Eagle Poem
by Joy Harjo
To pray you open your whole self
To sky, to earth, to sun, to moon
To one whole voice that is you.
And know there is more
That you can’t see, can’t hear;
Can’t know except in moments
Steadly growing, and in languages
That aren’t always sound but other
Circles of motion.
Like eagle that Sunday morning
Over Salt River. Circled in blue sky
In wind, swept our hearts clean
With sacred wings.
We see you, see ourselves and know
That we must take the utmost care
And kindness in all things.
Breathe in, knowing we are made of
All this, and breathe, knowing
We are truly blessed because we
Were born, and die soon within a
True circle of motion,
Like eagle rounding out the morning
Inside us.
We pray that it will be done
In beauty.
In beauty.
I am in my second favorite office: the airplane. My all-time favorite office is a cabin,
any cabin will do, or a wood-enveloped room in a quiet house. There is a room at my in-laws’ house
like this, made of old barn wood.
Yes, please.
I keep writing about easing off my personal goals, scaling
back on what I need to do lately.
Every time I think I’ve scaled back enough, I hear a call to go further.
It makes me think that I’m not the best judge of my own efforts. I either think I’ve done a lot of work when I could actually go a lot further, or I
have little to no insight into just how much I’ve done.
In my day-life line of work, there is a lot of talk about
metrics. It’s perhaps telling that
when I first started my job at the company where I work, I had no idea what
people were talking about when they used the word metrics. “Do we have metrics for that?” people would ask. Or there would begin a new initiative to get some metrics around a topic. I sat in meetings picturing a
seamstress with her measuring tape, wrapping it around voluptuous hips. That was as metric-educated as I was,
and those type of metrics were something I had always resisted anyway, because
they seemed shallow or controlling, and my own measurements, their numbers higher than
my mother’s, and my whimsical nature combined to make me feel different from the way I thought I should have
been. Which is to say, small,
silent, pencil-ish. In other
words: invisible.
I’m beginning to think the only way out of the watery
subjectivity of emotional life (have I been doing enough? What have I been doing? I feel like I haven’t done a thing, but
I’m exhausted…) is a well-placed ladder of
objectivity. Does this mean that, after many years of not owning a scale I
might purchase one? Probably not. I’m not really talking
about the body here, although the body is the best place to start, when
considering mental health. More
likely, the kind of metrics I seek will come from friends, and people who love
me.
I wish I had been able to stand alone when I was growing up,
without internally comparing myself to my mother or to other women, who all
seemed bird-like in appearance, tamed and contained. I often couldn’t hear my mother’s love for me, and now
knowing what it feels like when I offer a compliment to someone and they reject
it, think that must have been difficult to live with sometimes. I once thought of our moments of glee,
going to stores together and lunching in sweet cafes when my brothers weren’t
around, as stolen gold. But now I
think they weren’t as anomalous as I thought. They were in abundance, too, just as the critical voice
inside me was.
I have touched the
space of acceptance in meditation and in writing, and I am learning to bring
this practice into my daily life more and more. It’s funny, because gratitude – so
fueling and empowering – comes from a willingness to wade into the vulnerable
places of the heart. And
yet, vulnerability is not the first word we think of when we think of strength.
But we were talking about business, weren’t we? I currently work with someone who is an
amazing leader. What makes him so
amazing to me is not just the quality of his decisions, but the openness of his
heart. In some ways, it is
difficult to lead with an open heart.
But in lots of ways, it’s harder to live with a closed one than it is to
suffer the pains that come with opening it. I know because I’ve led in both ways. I’ve embarrassed myself more with an
open one, and said some stupid things and shared responsibilities so much that
I wasn’t sure if I was even working or not. But I’ve had more fun leading that way, too. It takes humility and courage, and
faith in not only oneself but in a greater mission. A mission of one-ness, and of working to serve one-ness. This sort of mission is a powerful
thing to observe in action, and some days I think my front-row seat to this
sort of show is the reason I love my job.
So…I have said a lot here (and also, I fear, nothing at
all). I once was offered the
beautiful assurance that the dreams of our heart are the dreams of God, and
that I should trust them always, because they come from a divine source. I don’t know if those words work for
you, but I found them enormously revelatory, and think they point back to the
strength that comes from a willingness to be vulnerable.
Here is Denise Linn, one of my favorite authors, saying the same thing in her
book,
Altars – Bringing Sacred
Shrines into Your Everyday Life: “Remember
that the longings of your heart are often your higher self asking to be born.
The fact that you want to accomplish something is evidence that Spirit is
leading you in that direction.”
As for metrics, I’m thinking that the words of a friend are the kind of
measurement we should believe. The
words of our mothers saying how tall and handsome we are, or a girlfriend
saying we are hilarious. This is
the language of devotion, and our hearts need this language like our bodies
need food.
I also read the following words in an interview with the late James Hillman
yesterday in The Sun, and think it’s something we should all go around asking
ourselves. Hillman, who was
apparently a controversial figure in the world of psychology, said, “It’s
important to ask yourself, ‘How am I useful to others? What do people want from
me?’ That may very well reveal what you are here for.”
I may have once balked at advice like that, fearing it
implied I should go around pleasing others. But I like to think of it as serving others, and then it
makes sense to me.
Hillman also said, “Why is there such a vast self-help
industry in this country? Why do all these selves need help? They have been
deprived of something by our psychological culture. They have been deprived of
the sense that there is something else in life, some purpose that has come with
them into the world.”
Maybe this is the kind of metric we need. What am I here for? What am I good at that other people
need?
We are funny when we are being ourselves. Or we are ineluctably sweet, or
true. We are a gift to those
around us, when we live unedited, without shield.
These are the kinds of metrics I want to have for myself – am I healing to
someone?
Am I listening to someone
so deeply they feel heard? Am I
seeing the beauty in myself, wild and unkempt, like a fox in the living room?
To your own personal metrics, and the lives that feed them,
With love
Kara