Thursday, December 26, 2013

Defining Success


On Christmas, my wife and I visited one of our young men in prison.  Of all my friends, he’s the one who enjoys Christmas the most, especially the anticipation, the expectation, and the promise of a happy time, a brighter tomorrow.

After five and a half years in prison, his spirit is brighter now that it’s ever been. He’s grown in so many ways, and achieved many of his goals.  In prison, he’s actually had goals and found ways to achieve them.  Before that, life was just survival, slogging through chaos and drugs, of being treated indifferently, without love, and not knowing who he was or where he was headed.

Now, he’s found purpose and meaning.  He’s making peace with the demons in his life, and has found the strength and courage to look deep inside of himself, and to finally love himself, and all the possibilities he has in his life.

He wanted socks for Christmas, making sure everyone knew it, too.  Now, he’s a wealthy man, Mr. Big in the world of socks.  He’s the happy recipient of forty pairs of socks, socks of nearly every size and color.  He has socks everywhere now, new socks to try on every day for over a month.  

Yes, he had a successful Christmas, all the socks he could ever want.  In the telling of his story, his laugh and his big smile light up his face; he knows now that he is loved and respected by so many people.  He’s figured out the magic of Christmas, the reason for the season.

He’s successful in so many other ways this year.  He’s taken charge of his life, looking deep inside of himself, and taking charge of who he is, and where he is going.  He’s embraced his new maturity.  He’s taken on his self confidence and is moving ahead.  He’s found his courage and is nourishing and loving his soul.

He’s the person Robert Louis Stevenson was writing about when he said,
“That man is successful who has lived well, laughed often, and loved much, who has gained the respect of the intelligent men and the love of children; who has filled his niche and accomplished his task; who leaves the world better than he found it, whether by an improved poppy, a perfect poem, or a rescued soul; who never lacked appreciation of earth's beauty or failed to express it; who looked for the best in others and gave the best he had.”  ~Robert Louis Stevenson

This year, many people I know have taken stock of their lives, summoned their courage, and moved ahead.  Their accomplishments are many, and I’ve been applauding their journeys, and marveling at their determination and sacred intentions in their lives.  It has been a year of transformation and a year of dramatic and momentous growth.  Old demons have been called out of the basement, new directions has been set, and the tough, sweaty and hard work has been done.  And, in that work, our communities are stronger, more vibrant, richer in so many ways. 

Some people look to Washington politicians to make the big changes they want to see in the world and in their lives.  Yet, the real change and the real work is done right here, inside my friends and neighbors, the farmer, the waitress, the young man in prison.  The real change makers are right here, and the work is getting done. People are becoming transformed, people making a real difference.
Like my young friend in prison, people are taking inventory of who they are inside, and grasping the power they have to change.  And, then, they are stepping out, and doing the hard, gut level work, and moving ahead.  

They see the richness in their lives, not by the number of socks they got for Christmas, but in the way they love and are loved.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Suicide: Dealing With the Loss of a Friend

I don’t know what to say, or even think.  A friend of mine has gone, at a time and place and manner of his own choosing.  He left, not saying good bye, not asking for help with his pain, his choices.  But, then again, maybe he did, and we did not listen, or did not respond to what he asked.  At least, I did not hear him asking for a hand, or my ear, or even considering other choices.  Or, maybe I did.  And now, I do not know.  I am, at the least, confused and lost, and stumbling around in my grief, my impotence.  
Now, there is an emptiness, and a great unknowing.  The “what ifs” keep multiplying, and I am left with wonder, with sadness, and guilt.  “What if?”  “What if?”  
And, in the silence that follows my asking, there are no answers, only more questions.  
Friends of mine, closer to him that I was, are left empty, unknowing, wandering in the wilderness of uncertainty, of deeper questions which have no answers today.  My pain today is enough; I cannot imagine theirs.  
I search for answers that are not there.  I search for so much, for reasons, for explanations, for understandings, knowing that there is now only a cold wind blowing around my heart.  
Raw craziness, that is what is running amuck in my life now.  No answers, just more questions.  Not much solace, yet knowing that my friend was, at least for a second, at peace with himself and what he was doing.  
I was not on his road of life, and I did not know his journey.  In his departing, there is even more uncertainty in my mind as to what I might have known, might have done, might have loved him deeper, had he shared his pain, his questions, his journey.  But, he did not, and somehow I must accept that.  Yet, in that, I find myself angry, and unknowing, and uncertain.  I am confused, and enraged, yet what has been done was beyond what I could have done, and beyond what I am, and what I could have been to him.  
Old pains, and other suicides, and those still unanswered questions come back now, again reminding me of old wounds, unresolved enigmas, old doubts and tears.  I do not know.  I didn’t know then, and I still don’t know.  Old stuff, reopened, bleeding again, making new tears.  
Part of me wants answers, but I know that answers won’t ever come.  I move on, in life, yet I am left with wonderment, and enigma, and cold winds, ice in my heart that comes at unforeseen, strange times, dragging me back to old ghosts and old, unresolved times.  
The poet writes of what I feel, and points me towards forgiveness.  Yet, that word seems foreign to where I sit now, empty and alone, not knowing, not finding sanity in all of this.  The poet’s wisdom circles about me, aflame, trying to warm my cold, lonely heart.  
Perhaps, I should reach out, and accept that warmth, on this cold winter’s night.  


Forgiveness
By Marion Waterston, January 31, 2005

I guess I'll never know
All I want to know
Or understand
What can't be understood
But I believe it's time to forgive

Time to forgive you for leaving me
So abruptly and so painfully
And time to forgive myself
For talks we didn't have
Laughs we didn't share
Songs we didn't sing
Foolishly I thought that time was on our side

Can it be that time now wishes to atone for this betrayal
For tears no longer flow like endless rivers
Anger seems a wasted emotion
And dreams those dreaded night-time visitors
Can come as friends

Once again I smile at the innocence of children
The unabashed warmth of lovers
The enthusiastic affection of dogs
And although I do not see you my precious love
You are with me

So I guess I'll never know
All I want to know
Or understand
What can't be understood
But here in this quiet moment
It's time and I'm ready

To forgive.

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Cold Morning Walk


The essence now in that envelope
between night and dawn, 
the eastern sky silent through pure white spectrum,
everywhere crystalline frost, its task to bejewel 
fallen leaves and winter twigs,
and share itself with 
me.

Now, 
stillness—
deep silence,
until my soul opens up and
sees the all that is here
just, and only, now.
I need only
be.

Moving through the silence, only my
white breath moving, only my shoes
beating a faint cadence in this between time,
I become one with this world,
space where everything can be the future
if only I dream it, and move towards it.



—Neal Lemery 12/4/13

Saturday, November 23, 2013

Walking on Life's Path


I don’t know it all.  And, I never will.  

But, in this journey of curiosity, inquiry, the anticipation of what may be around the corner, and the meeting of what I haven’t figured out yet, lies the excitement.  

And, yes, I might even be wrong about what I think I know.  I’m not perfect.  I’m not a master of much of what goes on in the world, or what I think I know to figure out a problem.  And, the more I work on the stuff that I think I’m pretty good at, even a master of, I keep finding out that there is more for me to learn, and even more problems and questions that come up, as I go about my tasks.  

The learning curve still have a pretty good slope to it, keeping my journey as a healthy form of exercise, on all levels.  

Often, being able to ask the question is often more important than thinking I have the answer.  I usually don’t have the answer, at least the right answer. Even if the answer was right a while ago, it has a good chance of not being right now, anyway.  And, “right” and “correct” are relative, anyway.

But, I have a lot of questions, and more than enough enigmas, quandaries, and paradoxes to keep me moving forward, looking for the answers.  Somedays, I just discover I have more questions.  

Simply having the questions is becoming increasingly comfortable.  I’m full of questions.  I keep finding more questions, and revising, rewriting the questions.  Questions give me structure, and give me direction.  

I’ve always needed direction.  I’ve been around long enough that I can see the cycles, the patterns of life, and society, and being able to navigate through it al, with some sense of purpose and structure.  I can get easily lost if I don’t have focus, and a path to try to follow.  

“If you do not change direction, you may end up where you are headed.” —Lao Tzu.

When I figure out I’m going in the wrong direction, I summon my courage, dust off my list of questions, and take a new path.  I “work my hard” and change directions, heading on a new path.  And, when I look back, I can see where I’ve stumbled, and where I’ve danced, and I usually figure out that my choices were good ones.  

I’m loaded with questions, and I’m on my path, my meandering path.  My job is to keep track of where I’m headed, and to not get so caught up in myself that I start thinking I know it all, that I have all the answers.  If I’m curious and not afraid to look at the compass once in a while, life keeps on being an exciting, and rewarding adventure.  

—Neal Lemery, 11/23/2013

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

November Storm


Quiet now,
so quiet I can almost imagine 
the sheets of rain beating on the roof,
running down the windows, while I make tea
and feel its heat in my hands, the rest of me
buried under my blanket in my chair,
drying mouse hunter snoring in my lap.

The house will shake with yet another gust, 
the roar and whistling of wind streaking by
not long from its marathon above the ocean
from the tropics or Alaska, or wherever this storm was born.

The lights will flicker with the bigger gusts and maybe go out,
leaving us with the lone candle on the coffee table,
before I light Grandma’s “coal oil lamp” 
and get out the cribbage board.

Perhaps then we will make sandwiches by candlelight,
sipping the soup I’d made before the storm began,
and deal another hand, laughing and talking—
the storm slamming against the house,
garbage can lid and the last of the leaves
sailing by,
in the deep black of the soaking wet
night.

Later on, under the added blanket, 
I will wake to a long gust, whistling around the house
yet more rain coming sideways, only
the lightning showing me the neighbor’s house, 
thunder joining the wind in chorus of the night long song.

After dawn, air still, rain down to a drizzle, 
the rumble of the furnace, and the refrigerator,
means I can make the coffee,
the cribbage board there on the table, ready for the next deal.


—Neal Lemery, 11/18/13

Wednesday, November 6, 2013

A Courageous Dilemma


We often think heroes are the folks somewhere else, the people on the front page or on the TV news, people who have done something amazing.  They’re the people meeting the President, getting a medal.

But, we have heroes here, right in my town. And, sometimes, I get to be a witness to some amazing acts of courage and determination to just do the right thing.

A friend of mine is facing a serious dilemma.  Their work, and their values and morals, and what is truly in their best interest are now at loggerheads.  Life isn’t working out the way they want it, and there’s a lot of conflict, a lot of strife.  

And, it’s becoming clear that the right thing to do is make some big changes, and to move on.  That means giving up some things that are near and dear to their heart.  Yet, they aren’t able to fully live their morals and values the way things are now.  
They are at the crossroads, and the road is muddy, and there are a lot of questions, and not as many answers.  

My friend has wrestled with all of this, and keeps coming back to thinking they need to live their morals and values, and be true to themselves, to honor their core values.  And, when they’ve looked at their dilemma in that way, the choices become clear, and the path ahead opens up, and they can move forward.

They’re unstuck, now, and they’ve figured it out.  Do the right thing, be true to their values, and find the courage to move ahead, to embrace change.  Once they’ve come around to living life according to their beliefs, the choices are a lot easier, a lot clearer.

This conflict hasn’t been easy.  There’s been a lot of sleepless nights, a lot of conversation over coffee with friends, a lot of wandering in the desert of uncertainty and doubt.  And, in that darkness, they’ve found their stars again, and they’ve refocused on their beliefs and morals.  Their compass has found True North again, and they are ready to make their move.

I’ve helped, just a bit, in that journey.  I’ve listened, and put my judging and second guessing to the side.  My role as friend in all this has been to listen, and to repeat back to them what they are saying, so they can hear their own words, their own values, through another voice.

My friend has figured it out.  I don’t need to decide for them, and I don’t need to analyze the dilemma through my own values and beliefs.  I just need to let them hear what they are saying, and let they say and hear their own advice, their own solution to their dilemmas.

I’d want that for me, when it’s my turn in the box of paradox, dilemma, and conflict.  Someone to hold up that mirror, and let me see myself for what I am, and for what I believe in, and want to achieve. We all need that person in our lives to give us permission to get out the compass, and find our True North.

My friend is moving on, taking steps now in the direction they’ve chosen, and feeling pretty happy about it.  They aren’t expecting to get a medal from the President, but they deserve one, for being courageous and for doing the right thing.


Neal Lemery   11/5/2013

Wednesday, October 9, 2013

Lost and Found


                              

                          By Neal Lemery


   I can be so lost and alone, in a crowd of people.

   I plug into my electronic devices, suddenly accessing the immediacy of "news", social commentary, so many thoughts of others.  Yet, I can be, at the same time, in a dark cave of despair, my isolation and sense of unworthiness becoming the ghosts in the dark.  

   Friends are searching for their own meaning in life, their purpose, their place in this hectic, yes frantic world of immediate deadlines and obligations.  

   We heed the call of the Mad Hatter in Alice in Wonderland, "hurry, hurry."  

   But, we can be lost, easily pushed to the side of the freeway, as the world goes rushing on by.

  What we have sensed that we have lost is being connected with each other.  We used to tell stories around the fire at night, and during the day, work together, laughing and singing, always connected.    We shared the good and the bad.  

   We were close to the land, and the stars, the birds, and, through our hands, we were connected to the earth.  Our work was something we could see, touch, hold onto.  

   How we lived our day impacted our village. If we didn't hunt, or plant, or work together, we did not eat.  We truly connected with each other, and with the universe.  Spirituality was not abstract, it was real.  And, we had accountability around the fire at night, and around the shared meal.  

   Social media is popular, as we are back around the fire, telling stories, catching up, sharing our lives.  It has its drawbacks, and we can easily be alone in a crowd, ignoring the person next to us.  But, social media life is a form of village life, of community.

  Today, friends write about the  power of Alcoholics Anonymous, the Friends of Bill W. Why does that message, that simple act of gathering together and sharing, why does that work for so many people? Why does that change lives? 

  AA works because it is communal, it brings spirituality to the forefront of our lives, it has a belief that our  spirituality and our uniqueness as a person is truly valuable, and we benefit from the spiritual energy of others.  All religions, all prophets have the core message: be connected, love one another, find peace and meaning in being in communion with each other and with the universe.  Avoid separateness, don't be alone.  We are all one brotherhood and sisterhood.  The person next to us matters to us, simply because they are our brother, our sister.

  Yesterday, I reconnected.  The sun was out, it was a perfect day, almost hot, and still, with the colors of Autumn around me.  I had plants to plant in my yard, and it felt good to my soul to push a shovel into the rich, dark soil, and make a new home for shrubs, trees, and daffodils.  

  In sixty or seventy years, the trees I planted will reach their prime, and will send their seeds throughout the valley, and stand tall and proud, objects of beauty for those who come after me.  I will be long gone, but what my feet, back and hands did for those trees yesterday will be remembered by the trees, on the day they moved here and took up residence.  

   It felt good to feel the dirt under my feet, and between my fingers.  I held the plants, and their roots, tenderly settling them into the ground, settling the dirt next to their roots, and watering them in.  One tree needed staking, to hold it up in the coming winter storms.  Yet, all too soon, it will be growing tall and sturdy, its roots firmly reaching downward, connecting with and becoming part of this land.

  Being the tree planter connected me with the earth, and with the universe.  I am part of this place, as is the tree, and the hawk that circled above me, and the wind that blew in off the ocean, bringing the smell of last night's rain.  

  Today, I am far away, meeting one of my buddies, making more connections with him, as he is planting his own trees, and setting down his own roots.  He, too, will grow straight and tall, his soul firmly planted in good soil, taking in the water and sunlight of knowledge and stability, making his life rich and productive.

   I've been teaching him about tree planting, and farming his soul.  He's a good student, and what I've been saying about what we do in the village, how we are part of our tribe, is stuff he's taken into his heart.  

   "What are you doing today?" people ask. 

   Making connections, planting trees, tending my soul, taking care of the brothers and sisters in this world.  That's what I'm doing.

10/7/2013

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

To Forget


To Forget

The list of things to forget
brought me to remember what I’d lost
and not wanted to find ever again--
to pains and ashes and broken hearts
of long ago and yesterday,
all coming back.

To write it down becomes remembrance--
I try mourning again, like the obituary
falling out of the well fingered Bible,
old and tattered, its fluttering downward
bringing fresh tears.

In trying to forget, I remember again
the joys and smiles and songs well sung.
Those notes dull the pain of what
I came here to forget, but 
need to remember
again.


  ---Neal Lemery, 9/2/2013

Sunday, May 19, 2013

The Wisdom I Heard This Week


The Wisdom I Heard This Week

Eckhart Tolle

May I suggest a deeper and somewhat unusual perspective on who you are?
You are not just a person, and you are not IN the Universe.
You ARE the Universe, which IN YOU is awakening, experiencing itself, becoming conscious. That consciousness is who you are in essence. We are all fleeting expressions of it. The Universe awakens THROUGH experiencing challenges and limitations. That means YOU awaken and deepen through your challenges, as does humanity as a whole. So welcome or at least accept all that life brings you. Change what can be changed, otherwise surrender to what IS. Feel the Presence within you as the background to every experience. Know that, as Jesus put it, "you are the light of the world."
With love
Eckhart Tolle

Johnny Moses, Salish storyteller  

You decide if you want to live, or if you want to die.

If you decide you want to live, you also need to decide how you will live.

Every day is a new start, a rebirth, a new beginning.  You can’t go back.  You have to move ahead.  

Love yourself.  Respect yourself.  The power of loving yourself is transformative.

Every adult in the village can be a parent.  When you are growing up, you need a lot of parents.  

In the Salish language,
the words for singing and crying are the same
the words for death and change are the same

(Life is a process of change.  Embrace that change and move on.  Be reborn.)

In Salish culture, you are not a man until you can cry for your people.  When boys learn to cry and share their emotions, then they become men.





Notes from the Dalai Lama’s Talk on Compassion

Portland, Oregon, May 11, 2013

“Compassion means genuine loving kindness, the wish for others to be happy.  All the world’s religions -- every one -- message is compassion.  We need the practice of tolerance.  We need the practice of forgiveness.”

People of faith who aim to practice these values must be serious about it.  

“In many cases, religious practice is simply lip service.  Talk compassion, do something different.  Sometimes religion teaches us hypocrisy.”

“We can see among non-believers some people really dedicated to serving other people.  Be a compassionate person, not necessarily a religious believer.”

“Compassion is the key factor one one’s own well-being.  We are social animals, but those dogs always barking often remain lonely.”

Compassion includes tolerance and acceptance.  Anger is counter-balanced by tolerance and acceptance.  

Serving others is a tradition of all religions.  All religions have the same potential.

Be truly, sincerely committed.  Everyone needs the practice of compassion, in order to be happy.  Compassion is not only for religious people.

Compassion and affection are biological in nature.  (For example, nurturing a baby.)  As we grow older, greed and self-centeredness erode our compassion.  These are the costs of growing up.  

Religious tradition builds on the biological compassion, to encourage a lifetime of compassion.  All faiths have a tradition of compassion.  

Affection, action, and research are our karma in our lives.  When change occurs, we need to research, re-evaluate, take action, and change.   Action that is positive results in happiness.

A materialistic life is a cultural habit, and is living at a superficial level.  It is animal thinking.  So, go broader.  Humans are able to reason.  Use reason to extend compassion to all levels, all people.  Change your thinking.

Materialism is not happiness.  

The hygiene of emotion.  Our emotional state is as important as our physical state.  We need to educate ourselves and others about emotional health.  

This is “secular ethics”.  “Secular” means to respect all religions and the non-believer.  

Religion promotes basic human values, but, often, religious practices and views corrupt this.  The ruling class can corrupt this, and there is often bullying.  

Institutions get corrupted.  We need to recognize this,  change, and oppose this.  Religion isn’t necessarily religious institutions.  

Sincerely gentle people live better, more peaceful, happier lives, and have more friends.  

Affection, a sense of concern, brings trust, brings friendship.

Fear, hate, and anger eats at our immune system.  Compassion increases our immune system.

People, if they are NOT the recipient of affection early on in their lives, are less satisfied, have a lesser sense of love, are more anxious, and less happy.

Be committed.  Be unified with others who are also seeking more compassion in their lives.


(compiled by Neal Lemery) May 18, 2013

Monday, May 13, 2013

Notes From the Dalai Lama's Talk on Compassion



Portland, Oregon, May 11, 2013

“Compassion means genuine loving kindness, the wish for others to be happy.  All the world’s religions -- every one -- message is compassion.  We need the practice of tolerance.  We need the practice of forgiveness.”

People of faith who aim to practice these values must be serious about it.  

“In many cases, religious practice is simply lip service.  Talk compassion, do something different.  Sometimes religion teaches us hypocrisy.”

“We can see among non-believers some people really dedicated to serving other people.  Be a compassionate person, not necessarily a religious believer.”

“Compassion is the key factor one one’s own well-being.  We are social animals, but those dogs always barking often remain lonely.”

Compassion includes tolerance and acceptance.  Anger is counter-balanced by tolerance and acceptance.  

Serving others is a tradition of all religions.  All religions have the same potential.

Be truly, sincerely committed.  Everyone needs the practice of compassion, in order to be happy.  Compassion is not only for religious people.

Compassion and affection are biological in nature.  (For example, nurturing a baby.)  As we grow older, greed and self-centeredness erode our compassion.  These are the costs of growing up.  

Religious tradition builds on the biological compassion, to encourage a lifetime of compassion.  All faiths have a tradition of compassion.  

Affection, action, and research are our karma in our lives.  When change occurs, we need to research, re-evaluate, take action, and change.   Action that is positive results in happiness.

A materialistic life is a cultural habit, and is living at a superficial level.  It is animal thinking.  So, go broader.  Humans are able to reason.  Use reason to extend compassion to all levels, all people.  Change your thinking.

Materialism is not happiness.  

The hygiene of emotion.  Our emotional state is as important as our physical state.  We need to educate ourselves and others about emotional health.  

This is “secular ethics”.  “Secular” means to respect all religions and the non-believer.  

Religion promotes basic human values, but, often, religious practices and views corrupt this.  The ruling class can corrupt this, and there is often bullying.  

Institutions get corrupted.  We need to recognize this,  change, and oppose this.  Religion isn’t necessarily religious institutions.  

Sincerely gentle people live better, more peaceful, happier lives, and have more friends.  

Affection, a sense of concern, brings trust, brings friendship.

Fear, hate, and anger eats at our immune system.  Compassion increases our immune system.

People, if they are NOT the recipient of affection early on in their lives, are less satisfied, have a lesser sense of love, are more anxious, and less happy.

Be committed.  Be unified with others who are also seeking more compassion in their lives.


Neal Lemery

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Outside of the Church Yard: Suicide and Me


Outside of the Church Yard: Suicide and Me

We have a complicated relationship, and we go way back.  

Suicide and the way to early death of young men and women have hit me hard in my life, and I still haven't found a way to work through it very well, or to make much sense of it, either.

I've sat with a young man who was a son to me, when he was suicidal, spending the night holding him, and talking to him, and working through his pain and his hopelessness.  When dawn finally came, he was better, and decided he wanted to live.  That night took everything out of me, as I used every bit of love and compassion and reason and faith and hope to get him to decide to live, and to tell him that he mattered, that he was important and that life was sacred and good.

I've had long talks with a close friend in high school, as he raged about his father beating him, and neglecting him, and not loving him, and how angry he was about all that, and how he just wanted to end it all.  Long talks by the camp fire, where truth was spoken and the meaning of life was discussed, and I thought we'd really gotten to the core of it all.

But, we didn't.  And, years later, he came out to me, telling me he was gay and that his sexuality was at the core of his rage with his father, and feeling unloved by his father just made life all the more unbearable.  

I learned you never know how deep the wound is that people have to deal with, and struggle with, what the real reasons are that people finally decide that life may not be worth living.

I like to think that if I had known all of the worries, and all of the doubts, we’d been able to figure it all out and “fix” it, around that campfire when we were seventeen.  But, probably not.  I can’t seem to do that at sixty, and hopefully I’m a bit wiser and smarter now.  I’m left with wondering, and not knowing.  A lot of the not knowing. 

Maybe if we’d been able to say “I don’t know, but walk with me a bit,” that would have been enough.   

People ending their lives is not all that rare, but there is a code of silence. We have rarely honestly talked about this part of life, these holes that suddenly open up in our social fabric.  Yet, we dance around it, not really speaking truth, not dealing with this subject. Perhaps there are no words to say.  That silence is part of the craziness.

In our culture and not too long in the past, a person who ended their own life couldn’t be buried in the church cemetery, which was inside of the fenced in church yard.  Their grave was outside of the fence, their lives literally rejected and separated from their spiritual community, and from God.

The code of silence, and shame, and guilt was there for all to see, those feelings literally fenced out of where we were supposed to experience God in our lives, where our pain and our humanity were respected, where we could be embraced by unconditional love.  

That rule, that law of our culture is still there for all to see, the graves of the “saved” souls, the children of God, and then, outside of the fence, there are the graves of the suicides, the “eternally damned”.  

Oh, we aren’t so explicit now, using the fence around the church yard to make our judgements.  Yet, we do judge, and we express our adjudications of shame and guilt.  

We follow this rule, this law in so many other ways. We stigmatize and shame, and often ignore depression, other mental illness, and addiction, and the impact of violence and not loving our kids enough, or soldiers trying to come back from war.  We make sure people can self medicate with booze, and dope, and lots of prescription meds, and we judge those “solutions” as OK, but when people can’t seem to “get it together”, we put them outside of the fence, and get quiet about it all.  
And, when a pop star or other public figure commits suicide, we are quick to pounce, looking for flaws and defects.  We are quick to find the defining reason: drugs, love, or the microscope of public infatuation with their lives.  We like the simple, quick, and not so very truthful answers.  Real life is messier than that, but it doesn’t sell tabloids and it doesn’t draw a television audience.  We also don”t have to look at our own doubts, our own actions, and how we as a culture still use that fence.

I held a teenager in my arms one morning, in his bedroom, as he told me about shooting himself in the head, as his father held him, trying to talk him out of it.  He showed me the scar on his cheek, and the three missing teeth, and the place on his skull where the bullet came out.  

It was a miracle he lived, and it was a miracle we could talk about it in his bedroom, sitting on the bed where his dad had begged him not to do it, and couldn't pry the rifle out of his hands, until he had pulled the trigger.   

We gave voice to all those feelings, and all that pain that morning, dealt with the poison, and did some healing.  We moved on, not forgetting, but dealing with the feelings he had; we had some honesty, and dealt with his pain and doubts.  We went deep, talking about life and love and who we really are, and what really goes on when we are at the bottom and can’t see the light above us, or the hand reaching out to us.

A teenager close to me died, choosing a gun to deal with his worries, and his doubts.  People close to him had a lot of theories and there were a lot of stories, a lot of explanations, and a bit of blaming others.  There were the usual suspects: drugs, love, anger, rage of not being loved, not having a safe, respected place to be in, not getting enough love.  

Those popular stories might be true, or several of them, or maybe there was something else, too.  I'll never know. He is gone and didn't tell us why he left us.  Perhaps it all hurt too much to talk about and to stay around and muck through it all.
We will never know his truth, and where he was at when he pulled the trigger.    

Suicide takes away the answers and the conversations and just dealing with stuff, with family and with friends, and people who love you.  We are left with just the questions, and the guilt and the wondering, the "coulda, woulda, shouldas".  

Two other teenaged boys, boys I was close to, and they so very close to their buddy who shot himself, lived in the same town.  It came my job to be with them in the next week, and maybe keep them away from the guns and the drug dealers and killing themselves.  I took them to the funeral home to see the body and to pray and say goodbyes. I held them and sat with them at night in the park, the park they’d played in with their buddy, where we shivered on a snowy bench talking about life and crying.  

Some folks thought it was part of making sense of it all, but there was no sense to be made of any of it.  

And, as some families do, no one talks about him anymore.  It is like he disappeared forever, and wasn't part of our lives. But he was and he is.  A lot of people put him in the ground outside of the church yard. 

I will always miss him and I will always think of the insanity of a sixteen year old boy kicked out of his house on a snowy night, and finding a gun and blowing his brains out, all alone and cold and feeling unloved.

I've stood on that same street corner, where he died, in the cold and the night, and the answers don't come.  Even after nearly thirty years, they don't come, and the wind still blows cold, cold and lonely.  

            Crazy.

“His death was a single moment for him, but an endless, unforgiving moment for me, for us, for every encounter from then forward with others --- and every encounter with myself.” (Kim Stafford, 100 Tricks Every Boy Can Do: How My Brother Disappeared, p 165).

I know of that loneliness, that pain, that unanswerable, unconsolable ache that fills one's chest.   And, all the questions and the not so good answers that people say.  Suicide is craziness, about the biggest kind of craziness there is.  

Suicide is just craziness, without any real answers and without any magic wand that makes all the crap of that go away.  

I think I know, and yet I don’t.  Not really.  

We still bury people outside of the fence, at least mentally, separate and distant from the “rest of us”, away from community.  Perhaps, in that distance, there is safety, there is the sense of not having to confront those painful, ugly questions about despair, and hopelessness, and death.  

If we ignore it, it will go away.  

But, it doesn’t.  Life isn’t that simple, and when depression and suicide slam down on us, in its ugly suddenness, we don’t have good answers.

When I lose a friend, a relative, or anyone who has been a part of of my life, I need to grieve, too, for they have been in my life and then then they are gone.  A person’s death and the grief I feel when someone near to me dies is part of the hole that I have in my heart.  We all have holes, you know.  We all struggle in life to figure out our holes, and to try to fill them up with goodness and love, and to find some sort of peace and meaning in our lives.  Life is messy and awkward, and the work with our holes is sweaty, hard work.  

We all have holes, we all have hard, dirty work we are doing to sort through things, to move ahead, and live our lives.  

And we need to keep everyone we love inside of the church yard, so we can remember them and hold them close.  And, they need to hold us close, too.


3/26/2013