A sandpainting
The story I tell goes beyond my personal story
and so goes well beyond my own memory
to the collective and individual memories of many men
and, no doubt, through them, to the memories
of the many women
in their lives.
I
For twenty years and more,
a group of men, usually several score,
have been gathering among the redwoods
on Memorial Day weekend, for four days—
to explore together what it means to be a man,
to be alive, at this moment,
in this world.
And that deep commitment
to exploring together
has led them, over time,
to the simplicity of the circle—
a circle of ordinary men, who come together
to bear witness to each other’s lives—
without judgment,
without crosstalk.
The ritual response in this circle,
after a man has spoken his truth,
some particular part of his life experience—
joyful or sad or even close to unbearable,
after he has found his own words
and revealed himself, in that way, to his brothers,
has summoned that courage to be vulnerable
or to attempt, at least, to be vulnerable and has sat down,
after all that and after a moment of silence,
each man in the circle places his right hand
over his heart and looking directly toward his brother
speaks with intention and feeling
the words, “I hear you.”
And though I cannot tell you
all that has been spoken there, among us,
I can tell you this—
that vessel, that container,
that circle of open hearted men
has heard, felt and held each story,
for to a man, we have known such things, inside ourselves—
we know each story as our own.
The long warp of our separate lives,
the thread we each have followed,
sometimes loosely spun and soft
and hardly thread-like at all,
sometimes taut, spun and stretched
to the very edge of breaking,
these threads, woven together in a moment
with our shared words—
our words of risk, of fear, of anger,
of grief, of shame, of confusion, of understanding,
all fierce in their truth—owned as such, heard as such by each;
these threads of our separate lives
woven together, as well, by our faces, our fluid faces
speaking the language of faces, turning our insides out,
and within our faces, our eyes are doing the work of eyes,
seeing all and revealing all—
making the unseen seen—
and so from this warp and woof comes our tapestry,
the intangible tapestry of our lives, made real, in a moment.
Our intent, our desire, our vision made real—
a bond among men,
the depth of which surely matches
those legendary bonds forged among men in battle
who fight a common enemy,
who face death together each moment,
yet a bond, here forged, among us, in this circle,
from our common humanity,
from our likeness, revealed—
all ordinary and extraordinary, all,
all victims and perpetrators, all,
all heroes and villains, all,
all human, humans all.
This bond, then, forged from our likeness
and from courage to own it all,
to blame no one, to risk it all
in the telling of our stories,
the telling of our stories, whole
and in our willingness to hear and to hold those stories,
those moving stories that are always there,
with the most open heart we can muster at any given moment,
and this open heart comes from our intent,
from our desire, from our courage
and from our disciplined effort
at mindful listening—
first of all to ourselves,
and then to our brothers
and to our sisters
and to the wider world
around us.
II
This, then, is sacred space—yeiheishai
in the language of the Navajo people—
the place, as they say, where the gods come and go.
It lives where it lives, inside of us and out,
whether we enter it, whether we partake of it or not.
Memory can take us there. It is our guide
but memory can also profane and take us far, far away.
But without it, we have no future—
without it, we cannot tell our stories.
And telling our stories and bearing witness
is our essential human offering
to those who come after us. 1
III
There is more, of course,
that happens among us
over those four days together—
there are meals shared,
there is drumming and dancing,
free form and silly or full of grace and beauty,
there is time to visit and solitary time,
there is time of spoken word and ancient story
and morning singing—oh, the lifting up of voices
in the early morning quiet—
all this, surrounding our simple circle of sharing.
Yet there is one more part of this time together—
within this larger circle, smaller, more intimate circles live
and there’s a kind of symbiosis there,
a flux and a flow, a breathing of sorts that happens,
when large breaks up to become small
and voices and faces are close in
giving us that gift, that other way of being
and then small breaks up to re-make the whole
and so it goes back and forth, back and forth—
though out our four days together—
a kind of heart beat of these men
making community.
IV
And so it happens—
this labor of love, this men’s work—
as it always happens, when men allow themselves to be,
allow their own rich and varied colors—
their whites and blues, their yellows, reds and blacks—
to flow freely within this vessel,
this time, this moment together,
as if they each were the skilled hand
of one laying colored sands,
in healing patterns,
upon the floor
of some hogan,
mindful and open and connected,
doing the work that is theirs to do,
leaving behind what needs the leaving,
taking in what needs the taking.
And when their time together is done
and the circle and the sharing
and the singing and the solitude
and the spoken word and the stories
have worked their work,
and when the colorful sands are returned
to where they’ve come from,
as they must always be,
this beautiful soul painting
lives on in each memory.
V
And maybe, just maybe
you might hear, were you there
at the parting and listening carefully,
one brother saying to another,
holding him by the shoulders
square on and looking deep,
“All you know of me lives in you.
All I know of you lives in me.
We remember. We do remember.
‘Till then . . .”
Bill Denham 2010