One Starfish At A Time
When my first child was born after long days of labor, I was
not prepared for the all engulfing love that surged through me as I held him,
small, wide eyed, fresh to this world.
It was like a shock to the heart.
Suddenly the world I had made it through okay for 3 decades,
careless & wandering—suddenly that world was filled with hard corners and
sharp edges I had never noticed. And threats from things far away (I remember
thinking “must get involved now in anti-draft organizing”). And beauty, of
course. Always beauty.
He was so small, six pounds of determined life, held against
my skin.
He thrived and is thriving and this isn’t really about him,
or about his lovely siblings, each of whom came with their own independent
renewal of wonder and love and their primal reminders of how fragile our life
is. His sister, but for the skills of our midwife, might have ended her life
and mine on that beautiful spring day…we walked very close to the edge, and
came back treasuring this life all the more. His little brother blessed us all
with the peace of a wise, wild, unique soul.
I have been very lucky in my life. But the edges are always
there for me; once your heart has cracked open it’s just no use trying to shut
down again. The world floods through, your love floods out, you try to figure
out…how do you deal with death and war and cruelty? How do you pile up enough
beauty and kindness, enough hugs and “you really are okay” to sweeten an entire
world that sometimes seems bent on…oh, the most absurd, the most terrible
things?
We all find our way, of course. Sometimes stumbling,
sometimes falling. I remember thinking I had grown up properly when I no longer
had skinned knees; I guess you grow up a bit further when you realize perhaps
your soul itself is a bit..skinned..by the news of the world. Which I remind myself my friend Thoreau said
one should ignore (and then he ended up in jail, that prickly guy, protesting a
war and war taxes…so, perhaps his advice was bravado and he never took it
himself anyway).
Not long ago a friend sent me a little starfish, made of ink
on thick paper, nicely drawn, with that starfish story that has been making the
rounds for a while. You know the one; the man or woman who is standing on the
shore, which is covered with a zillion poor little starfishes, and he or she is
gently returning them to the ocean. A practical person comes by and points out
that look, there are a zillion zillion lost and dying starfishes right there,
and even if our idealist spends the whole day putting them back in the sea…lots
won’t be saved. Our friend serenely replies something about “well, the ones I
do put back will”. I don’t tell jokes well, and sometimes I privately scorn the
sweet things passed round—but I treasure my paper starfish, my little emblem of
maybe you can’t do everything, but you can do something.
And that’s how I get through. Well, that, and making sure I
have some fresh flowers around, and the batty attention of my cats, and the
hopeful eyes of my dog, and the sometimes outrageous silliness or profound tenderness
of friends and of strangers.
Just do something. If you see something wrong, or hurting,
or in need. Do something. It might be..I don’t know, a bit of food for someone
who is hungry, a bit of water for someone who thirsts, a listening heart or a
voice that says “you are okay” or “wait, that’s wrong”.
I know, it’s simplistic. And some people, seeing something
that is just..wrong, do far more dramatic things. Lock themselves to a truck.
Climb a tree. Go on a fast. Dance before an altar, release classified
documents, stand witness. End up in jail
or with the Nobel prize.
Or on the other hand, maybe we choose a simple life. Keeping
the tenderness of the open, broken heart. Picking up the pieces, what little
pieces there might be. Being thankful
for the glad morning that comes again, and again, and again, until that final
day when it comes no more for us. Maybe it won’t matter then, but I like to
think if we each make our brave, impossible, gritty or lovely choices—it will
matter, to someone. To the one starfish, or the stranger, or in some mad way,
to the universe entire, wheeling, mystical, beyond our dreams, that engulfing
love.
3 Comments:
Over the years I've learned that doing things for others makes a profound difference. No matter how big or how small, really. You have no idea what is going on in the life of the person you just held the door for ~ perhaps that was the kindest thing anyone has done for them in ages. Small kindnesses are so important. There is no kindness that is 'too small' or 'not worth it'. That is where you see the beauty of the world.
This is such a wonderful and inspirational read. Thank you.
When my daughter was born I felt it was now time for me to grow up. It was good. It was the right time.
But it also brought worry and fears that I never felt for myself before.
Now she is a grown up herself and I still worry but more about what a mess we and past generations have made of this planet and I sometimes think that maybe it's not such a bad idea when she says she does not want to have kids.
But she may change her mind any day.
Sabine, my daughter too says she doesn't want to have children (but seems to be softening). It is such a beautiful world still, for all the horrible things that are happening and have happened.
LiVewiRe...oh yes. You are so right.
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