I enter the snow-covered
Homewood Cemetery, my face already numb. In the open space past the iron
entrance gate, the wind increases in sound and sensation, numbing my hands as
well. I've just come from an hour of heated yoga; body and mind are finding the
transition difficult.
I seek an ideal sycamore,
thinking that my first essay will meditate upon it and penetrate its surface. I
slush down the path along the stone fence to a sycamore I once pondered. I
place my gloved hands on its fortified bark, admiring its patiently cultivated
power. Above, hundreds of crows squawk in their flight from tree to tree, their
conversation as loud as those of humans crammed into crowded coffee shops.
| Crows fly overhead |
I begin to wonder: is such loudness the natural state of these birds? Or
have their vocal cords (do crows have vocal cords?) adapted to compensate for
the loudness we humans have cultivated?
I seek silence today, silence and space. The crows thwart my goal. I
leave the sycamore in frustration.
Like Joyce Carol Oates in her essay “Against Nature,” I’m becoming
frustrated with my habit toward idealizing “nature.” I want to see nature as a
pure landscape that reminds us of our natural state of blissful unity with the
Cosmos. I want to recognize crows as beautiful manifestations of God-given life
and flight. But today, I see ugly annoying black creatures that won’t shut the
hell up.
Cold and annoyed, I continue in search of a new tree, a tree to
represent my presence amidst the dissatisfaction I feel. I’m stopped along the
way at the slight of a squirrel perched on a tree’s protrusion. The squirrel
sits calmly in the foreground, staring at me, while in the background hundreds
of squawking crows fly from treetop to treetop. I stare back admiring his
stillness. Then he leaps to another branch and departs.
| My pal the squirrel |
I descend a slope and find a row of sycamores. Their trunks are dense
and covered in tumor-like protrusions. They don’t feel correct. Still,
searching for something, I approach them. But my gaze is pulled to the side,
and deeper into the cemetery, I see my tree, my sycamore.
It rises isolated in the distance, beside an oak, before a pine cradled
within a willow’s bosom. As I settle before it, the crows shriek in unison and
collectively depart to their next destination.
The sycamore appears almost as if glimmering. Beige dominates its
reptilian camouflaged bark, standing in stark contrast to the green and brown
trees surrounding it. I approach to consider it from close proximity. The
bark’s dark Rorschachian patterns look and feel like rough felt. I gently press
my ear to the tree, hoping to receive a message that does not come.
Past several rows of headstones, leafless brush surrounds an ice-covered
pond. In front of the pond, four deer graze in the snow. One of them appears
adolescent. I pause once more and stare at the deer for several minutes. The
largest one stares back, its ears pointed high. I’m not sure why I keep
staring—I see deer most times I enter this space. Something about its presence
instills in me a desire to breathe. And as I breathe, I recognize the scene I
am experiencing as space, great space.
Gretel Ehrlich concludes her essay “The Solace of Open Spaces” with the
assertion that we like to fill spaces; openness disturbs us, as does silence.
But amidst my cold dissatisfaction, this squirrel, this sycamore, and this deer
remind me the importance of openness, lest the mind, like our coffee shops, become
cluttered with noise.
Maybe, in our idealization of the cleansing properties of “nature,” we
have confused two concepts: nature and space. Nature is everything, including
that cluttered coffee shop. But space is openness. While Ehrlich is correct, I
believe we also crave moments that remind us of this openness, precisely
because we have made our lives so cluttered. But nature is the clutteredness as
much as it is the space. There’s no “going back” to some pure place. There’s
just breathing into the moment. I enjoy open spaces, this graveyard, for its
space is sufficient for peaceful animals, and the animals’ peace reminds me to be
still, even as the shrieking crows return, offering no sign of their departure.
| A fat squirrel that said goodbye |
Lovely meditation. I hope you will continue to explore the paradox of living in the tension between wanting something, for lack of a better word, spiritual, from nature, and the realization that nature can sometimes be annoying in a most mundane way (the crows). And boy, that squirrel is really fat! Wonder what it's finding to eat this time of year.
ReplyDeleteHaha, loved reading this. I feel like I can hear you saying all of it. The clutter of noise is interesting as well. No silence anywhere. Also, that squirrel really is a huge chunk.
ReplyDeleteI connected to the feeling of searching in this piece... plus your squirrel is killer.
ReplyDelete(the fat one)
ReplyDelete