I was not on vacation exactly. I'd come to a "Mending Our Broken Hearts" retreat.
It's been just over a year since I left my once beloved church home. I've written about this before: http://myviewfromhere-donna.blogspot.com/2015/08/stepping-back.html
and especially http://myviewfromhere-donna.blogspot.com/2015/11/end-of-era.html
Every time I thought I was well and truly "over it", something would pop up that would re-ignite the hurt and rage I felt about the whole debacle, or as one friend has termed it, "The Great Unraveling". More than anything, I longed for peace from the ongoing resentment, hurt, and confusion I felt about what happened and my reaction to it. I needed so much to put it behind me and move on.
The retreat was a time to create sacred space for doing ritual. I truly believe in the transformative power of this type of work. I've done a ton of experiential personal growth work -- beating on pillows or screaming in rage to express a well of inner anger; acting out "scenes" to access deep feelings about incidents in life that still nag, talking to someone to whom things need to be said by imagining them in the chair across from you -- or choosing a volunteer to play the part of the listener or other "actor(s)" in a life drama; doing trust falls, being held in a group cradle, being sung to...
Yes, I know many of you may be laughing and finding it all so "woo-woo" silly. My guess that most of the laughter and judgment comes from those who have never done it, never experienced the power of intentional healing through experiencing any number and types of rituals that you can feel in your body, healing the heart and the soul. This is not "talk therapy" where intellectual "a-ha's" may come up..."Oh! I never thought of that!" Experiential personal growth work doesn't rely on puzzling your way to insight while sitting on a chair talking. It shoves you off the cliff, challenged with love and skill, until your heart finds wing. The relief is palpable, the healing cleansing, the tools gained invaluable.
This retreat wasn't as dramatic as all that, but it was a time for creating ritual and a time to find closure and renewal. We gathered on Friday, got settled, walked on the beach, spent time in silence. Then we made a plan for the weekend -- the group created the flow, decided on how the rituals would unfold, set an "agenda" of sorts. After dinner we began a round of "checking in" by speaking about what we wanted to heal and to leave behind; what were the "stuck, hurt places" still causing us pain. It was very moving to hear how deeply felt the hurts were. There were tears, anger, exhaustion.
Saturday morning there was a time of exploring the Enneagram Types -- similar to the more popular Myers-Briggs personality test. I love these things because they are so accurate in explaining the differences in how people respond to common or shared experiences in such different ways depending upon personality type. I was able to see so clearly how my own Enneagram Type, my own personality traits, and childhood experiences led me to feel so deeply hurt by what had transpired, why I (and not others) could no longer remain in an environment from which I felt so alienated, and even how my own journey of "leaving" was for reasons often quite different from others who'd also left. And, I saw that others were not "wrong" to remain, just acting from a different set of basic needs and personality constructs. (NOTE: Whether great or small, these early emotional "wounds" of childhood never completely go away and continue to inform how we respond to life, ever the more so if we are unaware of or deny them.)
In the afternoon we all set to work creating our "letting go of the past" ritual. We had brought along things that represented that which we wanted to let go of -- for me it was agendas, emails, reports, lists, rosters, organizational materials, testimonials...lots and lots of written materials. I cut these into pieces to be burned in our ritual fire on the beach. In a time of silence we also created a group collage of photos and words that represented that which we were leaving behind. Attached to this were long pieces of woven yarn, one for each of us, that we would cut, to represent "cutting the cord" to the past. We gathered up all these supplies and headed to the beach. A fire was built in a hollowed out place near a large stand of driftwood. We took turns adding our papers to the fire, sending the work I'd done with so much care and hope into the earth as ash, the flames burning hotter as the fire grew larger. Some said words appropriate to what they were letting go as they added their own fuel to the fire.
At the end of this burning, we suspended the collage over the fire. So many images and words there
spoke so strongly to my experience of both the joys and sorrows, the gratitude and grief, I felt toward my church experience that tears flowed as I read the words I'd written, expressing my deep gratitude for my time in that community as well as my deep disillusionment with it. I spoke of my desire to let go, to move on, and finally to wish the community well as they move into the future too. Cutting that cord was a profound moment, and almost immediately I felt a sense of release and freedom from the emotions that had been pulling me under for over a year. I felt my heart soar.
After the fire was put out we spent another hour on the beach, some walking, some sitting in silence, allowing this time in a wild and natural place to continue to heal. That evening was also a time of individual contemplation, quiet conversation, a time for stargazing as the sky lit up with the Milky Way and familiar constellations, reminding us of the vastness with which we are surrounded.
Sunday morning we lazed about, taking our time over breakfast, reading, laughing, sharing a lightness of heart and spirit. Then it was time to do the "moving into the future" part of the retreat. Ironically, I had a led a day-long workshop at my church three years ago called "Creating a Personal Mission Statement" and had volunteered to lead this as part of the retreat. I condensed it into a couple of hours and facilitated us through the various steps of finding our deepest desire for healing what might be an old wound or longing, writing a "statement of purpose" for our lives, and finally crafting a personal mission statement that one can use as a daily guide to determine if we are living life with intention -- making the choices and doing the work that truly feeds our soul, keeps us in the flow, and heals the world by healing our own tattered hearts and living our best selves.
By late Sunday afternoon I felt a joyous exhaustion. I felt happy and light, focused on the future, and relieved that every time I thought about the church and "The Great Unraveling", I felt neutral -- more grateful than angry about my time there; a degree of non-attached curiosity about what would be next for that community; wishing the best for those I still care about who remain there. I no longer felt the tethering pain, anger, humiliation, and shame that has been my emotional response for a year. I felt rather like thinking about high school; I felt some amusement, cherished some happy memories, and acknowledged some sad ones, but all from a distance -- from a different time in my life.
Sunday night we went out to a casual seafood dinner and then gathered to laugh with abandon at the silly female-centered humor of a movie called "Sisters" with Tina Fey and Amy Poehler. It felt good to just be goofy. I slept like a rock and got up Monday morning to pack and say goodbye to the beach, feeling deep gratitude for the experience and eager to drive back to my home and to reunite with Hub who had sent me off with such gentle and hopeful wishes for a healing journey. And it was.
At least, that's the view from here....©
PS...Having written this yesterday and just re-reading it, I feel I must add a note to those who I know read this blog and still attend this church. The "leaving behind" does NOT include friends and those I love. Those relationships are precious and remain so. I'm leaving behind the emotions about the institution, the organization, my time there as a congregant and leader. In fact, I feel even more tenderness now, after the ritual, for all we shared together.
Wow, I'm so happy for you that your retreat seemed to do you so much good, bringing the peace and closure (?) you needed for the Great Unraveling. I've never been to a retreat of any kind but everyone I know who has gone to one comes back glad they went. Beaches and oceans and big skies are the perfect place to take stock of any situation and put it into perspective.
ReplyDeleteI've done lots of retreats of various kinds, with various focus. I always come home with new learning, new tools, and the memories of people and experiences that seem to guide me on my path. Going in, the trick is to feel a sense of safety, know the facilitators are skilled and experienced, and to be ready to be open and vulnerable enough to gain benefit. Open heart and open mind. Most of my experiences have been very positive, some only so-so, none terrible. So I keep seeking the support and challenge where I find it to live bigger, stand in my power, and know myself more deeply so I can find peace within myself and be an example to others, hopefully. But I have no control over that last thing. Letting go of attachment to outcome is a lesson I'm still learning. :)
DeleteI love this: "I keep seeking the support and challenge where I find it to live bigger, stand in my power, and know myself more deeply so I can find peace within myself..." I think I find those things through blogging, especially the finding myself.
ReplyDeleteOne of the things I love about your blog is the "a-ha" insights your reveal in your writing about every day things. Wisdom.
DeleteMy children still snicker (yet - in their own families they use it) the family dynamics of having 4 children (one adopted) in a 20 year period - so teens and babies - and this is the phrase I used over and over again. FRESH START. Yes, the kids hated that but sometimes that was the only way to keep going. We are having a fresh start. Sometimes we had 3 of the things in one week! Yet now, we have children who are amazing, you love each other, who love their parents. Sometimes, Fresh start meant re-joining and sometimes it meant forging ahead in a new direction. When you can't go back or don't want to or things are too complicated to fix...there is nothing wrong with the "fresh start".
ReplyDeleteFresh start! That's a great idea for so many instances.
ReplyDeleteThe timing for this seems so appropriate, the Jewish High Holy days, and putting the past behind us, forgiving others and ourselves. I wish you peace of mind, Dear One. You deserve that, and I am so sorry for past torment. Hugs!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much! Your understanding and encouragement mean a lot to me.
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