When the weight of the world gets heavy
And trouble rolls in like the tide,
May we stand up and help each other
Find comfort where love abides.
- lyrics from "Weight of the World” by Peggy Nes, this song is part of the Threshold Choir
Repertoire, listen here (minutes 3:17-5:30)
—
Friends,
I will admit, "P-p-p-please!" is a pithy title I came up with in hopes of piquing your interest enough to open, ingest, and digest this blog post. However, the more I sit with this single, stuttered word, the more it piques my own.
The word itself is telling. "Please!" is a call for mercy, for help, for relinquishment of burden. It is
shins to the ground, palms together, fingers zipped and head bowed, praying for salvation from
pain or to be spared of pain impending. It is urgent longing to be relieved.
The stutter makes the sentence shudder. "P-p-p-please!" There is the admittance of vulnerability, of weakness, of desperation. It says there is room for negotiation, for a deal to be struck. Surely, whatever has been done, or is about to be done, can be undone, can be made not so, can be rendered down into something, anything, that sums to less than total annihilation and devastation.
"P-p-p-please!"
We have all been here before, some of us many times over. We have been frozen, stuck, humbled to our knees, with no certainty of what to do or how to be amidst a significant loss that threatens to consume us like a tidal wave come crashing down on our doorstep.
We become the speck of dust, the grain of sand, the blip on the radar of the Universe. Small, insignificant, unworthy, powerless.
It is here that we surrender our best laid plans only because they have been taken from us already. It is here where we sift through the rubble of our house of cards. Where we touch ground zero and below.
And it is here, where time stands still, just for a moment - though it can feel like eternity - where we beg something, someone, anything, anyone, to relieve us of the stopped-us-dead-in-our- tracks pain.
This pain, of course, has a name. It is called grief. And grief, as it turns out, wants to move just as much as we do.
Grief, like water, money, ideas, energy, and so many other phenomena, becomes itself when it is flowing freely. It loses its integrity when sequestered, corralled, suppressed, hidden away, or otherwise denied its essence. And in an out-of-balance state, pressure can build, forcing dramatic releases often out of proportion and in the wrong directions.
There must be a better way, no?
Yes. Yes there is a better way. An infinite amount of better ways actually.
Enter the pithy title: "P-p-p-please!"
To me, "P-p-p-please!" stands for the 3 Ps of Moving Grief (so you can feel relief). And the three Ps stand for Practices, Projects and Pilgrimages.
Practices are the small, regular, behaviors, activities, and rituals we can perform that move grief in small, regular, and meaningful ways. Grief practices may look like:
Projects are the one-and-done efforts we put our heads, hearts, and hands to to honor an ending. Projects can be small or gigantic, accomplishable in an afternoon or over a much longer timeframe. They can be artistic, pragmatic, or anything in between. There is, however, a distinct point of completion. Grief projects may look like:
Pilgrimages are the trips we take to carry out our grief tasks. They involve travel, moving from one place to another. Interacting with lands and people foreign and familiar. Pilgrimages may look like:
Just as we are unique individuals, so too are our grief expressions. This means that it is up to us to listen and discern which ones are being offered up to us in whispers, nudges, or outright demands, when our desperate pleas for help are answered with the call to movement and flow.
If you have found a practice, project, or pilgrimage that has helped you move from being frozen or stuck in a state of pain, I invite you to email me and share your experience so your success can ripple beyond you and inspire others.
And, if you're feeling frozen or stuck right now and could use some help, I'm here for you. Let's listen in together and see how grief wants to move through and with you.
A few more loving reminders, gleaned from songs in the Threshold Choir Repertoire (because who couldn't use some more loving reminders these days):