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Africa Journal, Back in the Tube

January 10, 2012

For those of you who have been following this adventure to Africa with me you might remember the image I used to describe what it felt like preparing myself to come to Kenya. Those little tubes that we use during drive in banking, inside which the deposits are placed, and whoosh, with the push of a button, are launched  from outside the building through the mechanisms arriving inside to the teller – that is what it felt like getting myself here. And now, I pack up all that I have gathered internally – all of the stories, blessings, information, wisdom, relationships, love and grace – and place myself back in the tube to come whooshing back home, through Amsterdam, New York, Atlanta and Asheville. Whoosh, whoosh, whoosh. So much comes with me. And much I know I have left here.

I want to unpack the stories, and will continue to write them and post photographs. They need to be told! My heart is full with gratitude for every bit of this journey, and especially to those whose love came with me in a special way of support.

Whoosh, here I come. Home on the 12th.

Africa Journal #5, Mission Accomplished

January 9, 2012

Tayria and Esther, January 6, 2012

Unexpectedly, my connection to internet has gone dark for the last days. Expect the unexpected in Africa, surely I am learning this. This is Monday night. The last days have been a world of experience which I intend to write about going forward, but for now I want to report on the events of last Friday.

Finally I got to go to Drugfighters, the orphanage and school that Esther attends. I could feel the swelling emotion and anticipation as we traveled to it. Entering, I encountered a dramatically altered site from the one that I had worked at in June of 2010. It was then a stench filled little dirt plot lined on one side by edifices made of wood frames with tin siding that were the classrooms. Piles of mud and and rock constituted the playground. Today there are structures, still of wood and tin, but solid, with tile floors and several more classrooms, clean dormitory rooms for the residents, a library room and a staff room. Given where we were, in Kibera, the place is a palace, and a miracle. I noticed the children looking healthier, less fog and film in their eyes, more clearness, calmness; their hair and skin showing signs of nutrients they had not been receiving before. All of this is due to the efforts of their lioness founder, Agnes Musau and her assistant Martha Muiriri, and also to the efforts of Carter Via and Cross Cultural Thresholds who raised the funds and have brought volunteers over the course of this time to build the facility.

I was very moved as we were given the tour after arriving. Peeping into the classrooms, my eyes scanned each little sea of faces looking for Esther, not finding her. My heart began to sink a little and for the first time it hit me that maybe I had come all of this way and might not see her. I hadn’t allowed myself to think it before.

They called an all-school assembly to greet us the visitors who had come with Carter, who they obviously and for good reason adore. We were seated in a row of chairs at the front, with all of the children gathered in the courtyard to sing and perform for us. Martha arrived just then, and as I hugged and greeted her I asked about Esther. She said she would go ask her teacher. So, as we sat there just before the assembly began a tiny little girl was brought through the crowd and up to the front to stand in front of my chair. She was flooded with emotion and barely knew what to do with her face or body. I cried and said, “Esther, I came to see you!”

The program was just then beginning so they made a seat for her right next to me. We sat, my arm around her, both of us smiling broadly, and crying on and off, all through the performances by the children and greeting speeches by faculty and Carter. Then came the time to introduce us, the visitors. Martha said to the assembly, “There is someone here who is a special friend to Esther. Esther, can you introduce her?” She got up in front of the whole school, so tiny and shy, and said almost inaudibly, “She is Tayria.” Martha asked her to please say it louder! After about three repetitions she finally spoke with enough volume. As I addressed the children briefly Esther held her arm up to her eyes to wipe the tears and melted back into the crowd to take her place among her classmates.

Sometime later I was able to sit in a private room with Esther while Martha translated. We were all full of emotion, and Esther and I were moist-eyed throughout. Though she speaks mainly Swahili, Esther does know some English. These words came clearly to me from her in English – “I love you, and in my whole life I will never forget you.” This little girl has a hard time looking straight in the eyes because she is so shy, but she overcame it and looked directly into my eyes as she spoke, and often throughout our little meeting.

I asked her about her Mother, (who is HIV positive and had been deathly ill last time I was there) and her family. I asked about her friendships, her health, how she has been feeling. I told Esther about how I came to be with her, that I had wanted to come and many people had contributed to help make it possible. That made her cry, and she said softly, this also in English, “Please tell them I love them and thank you.” I am not making this up. This little girl said these words to me. I could barely believe her presence of mind and clearness, and the perfection of her response. It still seems like a miracle.

We only spoke for a half an hour or more, and then had long hugs good-bye. The scarf that I had been wearing which both of us used to wipe our eyes, I wrapped around her neck. This time I did not promise to come back, and I don’t believe she expected it. We both seemed to understand something so complete about this moment.

I don’t know if I can say “mission accomplished” with as much clarity as this about anything else I have ever done in my life. It is the rarest of feelings for me. This trip, this mission, this love and the return seem like possibly the most important thing I have ever done, after giving birth to my daughters. I do not even remotely understand why. There was something so real, so genuinely, simply real about it.

My heart seizes with strong emotion when I think about the people who responded so generously with contributions to help me achieve this mission. I had sent letters to each of them with self-addressed envelopes inside and a feather, offering for them to write down their wishes or prayers which I would then bring to Mother Africa, to burn their private thoughts in a fire here and spread the ashes of it on the soil; the feathers then to be released into the winds so that they can act as prayer flags as they are carried about.

Our whole group joined me in the fire ceremony that night. They looked on as each of the letters I brought went into the fire, and then they added writings of their own. After this all of the feathers were released.

There is much more to tell, even about this day, and about the astonishingly remarkable days since, but I will stop for now. My heart is full. Thank you, to all who have supported me in this journey and to the sweet, kind universe for making it happen so deliciously.

Africa Journal #4, Time out of time

January 5, 2012

We have just completed our 3rd full day on this adventure in Africa. It takes a lot of concentration to figure that out. Three days. It might have been three years. Maybe just a minute. Only a speck of time. All of eternity. I can’t say why or wherefore or what I really mean by this. There couldn’t be a narrative that would even vaguely contain it.

Yet, as it goes in Kenya, we spend a lot of time waiting. Waiting to herd cats to get in the vans to leave. Waiting an hour for the paint store to mix one can of paint. Waiting for the police escort to stand in a long line to check out his weapon so that he can escort us into the slum. Waiting for the kids to put on their little show for us. Nothing is “on time.” What is time? I’ve been waiting for 18 months to get back to Africa to see Esther, the little girl I promised to come back to see. Now waiting to finally get to her orphanage to see her, which will happen tomorrow.

Time is a man-made invention. It doesn’t exist as we know it in nature. And it sure doesn’t exist as we know it in Africa.  I feel its absence like a presence here. This happens where in live in the mountains of Appalachia, I have learned a lot about time and timelessness in the mountains. But this is qualitatively different from that experience too. It is more condensed. More vast. More original.

To live and move and be in the world beyond time, outside of time, released from time, that would be closer to our primordial nature. That way of being is with us all along if we just listen. Time is an illusion anyway. I feel closer to that here, and I like it. It changes you.

Africa Journal #3, Immersion

January 4, 2012

Building

We are a group of just 10, and have spent our 2nd day today working at Fafu, a school in Kibera begun by a Kenyan man named Simeon, a man of clear heart and vision who came to Kibera to help its children to Face the Future; Fafu is short for those words. Living in conditions of unimaginable human poverty – unimaginable to me even as I walk through the slum, smell, greet, and interact – Simeon sees a way to create possibility through education, community and love. He and every single human there, 240 children enrolled, know the harshest facts of life and human nature, all the way to the bone.

Three years ago this tiny plot of dirt and filth was empty. Simeon’s vision and passion joined with Carter Via’s ability to mobilize resources and help have brought about this throbbing little wood and tin edifice where the children come together to find hope. We visitors are offering what we have. Some rough but sturdy benches are being built; blank, dirty walls are being covered with paintings; art projects are underway.

directing a play

One man with us is a theatre director and producer who just wrapped up a show on the West End in London. Today he is directing several of the Fafu young people in a play he has modified to 12 pages. After 3 days of rehearsal, we will see it. Some of the older children are being interviewed by our young members so that they can have an opportunity to tell their stories, present to us their dearest passions, describe unique talents and visions for their future. A young fellow at the school named Rogers has found that he can truly dance. We had a preview of his performance today and will see the full one tomorrow when the borrowed (pirated? electricity from a lot nearby will hopefully successfully pipe in the music. Rogers face is aglow with the genuine admiration and attention he is receiving. I worked in a private room with children one-on-one, along with a compassionate and gifted translator, to help listen to the suffering in the private psyches of several of the children whose difficulties are affecting their ability to engage with the work and the people at school. They have an opportunity to say in privacy what ails their souls, to verbalize and be listened to. My hope is to give them a model for the idea that they don’t have to suffer alone and in silence. The psyche itself requires and deserves expression in such ways, and can find it.

mural painting

We are swimming in a sea of love and chaos. In our debriefings tonight, a number of us realized all that most of the kids want really is a way to find someone to hold them and touch them. While Zoe paints the mural, 10 kids are attached somewhere to her body painting with her, the need for the touch and connection much more primary than the need to paint. Alexa found that in her art project work too. In my breaks I fixed the strap on a little girls back pack, and before I knew it one after another were pressing into my body wanting their straps fixed too. Back strap fixing is very important, but the experience of crushing their little bodies into mine while we fixed it was more essential. The tiniest ones just wanted to put their head on my breast and shoulder. Ok with me, sweet hugging is heaven.

Our director was laughing saying his job today was like herding cats, but it was happening. i feel right now like a cat herder of my mind. The immensity of this immersion is unsayable. The mystery of what pulls us all together for this moment in time, what the experience reflects to each of us – there is magic. Unrevealed but very apparent magic. Mystery, love, beauty, pain.

faces

Just a blast here from the chaos. Look at the photos I attach through worm holes and see what you see. It’s so much mystery.

 

View from classroom, Kibera

Africa Journal #2, Tunnel Vision

January 3, 2012

Hut in Kibera Slum

Last night was my first full night in Kenya, and today the first day. Though I barely slept a wink, I did wake up with a powerful dream.

Let me preface the telling of it. The days of preparation for leaving on a trip like this can be the hardest part. Aligning oneself mentally and spiritually, and preparing physically, take focus, courage and unflagging attention. I kept having the sense that I was putting myself into one of those little chambers you use when you do drive-through banking – the tube that whooshes through the machinery and takes your deposit from outside to inside and back. I felt like I was putting myself into a vessel similar to that, preparing to whoosh myself to Africa. The chamber is tight, so only what belongs on the journey can go, internally and externally, or the transmission won’t go well. I needed to constantly make careful adjustments in emotions, attitude and intention.

Then last night, after a mercifully safe if long journey, I had this dream. Looking around lovely Kenya, seeing familiar sights and smells, something like worm holes appeared all through the visual field. It was like seeing the space between atoms, demonstrating that nothing is solid. The thought came to me while still in the dream, and more fully as I pulled awake, that the worm holes are passageways through to vast worlds of potential and possibility that exist right here and now. Humans tend to look at the world in 3 dimensions, missing the fact that matter has infinite dimensions. Our reality intersects multitudes of other realms.

In my middle of the night dream note I wrote “tunnel vision” to describe what I was seeing, not meaning  limited vision the way the term usually refers, but the opposite. This tunnel vision is seeing through this apparent “reality” into worlds inside of worlds of infinite possibility. I felt the dream telling me something about this trip, how to see, not to be discouraged by the circumstances here, especially in the Kibera slum, but to see potential. The only thing limited is human vision and faith in possibility, not “reality.”  Masters of mind, science, soul and spirit have said it every which way for aeons, and string theory is pushing toward scientific evidence that all dimensions of possibility are here and now, ready to be entered, and integrated.Looking into the eye of the level of deprivation and poverty I am visiting here, the dream is a timely revelation. I want to see all that I am faced with for exactly for what it is in our consensual reality, but also hold the vision of what else is here and the potentials that reveal.

I have not yet been to the orphanage I came to visit as we are working at another school this time, but that visit will come soon. I will write more details of the journey as I go. Since my dream began my time in Kenya with that dream, I wanted to start my blog with it as well. The above photograph was takenas I jumped out of the van, just as I put my foot on the soil in Kibera. Look at it. Look at it for what it is. Can you see the worm holes too, though?

Africa Journal #1, Leaving

December 29, 2011

Tonight I am in the process of readying to leave the country for 2 weeks on a trip to the Kibera slum outside of Nairobi, Kenya. I have been writing about the trip, and many are supporting the journey with heartfelt donations to make it happen. I want to write what I hope will be meaningful accounts as I go.

I’m going to be simple and honest in these accounts. I can’t even imagine how to try profundity when my brain is burning at the end of days. Readers beware. Since a surprising number of people have involved themselves in this journey by generous and heart-filled support, I want to share the process in case they, or any of you readers, are interested.

Getting ready to leave might be the hardest part of a trip like this, gearing oneself up, figuring out the preparations for being away and anticipating what will be needed while abroad. As I worked on sorting out vitamins, amenities, laundry and so much else tonight I put on movie channels to watch something while I whittled away. I often experience that whatever is available to be seen at such times is oracular. There is undeniable meaning. I will tell you what showed up tonight, as it had me amused and amazed through my mind-boggling preparations.

Men In Black.
Men Who Stare at Goats.

Both movies are about seeing beyond the illusion. Mind-bogglingly funny. Profound. True. And genius.

These messages are what are sending me off to Africa tonight.
I recommend them.  Smoke something, drink something, make some tea, put your feet up, whatever helps you relax and enjoy them.

This trip is motivated by the heart for me. Following the heart unfailingly seems to lead to piercing illusions of mind and culture. These little send-offs help me to feel supported in the spirit.

Now Go and Do Heartwork

December 27, 2011

Work of the eyes is done, now
go and do heart work
on all the images imprisoned within you; for you
overpowered them: but even now you don’t know them.

-Rainer Maria Rilke

The morning after Christmas I awakened with the words in this title. The holiday with my daughters and their significant others had been perfect, completely delightful, just divine. I feel so fortunate. After that blessing was completed, the words “Now go and do heart work” were strongly imprinted as I awakened.

On January 1st, 2012, I leave on my journey to Kenya. It is clearly the work of the heart that moved me to commit to this trip, details of which I wrote about in my blog entitled Africa: A Promise on November 19th, 2011. Telling the story of why I need to go, the promise I need to keep, I suggested that anyone who might be interested to support the journey could help me with it by contributing donations of any amount. Conversations with my friend, Carter Via, and my daughter, Josi Ward inspired me to make this suggestion.

I had no idea whether the notion would speak to anyone or not; there were no expectations. The response has been truly overwhelming. There has been an outpouring of feeling, love, interest, care, concern and support. With this outcome, I now make the journey not as a private matter but also as a carrier of the love and intentions of many who have involved their hearts and energy in the trip as well. I feel, differently than I ever have, like an ambassador. I want to represent well each one who has entrusted me with such support.

The heart is a fierce organ; mind is weak by comparison. In a recent dream I was doing things with my tiger, an animal who in the dream is bonded to me and goes everywhere with me. I know from some of my most important life dreams that tiger for me is an image of the heart. Now it is time to do work with the tiger.

I can’t say I know yet just what this means. The dream is laying some groundwork, I suppose, readying me. With all my heart, and with the hearts of all who are now coming with me in this energetic way, here I go.

In the Manger

December 25, 2011

I truly love the traditional Christmas story – that this very morning Mary and Joseph were sitting in stunned and happy quiet after the successful birth of their baby boy, tucked into a  manger cave behind the inn, having swaddled their son and placed him in the warm straw. The animals who lived in that manger kept them warm and adored with them this newcomer. Then shepherds arrived who had heard angels singing, telling of the birth. Then Wise Men of the East had known of the prophecy and found the baby through their astrological wisdom; they followed a star shining in the East. And, the New Testament says, Mary saw all of these things and held them in her heart. I always loved that line.

I just know it can be so that this very morning some new impulse of innocence, power, beauty, divinity and love can be successfully born in each of our hearts too. A new possibility. Let’s each behold what is born, swaddle it, be quiet with it today, at least in that interior place where silence can be held even as life swirls about. In that manger the animal spirits will watch over, the protectors will come to see and honor, the new gestation will have a silent and tender beginning. I hold all of these things in my heart with you.

Whatever name or story for the mystery you love and celebrate, I pray you will be infused with the love and magic in it as our earth turns toward the new season and new year. It does seem a good time to begin again and believe freshly. May love be yours.

Winter Solstice, the Turning

December 21, 2011

Today is December 21st, the date given to celebrate the Winter Solstice, the darkest day in our hemisphere, the world now beginning to turn toward the light of longer days. The event has been ritually celebrated by humans since well before recorded history. We find the markings of it in such things as the ruins of Stonehenge in Britain and Newgrange in Ireland, revered relics that were ingeniously built to highlight the sunrise and sunset on the day of Winter Solstice. The effort and ingenuity it took to create them, as well as the lasting fascination with such sites the world over certainly suggest we might pause today and reflect what this moment in our year’s journey around the sun still might mean to us. We have modernity and the strains of holiday preparations to distract us, but I am thinking the reflection has value. And so I pause this morning to write.

In my body I feel not so much the anticipation of more light, but a buckling down for winter. In earlier ages the possibility of not surviving a winter was a cold hard reality to prepare oneself for in all of the ways one prepares. Starvation and freezing to death were only two of the ways a harsh winter might be unsurvivable. Enforced isolation was and still is a factor.

This will be my 8th winter living in remote,  high altitude terrain in the mountains of Western North Carolina. Part time residents in my area still don’t know what it is like to go through a winter there. I am finding new respect each year in the faces of my neighbors as they count how many winters I have survived there. It is a kind of respect one can only give or sense the power in receiving if you have done this particular gauntlet faithfully and repeatedly. I am uniquely initiated, and realize I even owe respect to myself for this.

But, and still, and in any case, those particular initiations are symbolic of something interior all of us at some level and to some degree experience in our deep instinctual soul in this season, marked by this day. Death and hibernation are all around. Plants, animals, insect populations die, the soil lays fallow. We see more moon and starlight than solar light. We cover our bodies in layers to defend against temperatures. Huddle around fires. Sleep more if we are lucky.

What dies inside of us? The experiences of the calendar year just completed have become essences and memories: 2011, the year when…  The new year hasn’t yet arrived, there is more to go through to bring it in. This Solstice day is a between-life moment. A time to assess the old, to determine to survive the winter and survive it well, with more awareness this time. A time for our psychic soil to lay fallow and rest before new planting and new possibility. A time for darkening. Deepening. Dying. No re-birth is possible without the death.

Let’s take this moment, not let it pass. Build our own Stonehenge in consciousness to mark it. I commit to this now.

The Hole in the World Where Love Should Be

December 13, 2011

I have travelled on numerous pilgrimages over the years of my life. I went to Lisieux, in France, to see where the young saint who had shaped my life through her inspiration actually lived, Therese of Liseux. I went to Lourdes in Southern France to see where Mary appeared to Bernadette. I went to Rome, to Jerusalem, to Medjugorje, Santiago de Compostella, Avila. Visiting place to me  is like traveling to a center in the brain where vital information and sensation are stored and thereby accessed.

Each time I have gone on pilgrimage I knew instinctively to dedicate the pilgrimage to a certain purpose. I could write a book on the responses I have felt to those prayers and purposes over the last decades. I may do that one day.

On January 1 of 2012 I leave on pilgrimage to Kenya, Africa – specifically to visit the slum in Kibera where human innocence is stored, covered over by depravity of poverty and violence. I have been considering how to dedicate this pilgrimage. The image occurred to me today to commit this travel to visualizing the possibility of tapping into a hidden spring, like what happened at Lourdes and many of the places where the Virgin Mary was said to have appeared.

The spring I want to imagine being tapped is a spring of love that will rush up to fill the hole where absence of love has been. If we see it, maybe it will be so. Why cannot we fill the spaces of love’s depravity with love itself if we wish to?

To this possibility I dedicate this season and this pilgrimage.