Friday, February 22, 2013

The End of the Story - The Return of the Queen

It had been many years now since the Queen left the desert kingdom so very long ago. In the midst of her garden paradise at the middle of the Earth, in its deep silence of the fecund cathedral, she reflects upon this fact and ponders the future. For spring is approaching and the energies of the universe flow through her body, stir something within and remind her that the cycle of life continues in eternal renewal.

So I bet you are wondering how the story ends.

Here in St. Croix it's absolutely gorgeous right now. Art Thursday was last night and I reveled in living my dream as an artist by showing my work at my friend Tina Henle's gallery in downtown Christiansted. I was thrilled to sell a photo collage the month prior and meeting interesting people, local and tourist alike. The Agriculture fair came and went, and it's the peak of the season with the lush, farming goodness of people, animals and earth and 3-days of island buzz.

Now it's back to cleaning the house, spring cleaning, that starts with the body. The salvation of meditation and yoga that bring one into alignment every time. To be so grounded in reality and to recognize one's identity as the jewel in the lotus, identical with Vishnu dreaming the world into creation. So I meditate on the porch every morning to the sound of roosters, birds and other sounds of the bush. Those and the cool breeze that touches my skin to keep me present on the cushion.

It's also back to work. Back to writing, telling stories, teaching yoga, performing Storytime Yoga and the Queen of Bohemia, re-enchanting the world with yoga and story. It's also a time of deep personal practice and reflection. To look back on 10 years since my husband died, and nearly three years since I moved from the mainland U.S. After his death I started Storytime Yoga and worked again out of passion but also fueled by sheer post-traumatic stress. Then seven years into it, I wanted to return to the place before the wounding, before his death. I wanted to be a homemaker and mother only again and enjoy my children. Because when you are widowed with young children and it's only you to work and run the household, something falls through the cracks. I didn't want it to be my children. I think that's what the world most needs - to not let children fall through the cracks.

So we set off for Buenos Aires for a great adventure as a family. I yoga home schooled the kids with the help of a local woman from such locations as Café Tortoni, the Botanical Gardens or Science Museum. There I took the time off for us all to learn to knit, cook and live simply and without American-style pressure or culture that I didn't think was particularly healthy for kids.

In Buenos Aires I also wrote only for myself rather than blogged or wrote for business. So that I could tell the truth about things. The satya in yoga. That's what memoir writing does. It examines what happened and why it happened and comes to some sort of understanding of the truth about things. To see things clearly from a distance and see all the characters, all the players and the fates and world stage of which we submit to our amor fati willingly.

The deep peace and healing I have found in those three years since leaving the U.S. and ending up here in St. Croix amidst the garden and isolation from the insanity of the outside world has indeed brought me to realize the "pedacito del paraiso," as Tonio puts it. The little piece of paradise. That paradise that comes from within, no matter what the situation in life, we have an anchor on a little piece of real estate within that is undisturbed, "anahata" unstruck in the heart, a reservoir of eternal life and salvation that is instantly available. If we only can reach it. It does come with meditation, with yoga and surrender. With the ability and courage to look at one's self clearly, still the mind and peel away all the unresolved conflicts. For that you have to die, terrifying as that may be. Die to your ego and fears and stories about who you think you are. Then liberation is great. Like a gourd released from the vine, as the Maha Mrityunjaya mantra puts it.

I have been involved in a dream work group here on St. Croix. It met for six weeks on the ruins of Mt. Washington at my friend Nancy Ayer's house. She has a fantastic labyrinth there I have walked many times, even with my children. It's power to go deep sea diving to within your own depths is great - if you have the courage to face it all. The journey is arduous, as Emily Dickinson wrote, filled with demons, dragons and most deadly of all... denial. Few can handle it. Those with so much to lose, they are the first to flee. But those who have nothing to lose, it's easy to just throw one's self in to the fire and transformation comes in a flash, the phoenix rising as sure as the morning sun.

The dream work has been profound, especially when with a group. We start again for another six weeks soon. I'm now helping teach too. Last time I worked this intensely with dreams was when I did a workshop with Rebecca Armstrong through the Joseph Campbell Foundation in Oaxaca, Mexico for some psychotherapists. Called, "Dreaming the Myth Body of the America's" we worked for three days with dreams and created new myths based on those dreams told. Truly you start dreaming other's images, as I've found in my own online dream work courses I have taught. Those dream stories, Campbell said, is the emerging myth for the world. The myth that started to arise was that of the feminine returning. Women claiming their sovereignty, power and selves. It's through the body, its creative energies, and putting the dream images of the conscious as well as unconscious world together into the body and reality. It's a stitching together of inner and outer worlds. The true meaning of tantra, which means loom. You co-create your world. You, as Vishnu, are dreaming reality into place, as Physicist Fred Allan Wolf claims in his book "The Dreaming Universe." You just have to pay attention to those jewels brought every night, as much attention as you must pay attention to your day dream. What are you dreaming? What are you bringing forth to creation? That is the question.

So I am content, and I question my self. This persona, this mask. The Queen of Bohemia is my aid in the quest, and I question all my story and my life in reflection from the point of the deep peace and joy I feel in the center.  This deep peace and awareness that was born out of great pain, deep sorrow. Call it the agony and the ecstasy. Always the paradox that takes place when giving birth. And now I am seeing clearly from the center of everything and make art out of it. Be it a collage, a poem, a yoga practice or a memoir.  I wrote and finished a memoir this year that I have been working on for some time about my late husband. What an intense release of energy! That's the beauty of taking time off. To refill the well. There was a study recently about the productivity of people who take a lot of time off, who sleep a lot or take naps. (ME!!!!) Not lazy, just brilliant!!! I am amazingly productive, and it requires long periods of nothingness to recharge like a battery and burst onto stage in a flurry of creation, like flames from a bonfire.

I now turn toward pulling out those old writings I made in Buenos Aires, where I set out each day for some historic cafe for which to write and drink cafe con leche and eat three media lunas. I had a trusty map with the locations of every cafe, and each time I reached one I marked it off, I wrote and wrote and wrote. For my self. For my heart.

So now it's time for deep reflection. To look at things from a far and continue on the great journey of teaching that The Mythic Yoga Studio does. The Yoga of Your Story. The Dream Story of the Body.  What did the Queen do when she lived in Buenos Aires? How did she come to St. Croix and how did she find such profound peace and deep healing? For she heroically journeyed into the depths to find the pearl of great price and now to come back out again. She risked everything and conquered her fears. How did she do it? The lens of time brings everything into focus for the Queen. From a far the angels gaze over her shoulders and witness with her, cheering her on, peeling back the layers of thoughts and mind and coming to the truth of it all and to bring forth art out of the rhapsody of experience. It's the End of the Story - The Queen has Returned. Arriving at the end of the story in order to begin all over once again, and for ever, ever after.

OM SHANTI

"If you are irritated by every rub, how will you be polished?" – Rumi

Friday, February 8, 2013

The Queen in the Well

A Modern Fairy

 Tale By Sydney Solis

Once upon a time there was a Queen who lived in a castle.

The castle was deep in a vast forest, surrounded by a great garden sitting high up on a mountaintop.

The castle, however, was in ill-repair.

Where once a well flowed with wine, it was now dry. Where once a garden bloomed with trees of golden apples, it was now withered. Where once the great halls of the castle were filled with gold, now it was darkened and covered with vines.

What had happened was that long, long ago the Queen and King had had a great wedding ceremony in the great hall. Golden rings were exchanged with vows of deep love.

The Queen’s three most faithful servants raised three golden cups in honor of the Queen and King. "Long life, love, joy and faith."

But just then, the Demon King and his legion of demon warriors attacked the castle. They swept through, destroyed the castle, kidnapped the King and stabbed the Queen in the heart.

The Demon King cast a spell on the castle, turning the three faithful servants into trolls. Everyone else vanished.

The Queen survived, and the trolls carried her down to the dungeon, where they watched over her. Magically, she recovered.

But her recovery had taken many, many years. It had taken so many years to heal, in fact, that she no longer remembered the King. She no longer remembered that there was anything but the dungeon or anyone else except her troll servants. And all she could remember was the face of the Demon King.

One night the Queen had a dream. She dreamed of a well. And in the deep, deep well there was a man. There was something beautiful about the man, she felt.

When she awoke from the dream, she asked her troll servants, “Could there be such a thing as a well and a man inside the well?”

“Absolutely not. There is only darkness and the Demon King’s sorrow.”

But night after night, the Queen would have the same dream of the charming man in the well. Her heart would feel a pang of excitement, hope and mystery, something she had not felt in a long, long time. This feeling brought back a memory, something she could not quite put her finger on. Yet she felt it.

Meanwhile, the King had finally, after years of intense battle, defeated the Demon King. Because of this battle, the King had acquired certain powers. He had the power to see far away. He had the power to shape shift, and he had the power to become invisible.

After the Demon King was dead, the King’s heart instantly felt for the Queen. He used his power to see far ahead, back in the forest, on the mountain, in the castle, in the dungeon, and there he saw his beloved.

He raced back to the castle as fast as he could. He did not understand what had become of the castle and was saddened for his Queen. He saw the place where so long ago life held so much promise and was now but a heap of ash.

He rushed through the decaying halls and flew down the steps to the dungeon. The trolls were asleep. The King called to his Queen.

“Queen, Queen, it is I,” he said.

But the Queen was frightened by his sudden appearance. She screamed, the trolls awoke, and the King fled in confusion.

“My poor Queen,” he thought. “She must be so broken.”

The King went back a second time but the trolls spotted him instantly and had only to show their nasty teeth and claws that were like sharp knives for the King to think of another plan to reach the Queen.

“My Beloved must be reached by not so ordinary means,” he thought.

The King again searched the castle. He discovered, buried in dust, the rings that were exchanged. He found the three cups. Then he set them about the castle. He went to the well, climbed down it and changed himself into a frog.

That night, he slipped into the dungeon while the trolls were sleeping and whispered in her ear, “Queen, Queen. Did you know that there is a well outside this castle? And that inside that well there is a great treasure?”

The Queen stirred at the thought of the well. Just like her dream. Could there be such a thing? She wondered. She awoke and looked at the frog.

“Queen, Queen, follow me up the stairs, you will see for yourself! There is a well with a great treasure in it! Come! Come!” And the frog hopped up the stairs and out of the dungeon.

The Queen tiptoed past her trolls and climbed the stairs cautiously. She looked about, and in the darkness saw a great light.

“That is the door,” the frog said. “Go to the door and you will find the well.”

“Is there really such a thing? Like the well in my dream? Like the man in my dream?” She asked.

She moved toward the door, but the trolls suddenly appeared.

“Queen! Come back! Do not go! Come back to where it is safe. No, there is no well. There is no man. There is only sorrow beyond there!” And the Queen went back with them to the dungeon.

That night the Queen dreamed of a golden ring. The frog came again, snuck past the trolls and whispered to the Queen.

“Queen, Queen, come! Did you know that in this castle there is a golden ring?” the frog asked.

The Queen stirred. “Just like my dream. Where? Where is it?”

“Up these stairs,” the frog answered.

Again the Queen climbed the stairs. She saw the light in the darkness. She followed the frog a ways further, and there she spotted a golden ring. She picked it up and a memory rushed at her heart, a flood of love, as she remembered the face of her beloved King. She remembered the moment they exchanged their vows of love for each other. A tear swelled up in her eye.

“Could it be true? That my beloved exists?” the Queen wondered. But she dropped the ring.

The trolls, however, had awoken, and once again they coaxed her down the stairs with the words, “No. Forget about it. Stay with us where it is safe.”

The next night the Queen had another dream. She dreamed of three golden cups.

The frog came again and the Queen stirred.

“Queen, Queen, did you know that farther on in this castle, farther than you have gone before, there are three golden cups?”

The Queen rushed up the stairs, saw the light, walked past the ring and found three golden cups. Instantly, her memory flooded back again. She remembered her faithful attendants, the joyous toast and the face of her beloved.

“Could it be real? My beloved is real and that I have my faithful friends? My beautiful castle and garden?”

But the trolls awoke, and the Queen again went back with them.

That night, the Queen had another dream. She dreamed of a bright light in the middle of darkness.

The frog came to her and said, “Queen, Queen, did you know that there is a well outside the castle and that there is a great treasure in it?”

The frog dashed up the stairs flew outside, went down the well and transformed himself back into the King. But the King made himself invisible and returned to the castle.

The Queen immediately rushed up the stairs, rushed past the ring, past the three golden cups and suddenly she heard the voices of the trolls.

“Come back Queen! Don’t go! It’s too dangerous!”

But then she heard another voice, “Keep going, my love. It’s true. Believe it. Believe in your dreams. There is a well with a great treasure. You will find it. Go now.” Then the King returned to the well.

The Queen dashed to the bright light, hesitated before its radiance, then pushed herself outside. She saw the frog sitting at the edge of the well.

“Follow me,” the frog croaked.

The Queen looked deep into the darkness of the well. She saw the little frog and she pursued it down, down, down spiraling steps. She came to complete blackness, as the light above had become nothing but a tiny hole. She could not find the frog.

“Frog, frog where are you?” She cried out in fear.

Just then, a great light appeared behind her head. She saw her own face lit up in the water below. And upon her head was placed, a great golden crown. It’s brilliant light filled the whole well.

“Here I am,” the King said, as he stepped from behind her and stood next to her, gazing at their images and radiant golden crowns reflecting in the water.

The Queen remembered everything. Her heart overflowed with joy, love and faith. “It’s you. It’s really you, the man from my dreams. My King. You have returned.”

The King and Queen came up from the well. The spell lifted and the entire kingdom came back to life. The well bubbled up wine. The trees bloomed golden apples. The vines receded around the castle as it was restored to its golden splendor.

The trolls returned to their human form as the Queen’s most faithful attendants, and all of the castle’s people returned out of thin air.

They had a second wedding. The King and Queen exchanged rings and vows of love, the three servants raised their golden cups and everyone lived happily ever after.

Backwards We Spell Japan

Nancy, Albert, Patti and Jeanie. Backwards the first letters of our names spell JAPAN. We always knew that. We children always knew that our father is Dutch and that he is a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp. It was during World War II. He was born on the island of Java. Before it was called Indonesia. Before, when it was a Dutch colony run by the Dutch East India Company. One captain Straub was our seafaring ancestor who married a princess from the island of Madura.
The Dutch traded coffee and sugar, quinine and indigo to bring back to the motherland, and tea that grew on plantations cleared from the jungle. My father lived on tea and sugar plantations, with my Oma, his two sisters, and my grandfather Straub, a mechanical engineer who kept the plantation machinery going. He starved to death in a forced-labor Mitzubishi tin mine POW camp outside of Tokyo. I know him only as a charcoal drawing on white paper hanging above my father’s bed.
“Those dirty Japs,” Mom always says. “Thank God for the atomic bomb.”
We know that our father is a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp because Mom tells everybody. The people with blank faces at St. Ambrose Church that mom forces me to attend, to my neighbor Leslie’s mother, to Lou the skinny milkman who nods and nods and nods.
“They don’t know about the dirty Japs, Patti,” she says to me. I tell Mom about the Holocaust we are studying in school. Gritty black-and-white films of shriveled corpses bulldozed into pits, Jews’ hair made into rugs, their skin into soap. “Tell your teacher your father was a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp,” Mom says. I do. My teacher stares at me bewildered.
“Is your father Japanese?” No, no. I shake my head. “Is he Jewish?” No, no. I can’t speak. I feel it stuck in my throat. My family is in the wrong concentration camp.
We know that our father is a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp. We go to the K-Mart, Nancy, Albert, Patti and Jeanie. With Mom, who chases down blue-light specials for cheap blue-and-red plaid shirts.
“Come on, kids, hurry!” she says running.
It’s Hiroshima Nagasaki Day. August 6, 1976 in Boulder, Colorado. We stop at the snack stand for white hoagie sandwiches with ham and lettuce and mayonnaise. Mom orders water, but Nancy pleads for Icees, and Mom thinks, and then says OK. We hold the waxy Icee drink cups with polar bear triangles on the side that Albert cuts out and mails in for free cheapo gifts. The Icee cups full of red slush that make it easy for Nancy and me to shoplift red fingernail polish in.
“$4.95,” the girl behind the counter says. She is bored, with blond-feathered hair. She glosses her lips with a sour grape Bonnie Bell lip smacker. She stares at Mom’s nose, broken in 1943 when she was kicked by a horse. Plastic surgery wasn’t too good back then and now her nose looks like someone mashed a wad of silly putty on the tip.
“Do you know what today is?” Mom asks. The girl shrugs. “It’s Hiroshima Nagasaki Day. When we bombed the Japs.” I press my face to the glass, watch my nose leave a crescent of steam.
You know, my husband is a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp,” Mom says, fishing through her big, black secondhand handbag. “If we didn’t drop the bomb, none of these children would be standing in front of you.” We suck our Icees, bite the straws, shoulders hunched, backs turned. We disappear into our own fantasy. We are not here with Mom. Not with this moment.
“Shit, dog shit. Bobbie rocco moco poco pup,” Mom says. Mom can’t find the money. She can find the car keys at the bottom of the bag, along with the broken lipstick containers, cracker crumbs and dried lemon slices swiped from restaurants. She can find the coupons, the dry felt-tip pens, the spare Kotex that will catch her diarrhea that suddenly comes on out of nowhere, because she ate too many tomatoes or drank too much black coffee. The diarrhea that drops in small brown bloodstains behind her after she quickly pays the girl, then shuffles to the bathroom at the back of the store.
Nancy, Albert, Patti and Jeanie. We wolf down our hoagies sitting in the yellow and orange snack booths waiting for Mom. Nancy is the oldest, older than me by six years. Then came Albert, ten months later. Irish twins, my father says. Then came me, born late, the day after Christmas, 1966. And then Jeanie, two Februarys later. Mom says we were accidents. Four 10-pound accidents. She could have found somebody rich, married Liberace, or Onassis, or somebody else, she says. But she asked our father to marry her, and she got us.
We know that our father is a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp. We are packed in our house together, like the thousands packed into the concentration camp, in the monastery at Ambarawa 7 where Dad lived for three years as a little boy. We are packed into house that has no dining room and no family room. Jeanie and Albert are together in one bedroom, Nancy and me in another. Then Mom and Dad in the big bedroom. But Mom is everywhere. She is in the oversized painting of fishing boats washed on the shore, mysteriously without fishermen, hanging crooked in the living room. She is the collection of pen-and-ink caricature drawings on the wall, her oversized head looking like a young Johnny Cash with long hair, her hand posed with a writing quill. She is the innumerable scattering of out-of-date books, astronomy, chemistry, world encyclopedias and communist China film strips grabbed from the free box at the Boulder Valley School’s discard sale. She is the neighbor’s trashcans that she digs through, searching, pulling, hauling things back to the house, old wood, broken mirrors, or locks with no keys. She is the popcorn-yellow paint in the kitchen laced heavy with gray cobwebs and pork sausage grease splatters, the pork sausage grease saved in a coffee cup that smells up the kitchen, smells up the house, fouls my heart. She is the cut up clothing laying all over the floor, on every floor, in every corner, heaped like refugee rag dolls, along with the piles of records, ripped up hand bags, old cans of blue paint. The blue paint she painted the outside of the house without finishing the job, the blue paint that streaks the back of the bathroom door, that is all over the porcelain toilets, all over the scuff marks on the tips of her shoes.
We know our father was a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp.
“Scrape your plate,” Mom always says. “I should put you in a concentration camp and let you starve.” That’s what Mom says at the dinner table while we stare at the trash piled high on the fake wood table -- the elastic cut off from Dad and Albert’s old underwear, the coupons glued together with spilled milk and mold, the thimbles, newspaper clippings, nuts and bolts, the unwashed dishes, dirty knick knacks from garage sales, the dusty plastic flowers falling out of a dented aluminum tea kettle.
We eat Mom’s cooking, eat chipped beef that was boiled in a plastic bag, or chew green peppers stuffed with white rice off of chipped plates and drink from faded, plastic glasses that once had pink and green beach scenes on them. Mom found them last week at a garage sale for a quarter.
We hold Mom’s cooking in our mouths, peppers stuffed with rice with no flavor. We wipe our faces with paper towels when she’s not looking and unload the mouthfuls in them. We slink under the table. We try to escape. I pick through the broken cookies at the bottom of the wooden cookie jar, brushing off the tiny bugs and old crumbs clinging to them.
We know our father was a child survivor of a concentration camp. How he starved. A 10-year old boy, taken from his mother and sisters and put in a camp for old men and adolescent boys. The Jongenscamp. Surviving on clothing starch, snails, grass or scraping the ultra-thin layer inside a banana peel, or filling his belly up with the compressed straw that was for the guards’ pigs, or drinking from toilets in the dark of the night, or crouching by the bamboo fence and waiting for something to eat, for something to crawl under the fence and into the camp – anything -- rats or snakes that he grabbed by the tail and whipped to break their backs and eat them raw.
“Look at this!” Mom cries. “Look at this last drop of milk you have wasted! Sit back down here and drink it. People are starving to death!” Her mouth is a rectangular slot of false teeth lined with shiny wire, clenched, carving lines deep as dry old cheese into the corners of her mouth. All I see are her waxy pink-gummed false teeth that slide out of her mouth and sit in a glass of water that is never changed. The glass of water on top of the rusting medicine cabinet in the bathroom that Mom, using her zigzag scissors, pasted over with sticky contact paper of sailing ships. I see the false teeth, yellow hunks of food stuck between the teeth, floating and trying to escape. They sit in front of the mirror dimmed by years of white toothpaste splatter where I stare at myself brushing my teeth with my blue gun toothbrush. I am thin, thin, skeleton thin, knobby elbows, tall for my age. My Dutch white face, heart-shaped with wide Czech cheeks and a pointy chinned, is shocked by my dark brown hair that I hate, stick straight like Dad’s. With my green-brown eyes I stare. I don’t think. I don’t feel.
We know that our father is a child survivor of a Japanese concentration camp. I see Dad sitting on the rattan couch that was once new from American Furniture warehouse, now covered with layers of unsewn, unmatched tattered fabric that was on sale at So-Fro Fabrics for 35 cents a yard.
Dad sits alone on the couch listening to Madame Butterfly. The part where she finds out that Pinkerton has a new wife. A cone of sandalwood incense burns He has taken pills for his migraine headaches. The headaches he gets every day to some degree. Sometimes bad. In the middle of the night, waking up sweating. From remembering something. Or thinking of it. He takes codeine, amatriptaline, bottlesfuls. Their yellow-brown plastic containers sit next to his bed on the bed stand next to the picture of Jesus that glows in the dark. The empty containers fall, roll under the bed. Some tall and thin, other fat and big. With long pills, yellow pills, round white pills. When the headaches are really bad he goes to the hospital and they stick a needle full of Demerol in his neck and he sleeps for days.
Tonight the headache is bad. Dad took many pills. He is slow. I walk up behind him and without a word gently place my hands on his head. I ask God why. Why? Why do people suffer? Why did my father have to go through hell as a child? Why did he survive?
My hands run like seeping water through his hair, gray, greasy, limp. My hands pull his hair, just like the nurse he had in Java. She knew just where to twist and pull a section of hair to make a headache go away. I pull his hair. Pull out the tigers and snakes roaming the jungles of Indonesia, when it was the Dutch East Indies. Pull out the pain, pull out the war, pull out the headache that will leave Dad in bed with a wet washcloth over his eyes. Unable to move, drenched in tears and sweat, unable to hear in the darkness of his room or go to work at his job as a mechanical engineer beneath fluorescent lights in a yellow brick building in Boulder.
My fingers push on his muscles, the bulging tight muscles in his neck that connect to his head, that surge into his eyes, forcing them closed, unable to watch Star Trek or Buck Rogers or the Project Blue Book episodes that we have seen so many times we know the dialogue by heart.
“Shit, dog shit. Bobbie rocco moco poco pup,” Mom says, searching for something, alone in the kitchen as she opens and shuts the kitchen cabinets, opens and shuts them. “Rocco moco poco pup. Shit, dog house.” My hands pull Dad’s hair harder.
“Shake your hands,” Dad says in his thick Dutch accent. “Shake the pain out of your hands. Get rid of it.”
I shake and I shake.
“Cat, rat, trap, dog dump,” Mom says as she opens and shuts the kitchen cabinets, opens and shuts them.
At midnight, Dad vomits in the bathroom. Vomits in the toilet that is always clogged with Mom’s diarrhea that is caused by her weak bowels. Because the doctors cut her fistula when she delivered Nancy, Albert, Patti and Jeanie, all 10-pound children.
“They ripped my guts up,” Mom tells the woman at the K-Mart check out counter. “Nancy, Albert, Patti and Jeanie. Backwards the first letters spell Japan.