No more words

 

alphabet chance cube dice
Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

I’m running out of words.

I am in a place I couldn’t have imagined four years ago when I became Catholic. One of my children is still struggling with what is, at times, a very challenging illness. I considered my situation difficult until it got many times more challenging; my sister and closest friend recently died in appalling circumstances.

I intended this blog to be about my continuing conversion as a child of God, and, more specifically, as a Catholic. I don’t want it to become a suicide survivor’s blog. So, this is probably my last post, at least for a while although I hope I’ll still manage to read other peoples’ posts on wordpress, although at the moment most of what I’m reading is written by people who have lost loved ones to suicide.

I don’t have words to make sense of what has happened. Not yet. I just have to BE, in this place, a hideous desert, where it is not possible to impose some kind of meaning.

It’s like a tree, which was growing in my heart, has been torn out taking some of me with it. I don’t know where all this is going.

In the Bible, the Israelites passed through the desert to reach the Promised Land. The Holy Spirit led Jesus into the desert for forty days of fasting before beginning his ministry.

In ‘Seven Storey Mountain’, the American Trappist monk, Thomas Merton, uses the image of the desert when writing about his own conversion:

I had come, like the Jews, through the Red Sea of Baptism. I was entering into a desert – a terribly easy and convenient desert, with all the trials tempered to my weakness- where I would have a chance to give God great glory by simply trusting and obeying Him, and walking in the way that was not according to my own nature and my own judgement. And it would lead me to a land I could not imagine or understand. … It would be a land in which the work of man’s hands and man’s ingenuity counted for little or nothing: but where God would direct all things, and where I would be expected to act so much and so closely under His guidance that it would be as if He thought with my mind, as if He willed with my will.”

I can’t see that land. I can only glimpse it, a place where my heart stays open to God and others, no matter how much I’ve been hurt, a place where I hand myself over to God without any conditions, where I accept life as it is, without demanding success or security. Above all, it’s a place where I am able to do the most difficult thing imaginable: trust in God’s strength whatever happens.

I’m not there yet, but sometimes, when prayer goes beyond words, I go briefly into a place of pain and healing.

Before I end, I want to share two things. The first is a poem by Thomas Merton, written after his only brother was killed in the Second World War. It has touched me. My sister died on a battlefield fighting demons which the rest of us couldn’t see, but which were very real to her.

20180808_210556

Sweet brother, if I do not sleep

My eyes are flowers for your tomb;

And if I cannot eat my bread,

My fasts shall live like willows where you died.

If in the heat I find no water for my thirst,

My thirst shall turn to springs for you, poor traveller.

 

Where, in what desolate and smokey country,

Lies your poor body, lost and dead?

And in what landscape of disaster

Has your unhappy spirit lost its road?

 

Come, in my labor find a resting place

And in my sorrows lay your head,

Or rather take my life and blood

And buy yourself a better bed –

Or take my breath and take my death

And buy yourself a better rest.

 

When all the men of war are shot

And flags have fallen into dust,

Your cross and mine shall tell men still

Christ died on each, for both of us.

 

For in the wreckage of your April Christ lies slain,

And Christ weeps in the ruins of my spring;

The money of Whose tears shall fall

Into your weak and friendless hand,

And buy you back to your own land:

The silence of Whose tears shall fall

Like bells upon your alien tomb.

Hear them and come: they call you home. Thomas Merton

20190119_154654

This last piece I wrote to my sister while on retreat, trying to express my gratitude that she loved me without judgement.

You would love the light here, the way the darker clouds lie on the left and the lighter ones on the right with a winding scraggle of brightness between them, narrow down by the hills and widening upwards like a pathway to heaven, hills piled beneath and me here folded in a wee room with single glazing and chipped paintwork and the sound of birdsong. I’m imagining you sitting out in the garden painting this view, maybe on that wee, folding chair by the ironwork table.

I’m thinking of life, death and rebirth, sa-ta-na-ma. I’m so exhausted, still stunned and dazed. The only way I can heal is by continuing to hold you in love, not pretending you weren’t or that you didn’t matter or that we can just tidy away our memories and put them to the side like the bags of clothes for the charity shop. No pulling myself together and getting on with my life, whatever that means – is it really mine? – will change the fact that you were, are still, always will be a fundamental part of what makes me, me, one of the few, precious people who was an unclouded mirror reflecting back love.

7 thoughts on “No more words

  1. desireehausam April 8, 2019 / 12:27 am

    Oh….oh no. I’m so terribly sorry. Many prayers and please reach out if you need someone to talk to.

    Liked by 1 person

    • canach April 15, 2019 / 7:22 pm

      Thanks for your kind words. I can’t write about my life or faith without writing about what’s happened, which is why I’m just going to keep things to myself for a while.

      Like

  2. thescarletpumpernickel April 8, 2019 / 7:22 pm

    Wishing you comfort and healing on your journey with with grief – I say “with” because I am not sure that one ever gets “through” it or “past” it but with faith, compassion and time we sometimes find we can live “with” it. Below is a link to something I wrote as part of my journey.

    Grief is a Garden

    Liked by 1 person

    • canach April 11, 2019 / 5:15 pm

      Thanks for the link. I can identify t with the poem on your father’s anniversary as my sister died when she ‘should’ have had many more years. It helps to believe there is more than what we see but it doesn’t take away the pain. At least not yet.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Elizabeth April 8, 2019 / 7:56 pm

    I completely understand and wish you well. Nice sharing from Merton, thanks.

    Liked by 1 person

    • canach April 11, 2019 / 5:21 pm

      You too, Elizabeth, and thank you for your comments from your own experience of a loved one’s suicide. Regarding my last post, I meant to say that while my sister’s care fell short (something now confirmed by medical personnel), I realise that there are also cases when everything possible seems to have been done, but a person doesn’t recover. Just like some cancers, it seems like we don’t know how to reach and cure some people with mental illness.

      Liked by 1 person

      • Elizabeth April 12, 2019 / 3:41 pm

        No we really don’t know how.

        Like

Leave a comment