I was meant to be gathering images for a collage that marked Past, Present, and Future for a weekly task in a study I'm working on. Since I have only a very few magazines on hand, most of my images centered around words clipped from pages and a handful of pictures that represented things important to me. Frankly none of them represented my past, of which I feel I've had a gracious plenty! Instead, I focused on what I wanted to see in my future. Some of what I have now. A lot more than I have now. I had slowed considerably in clipping and started scanning articles as I flipped through one of the last magazines. Suddenly there was a small paragraph that leaped off the page at me.
I was so caught in what I read, that I completely failed to note who the author was. She (he?) had written for a travel magazine about a trip to the Grand Canyon. The author found herself traversing a narrow ledge, keenly aware of the rocks pressing into her on the one side and the vast amount of space and air on the other. She related her first and second thought. First that she might stumble, fall and find herself tumbling thousands and thousands of feet down into the canyon beyond. Her second thought was, "But what if I just chose to jump off, instead?"
The second thought disturbed her mightily. She later related the experience to her trail guide. "The French have a phrase for that," he told her. " It translates to 'the call of the void'. I've heard of many people experiencing it, though I never have. "
I felt my whole body and spirit go quiet and still. I know the call of the void. I would even liken what I'm doing now, navigating grief, as an exercise in experiencing, and resisting, the call of the void.
I existed in that space of pressing in close and being aware of the void on the other side for a few weeks' time just after John's death. Not for long, but long enough. My nature is to 'get busy', to go to work, to get on with things, through the big and unbelievably difficult things. The truth is I fill up space and time with activity. I see the void. I may contemplate the vastness of it. But overall, it makes me uncomfortable. It's unnatural to me.
And yet, I cannot deny that it exists. For me right now, that void is called 'future' in which so many unknowns lie. Will I find my way along this ledge to wider paths that make me feel safe? Will I find I have a guide to help me along the more difficult ways? Or will I simply turn and face the vast unknowingness of it all and free fall, waiting to see what might happen?
I can't help but contemplate the freedom of letting go and just going over the edge. Would it be like flying? Would the wind uplift me at some point?
On the other hand, I have this healthy fear of the consequences of gravity based on just such foolish actions. Here is the problem when the practical, realistic woman gets tangled with the romantic, more adventurous one.
Then again, practically speaking, perhaps that is balance wheel to being totally off the wall?
I think I shall play it somewhat safe and keep traversing the narrow ledge I'm on. But I'm on the lookout for the wider part, where I not only can turn away from the wall but see the void. It will be enough I think, to accept that though there is a ledge under my feet, everything I do from now is, in essence, stepping into the unknown. That's close enough, I think.











