Supermoon Tides, Giant Fish,and Where Does Sadness Go?
High high tides this week, bringing storm and kelp, sweeping beaches clean, dumping the detritis in all our nets. The supermoon added extra pull on our already massive tidal range of 26 feet. Meaning we live in two worlds. This one:
And this one six hours later.
The swelling waters brought a fish through my doors the same day. A big fish, a 30 pound king salmon.
Such fullness! Such a feast! Until I filleted it down to its spine. Nothing left but bones and death.
Such has been my week. These times come to us all. High full tides, a bounteous salmon---then a sucking minus tide, a gutted fish, an empty plate. Has your week been like this as well? I confess it is partly my reading. I am reading Shannon Huffman Polson’s just-released memoir North of Hope.
(Shannon was my student in Seattle Pacific University’s Master of Fine Arts program.) I knew about this story several years ago, when we worked together, but reading it again, this time in excruciating and haunting detail, I was devastated afresh. Shannon lost her father and stepmother to a rogue bear in the Alaskan Arctic wilderness. I grieved again and again with her for the magnitude and the manner of her loss----and I had my own grieving to do as well . . . the loss of my own father, who gave me nothing and took nothing when he died. (I am thinking of him all this week as I proof my next book, Forgiving Our Fathers and Mothers.)
We all contain such hollow spaces and empty moments. Times of such aloneness, when we should have been loved but weren’t, when someone who should have taught us, didn’t. When someone who should have given us words to guide us, didn’t. When someone who should still be with us, isn’t. And when someone we really need to help, j u s t c a n n o t h e l p u s. He cannot. She cannot.
And the earth spins and tilts and the moon pulls and the ocean rises toward it, and the tides flood the beach, stretching our nets first one way, then another. We strain all the harder at lines so taut we can hardly lift them. And maybe we cry, salt water into salt water. Maybe we feel sorry for ourselves. And its all right that we do. God, who knows just what has come to us, what he has given us, is sorry too.
When sadness comes, let it be. At least for awhile. Moses did. He dared to write—and God dared to inspire him to write these dark words:
All our days pass away under your wrath;
we finish our years with a moan.
Our days may come to seventy years,
or eighty, if our strength endures;
yet the best of them are but trouble and sorrow,
for they quickly pass, and we fly away.
We fly away------but not yet. Here in the now there is still the other. The water will not stop moving. If we look, we can find good and goodness around us to count and name: blessing and offering and surprise and beauty and love. This is my week too:
But I don’t send you these photos of my blessings as some sort of consolation to either of us. Photos from my island won’t fix anything. I know it’s not enough. Nor is it enough for me to live here in the midst of this beauty and wildness. Toward the end of her book, Polson quotes Ralph Waldo Emerson: “The happiest man is he who learns from nature the lesson of worship”. Polson does indeed give us worship in her remarkable book. I have learned the same.
Toward the end of Moses’ psalm, he asks this of God:
"May your deeds be shown to your servants,
your splendor to their children."
If you see it here in these tiny photos taken by a simple, watching woman just learning to see---then I count this one more blessing in a troubled week.
Here, then, is where sadness goes,
lost in
His deeds,
His splendor,
His unfailing love.
W o r s h i p.
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Sadness is like a fierce rip current. As it sucks me away from terra firma, every atom of my being screams to fight the water and swim toward shore. It feels like death to turn my face toward the horizon and swim into the depths, to move far from the shore until the current abates. But it is life. To turn and face the sadness is the only way it can lose its hold on me. Otherwise, I might drown.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the mention of "North of Hope", and "Forgiving...". They are both now on my list. But thank you most for continuing to point to the Ocean of Love that doesn't heed our commands, but buoys us when we worship.
Amy---so true, the "Ocean of Love that doesn't heed our commands." We rise and fall with it, without any control. But God is in it all somehow. And we worship. Thank you for doing that with me here . ..
DeleteThank you for sharing your life, your world, your contemplation with us. I've had to catch up with your blog after a busy month away, and I'm so glad I did. Forgiving, letting go, capturing the wonder of God's creation. All of it spoke into my journey. Again, thank you.
ReplyDeleteIngrid, I'm thankful ...and you get an extra star for even reading the back ones---wow! (May I send you a book, "Surviving the Island of Grace"?) Send me your address.
DeleteI love the way you weave your words and pictures exposing the beauty in the underbelly of life. The tides are high in my life and these tides bring both the beautiful beautiful...and the ugly beautiful. In these turbulent waters I have to keep my eyes fixed on Jesus...the one who give buoyancy in the rough waters of life...and like the bouys that float in the water...they ride the waters...never sinking or being flipped upside down...so it is with God...
ReplyDeleteI am always refreshed here....blessings to you~
wow...that salmon...I can't imagine how wonderful it is to eat this so fresh...
Ro, So sorry you're in the riptides and high tides .... praying for you now, to be filled and refreshed in the Holy Spirit, to not tire or give up. And hoping you will see something outside your own window today that brings beauty and---worship.
DeleteSimply gorgeous expression! Thank you! Can't wait to read your new book because forgiving my parents and seeing the miracles God worked in the process has been such a huge part of my life. Your photos are stunning! Wish I had my hands on that fish! Got any cumin and fresh limes? Marinate a fillet in lime juice with lots of cumin (can't use too much!) and grill. Delicious!
ReplyDeleteHeather---I'll look forward to hearing about your forgiveness walk .. . Hmmm, not sure I have lime juice out here. I may try to get some to try this. I agree---can never use too much cumin!!
DeleteWe've been slogging our way through the murky waters here in recent weeks Leslie. It is so easy to get caught in a tide of self-pity and even (dare I say it?) anger.
ReplyDeleteBut there is a nest of baby cardinals right outside my kitchen window. The Mama and Daddy built their nest in my artificial hanging plant! It is a wonder. They carry on as the wind whips and spins their home - simply trusting that all will be well.
You write so beautifully of the things that come to us all. Thank you.
Linda, thank goodness and thank God for those cardinals! Who will not save you, but who are a constant reminder of God's care of His creation--most of all, you. (And I just laugh at this--that they built their nest in an artificial plant! Oh, such wonder and fun!) Praying for you this week, Linda, for steady waters beneath us and a clear gaze above.
DeleteBeautifully said, Leslie. Thank you. A hard truth, but also a good one. . . the sadness entwines itself with the beauty and somehow, we survive. . . and even thrive. Grace helps. And fresh salmon. And gorgeous photos. Thanks for all of that.
ReplyDeleteJust downloaded Shannon's book on audible.com. Looking forward to the completion of your book on forgiving.
ReplyDeleteHow often GOD reminds us that this old earth is filled with those "hard truths." And that we can only see "through a glass darkly.
Yet, "Here in the now there is still the other. The water will not stop moving. If we look, we can find good and goodness around us to count and name: blessing and offering and surprise and beauty and love." His Presence...the true Reality holds all things together and someday we will see clearly.
Connie---Excited that you've downloaded Shannon's book. I think you'll enjoy it. My forgiveness book is done--yay! Just got the advance reader's copies a few days ago. It's a good feeling to hold 3 years of work in your hand---and to know it represents the best you were able to do. I am praying God will use it to free many. Thanks so much for reading and writing back, Connie!!
DeleteHi Leslie!
ReplyDeleteIndeed you must be a wonder woman with a life rich with wonderful experiences you so beautifully and willingly share.