Circles of Pain
(And in him you too are being built together to become a dwelling in which God lives by his Spirit.” Ephesians 2:22)The pain
has grabbed me around the neck today,
pressing its way into every thought,
cauterizing open wounds
and blinding every well-meant phrase.
It’s been that way for two days now
and I could not sing and could hardly finish
a walk in the cold February air.
I planned
on writing something full of spirit,
full of life and daffodils rising before a hint of
spring.
Instead I record these words and know they have
little meaning to those who can walk through a day
with doubts cast aside like rubbish and last year’s
party ribbons.
There must
be some sense to this all,
I used to say.
There must be some purpose that leaves me
more whole by the end of the day.
I planned
on wondering about how we all
are just walking each other home,
but I can barely give myself permission to
leave the house.
I planned on igniting some well placed
lightning
to scare the pain away.
Do you
remember how we used to sing
with
only a guitar and made-up songs? Do you
remember
how we used to walk on the same hills where
the cows grazed on late afternoons?
There must
be some sense to it all,
these memories that take my time away
from knowing anything for certain.
There must be a way to embrace
the new wine the spirit brings and
share the cup like sneaky teenagers again.
I got up
from a nap to write this.
I was hoping it would do me some good.
But I pause before each line and want to
lie down again
except that sleep eludes me and
the pain
makes me homesick for the dwellings
of friends
where we gathered in laughter and naivety.
I’d call you again, but it hurts to speak
about the transfixed nature of this circle
of pain.
So, for now,
I’ll repaint my boundaries
with hopeful words of remembrance
and how good it felt in those days so many
decades ago.
There may
be a space so safe that spirit
draws open the tears and reminds us
we may not have this chance again.