it is at its core, and in its every blessed breath. go silent for a minute or two (or three or four) and simply keep watch: listen for the mournful cry of the geese veeing the sky. watch the leaves go gold. plop yourself at the water’s edge and marvel at its infinite rhythm.
i’ve just started reading a marvelous book by john philip newell, one titled, sacred earth, sacred soul, and like newell’s earlier books, it’s an exploration of celtic wisdoms, a reawakening of the ancient and eternal truths long ago snuffed nearly into extinction. it’s a book i’ve already managed to slather with my inky underlinings, page after page.
newell, once the warden of iona abbey, a sixth-century monastery rising up from a wee island off scotland in the roar of the north atlantic, beckons us to listen for the beat of the sacred deep within ourselves and one another, and deep within the body of the earth. sacred, he writes, “is not bound by religion.” sacred is the soulful knowing, the keen awareness, that deep down in all things — in the earth, and in everything that has been born — there pulses an inextinguishable holiness. it’s our task, our holy task, to sense it, to seize it: to see it, to feel it, to honor it. to make way for it, make an altar for it, hold it up high.
my bulb-burying the other morning might have been seen as just another autumnal chore. or, through the celtic lens, the lens of an ancient wisdom shared by all the world’s great religions, it’s that i was quietly tucking in visible manifestations, reminders come spring, that what pulses deep within the earth, deep within each of our souls and our selves, is something unflaggingly beautiful. and holy. at once tender and resilient.
digging those bulbs, turning newell’s pages, brought me back to a peaceful holy calm. and i filled my lungs with pure blessed air.
what brings you breath? what’s your understanding of sacred? and how do you sense the sacred within?
In 2016 my husband Steve and I were fortunate to spend a week with John Philip Newell on the Isle of Iona! A spiritual practice I learned from him and continue to this day goes like this:
I gently and reverently place my hand on my heart and feel my heartbeat, which is the heartbeat of God giving and sustaining my life and all life. I feel the energy and connection of the ONE. Abiding there for a while brings deep peace….my wish for all who are pulling up a chair here.
Be still MY heart. I can only imagine. ❤️❤️❤️
I agree wholeheartedly with Newell that “sacred” is not bound by religion. Just knowing that you have been spending quiet time tucking sweet spring bulbs into October earth brings me vicarious peace. What joy awaits, come spring. Makes me smile. xoxo
love that you zeroed right in on that especially emphatic point. i believe it’s the core of how my heart beats. all holy paths are paths i seek. xoxox may your weekend be blessed. and your spring emerge riotously.
JP Newell … I’m on the wait list at the library. Really look forward to it. Any peace welcome these days… 😘
my prediction: you’ll be enchanted……xoxoxox he pulls me into a deep deep place….
I am reading Sacred Earth Sacred Soul, as are you. Love knowing we are soaking in the same beauty. ❤️
Pretty sure you first introduced me to him. In person!!!! Forever grateful.❤️
it’s a relatively balmy (for october) golden sunday afternoon, and i’ve just clicked off from a rilke poetry conversation, with voices from across the globe. at the very end someone mentioned a rilke prayer/poem that’s taken my breath away every time i’ve read it. one of my favorite parts of the chair is to quietly leave morsels here when all is quiet. not the noise of the meander (aka post) of the week, but here where the whispers are. in the quiet later thoughts.
so, here, is Rilke, as translated by my dear friend, poet, former landlord, mark s. burrows. may your breath be momentarily taken away…
from Prayers of a Young Poet
Rainer Maria Rilke
translated by mark s. burrows
(60)
God speaks to each one of us only before we’re made,
then wanders with us silently out of the night;
but the words uttered before each begins,
the misty words, are these:
“Go, you who are sent out by your senses
go out to the boundary of your yearning;
clothe me with a garment.
Grow like a fire behind things
so that their shadows, spreading all about,
cover me always and utterly.
Let everything happen to your beauty abd dread.
One must only go; no feeling is too remote.
Don’t let yourself part with me.
Near is the land
you call life.
You’ll recognize it
by its earnestness!
Give me your hand.”
and listen to this while reading, or letting it soak in….
Spiegel im Spiegel by Arvo Pärt
according to someone who commented on youTube: “He wrote this just prior to emigrating from Estonia when he was 45 to get away from the Soviets. The house he grew up in had a piano with a damaged middle register so he would play only in the high and low registers, never being able to play simple chords like the ones throughout this piece. It’s like he’s saying goodbye but it takes him so long to do it…”
Barbie, your words always create a perfect picture of where you are, what you’re up to and how you feel about it. I really miss the hours that I used to spend working in my garden so, thank you, because I’m reliving them vicariously through you. What beauty you’ll behold in the spring!
I feel deeply that the table is a sacred place that brings me breath. Was it divine intervention that brought you back into my life? I think so! And what a joy it’s been pulling a chair up to the table.
Oh beautiful beautiful KI (you will always be that somewhere inside me), you are beautiful, and whatever, whomever led you to pull up a chair, it’s been a joy and a balm of my year. ❤️❤️