Blue-faced Honeyeater. Photo credit: Lip Kee via flickr.com |
Hello again.
It’s been a while. Why? Well, for the last five-and-a-bit months I’ve been
settling into life in Australia .
What does that mean, settling in? All sorts really. On a practical level it has
meant feathering the nest in which I live. It has meant walking heel to toe,
heel to toe, sometimes barefoot, sometimes not, letting my feet meet the ground
of my home-for-now. When you’re new to a neighbourhood it is very important to
get your bearings. This ensures you don’t get lost. And so, I have taken time
to walk the streets and note landmarks as guideposts. Energetically too, there
is a grounding, a connection I feel that occurs when we walk on land that doesn’t happen by simply driving around a new stomping ground. Moving at
speed doesn’t serve connection in the same way. The same goes for truly
connecting with people, another aspect of settling in. The importance of community is highlighted
when you arrive in an unfamiliar city. Connection and community are also
essential to creating extraordinary theatre. It’s uphill work if you try to get
a show up by yourself. It’s far more fun to create with others and, by engaging
others to use their specialist skills as writer, designer, producer etcetera, community and connections are strengthened, everyone's gifts are valued and given space to bloom. I
digress. I’ll come back to communion and community, earth and earthly bodies
another day. Now to bodies of feathers and fur...
Crimson Rosella. Photo credit: Arthur Chapman via flickr.com |
One of the best
parts of settling into this leafy suburb of Brisbane has been getting to know the flora
and fauna. It is such a joy and thrill to spot yet another strange and wondrous
bird whose feathers are splashed with rainbow-shades: vivid greens, red, yellow
and blue. I race to borrow my neighbour’s bird book. I find out this happy
creature’s name: a Rainbow Lorikeet. Then there’s the bird with the long and
daintily curving beak, the one who wears a light blue mask and looks at me
coyly through the fronds of the tree leaves. Oh you Blue-faced Honeyeater,
you. At night, out come the bats that chuckle like a jack-in-a-box and the
brushtail possums that climb high across the telephone wires perhaps sensing my
desire to keep them as pets. It’s the same desire I had as a child, nursing
eggs from the fridge in the hope that they would hatch. Oh please, be my pet.
There is something in the need to know the name of things in the world around
us. Like signposts that give us a sense
of direction, a sense of safety and place and home. I wonder if the English
colonisers of 1788 were desperate to name and to own and to find a sense of
place and home – did they make up the names of the birds as they wished? I’ve
heard that the early European settlers encountered huge flocks of Rosellas in
Rose Hill, NSW (now Parramatta according to the font of all knowledge that is Wikipedia). The birds became
known as ‘Rosehillers’ which was contracted further to Rosellas. They’re quite
something to behold with their bold blue and rich red feathers although there
are many varieties within the species, each group with their own vibrant plumage.
When I look at
these creatures, I wonder what their Aboriginal name or names are. I say names
because there are many Aboriginal languages. According the Creative
Spirits, an indigenous knowledge website, there were 250 Aboriginal
languages and 600 dialects spoken prior to the invasion of the colonisers. The
website states that there are now just 60 Aboriginal languages spoken as mother
tongue today. What would be different now if the English settlers had asked the Aborigine people for the names of all they saw? What if
the English paused to connect with the land? What if they had chosen to respect and connect with the people who had inhabited it for tens of thousands of years before the English arrived, rather than
attempting to subjugate them to British rule? I wonder…
Rainbow Lorikeet. Photo credit: runmonty via flickr.com |
The words we use have such power. We can name a bird. Name land or
re-name land, use words to claim and label. On a daily basis we humans do this
to others, to what we see and also to ourselves. What labels do we carry on our
backs that we have burdened ourselves with or let others plaster upon us? And
how can we let go of them? I remember British yoga teacher Rowan Cobelli gently offering a path
to such freedom during a candle-lit yoga class. As we rested in Child’s Pose
Rowan suggested we experiment with letting go the labels upon us. A practice so
simple and yet so profound.
Photo Balasana, Child's Pose. Note the variation with arms extended and not by sides. Photo credit: minishorts via flickr.com |
Here’s an echo, a variation of that practice. Five minutes to
forget who ‘you’ are and remember the ever-present peace within:
Child’s Pose, Balasana
Kneel on the floor on a mat or towel. Sit back on the heels, knees
hip width apart. Allow the spine spine to lengthen and the torso to slowly fold
forward, resting the torso between the thighs, relaxing the forehead towards
the floor. Bring the arms by the sides of the body, palms upwards. Inhale
deeply, breathing into the torso; expand the breath into the back of the torso
[1]. With every breath, have the sense of opening yourself into this
restorative pose. Inhale. Exhaling, release the tops of the shoulders towards the floor. With each exhale, invite the sense of shedding the
labels that you might carry with you: man, woman, mother, sister, brother, job
title, friend, family member, lover, partner. Observe the body, the mind, the
emotions; let thoughts and feelings float gently to floor like leaves from a
tree. Rest in the space that is revealed, when the words we surround ourselves
with are placed to one side. How does it feel to be in that space?
Words, energy, movement, thought and feeling. A
powerful inter-connection. Alchemical process. And we are the creators of our
worlds. What words will you use today?
Photo credit: minishorts via flickr.com |
[1] Much thanks to YogaJournal.com for their insightful doorways
to deepening such a seemingly simple practice. In their ‘Beginner’s Tips’ section
they offer this:
"We usually don't breathe consciously and fully into the back
of the torso. Balasana provides us with an excellent opportunity to do just
that. Imagine that each inhalation is 'doming' the back torso toward
the ceiling, lengthening and widening the spine. Then with each exhalation
release the torso a little more deeply into the fold."
I highly recommend reading their thorough exploration of Child’s
Pose here.