A rare moment of public personal musing
The other day, while tidying up, I found an old paper address book, and flipping through, decided to contact an old acquaintance some of you will know, Steven Caldwell. His phone number was the same as it was a few years ago and we ended up having this amazing conversation about Buddhism and communication, grieving, healing, compassion and most importantly for me, silence.
He mentioned that people in silent retreats find it difficult to look each other in the eye. He used words about silence I don’t think I would have thought of — wicked, uncontrollable — and it seemed to me that I need to write a poem at some point about this silence. When I was watching the seduction scene in The New World, which is mostly silent, it occurred to me again. And thinking back a number of missteps I have made in one of my most important relationships this year, they mostly relate to enunciating things that could have been left unsaid, unspoken, in the delicate collusion of trust.
I am mostly a very social person, an extrovert. I recharge in crowds, as thorfinn has said many times. Or at least, I used to. When daisynerd suggested years ago that I should try living alone, the idea terrified me. Now I crave my space. And while I crave company also and too often feel like I am an outsider, even in the outsider crowd, I have started craving the company of only a few people, people I know will challenge me to discuss the world, life, politics, science, rather than the inward focus that I fall into otherwise, filling silences with panicked analyses of current obsessions or boastful retellings of personal history.
I realise that my most treasured friends — you know who you are — are those I can shift modes with: we can arc through the world-solving, illustrate with the personal, support each other through crisis and most precious of all, sit in silence, touching or not touching, looking each other in the eye, loved, loving, safe.
March 4th, 2006 at 2:45 am
I realise that my most treasured friends — you know who you are — are those I can shift modes with: we can arc through the world-solving, illustrate with the personal, support each other through crisis and most precious of all, sit in silence, touching or not touching, looking each other in the eye, loved, loving, safe.
I’ve often thought the same thing. Or that my best friends are not just those I can be myself with, but those with whom I can be whatever self I am at any given time.
March 5th, 2006 at 2:20 pm
Your entry is quietly moving…more than you know !
Thank you for keeping your entries public. I know that a lot of people just wouldn’t…if they wrote entries about their feelings like this. It lets the sun in…and unbeknownst it helps others too.. !
I found your lj ages ago b.t.w. -Some of your poems are just amazing.
March 5th, 2006 at 11:06 pm
Thanks for the thoughts on silence.
I think that maybe one thing we have in common is the belief that communication, specifically, “talking about it” can cure all relationship ills. Not too long ago I was introduced to the idea that sometimes it is better to be less straightforward in what is said, with the intention of achieving clearer communications. I think silences have a role to play here too, but had never previously thought of it.