Monthly Archives

October 2012

Brave, collecting emotions, grief

Talking About Grief

October 30, 2012

There are not yet words for what we are swimming through. Things are happening we cannot say or even percieve, because no one admits they are happening. This is where the limitations of human conciousness show up: we need words in order to make things real. If we don’t talk about something, it’s as though it’s not happening. And yet it is happening.”  – Christina Baldwin. Storycatcher

 

No one ever talks about how exhausted the process of bereavement makes you.  They talk about how sad they are and the stages of grief and all of that technical stuff.  They talk about baggage and processing and funerals and details.  You always know how someone died and when they died and when and where they will be ‘put to rest.’  But at a time of loss, it is not the dead that need that rest.

We have had a profound loss in our family.  That is why I am not here with the story I had hoped to give.  I haven’t had a chance to record it, but more than that, I have simply been too tired.  I have fallen asleep in three different chairs today and in the middle of three different conversations.  It’s as if the body simply can only take so much emotion and can only go so deep for so long before it decides it has had enough and shuts down.

We have talked for several days now, in that strange gap in your life that death opens.  We have used words to remember, to understand, to question, to wonder and to share memories.  It’s as if we must get it all out there; get it all said in order to cement it into our minds and our experience.  I have heard some stories three or four times already.  These tales have already begun to take on the status of family legend.  The mythology is being created around me as I sit as witness.  It is sacred and strange all at once.

But the fatigue remains,  and although proper sleep alludes us, we have begun to sit together more quietly and to turn to distractions to fill the silence of our tired selves.  Our minds turn from telling the stories to storing them.  New files are created from this unusually massive download in our cells, and we struggle to string a full sentence together.

It is a ritual and a ceremony that is so personal and yet so universal.  Birth and death are the things we all truly have in common.

But it is the stories we tell about those things and the time in between them that creates our experience.

Sending love to you and your loved ones tonight.  Hold them tight.  Tell your stories now while everyone is there to hear them.

xo

 

 

Stories

The Queen Who Went to Dinner – A Story

October 21, 2012

“Invite someone dangerous to tea.” ~ SARK

A friend is currently doing a lot of shifting and glorious re-aligning, and there has been some conversation around her being a Queen.  In her honour, I would like to share this story with you.

I originally published it as a story on my old blog, but this is the first time it has been read aloud.  I hope you enjoy it, and hear the message deep deep down.

The image here is one I found on Pinterest and I have had trouble finding the owner. If anyone can tell me, I’d love to give credit where credit is due.

xo

The Queen Who Went to Dinner by Meghan Genge (3:04)

Do you want to hear another? Here’s, The Caged Woman

Stories

The Whole Woman – A Story

October 17, 2012

The thing you fear most has no power. Your fear of it is what has the power. Facing the truth really will set you free. – Oprah Winfrey

I promise that every story will not have the word ‘woman’ in the title.  This week’s story is a tiny bit tongue-in-cheek.  I hope you enjoy it.  A teaser for next week’s story: so far it looks like it’s going to touch on our collective cellular memory around women being burned as witches.  I only write what wants to be written – I’ll do a post on that soon too.

Enjoy ‘The Whole Woman.”

with love,

Meghan

The Whole Woman by Meghan Genge (5:48)