CRATERS OF THE MOON

inferno cone craters of the moon

We waltzed in the midday sun, along straight roads outta town, through long lazing fields of potato plants, to find this dark, glittering, frozen planet. The sun beat down, and up, from the ground to swirl around our legs in a hazy heat that reminded me of the deserts of Arizona and California. We were in Idaho, yet we were a million miles away, on the surface of a sunny moon. A moon where rocks lay about in strange formations - small, foamy and gassy cinders, light enough to bob to the surface, rolling along on top of heavier ropey waves that washed out from the inner earth. Caught in a few crevices here and there were tiny starlike flowers, shuddering in the wind that ran across every surface.

We loped along, exploring caves and climbing cones. Oliver was much more daring than I was - he descended into the darkness through holes so small they caught my breath in my chest and throat. I watched, feeling a kind of compulsion to try and fail, yet again, to climb into the wombs of the Earth. I have always had a fear of small spaces, as long as I can remember… Perhaps it has something to do with a blurry memory of a game of hide-and-seek, and an uncomfortable spell tucked away in a cramped wicker laundry basket or some such thing. Whatever it is, I have struggled with nightmares of small caves becoming smaller as I crawled, and have even foregone certain adventures if they meant I had to squeeze through a narrow opening. I watched, with longing, wishing I could gather my courage. It felt as if this land was testing me. I dipped my toes in the dark water, but pulled out before I lost my breath. It would only be a year later, when guided by the glow of spirit, motivated by the thought of never-again, and pumped up with many deep breaths and sips of water, I slipped past a small opening such as this, into the depths of a wide cavern on a small island in Bali.

But no matter! There was much more to explore, on this tiny slice of the moon. Larger caverns with wide openings called, and so did the bats that slept and flapped inside. A tall cinder cone begged us to walk to the tippy top, where the wind whispers secrets and tickles your ears, and a twisted tree sits alone, overlooking the black lands. The rocks talked, chattering with the voice of that wind, whistling simple tunes, while catching at our shoes with their rough edges, trying to get us to stop and admire them. Touching them was like feeding a horse - careful, gentle, fingers held at just such an angle so they wouldn’t bite or scratch us.

Oh, to think of what devastations happened here, what huge acts of heaving and wrenching and spilling destruction, that led to this quiet creation! All is hushed now. All serene, all calm, only the wind and it’s song.


imageedit_13_6817912448.jpg

WALKING ON THE MOON

Walking back from your house

Walking on the moon

Feet they hardly touch the ground

Walking on the moon

My feet don't hardly make no sound

Walking on, walking on the moon.

Some may say

I’m wishing my days away

No way…

~ The Police


craters-of-the-moon-spatter-cone
craters-of-the-moon-cave
craters-of-the-moon-park
craters-of-the-moon-rock
craters-of-the-moon-lava-field

KIRKHAM HOTSPRINGS

kirkham-hotsprings

. IMMERSED .

/iˈmərs/

verb

  1. to dip or submerge in a liquid.

  2. to deeply lose oneself in something else.

    From:
    early 17th century Latin
    immers = ‘dipped into’
    +
    mergere = ‘to dip’


I’m love drunk
sun kissed
wide awake
nothing’s missed

✨💧✨



Yesterday I fell head over heels for the smell of cedar in the street outside. That smell was more real to me than anything; it literally brought me “back to my senses.” I wanted to curl up and rest under the overhanging branches.

I have been exploring the joys of wearing less clothing ~ letting the light touch my skin, leaving my shoes at home. Softness is everything to me, right now.

I leave the window open at night, and listen to the noises of the city, far beyond the meadows.

Summertime sanctuaries, these earthen temples that tempt me in, time and again, to bath and to walk, barefoot on sand and stone, under the eaves of some branch or other.

let’s immerse ourselves
you and I ...
diving deep to find
the pearl-essence
of each unfolding experience


kirkham-hotsprings
IMG_8801-2.jpg
kirkham-hotsprings
kirkham-hotsprings

RIVER

goddess-greeting-deer-riverside

. WATER BLESSINGS .

at Wallowa Lake

with

. . . RIVER . . .

.
.
.


I met a girl called River. She seemed to me like a spring morning: all abundance, her face lit up with a many thousand twinklings as the shadows of a cherry blossom tree, and she smiled with such loveliness it would have made you smile just to look upon her.


In her presence, all thought of hurt and pain goes out the window. In her presence, all that exists is love, as if she herself was made of the stuff.



✨ on the wisdom of a river ✨

The river may teach us many things. Just by the nature of its being, in its way of passing, a river can tend to the land - giving nourishment to each town, each person, each forest it encounters. Ever it flows on, and in its wake: a great flowering.


Just by being,

rolling and tumbling

swirling

through life

we can create

waves

around us

waves of love

that bring joy

and peace

wherever we have walked.


...


P.S. ~ In the midst of this Goddess Portrait Session, a beautiful young fawn graced us with its presence. River crept close on hands and knees, and we watched, breathless and in-awe beside the berry thicket.



flute-playing-river-nymph
river-nymph-speaking-with-a-deer
flute-playing-river-goddess
deer-goddess
crowned-river-nymph
river-mudra-movement-medicine
gifts-of-the-river
worshipping-mama-earth
river-dance
river-dance-photoshoot
summer-solstice-crown-dandelions
offerings-to-the-river