Posts Tagged: brother


16
Nov 09

The beaded path

The beaded path...rudraksha and crystal mala.

 

 

 

 

 

Sitting bones heavy
Brother, baby, brother – breath
Karmic beaded path

With a loosely coiled mala in hand, I recite the mantra, “Om Namah Shivaya.” Rudraksha and glass beads alternate along the beaded path… forming a meditative conveyor belt moving through my thumb and index finger. I mindfully transition from bumpy wooden beads to round crystals. There’s 108 beads. Each one is matched with a breath and recitation of the sacred mantra. Repeating the mantra quiets my mind but the engine still hums. I sit tonight recalling many things.

Each rudraksha bead bears five main crevices and many bumps that form a resemblance to the human brain. My heart sinks lower and lower toward my stomach every time I contemplate this analogy. I think about my brother lying alone in a hospital bed tonight praying that he doesn’t have a blood clot in his brain. John’s death still throbs in his heart. And now, an unexplainable throbbing in his head. Our hearts hurt. Our minds heavy. He lies in Louisiana while I sit in Florida. We are both blanketed by indifferent, dark skies tonight.

A stick of nag champa burns…smoky swirls snake off a glowing red tip. Cool air enters from the cracked bedroom window. The corner of my eyes catch the rhythmic flicker of a candle. The air is sweetened from the ashen incense and vanilla amber scented candle.

The wooden beads bring thoughts of my brothers, Bryan and John.

The crystal beads cradle the recent memory of holding a newborn child. My heels click and echoe down the hospital hallway. I observe pre-occupied people in scrubs, dimly lit rooms with drawn curtains and droning television sets. I had been down this hallway before… finding the hospital rooms for my grandmother who died of renal failure… then my brother who lost his life to liver cancer.

My hands warm from cupping the nonfat chai tea latte from Starbucks. I hear the sweet murmurings of a newborn mother and child cooing at one another. My eyes water as the warmth travels steadily from my hands to my  heart. I stand waiting outside the doorway until my friend calls for me to enter.

In the room, an empty wooden crib stands perpendicular to a bent hospital bed. Both are empty. The mother and her duckling sit swaying in a nearby rocking chair. For ten months, they rested in one body. Now they are two souls connecting innocently and openly before my eyes.

I hold her and notice how developed her finger nails are. She grips my finger with surprising strength. Her purity cleanses me. Her potential is so clear. Her consciousness untainted; she trusts with her entire being. Swathed in my arms was a two day old soul and the closest thing to God I had ever held.

A few feet away is the empty hospital bed. In the back of my head sits memories of doing breathing exercises with John. I remember the call and response fashion to conducting shavasana.

“Begin with your toes,” I softly instructed. “Trace the breath to your knees…up your thighs to your hips. Follow the side ribs out to your arms to the tip of your fingers.”

At this point John would clench his fists open and close.

“Now travel back up the arms to the sternum. Breathe up and out through the crown of your head.”

I remember reading a recent chapter from Mitch Albom’s new book, “have a little faith,” where he visits his rabbi in the hospital and asks for the secret to happiness. The rabbi is about to answer when his attention is diverted to an infant crying in the hallway. The baby’s squeal reshapes his response.

“When a baby comes into the world, its hands are clenched right? Why?”

After a pregnant pause, the Reb continues.

“Because a baby, not knowing any better, wants to grab everything to say, ‘the whole world is mine.’ But when an old person dies, how does he do so? With his hands open. Why? Because he has learned the lesson. We can take nothing with us.”

I speak to Bryan today, I ask if he could clench his fists open and close. He said yes. We do breathing exercises over the phone. Breathe in… clench. Breathe out… open.

Open and close. Rough and clear. Bead to bead, I travel along many breaths and thoughts… brother to baby to brother… hospital bed to hospital bed… breathe to breathe… all backed by the mantra… tracing my karma as my fingers pace along the beaded path.

Just as I begin to weep, I remember how I was once a dying infant. I am so sick with high fevers at Nong Khai refugee camp that my hair falls out and my mother can barely hold me as my body is scorching. My father grows desperate and begins to hear the call of death. He bribes Thai guards into granting him a fake ID card. One fateful night, he leaves the camp and visits the abbot of a nearby temple. The head monk hands him an herbal remedy. This is how I am still sitting tonight.

We have all been there… cradled in the arms of the universe… able to trust completely with every fiber of our being… confidently clenching life. It is our beginning and ending point. Such is the karmic beaded path.

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8
Oct 09

Taking flight

Mourning dove nesting,
“He has flown away,” it coos
I echo its cries

A mourning dove coos from the magnolia tree outside my kitchen window. John is gone. I listen closely to the sweet echoes of his peaceful passing. The dove knows so much.

I first came across sandhill cranes on the long quiet highway between Maitland and Lakeland in the early hours of morning. On Polk Parkway sits an abandoned white semi-truck with bold and faded sans serif text reading, “Find Happiness in Polk County … We Make it Easy.” Right past this point, smooth pastures stage the sunrise. This is where I spotted them. Slowing my volvo to a crawl, I watched them walk with one exaggerated step in front of another. They marched in groups and in rhythm. Grace wobbly flowed from red mohawks to lanky necks and down stick legs. I was mesmerized by their movements.

I later read that millions of sandhill cranes gather in Nebreska along the Platte River every year, a point along their path of migration. Jane Goodall observed these cranes and was profoundly moved. She believed them to be symbols of hope and wrote, “We can view them on their great migratory journeys as peace messengers, their display along the river as a Dance of Peace. They tell us that there is hope even in darkness. They tell us there will be peace at the end. ”

Cranes are considered spiritual creatures in eastern philosophy. It is believed that souls are carried by them to higher levels of spiritual enlightenment.

On my birthday this year, three sandhill cranes casually strolled the parking lot outside my company’s building. I watched from the fourth floor boardroom, squinting to see the red dashes atop their heads. It was a week and half before John would ride upwards on their wingspan to realms unknown to me, sitting in the physical world of illusion.

I took many walks during the time of John’s sickness. I take many walks now, ten weeks after his passing.

It was on the walking path at Minnehaha Park, that Carl and I encountered Bright Eyes. Yellow orbs observed us from a low branch of a live oak, stopping us in our tracks. Dazed and amazed, we stood only a few feet away from a burrowing owl. Rotating its head in a full circle, it scanned for prey. We eventually locked eyes with the unblinking bird. I held my breath, not wanting to disrupt the feathery sage.

Somehow, the owl’s presence provided powerful perception. I remember meditating on the experience and sensing that it was perhaps a guardian of the night, of darkness, of death. Its traditional symbolism of wisdom, intellect and protection resonated brilliantly in my breathing.

I have re-walked that same path many evenings since John’s death, hoping for another meeting with Bright Eyes.

Molly often fretted over the crows that gathered on the patio during the time of John’s illness. Omens for death and darkness, their oily black bodies bothered her as she hand washed dishes; scrubbing desperately for another outcome. I remember the kitchen blinds being closed during that time.

Swans gathered on a lake the evening we moved John into room 103 at Palm Terrace Hospice House. I relayed his last sunset to him when feeding him a slice of canned mandarin oranges. The swan’s white bodies glided and glowed on watery streaks of lavender, gold, sherbert and strawberry. The lucid sunset marked the final preparation for my brother’s peaceful passing.

John took his time chewing on the fleshy, orange crescent… savoring our last conversation. His last words to me were, “I never knew how much sweetness could be in one bite.”

The next morning, I sat on a plane ready for the take off. It was going to be a connecting flight from Orlando to Charlotte; landing in Lexington, Kentucky. I had just put my carry-on luggage in the overhead bin when my PDA vibrated. It was a voicemail from Melissa. John was no longer responding.

“Come home if you can,” she said in a hoarse voice.

Popping out of my seat, I quickly spoke to the flight attendant and found myself breathing deeply, driving to the hospice house. I arrived a few hours before John took his last breath. He moaned loudly when I first entered the room. I latched onto the right side of his hospital bed and whispered all the loving words that I could utter.

As fate would have it, my brother took off the runway that day. I remained seated, as he flew into eternal skies. The doves knew this. The cranes too. The swans gathered. The owl confirmed. I accepted.

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