Archive for August, 2009

The Impossible Task

Friday, August 28th, 2009

spiralpathsummer.jpg“In our era, the road to holiness necessarily passes through the world of action.” –Dag Hammarskjold

 

I feel quite blessed and content in my life but know that through inevitable difficulty (loss of loved ones, or simply through the process of aging for examples), I will experience the pain involved in living. What I have also discovered is that life, when truly lived is full of impossible tasks.

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I make sure to walk the labyrinth-spiral in our prairie every day at sunrise the week up to my birthday. My fifty-fourth birthday was this past August 16th. I take the time to consider my past year and what my intentions are for the new one. The prairie offered up encounters of crows, red-tail hawk, Tiger-Swallow Tail and all the beauty of what has come to blossom: Prairie Doc, Black-eyed Susan’s, Blue Stem grass, Queens Ann’s Lace and Cone Flowers. Bees covered the Bee Balm as to be expected and spider webs made labyrinths in the sky as they swung between grasses and flowers. Often I stopped on my walk to look at a dewdrop that clung to a purple Cone or at the sun rising through the spider’s web. Each walk strengthened me as well as reminded me of the miracle of life.

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But even amidst such beauty and miracles difficulty can find its way to disrupt and disturb. A disruption in our Prairie is the invasive and abundant Golden Rod. A few might be enjoyed but they tend to take over and smother out other plants. And we are not talking about a few Goldenrods but an invasion of yellow. I saw several Prairie Doc’s being smothered out by a surrounding camp of Goldenrods. This was the first year the Doc’s gave forth their flower, after a good five years following their seeding. I didn’t want them defeated and so began to pull at a few Golden Rods on one of my walks, pulling them out by stem and root.

 

 “Okay,” I thought, “I can do this.”

 

But then I looked up and saw the plenty of Goldenrod spreading and flowering over the several acres of prairie. This was an impossible task. But something called me to just keep pulling until I created space around this particular Prairie Doc. More revealed itself to me and to the light as I cleared the area – a hidden Cone Flower and some plant I will need to look up in the book.

 

Then I would peer up again and see the mass of Goldenrod everywhere and feel once again the impossibility of this task. Am I a fool? Then I would see another prairie plant struggling for light through the mass of Goldenrod and I would begin to pull bringing up stem and root.

 

I spent much of my birthday pulling and clearing. Even at the end of the day, it seemed I hardly put a dent into the impossible task of ridding the prairie of Goldenrod. But then, I could see more evidence of my effort, another prairie plant getting light.

 

Something kept calling me that day to just clear one more space, to give more room to one more Cone Flower or Prairie Doc. I chose to focus on the smaller task of one patch at a time and discovered an entire new world within this spiral I have walked since its conception in 2001. Each time I would take to clearing a space, I found myself going deeper into the more hidden world of the prairie. I saw life (and death) beyond the path and under the leaves and flowers that more readily displayed them selves to the observer. I discovered a layer to the underworld of the prairie, which was made up of dried stems and flowers from several years of growth. They too were competing with the diversity of the prairie. In this case the dead plants were stifling the living.

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Looking out, the larger task could discourage me into passiveness and defeat. How true I find this to be when trying to live by spiritual principles (or attempting to obtain enlightenment), or the hope of ending war or world hunger. Even such tasks as marriage, raising children, attending to our vocations can all be daunting when trying to take in all that is asked of us, particularly when within these commitments arise difficulty. So both the greatness of the task (a happy marriage, enlightenment) can seem impossible but then too difficulties arise within these obligations.

 

Then I recalled something one of my teacher’s once said to me, “When there is difficulty we are either part of the problem or solution.”

 

I decided to be part of the solution when it came to restoring the prairie. I too can decide day to day to deal with all (internal and external) hindrances in the same way: choose to be part of the solution. There really is no third alternative. To give up, walk away, to be in denial, or to discount means to relinquish ourselves to the problem and to be in agreement with the problem. I may just be able to create a little space, a little world peace, but knowing that I am contributing to the solution and not adding to the problem is a great relief to me. And we can keep it simple. No need to join the Peace Corps; just be kind when your stuck in traffic, love the one your with, or be patient to the tired grocery clerk who messed up your bill.

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As far as the prairie goes, there is no one single happy ending followed by credits. The story goes on and on. I will need to continue to pull out one plant at a time. And each year there will be more Goldenrod trying to dominate the prairie. But if my aspiration remains strong – - -to be part of the solution, (in this case to make space for all that wants to seed, grow and bloom in this prairie,) I will continue to experience many small (but worthwhile) successes.

 

At dusk on my birthday I asked my husband (a wildlife biologist), “Is it worth it?” I wondered whether from his point of view if this pulling one Golden Rod at a time was sensible.

 

He reassured me that even world peace is possible one patch of Goldenrod at a time. “Besides we can help the prairie rejuvenate further through a Fall burn,” he said. As it turns out native plants are “fire dependent.” So, to burn the prairie will help bring forth its diversity and not let one plant dominate (in this case Golden Rod). And the burn will eliminate the competing dead undergrowth. As it turns out Goldenrod is not as fire dependent. So along with the pulling out the Goldenrod and burning the prairie this Fall more of the Prairie’s naturally diverse beauty will be revealed.

 

Sometimes we do have to set our lives on fire to reveal our true nature.

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In one of his essays Leopold bemoans the loss of his favorite compass plant (another species in the genus Silphium, like Prairie Doc) when it got mowed down and destroyed by a cemetery maintenance crew (who likely were not aware of what they were doing)….

“What a thousand acres of Silphiums looked like when they tickled the bellies of the buffalo is a question never again to be answered, and perhaps not even asked.”

This quote (one of my husband’s favorites) is obviously about loss in the name of “progress”… and a good motivation for me to keep pulling.

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“Whichever step of the staircase you enter upon, the journey will, in its own way and own time, lead you to all the other steps. The only requirement is that you put one foot in front of the other-one thought moment of interest and effort after another. That is all teachers really require of their students. They have trust that teachings will unfold their results naturally, if the students will only grasp the opportunity.”  David Pratt. 2003. Steps on the Path to Enlightenment. Boston: Wisdom Publication

 

“If we can really understand the problem, the answer will come out of it, because the answer is not separate from the problem.” -Jiddu Krishnamurti

 

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 jewelhrt8@aol.com 

 

 

Julie’s 2009 Fall Schedule

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

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Sunrise Walks in the labyrinth-Spiral August 10th through the 15th. (5:30am to 7:30 am). The spiral is in full bloom. I take my walk around 5:30 but will keep an eye out for you. Just drive on up and park on the drive way. Sun rises over the hill around 5:45. The address is E3298 County Rd B. 6 miles west of Plain on County Rd B. Of course this is free and open. On SATURDAY the 15th, the labyrinth will be open to the public until NOON.  (Please bring appropriate walking shoes).

There is still room in the Spiritual Journaling Class –  

Spiritual Journaling: The Way of the Spiritual Warrior Begins Wednesday September 9th. Meets every 2nd, 3rd and 4th Weds of the month for five months at Healing Services Overlooking the River in Prairie du Sac. 6 pm till 8:15.  $25 per night, scholarships available. Write your way to enlightenmentGain insight, get beyond the mind to deeper awareness, and develop your natural gifts of intuition, creativity and compassion. Inquiry through journaling practices. Access your inner wisdom keeper. Based on years of journaling practices, my book and various psychological practices that open one’s mind to wisdom. I have used journaling practices in my work with people (and in my own spiritual practice) for over 30 years. 

Some of you inquired about personal sessions –  

I offer personal one to one sessions based on transpersonal psychology and intuitive practices. My one to one sessions go for an hour and a half. Come in for a one time consultation or psychic reading or for a series of transpersonal counseling sessions. Creating movement and increasing integrity in your life is central to the paradigm I use in private sessions. I offer a sliding scale from $85 to $125.00 per session. I am available in Prairie du Sac at Healing Services Overlooking the River on Wednesdays and Thursdays and at Thundering Clouds, LLC (near Spring Green) on Tuesdays. Email or call me to set up a session. (Contact information below)

One last thing – 

My next OPEN WRITER’S Day at Thundering Clouds is FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 4th, SUNRISE till 3:00pm (Come and walk the spiral at sunrise if you want). I will be available for brief consultations on your writing and journaling (free of course). Come and enjoy the spiral-labyrinth in the prairie, the Three Jewel labyrinth in the wood, visit the sweat lodge or simply write in the Thundering Clouds gazebo. Please bring appropriate walking shoes, bug spray, water bottle and lunch. 

This year’s Initiation Course began August 13th. The next one will begin October 2010, following the release of my Initiation book.

The Initiation Course

The spiritual pilgrimage of initiation reveals to the participant what is yet hidden, makes known to you and the world more of your true nature, gifts, latent possibilities, and inherent qualities. The process is one of movement, recapitulation, regeneration, transformation and initiation. The Wheel of Initiation opens “out a way whence the imprisoned splendor may escape.” It is an organic template of personal spiritual initiation, an inner pilgrimage where you free yourself from that which ties you to habitual and even harmful ways of being, into a more natural, initiated state of expression. 

The Year of Initiation will take you on an initiatory journey, a personal spiritual pilgrimage of initiation with me as your guide.

The Wheel of Initiation, once entered can offer you skillful and personal means of freedom from painful habitual states. But be warned, you will be leaving the shore of your comfort zone. As Andre Gide stated, “You cannot discover new continents without losing sight of the shore.” You will need a willingness to let go of old held on beliefs and assumptions about your self and the world to “see” anew. However, you will not be offered someone else’s beliefs to replace the ones that you already hold. This spiritual initiation is simple but not easy and opens inner doors so you can access and discern truth for yourself. It is accessible to all because the splendor indeed is hidden within each of us. The Wheel, as an organic template, presents you proficient means to open the inner doors for yourself, choose for yourself, and initiate yourself.

“When a rite of transformation is specifically geared toward a person’s lifelong spiritual journey into the circle of the spirit, it is referred to as an initiation rite. It initiates one’s daily spiritual path of understanding and practice by eliciting the proper mental attitude and providing the necessary ritual and philosophical knowledge.” Peter Gold, Navajo & Tibetan Sacred Wisdom: The Circle of the Spirit.


Julie Tallard Johnson, MSW, LCSW

jewelhrt8@aol.com   

Thundering Clouds Consulting & Counseling

Thundering Clouds Center for Creative Expression, LLC

Healing Services Overlooking the River in Prairie du Sac, since 1995

http://www.julietallardjohnson.com 

608-963-0724