I've tried on so many uniforms and badges that now I'm just me - mother of 8 children and all that entails, flowmad, and human animal parent. Writer of this living book of a blog, philosopher, and creatrix of hand dyed and spun crocheted wearable art. I gave up polite conversation years ago, and now I dive into the big one's.....birth, sex, great wellness, life, passion, death and rebirth.
You don't have to look very far back in history to find cultures that celebrated and walked eagerly towards death. Mostly due to a full bodied belief in an afterlife and continued evolution after death which is also a birth. And if they weren't walking eagerly towards it, they at least were at peace with it, many cultures around the world practicing a laying out period after death so community and family members could say goodbye, with death being a lot more present and visible in every day life.
Just off the top of my head, I remember reading about Thai monks who laid their dead peers in huts to decay slowly, while they meditated on the process of decomposition. There are so many elaborate and ritualistic burials, from Tibetan sky burials to Indian funeral pyres to Egyptian pyramids to Celtic cairns and mounds to massive Chinese monuments to Viking burials in longboats to the Mexican Day Of The Dead to the Indonesian tribe that enbalm their dead and bring them out for festivals to sea burials practiced by sea folk all over the world to Roman mausoleums and catacombs to Tribal cannibalism...............we've collectively dealt with death in a myriad of ways.
In terms of actively seeking death most especially through battle, we've got the Kamikaze, the Bezerkers, the Celts, the Aztecs, and the Mongols, just to name a few. All diving into the afterlife with strong ideas about the bountiful lands, rewards and loved ones to reconnect with on the other side.
And in our modern day, we have widespread Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, and New Ageism, all with their differing theories on death and the afterlife making up a large part of their focus, which gives their faithful peace around death and where they are going.
At least you would hope so!
But is this the case in our pandemic fear filled days? I can't speak for the non western religions, but as for Christianity and New Ageism in our western world, I'm not seeing a lot of peace around death and the afterlife. I'm seeing a panic and terror leading people to take strong and rigid stances on one side of the fence or the other, and allowing a yawning chasm of a divide to stand between friends, family and communities.
In recent years, we've been led down an angry and divisive path, led by a mainstream media that's tightening their ownership, stranglehold and censorship on the world wide web, and every other form of media they can lay their hands on. We were taken in baby steps, through Climate Change, then the Yes vote, then the Me Too movement, then the Transgender movement, then Black Lives Matter........taking a brief interlude for wildfires to ravage the world, both physically with brutal fires in the Amazon, Australia, America, and many other places you would never think it could happen, and spiritually, with protests happening in just about every country, gaining in strength and momentum, which led to Time magazine proclaiming 2019 the Year Of The Protest........till we arrived at the Pandemic.
All of these movements - Climate Change, Yes vote, Me too, Transgender, Black Lives Matter and Pandemic - are explosively divisive and full of anger, fear and projection. All of them can sometimes feel like the only conversations being had, no matter where you are in the western world, and often result in statements like "If you don't agree with me, you're a total waste of space and breath and unfriend me right now." All create extreme polarity between view points, being either the mainstream belief or 'the other'. Alternative beliefs or Mainstream beliefs that have quickly became lumped in with everything else associated with them, to form an amorphous blob of either Conspiracist or Sheeple.
And whichever of the two you choose to identify with, you are choosing your stance based on loving your family and wanting the best for them, and making the very best decision you can based on your life experience and knowledge. Both sides believe equally they are thinking of the good of other people and trying to save the world. And both sides being completely terrified about the mega scale death they are convinced will ensue, if the other side doesn't listen to 'The Truth'. Which everyone seems to know these days.
Personally, as an adept of Newtons Third Law, of every action having an equal and opposite reaction, as well as of Heraclitus, who proclaimed that every pair of opposites is a unity, as it's the dynamic interplay between the two that sparks evolution and growth........I'm firmly entrenched in the middle ground. From my life experience, most recently bumping into Leukaemia as an organic off grid dweller, I've found that paradox really is the nature of the universe, and truth lays in neither but both extremes being true. The extreme polar ends are both right and wrong, and in acknowledging that, I can take what makes sense to me from both of them to fashion a path forward. I know from experience, that as shit as it gets is also as great as it gets, and that is always going on.
Which of course doesn't mean that I don't get filled with fear and worry and overwhelm at the state of the planet, but coming back to the point I was trying to make at the start, at least I'm not terrified of death. And I'm getting quite good at finding the equal and opposite to it.
I've decided for myself that the best thing I can do in a world that can seem at times overrun with destruction, is to create. So in the spirit of that, here is my visual and word manifesto on Birth, Sex and Death.
And here are the words spoken......
From the moment we're born, we want to go back.
Back to the womb. Back to our source.
Back to that complete and total feeling of oneness.
Back to the experience of being inside someone else's skin,
with them everywhere they go, hearing the noises they hear,
imbibing their foods and drinks, thoughts and conversations,
fears and intense life events.
On the inside, cocooned in warm, salty liquid that cushions us from extremes.
The sense of connection with every event,
sitting sleepy inside, gently bouncing round.
But we are born.
Squeezed by the biggest organ of a woman's body,
her womb,
into the world.
In all different ways, all over the planet,
we die to the womb as we are born to the world.
How our birth unfolds, the conditions around us,
and the welcome or lack of it that we feel in our first moments,
are the foundation stones on which we build our lives and self esteem.
Funny how we like to quickly clean up after the great events of life.
Cut that cord and get rid of the placenta,
wash up the blood, wash the woman, wash the baby,
wash the sheets and wraps and blankets and pillows and cushions
that were birthed on.
Clean away all the smells and colours and textural remembers of birth.
We clean up after sex, the milky substances left behind on sheets,
and on our thighs, and the sweat and sex smell that permeates our skin,
and then get nicely deodorised and sanitised before hitting the public again.
And we clean up after death,
with the blood and bodily functions that have spilled and left the body
just like the spirit, the breath, and the vitality of life have left.
We try to clean up our emotions, our needs, our feelings, our wants,
and our complete and total inner desire to feel that oneness again.
The oneness of birth. The oneness of sex. the oneness of death.
Our cultural taboos, and yet the very events that shape us.
Connect us.
Remind us of the great oneness that existed before we were born,
that exists when we connect with each other inside our skins through sex,
and that we go back to when we die.
A reminder of the big cycles that echo constantly around us.
A process we see through the universe,
with our seasons, our life cycles, our relationships, our families,
our ideas, our cultures, our religions.
A process of pregnancy or seed planting,
then inner growth and building,
to the great pause and extremity of transition,
before the birth of a person or thought.
Then the vital life of interconnection,
and the intense moment of sexual communication,
and spiritual realisations,
and the equally intense moments of great illness or mindsets,
through the cycle to the death of the person or idea or group or period,
into the uterine depths of seed planting and pregnancy or rebirth again.
A theme mirrored in the water that courses our bodies,
and the fire of sex or spirituality that connects us,
and the planetary bodies that dance their spiral dances,
and the breath of conversations that take us on word journeys......
A fascination with this sacred trinity persists,
even in the face of cultural taboos,
in our great and enlightened culture that seems to thrive on separation.
But in an atmosphere of repression of our great connecting life mysteries,
birth becomes a fraught event, be it in hospital or home,
and fears come clinging to it like young children afraid of the initiation.
Sex becomes a possibly deadly affair,
and manifests too often as young women with shaved bodies,
bouncing merrily on assorted phalli,
making a cacophony of unnatural noises
and imprinting unrealistic and shallow messages on wistful hearts.
Or a tool used in hate and revenge.
Or to capture a person and keep them caged.
And death is a trauma, a wailing, a shudder of darkness at our shoulders,
threatening to drag us into its eternally dark maw.
All events that we clean up after,
and sanitise, and deodorise, and create polite conversations around.
Talk in metaphors and simplicities,
about the complexities that we don't know how to express.
Hoping that if we follow the right rules, prescribe to the 'true' belief systems,
and engage in the correct spiritual practices,
that they will either go away and bother someone else,
or wont impinge on our important life,
of work and cars and mortgages and hobbies and homes
and clothes and holidays and acquisitions.
How did we get so far removed from our instinctual, animal,
spiritual, eternally cyclic, ancient and deeply symbolic selves?
How have we journeyed so far,
that we can stand to see birth as a routine event,
and death as an equally regular occurrence on our screens,
while being horribly scared and avoidant of them in our real lives?
How can we bear to watch zombie after woman after man after animal
being killed on our screens in horrific ways,
and in our books and our stories,
while we stumble all unknowing into the actual presence of death,
stuttering and unsure.
How are we happy to vaguely allude to sex, or only talk about it in extremes,
and voyeuristically watch or read about other people doing it
in spectacular fashions,
while we sneak home to bed with our familiar partner, hiding our real feelings,
and wishing there was a movie star next to us instead?
How can we be truly alive without the full stop and renewal of
death as the accent and boundary that makes it all the sweeter?
And how can we fully embrace birth as the gentle sundering of the oneness,
and journey into multiplicity,
when it's been packaged and parcelled
as a scientific and potentially dangerous event
that needs to be dealt with by professionals only?
In our avoidance of the alchemical mysteries
and oxytocic adventures of birth, sex and death,
we've strung it about ourselves
in unrealistic and gaudy displays like christmas lights,
hoping we can wear it as a symbol
rather than actually tread the subterranean worlds beyond the world
that we all practically, sensibly, and scientifically agree is real.
Sex has become a circus pony that we drag out to social gatherings
to slap on the arse and force to perform.
And take home in the dark to subject to our repressed desires.
Birth has become a feared nemesis to women,
stalking their carefree moments
with the threat of immanent pain and a cacophony of need.
Promising a life of duty and unappreciated work to its penitents.
And death has become the diseased corruption
of a twisted society spending all its time and money in an effort to defeat it.
We hope to make sense of it by inundating ourselves with it,
and have instead resulted in numbing to it,
being afraid of it,
and detaching from it even more instead.
But in a very real way, our sense of connection,
our oneness, and our source, is where it's always been.
At our fingertips. Entangled through bonding.
Elements of it sprinkled through every interaction we have.
The pregnancy and gestation of a relationship,
that goes through the intense transition of hardship or fear,
before birthing into a full bloomed rose
of tangled and intermingled tendrils of love and hope.
And can also die, and then be reborn with another person in another time and place.
The birth of our babies, through the intense transition and expulsion into life.
Which also holds a death.
The death of the family as it existed before the new babe,
the death of the maiden to become the mother,
the death of the ego as it learns to surrender to the demands of life.
And then there is the death of our loved ones,
that leaves us with an unconscionable urge to be ALIVE!
To drum up the spirits and the sorryness and the fears and the memories,
and let them float on the rhythm of the heartbeat of life,
and remind ourselves of the things that only life can see,
and hear, and feel, and touch.
It's time for us to stop and really look at each other and ourselves.
To tell each other our experiences as they really are,
rather than sanitised versions that keep all our real juice and gristle hidden.
To treat each other as if we really were parts of each other,
until our combined experiences show us that truth.
To pull apart our life knowings and plumb the depths of our authentic experiences
till we can really dance and gaze at the realities of
birth, life, sex and death.
We are the ones that we've been waiting for,
and the time for us to awaken to our connection is now.
We can get back into the womb of oneness through
empathy, compassion, love and respect.
Through seeing the mirrors of oneness in all of creation.
Through the peace we create when we accept all the parts of ourselves.
Through the harmony of love, respect, peace and freedom,
that we can learn from our families and bonding love.
Through the melting and surrender that we visit in
birthing, great sex, intense life experiences, and death.