Who can spread his hours before him, saying, “This for God and this for myself’ This for my soul, and this other for my body?” ”On Religion” by Kahlil Gibran
In
between bouts of eating dragon souls in Skyrim, I spent some time
this weekend working on another poem in the new series I’m
developing. I’ve written a fair number of poems about The
Body:
What
I have and haven’t done with my own,
my
general
disconnection
from it,
and its
various and
sundry
batterings,
most of them self-inflicted.
Many of those poems are very dark. I had forgotten just
how
dark until I went back and read some of them recently and
found myself alarmed by their brutality. With this new series, I am
consciously trying to take a different approach—not an insincere,
rah-rah positivity approach, but one that comes from a place of
genuine gratitude and appreciation for what my
long self-maligned body is able to do—it’s adaptability, it’s
capacity to learn, and shockingly to me, it’s hidden strength. One
cannot, I have discovered, simultaneously malign one’s own body and
effectively strengthen it.
I
came to weight training with many wounds around my life-long lack of
athleticism, being too tall, spindly and uncoordinated in my younger
years to be able to do any sports, anger about my knee never getting
properly fixed, never “clicking” with a sport or a physical
pursuit, and feeling hopelessly limited. The weight training has
tuned me into my body and its physical workings like nothing else
has. It’s been a hard and uneven and sometimes painful process, but
it’s taught me a lot, including that perennially favored spiritual
buzzword, “presence.” I practiced regular meditation for years,
and it never got me anywhere close to the presence I’ve discovered
when I’m pushing through muscle fatigue and self-doubt trying to
get three more reps in on the leg press, and the world shrinks itself
down to nothing but me, the sound of my heartbeat, and that plate I’m
pushing out with the sheer force of my will. That clears my brain far
more effectively than sitting in a lotus position and trying to
release desire ever did.
I
know that for most people, the ability to set a physical goal and
execute on it is a normal, non-earth shattering experience, but for
me it’s been huge. I literally didn’t know I was capable of it. I
am stunned to find that I enjoy the physical sensation of pushing
myself hard, overcoming my physical fatigue and my mental self-doubt,
and seeing progress. It’s strengthening me both in body and mind.
In essence, I am finding the spiritual through the physical, which is
the last place I ever would have looked. In all honestly, I always
had a slight contempt for people who I deemed “too into” their
physicality. I made the incorrect assumption that they didn’t have
anything going on in their brains and that they didn’t have very
much depth as people. I was wrong to let my bitterness blind me in
that way, but I’ve turned over a new barbell and shall move forward
all the wiser for my mistakes. This new series will be an evolution
of my poems on The Body. I don’t know where it will take me, but
I’m interested to see what emerges.
Speaking
of the realm of the spirit, I recently came across some poetry by
Kahlil Gibran, and I have become entranced, enthralled, enchanted,
enraptured and mesmerized. (I’ve been using the thesaurus a lot
this weekend.) I never paid much attention to his work before and I
never read “The Prophet” or otherwise actively sought out his
poetry. I guess I just thought it was a 60’s hippie thing and
mentally dismissed it. But after reading these poems, I was deeply
moved and immediately used my Christmas Amazon gift card money
(thanks, Allan and Sandy!) to order his Collected Works, which should
be coming soon. I’m very excited. I have a whole lot of time to
make up for and I’m looking forward to a three-way date involving
me, our couch, and Gibran’s lyrical mysticism.
4 comments:
I love what you have to say about meditation vs. weight training. That's a beautiful insight.
Exquisitely beautiful, Kristen.
Thank you, Jason! I appreciate it.
Thank you, Master Poet! :)
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