Drinking with the Crows+ Death Be Not Proud










On Sunday, sitting in church, I knew it was fall. During the sermon a raucous chorus began outside the window----ahhh yes,  there they were: the crows squabbling over the mountain ash berries. Soon they would be drunk.  I go to church for worship and joyful company. The crows flock to our church for the alcoholic berries.  We both emerge tipsy and happy, (but my Spirits last longer than theirs!)

     I watch for signs of fall every day, and I watch far differently than I watch for signs of spring. I feel like a child when watching for spring, ready to gambol and run. In Fall, I am practicing death. Soon, the drop of all leaves, the steady loss of light, the hunker beneath winds of howl and ice. We know what this is like.




This year, I am ready. I am not cringing. I am not examining my survival plan for the season. I am not dreading the coming dark.

As I look about me, I am remembering that dying, that winter's lapse into long sleep can bring furious beauty out of some. For these, the shorter days slow and halt the cholorphyll, and the leaves bloom out their truest colors: yellow's (xanthophylls),  oranges (carotinoids) and reds (anthycyanins) emerge. The loss of light ignites the trees, the bushes, even the lichen.












The same is true for us: when the sun goes down, when the light shrinks back, this is when our true colors emerge.


         And you know about the red salmon. How they stop eating as they leave the ocean, returning to the river of their birth, pointing all their strength now against the current to spill their eggs or their milt, and how, in all of this, while dying, they bleed into scarlet, brilliant, dying yet so alive . . .







But not all is beauty. Sometimes death is just dying without beauty or notice. Some salmon turn hideous as they struggle toward their spawning bed, just wraiths, leprous.











The banks of the salmon-blooming rivers are paced by bears, who smash the grass and gobble the salmon, leaving only ghastly pieces behind. 





















The mountainsides hold death as well. We drive by, awake to the falling colors, and we do not see it at first. Just beauty, fading . …



and then we see and remember-----


the four who died in the plane crash on that mountain some falls ago . ..   

           It is written into the grain of the universe, this dying, this descent into dark, into cold, the yearly launch of the earth far, farther from the sun. And it is written in our cells as well since the time we all turned away from our Maker, launched off into a wild, cold place, far from the light. But we need not despair. Even in the midst of it, even when we descend into insomnia, depression and immobility, all this is covered, known, provided for-----from the very foundation of the world. From before the very creation of the world, it was done: the wheat kernel would die before shooting to new life, the old would give life to the young, a lamb would die for his people, and death only lights the trees on fire.

Because of this, for all of us, when we die little deaths along the way----a child turns his back and is silent for a decade, a father and a mother cannot love their children, a good friend dies, a father abandons his son, a beloved sister dies, your best friend betrays you . . .. We cry and we die a little, for short or long------but we do not die. We do not die. 

I am reminded of John Donne's famous sonnet, 
Death, be not proud

Death, be not proud, though some have called thee
Mighty and dreadful, for thou art not so;
For those whom thou think'st thou dost overthrow
Die not, poor Death, nor yet canst thou kill me.


Two and three months ago I thought I was dead.  I go this weekend to lead a retreat. I go alive, full of joy, to speak about forgiveness, about light, about all the ways we're given to live, again.

We will live, all of us. The coming dark will ignite our truest colors. Death is swallowed up and we are all aflame.

         (http://anothertwilight-sombrelune.blogspot.com/2011_12_22_archive.html)

Go, burn bright. Do not let death be proud.

8 comments:

  1. "The same is true for us: when the sun goes down, when the light shrinks back, this is when our true colors emerge.” this place is where we see both the growth and the lack in our lives... these seasons reveal what is truly reality in our lives and what is theory...because in these moments we usually think we are “further” down the road than what we are... ... and here is where the enemy speaks such discouragement to us... but in this season is where our roots can drive deeper into the soil... and it also in these seasons we can stand amazed at God’s work in our lives when we see places of freedom that we had not ever known before!!!
    Don’t you just love how God speaks to our spiritual lives through His creation... and won’t it be wonderful one day to see all His love letters to us through His creation...
    blessings as you go to speak... go, burn bright!!!!

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    1. Ro---what a thought! I love this and think it's probably true, that on the redeemed and made-new earth, we will be able to see and read creation so much more completely than we do now. (Even now what riches!) but so much more ahead!1 Thank you, always, for your good words!

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  2. Leslie, thanks for the "furious beauty" and "drunken crows" and "practicing death." God give you grace and peace as you speak truth.

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    1. Thanks Diane! This winter will be more of a challenge since I won't be traveling as much (which always brings relief from an 8 month winter!) But--trusting God to stay a-lit. ANd for you too!!

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  3. Every year I am energized (somehow) by the beauty of autumn. The shrinking of the light, the demise of the garden, the stripping of the trees -- it should be bringing regret, or at least reflection, but there's so much beauty in it all (here in Maine!) that I can't help but cheer it on! I'd never heard of "drunken crows"! Guess I need to pay more attention to who's visiting the mountain ash trees. Thanks for a thoughtful and beautiful post.

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    1. Thanks Michele! Yes, fall is SO beautiful in Maine! I never knew how beautiful NH's falls were until many years after I left. Now I know!!

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  4. Gorgeous, true words and photographs! Death is the harbinger of new life. Doesn't make death less painful but hope holds our hand as we walk through. "Jesus . . . for the joy set before him endured the cross." (Hebrews 12:2) Every "cross" God allows has resurrection in mind, with the new life better than the old. Good news?

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  5. Thank you dearest Leslie for beautiful truth in your words and in your life and for showing us how to walk by faith.

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