On Death – 7 hour airport layover musings

A friend recently gave me the writings of St. Porphyrios (a recent 20th century Greek saint), and I’m working my way through them at glacial speed. This is rather unusual for me, but I can’t read more than two sentences without feeling I’ve suddenly discovered a mystery of the universe and falling into deep contemplation for half an hour.

Yet, when I try to capture my profound reveries, or read aloud the same sentences to someone else, something feels wrong… out of tune. This is a contemplative rabbit trail, but I’ve had several spiritual experiences recently that cannot adequately be put into words. I suppose what matters is how the contemplations shapes my life and actions more so than what words I can find to encapsulate the Spirit’s work within me.

The following are a few notes I made while contemplating death in the context of St. P’s writings.

“Whoever enters into the Church is saved; he becomes eternal. Life is one, an unbroken continuity: there is on end, no death. Whoever follows Christ’s commandments never dies. He dies according to the flesh, according to the passions, and starting from this present life, is accorded to live in Paradise, in our Church, and thereafter in eternity. With Christ, death becomes the bridge which we will cross in an instant in order to continue to live in the unsetting light.
From the moment I became a monk I believed that death does not exist. That’s how I felt and how I always feel – that I am eternal and immortal. How magnificent!”

Wounded by Love – The Life and the Wisdom of Saint Porphyrios, pg 90

St. Porphyrios’ blissful disregard of death is foreign, almost bizarre to me. The experience of marriage and love within marriage brought with it for me, a profound and specific fear of death. A fear, I’ve always assumed most people share. (True, my own husband rolls his eyes at my fear, but he has never been a good yardstick of “normal people fears”.) I’d like to say I don’t particularly fear my own death – though the anxious churnings of my stomach and mind during a bad patch airplane turbulence suggest otherwise. But I very much fear the death of those particularly close to me.

If I take a stab at categorizing fear of death (both my own and others), I find roughly three categories.

Fear of Pain – fear that the physical moment of death would be violent, brutal, cruel, or agonizing. This is not a fear I dwell on, but certainly, I find it undesirable.

Fear of Missed Experiences – the loss (or missing) of childbirth and childrearing, the loss of growing old together, the loss of shared time, the loss of mutual support. This one I fear greatly. Before I married, I feared dying without experiencing marriage and sexual relations. Within marriage I fear dying without ever knowing the mystery of a womb filled with life and bursting forth. The mystery of raising a small Imago Dei, at turns captivating, bewildering, and infuriating. And, having thoroughly interwoven our lives, I struggle to imagine how I would even function without my partner.

Fear of Grief – both for others and by others – fear of how lost I would feel without my spouse. Fear of the deep pain he (and others) would experience. The ache of waking to an empty bed. The profound loneliness of chronic pain suffered without a partner or support. The delicious meal that cannot be shared.

I suppose I am primarily thinking of “untimely death” in these fears. And that phrase is rather a weighted one. Can any death be “untimely” if God breathes each of our lives from first wail to final gasp? At what point would I accept a death as “timely”? Is it the nature of the death? Must it be “old age” and not “disease” or “accident” or even “attack”? Yet Grandma Yoko fell asleep at an old age and rather peacefully though “cause of death” was cancer

It strikes me as I review St. Porphyrios’ words that in all my fears, I completely omit what he considers a somewhat valid though ultimately unneeded fear. Fear of the devil, fear of hell. Fear of being so enslaved to sin that at the final judgement we reject Love and experience the depth and passion of it as unending flame. Perhaps I ought to fear my own death rather more. I am slow to repent, unwilling to admit the evil I wreck and quick to excuse. Too often I think of sin as something I can glibly justify before a judge. Rarely do I see how it blinds and binds me, turning the taste of Love from honey to bitter medicine.

Yet.

“In the Church which possess the saving sacraments there is no despair. We may be deeply sinful. But we make confession the priest reads the prayer, we are forgiven and we progress towards immortality, without any anxiety and without any fear.”

Wounded by Love, Pg 90

If my loved ones dwell in the presence of Christ, surely they will continue to experience goodness, joy, love, and peace, whether I live or no. And as we draw nigh to Christ do we not continue to share life in His presence, alive and asleep? Perhaps it is unhealthy for me to desire a loved one so much that their death matters more than Christ’s eternal presence? Would my husband’s death really mean the loss of all goodness and joy in my life? Can I not trust God to continue to bless and care for me?

Of course, I would grieve the brokenness of death – and yet… St. Porphyrios seems to suggest that death is already healed? Certainly conquered. Would St. P mourn the passing of a friend if he considers himself and the friend already immortal? It seems unlikely. After all, do we not worship with all the Saints in the bosom of Our Father every Liturgy?

As for loss of experience, perhaps ultimately what we seek and treasure in experiences is either intimacy or tasting the beauty of God in creation. What is eternity in a new heaven and earth if not the continual experience of intimacy and beauty?

What of sexual relations? Or childbearing? Are these merely means of experiencing Truth – intimate union with the Trinity – love overflowing into creation, service and sacrifice.

Yet still we long for specific experiences of God’s love – a forest walk, a mountain climb, an ocean bath, a child’s innocent delight in your gaze.

Here I stumble onto a mystery I cannot yet comprehend. And perhaps all this philosophizing obscures the heart of St. Porphyrios’ total lack of fear.

“If we reach the point of feeling joy, love, worship of God without any fear, we reach the point of saying, ‘it is no longer I who live; Christ lives in me.’ (Galations 2:20)”

Wounded by Love, pg 90

Where are desires or fears in this? If we can so trust in the depth and breadth of God’s Love, then all will be will, and we shall live in the fullness of life, that is to say, Christ.

Short Story: First Meeting

I don’t know what day it was when I wandered into the sunroom. Wednesday? Thursday? I only knew that I had gone 26 hours without a hit, and I was ready to be done. I didn’t care what happened, I just needed some relief.

A woman met me at the door and her cheery voice hit me like a semi-truck.

“Good morning! Welcome to our group!”

So it was morning then, that was a surprise. You lose all sense of time, they say, when you first try to quit.

“Would you like some coffee? There’s plain, hazelnut, latte?”

“no”, I mumbled, “really, I’d just like a bed.”

She laughed, like I’d said something clever, and then paused when I stared blankly at her

“oh honey, how long has it been?”

“I don’t know”, I whispered, leaning against the door, “too long?”

“it’s alright”, she said more gently now, “we’ve all had to start somewhere. Come, sit down, we’re about to start.”

I joined the motley circle, sitting cross-legged on the cold wooden floor. And wondered vaguely, what was going on.

A tall thin man stood up and started talking.

“Hi, I’m Al.”

“Hi Al.”

“I’m Al, and I’m an addict, but I’ve been clean for 3 weeks now.”

I stared. 3 weeks? How? I’d made it one day, and I felt like I was going crazy. He seemed to catch my bewildered gaze.

“I know, for some of us that’s short, and for some of you that’s a lifetime away. I think I started using when I was 6. It was after my mother left us. My dad got me hooked. He didn’t know what to do with a toddler, so every time I wanted to hang out he’d rock me to sleep instead. Eventually I stopped asking and just started putting myself to sleep.

It was so easy. I’d lie down and before I could feel all the loneliness, all the longing for my mother, sleep would creep in and wipe away the pain.

Sleep is a drug.

I know that now, but it took me 3 decades to admit it.

I always insisted that I could stop any time, that it was normal, everybody sleeps, right? But it got worse and worse. I was sleeping at work. Sleeping at parties. Naps in the morning, naps in the afternoon, a quick dinner and then I could sleep all night and then some.

Life is full of pain, a mother gone, a father absent, a cross word, a sad memory. My friends didn’t seem to understand, they just kept leaving when I’d try to talk about it. I thought I’d be happy when I started dating, but of course, my girlfriend was using too. Seems like one of us was always asleep when the other was awake. It was easier to just stay asleep.

But then, one day, well, she just didn’t wake up. Noon came, then dinner, and finally, the next day, I realized it. She was never waking up. She’d finally overdosed.

At first I was jealous, she’d found the secret to eternal sleep after all, our holy grail.

I did what I always did to cope; sleep, and sleep, and sleep, until one night I just couldn’t. The pain of missing her was so bad that I just kept waking; tossing and turning and sleepless. I tasted sobriety for a few brief hours. It was cold, hard, and brilliant.

That day I saw the sunrise, and I realized, I’d never seen so many colors. I didn’t even know all their names.

That’s what keeps me going at night right now – I want to see the sunrise, I want to learn all the colors, to know their names, their meaning, I want to bathe in their depths, to become one with the deep oranges and the gentle pinks.

Coffee is my road to sobriety. I know some don’t like that, they say it’s unnatural. They say it’s just a crutch, another drug, but for me, it’s the only way to stay sober right now. Maybe someday I can stay awake without it, but for now the withdrawal from sleep is just too strong.

To be honest, I’m a little tired right now, I had a rough day at work yesterday, my boss was frustrated with me, and all I could think about was sleep, but I knew I had you all to visit, so I stayed strong.

The sunset is coming, and I can’t wait to see what colors there are tonight.

Sleep is a drug, but I want to be free. I want to be awake.”

The Siren, Beauty

I haven’t quite decided if I want to post my poems with no introduction, or a short introduction. So today I’m experimenting with short intros. Let me know in the comments if you like hearing a little bit about the poem, or if I should just let the poem speak for itself.

I visited the North Atlantic coast with my in-laws for a day this fall and instantly fell in love with the barren rocky shoreline. Beauty often feels just out of reach of me, impossible to fully enjoy until I become one with it. Like a pile of leaves, incomplete until I leap in them.

The Siren, Beauty

My sweater flutters against my back
flapped by the wind’s racing heartbeat

Fall colors shine beneath the water
black caviar algae hems
the promontory’s pink rock edge
maroon dulse and forest green lettuce
drape themselves across the rocks
all enclosed in flawless shining glass for one
eternal moment
before the water turns to spray
splashing onto bare rocks
darkened from Sisyphus-like bathing

Again and again the shining water
thumps and splashes
on the smooth, wrinkled rocks
echoing Odysseus’ sirens
as it calls my name deep within the rocks
calling, whispering, pulling at my bones

Come, come to me
Here in the shimmering water
Here in my sea moss embrace
Here is paradise for the taking
Come, come to me

And I follow the call
racing along the barren shoreline
straight for the rocks
leaping across them
pausing only at the farthest edge
where the call is a growing hum,
vibrant, deep , insistent;
here is the beauty ever out of reach
ever at the corner of my eyes

The wind’s heartbeat tightens to a tremolo
whispering, pushing at my back;
one more step and I will kiss beauty
wrapped at last in her embrace

And as I plummet one last thought
floats through me:

Odysseus was a fool

The Advent Wreath

I wish to speak of a mystery, glimpsed,
as a light around a tunnel bend,
but not understood.

Each winter we commence a common journey,
marching through a tunnel of dark walls
pressed on either side of short days

and as we march we tell a story,
to warm our hands and light our way,
whispering words to light candles in our hearts.

Faith

So as light fades into the first Sabbath
we light the first candle in faith.

Faith, like the faith of Mary,
borne of God, yet God-bearer,
who, in one faithful choice,
lit a candle brighter than the sun.

Faith, like the faith of Immanuel,
choosing a fragile baby’s body,
trusting in Mary and Joseph
to raise him to manhood,
feeding His flame until He lit the world.

Faith, like the faith of Christ,
entrusting Himself to our messy hands,
believing in those we rejected,
seeing love where we saw evil.

In the dead of winter we trudge onwards,
placing faith in the One who placed faith in us.

Hope

We light the second candle in the name of hope.

Early dusk and cold winds come hand in hand,
tearing and scratching at locked shutters and doors;
while in the dark pain echoes, long and loud,
and tires scream as we race away from our wounds,
praying the darkness will steal no loved one tonight.

In the tradition of our fathers, we push against the dark,
hollowing out safe havens with our flames,
lighting candle after candle in the name of hope.

What is hope in this cold and weary world;
to the man choosing between a pill and the unbearable weight of grief
to the girl choosing between the flickering light screen
and the loneliness of reality —
choosing, feeling the bruises of the last hundred falls.

What is hope when your friend is bleeding,
when the numbers don’t work, and the line stretches on,
when death comes and rips love from your hands
           without breath for goodbye
What is hope when the light burns out before the dark?

My words are too cheap and small
to answer the cry of a world with a burnt up fuse;
or rather, too small to wipe my own tears.
And yet I spark the flame again and again,
digging matches into the wax,
bringing in fresh candles
as last year’s hope drips into stubs,
Waiting for the light to come again.

Love

We light the third candle in the name of love
the basis and culmination of our faith and hope.
For love became weary feet and tender hands,
love stopped bleeding and closed wounds,
love walked besides, mile after mile,
weeping as we wept,
unfazed by our addictions, our constant search for peace,
oblivious to the peace besides us.
Ignored, rejected, despised,
yet love did not falter,
did not hesitate to enter death,
and dying freed us from the dark.
And how then can we doubt
that light will come again.

Peace

We light the fourth candle in the name of peace.

Peace, what is peace when I wake daily
to the words of war
flickering across our virtual reality.
Weapons of mass destruction, yet we toss them
more easily than children throwing snowballs.
And I begin to think every “other” evil —

Yet he speaks peace over the heathen,
and who am I to deny my neighbor
the kiss of peace when Incarnate Divinity
comes to kiss death.

Repentance

We light the fifth candle in repentance,
confessing that we are rocky and crooked.
We have ten coats and we give not,
rotting meat and we share not.
As for violence, have I struck a man?
Yet there are many I hate,
denying their Divine Image.
(Refusing to learn colors,
I paint them in black and white boxes.)

And after all this, still I hear,
“a voice crying in the wilderness”,
and I confess that I wake daily, discontent,
counting my silver, and longing for more,
just a little more, a little more,
yet I will not be satisfied.

The ink pours from my pen
in a cold baptism of repentance;
washing smooth a path
for the coming Dayspring.

Communion

We light the sixth candle in communion,
a common flame refracted across a thousand rooms,
a warm light in the darkness of our distanced days.

And in the isolation of our homes,
a light begins to shine
on the isolation of our souls,
revealing the true nature of the independence
we have run after, calling it freedom,
cutting every tie that holds us,
till drifting in our private space,
we find that we have sold our souls,
and gained, not paradise, but hell.

And at last our cut off souls cry out
for the neighbor we did not recognize as brother,
longing for our joining in the coming light.

Immanuel

We light the seventh candle for Immanuel,
the light that came,
that is,
that comes again at the last day fall

And through the grainy flickering screen
I catch and join the angels’ song
“Christ is born, glorify Him”

Note: there are six candles for Advent because the Orthodox Church Nativity Fast is 6 weeks long.