A Major Arcana Acute Sinusitis

This happens every time. It took me a while to notice the pattern, but now that I have, it’s impossible to ignore. In Tarot, we call it the Tower – when everything we’ve built catches fire and burns to the ground, crumbling in hot debris around us, leaving us foundationless in the dark. It sounds dramatic, but it is the major arcana of Tarot after all.

I’ve been asking for a shift, begging the gods for a change of direction, a breaking of the dawn, relief. Movement. Change. And I keep asking “how close am I? when will it happen?”

I suppose I should be grateful that the thing I’ve identified as the “change sickness” has come for me at last? This happens every time: a sinus infection (acute sinusitis). Whenever there’s a Tower moment in my life, my head and face swell up from the inside and I spend a couple weeks battling whatever virus is haunting my sinuses, forced to hole up, rest, and contemplate why things are The Way They Are.

There’s a lot of self-blame in all of it, too, because I could have caught the infection sooner and cured it as a cold, as an earache, as a whatever-started-this. But I didn’t. I let it fester and ignored it and pushed ahead until it put me on my ass. Again. Always.

Being The Way I Am, I look for the spirituality in all of it. Sinuses and headaches are the top 3 chakras: throat, third eye, and crown. They’re our connection to truth, intuition, and god. I genuinely keep thinking I have “mastered” these chakras, since I do after all spend the majority of my daily life connecting to and expressing my truth, intuition, and spirituality . . . but the body keeps the score, and right now it’s saying I have fallen way out of alignment.

It’s not as bad as the last couple times, when Big Things Happened. This one, I’m catching early and feeling relatively confident I can fix the natural way . . . but it still hurts, and it’s exhausting, and it brings along with it a myriad of wounded thought patterns I have to continuously correct.

This always happens, and usually it’s during Major Life Change: a divorce, a job loss, family trauma (missing nieces and custody issues and deaths and the like).

This time, I really felt like I had it all under control. It’s been a slow burn, this Tower. Not at all like a controlled demolition – a free-falling mass of steel and glass that stood only a second ago. This has been more like what I imagine would happen if the earth tremored, and repairs were made – but then, a storm came. And then another one. And the foundation was cracked, and the walls lost their sturdiness, and then lightning struck and the fire started at the top until the whole thing finally just fell.

That’s where I am now: in the rubble, trying to salvage the bits that I can take with me into the Next Thing.

I felt the earth shake, I weathered the storms, I put band aids over the cracks, I prayed to the light between the clouds. I saw the Tower crumbling but I thought my faith was strong enough to fix it.

That’s the thing about faith, though, isn’t it? Faith means Trusting, rather than Thinking. I begged the gods to fix the Tower, but they kept telling me there was something on the other side even better than I could imagine. They say I need to let this fall and trust that the Next Thing will be so good, so big and strong and safe, I will never again have to stand inside of a Broken Thing begging it not to fall.

I can’t be totally sure, but I’m beginning to think the sinus infection is their way of making me stop fighting, sit down, and let it happen. The pressure in my head makes it difficult to think, let alone overthink. The congestion in my sinuses makes it tough to speak, let alone scheme and negotiate stop-gaps. The exhaustion in my body makes it impossible to run, to rebuild, to frantically fight a fire that is, after all, dying out on its own.

Know what makes it feel better? Crying. Crying relieves the pressure. And it’s funny, because I tend to wait until the end to cry. Cry when it’s over, cry when the poem is written, cry when you can look back and see the Whole Big Thing.

This happens every time . . . and then, the Star comes out to write a New Story. Then, the day finally breaks, and we begin. Again.

Like Something Else

Deep loneliness presents
like a symptom
of something else:
like depression or apathy,
or something like
laziness
or negativity

or, maybe she doesn’t have social skills,
or, something must be wrong with her,
that she’s always alone

or “stop feeling sorry for yourself
and just
go outside,
join a gym,
read a book,
go to yoga classes,
why not try meditation
or hiking or
get on a dating app
or spend time with kids
or volunteer for a cause you care about” —

like somehow the answer
to the sickness
is something you can fix
on your own

But the sickness IS
the being alone

It is hiking every mountain
by yourself
and doing all the yoga-gyms-meditations-book readings possible,
but still being alone in it.

Loneliness is
all of this
and reaching out to friends
… and not getting replies.

Loneliness is
yes she tried the dating apps
and it was terrifying —
not in the ‘everyone is boring’ way,
but more like the
‘that guy is a rapist
or married
or maybe something IS wrong with HIM’
and now she is scared to sleep at night
way —

And all the times they tell her
she needs to just THIS or THAT
or maybe it’s their friend Nick
except Nick has a girlfriend
or a baby
or a drinking problem

— all the times they say
“go outside
or read a book
or try harder
or why don’t you just

ENJOY YOURSELF MORE”

So she goes out
on dates
by herself,
buys herself the nice clothes and shoes,
and wears them while sipping expensive coffee
all alone
(with her book
because we know
she shouldn’t be grasping
for human connection
on social media
all day — that would be pathetic,
wouldn’t it
),

she buys herself nice dinners
and takes her own photo
on the tops of mountains
or by the lake with the sun setting in the background,
(she even has a little plastic thing
to set the phone on
so it gets a better angle
with the selfie-timer) —

And then they criticize her
for too many selfies
(she’s self obsessed,
she’s vain
)
and for dancing by herself
(she provocative,
she’s asking for attention
),
they judge the outfits
and the shoes
(what are you so dressed up for?)
all while they fire emoji
her stories
from the gym —

and they think she’s vain,
she’s an independent woman,
“wouldn’t THAT be nice,
to have so much free time;
of course she has a hot body
when all she does all day is work out,
must be nice
to get to spend so much time
on self-care” —

And when she says
“I’m drowning,
I’m lonely,
I am depressed and I’m scared,”
They just say

“You need to learn to love yourself”

And that is not the same thing
as loving her.

It is not the same.

And all the self-love
in the universe
cannot fill the heartspace
that she has carved out
to love the world

… and to be loved in return.

Love’s Confusing Joy

They say to write about the joy.

Rumi, especially, says that life is meant for “love’s confusing joy.” When I re-read, for the thousandth time, his words written back in the twelfth century, last night, in my own bed, these 760 years later, they resonated in a new way:

“If you want what visible reality can give, you are an employee.
If you want the unseen world you are not living with your truth.
Both wishes are foolish, but you’ll be forgiven for forgetting that what you really want is loves confusing joy.”

I saw my first Christmas ad today, and it made me want to scream and cry – not out of joy at all, but out of deep loneliness and something else I cannot quite place. That first verse about wanting what visible reality can give – it’s that same emotion of commercialized emptiness. Of missing the point entirely.

Craving for the unseen world is a permeating condition for those walking the spiritual path, isn’t it? We want to be, as Rumi would write, “in the Presence.” We want to be interdimensional beings of light and love, unaffected by the “lower vibrational energies” of emotional discourse and able to “transcend” the suffering of the human condition … but we are not here to transcend. We are here to experience.

We have come to be fully human, on purpose. We have a soul contract to expand the consciousness of the Universe – not to float around in idle joy, but to swirl upon the waves and rivulets of All that Is.

To wish for only that which we can manifest is as foolish as wishing to transcend, Rumi wrote.

What we really want is love’s confusing joy.

Confusing. Confusing because Christmas is marketed joy and on the heels of the darkest night; confusing because love is equally ferocious when gripping us or letting us fall.

Confusing because, Rumi writes in a different piece,

“The way of love is not
a subtle argument.

The door there
is devastation.

Birds make great sky-circles
of their freedom.
How do they learn it?

They fall, and falling,
they’re given wings.”

I have wondered lately about the Laws of the Universe. We simultaneously believe in karma, that what we put out will come back to us, and in a system of balance – nothing created or destroyed, but equally potent in all directions. We know the prophecy of the wounded healer, that those with great pain are best able to facilitate great healing.

In my darkest days, I assure myself that my capacity to withstand the dark is a counterpoint to the bright joy that I am destined to hold. Or, the depths of my loneliness and the lengths of time and space it occupies is a gravitational vacuum calling in massive connection, making space for everlasting companionship.

Devastation is a doorway to love* – and love is confusing. But we are promised that it is also joyous. And we want it more than anything.

*A note on “love,” not from Rumi but from me, Brittany:

I write a lot about love. While it is true that I am a “hopeless romantic,” in search of a fiftieth wedding anniversary – a Great Love, a True Partner, a One and Only – it is equally true that I am driven by love in its purest, most applicable sense.

I was born into a loveless situation, orphaned, abused – you know these stories already. My whole life, I have been seeking for love: for family, for a joyous noise that drowns out the echo chamber of silence that lives like a cave inside my head, keeping safe my abandoned inner child.

There is an empty space inside our hearts for community – to share our daily lives, our triumphs and struggles, rituals and rests, with a tribe that no longer exists. I read somewhere that a child emotionally needs 5-6 adults to “raise them,” and yet many of us are living in a vacuum of less (one, in my case).

Where the Internet has allowed us to build imaginary social bridges to span great distances of time and space in a sense of “connection” with each other, it has robbed us of deep, daily, involved friendships. Robbed us of loyalty in favor of FOMO and blocking, swiping and matching, friending and lurking.

Where our love of humanity should be, our political affiliations have taken up residence. Where a longer table should be built, we have walls and bombs, guns and laws. Where freedom should allow us to love as we wilt, we have hatred for the expressions thereof. We are taught to judge, to pick a side, to post some kind of “I SUPPORT ____” slogan and to “set boundaries” rather than to listen, to hear, to reach out and touch, to stop fucking yelling stuff and just hug somebody.

So yes. Love is confusing in that it is inaccessible at scale and largely distorted into a disfigured fools gold iconography of what it was always meant to be. When we hear “love,” we think of a romance novel cover. An engagement photo shoot. An old couple on a park bench. Not a world of children holding hands. Not mothers, grandmothers, and daughters sitting by a fire together in community. Not men championing each other, lifting the sails, charting by the stars. We think about vampires and teenagers and celebrities . . . and we are confused by this because it is very much “what visible reality can give,” and we are unknowingly employed by this confusion – when what we really want is deep abiding joy and the secure familiarity of tribal love to hold us in our times of devastation.

“Things I cannot know”

I thought that it was you,
but I hardly know your name.

Just the way the earth stood still,
the way it hasn’t been the same.

A thousand times at least,
I thought that you would say

Something like, “I felt it too –
I feel it every day.”

Call me psychic, call me crazy, call me petty all you like –
I know this isn’t right.

No stranger gets to take up residence
inside my head like this
Nobody gets to haunt me every night.

I am sick to death of seeing you
Everywhere I go –

Sick of how you follow me,
Only eyes and shadow.

Sick of knowing things I cannot know.
Sick of wanting things to be.

Sick of feeling sick inside –
Why can’t you just choose me?

I got it wrong again, in thinking it was you.
I did the thing where I believed in things

That simply are not true.

Things like there’s a man out there
Made perfectly for you,

And when you find him, you will Know –
because he’ll know it, too.

Writing Less: A 2,500-Word Retrospect

It occurs to me that I write less, or differently, than I used to. Once upon a time, I filled notebooks end to end faster almost than I could find them. I wrote voraciously, and daily.

The first time someone violated the sanctity of these innermost safe spaces was when I was ten years old: my mother found the current journal at the time and in her drunken shame spiral stupor called everyone I had named to share the contents. My antics in alcohol and cigarettes with my older cousins were exposed; the much-too-young sexual activities I engaged in, the way I hated how my mother ignored and neglected us, my thoughts of despair . . . all of this was thrown at me with a mixture of disgust, disbelief, and dishonor. If I remember correctly, I buried that notebook in the dirt behind our apartment complex.

After, I learned to edit as I wrote. This habit would start out as a self-preservation tool, and it would vary in intensity as the years passed, because truth be told there comes a point when I must write the truth, or die from the weight of it in my head. But I did learn to edit. And to turn honesty into prose into poetry. Where there was darkness, there was metaphor.

The second time my written hallowed ground was desecrated was perhaps the worst. Eighth grade, months before my mother died but years after I’d stopped living with her, my step-sister raided my journals. I don’t know how many she read or how much of each, but I do know that she turned them over to my step-dad and stepmother, and that they turned my words on me like weapons. It was already a psychological war zone in that home, aside from the physical and verbal abuse, but this moment turned the tide against me in an unforgettable way. They would never forgive me for my honesty in those pages, the way I wrote about the seething hatred so palpable it bled off the walls like liquid rage – the words they spoke to each other and about every one of us. My thoughts of escape, how I desperately needed to get out of that hell and the dreams and aspirations I had about one day being free. Much was written about my love affair with God, the Biblical One, at the time, and how the Church had embraced me and the things I was free to say in the privacy of my peers in faith.

I remember the things I chose not to write afterward, more than those I did. As I was winning national awards and flying south to accept them – for outstanding journalism, for writing truth – I was lying to the pages of my own notebooks, leaving out the parts about how so-and-so assaulted me on the eve of my mother’s funeral or how the pot I sometimes smoked eased the aching in my brain. I wrote about my nonsense crushes and the stress of Ivy League applications but left out the warning signs that I would soon collapse, left out the thoughts that led me toward my own destruction.

Time would pass without filling up any notebooks at all. I took as many as I could carry when I left that step-house, hell-house, with not much else but the clothing on my back, halfway through my senior year of high school. But I lost them, left at some waypoint couch I slept on, and many years later an old friend-of-a-friend would return them to me in a ripped up, musty bag alongside photo albums from my trips to Arizona and a cassette tape of my real father’s voice, playing the guitar and singing with my mom and friends somewhere in the valley, before he died. It would become my most prized possession – that ripped up bag with the tiny pink flowers so full of musty memories.

I didn’t write when I lived with the woman who would steal my inheritance and my college education in a single year, didn’t document the way she drugged me, the way we stayed overlong at casinos while she played at counting cards and I hid hundreds in my boots so we could eat when we got home, so long after dawn. I never wrote the things she said to me to make me stay, or how scared I was to run away. I didn’t even write the day after I woke up at that party with that guy inside me, the way I crashed my car and threw up on the side of the road trying to get out of there, the way the conwoman convinced me it was my own dirty secret and fault to carry.

Gradually, eventually, I did begin to write again. I remember sitting at a computer, composing poetry while my boyfriend nodded off to over-loud music on the couch, lines of white powder like ghosts on the coffee table. I remember the poetry I wrote in the Time Before Him, in the dark with tears steadily streaming down my face as my First Love stayed up all night anywhere but in bed next to me, playing video games and smoking pot, texting some other girl and hardly telling me goodnight. These would go on to be some of my best works, the inspiration for a very bad tattoo I later covered up, and the intro to the first book I finally wrote, many years later.

Notebooks began to fill again when I moved to the island, like somehow the veil of self-protective editing had thinned, bleached maybe by the intensity of sunshine and the way it glittered twice over the water. I wrote and wrote and filled pages with salt – tears, sea spray, sandy bits. I have notebooks full of scribbled rantings only rum can conjure, poems about the way the surf feels under the rising moon, memories of dancing barefoot beneath the palms. I wrote then like it would save me and in many ways I am certain that it did. These would become, later, bits of “Finding Starlight” that give the reader hope, that balance out the tragic, that shine like a sun really ought. I took these notebooks, heavy as they were, with me when we left for Babylon, not trusting the mold to leave them be while I was gone. A bit of foreshadowing, maybe, sensing rather than knowing I might never come back, not really, anyway, to that island-healed-and-bright version of myself.

Lately, I’ve wished that I had written more during those crucial years, the falling-in-love-and-getting-married years. I wish I had written in real time how I felt and what I thought, wish I had felt the freedom to express without the burden of future-editing necessity . . . but I did not. I’ve often wondered if this was another form of self-preservation, a way to force an intentional belief rather than inadvertently ruin such a safe, strong, secure thing with accidental honesty. I wrote some, though. A love poem here or there, a tragic one between.

It occurred to me that the book – My Book – the one I’d always been destined to write – was emerging from these times, and I began to make notes at first, to research and thumb through pages long past, to piece together the truth of who I’d been versus what I’d written. It took a long time, but I transcribed a past-life journey from filmed and mumbled meditation-speak to written down pages . . . and, in one manic rush fueled by red wine and clove cigarettes and the darkening August days, I wrote the first forty-thousand words like a frantic Hunter S. Thompson on the deck of “the little trailer” back when things were so very, very different.

Things changed after that, and I don’t know what, if anything, I wrote about it. 40,000 words is a lot of words to write about oneself and then — suddenly – to stop. I went from writing my story to living it, or a version of it anyway – to writing grants and board meeting agendas and program plans. Back and forth to Haiti and back again we went, my husband and I, my rock and the airy sparkle hopes of that younger version self I was. Our fights got worse, our situation harder. I never wrote about any of that at all, like if it didn’t exist on paper it wouldn’t be real in life. If I could just – get us forward, I guess I thought, and he did, too, in his own ways “If I could just –”

We had a baby just when we had come to realize something had to give (and it was the dream of Haiti, and so many things we tried to build, that gave), and then we gave again all that we could. I wrote a bit when my belly swelled, but not nearly as much as I wish I had, now. I learned to meditate again, read a thousand books, met myself and a new God, the Divine Feminine, found my way truly and wholly home to a complete spiritual embodiment I had only hoped existed … and though I didn’t write or not write on purpose at the time, I knew that I would not lose touch with these truths. And I never have.

When Jasper came, my little orb child, there was no way I could hold a notebook and pen, because all I could hold was him, then. Presence was palpable, every moment completely awake and alive and fuller than I’d ever been, even while the distance between that and my old self grew and the chasm between us and my husband did, too. More that I never wrote.

Until, one day, I did. Some time went by, and it occurred to me that I could start again, begin at the crossroads of who I wanted to be and where I had sacrificed her. With husband’s support, I became a yoga teacher, a real yogi this time, and opened a most Magical studio, and finished that Book, My Book, “Finding Starlight,” all nearly 200,000 words of it this time. That – now THAT – was a lot of writing.

Notebooks began to fill again, but more slowly now, and with sporadic intention and scattered meaning, literally into different journals and books, some so full I turned them backward to write upside down on blank between-pages, and others with only a jumbled mess of a five- or eleven- page entry and nothing but plank pages on either side at all. Poetry would flow, and then stall.

Eventually, my orb child and I would move out on our own – and this, too, would be a product of my written word. I hosted a chakra-clearing workshop at my Magical studio and participated in it, too. There, I had written a letter or perhaps a piece of prose and I don’t remember if it was to or from my Higher Self but in any case, She was the subject of the thing. When it was done, the workshop, we drove to some errand-chore-place and as we did he asked me what I led that last day. I mentioned the letters and though he had not read my words in many years – did not ever read My Book nor intend to – for some reason on this day, in that car, he asked me to read it aloud to him: the letter to or from my Higher Self, and it said something like “I desperately need to feel free” and later that night he gave me back his ring.

I wish that I had written in notebooks then, and all these five years since. Instead, something strange happened where that fractional reporting took over my brain and my style and it will take me years to untangle the mess of what I have created (or undone). I have written, yes, and almost daily. But now? It looks like 1,094 “notes” in my cell phone, prose attached to some 500-odd Instagram posts and who-knows-how-many Facebook versions both public and in the most sacred shared space of my Goddess Group. I have a blog that really not that many people read (and thank you if you do), with seventy-three posts on it and another much older one where I cut-and-pasted every poem I could find that I stopped using ten years ago but still has 40-some pieces out there for the shadows of the internet to read . . . I have all of this and uncountable word documents on however many (three?) laptops and of course the many little journal-notebooks in various stages of ink stained completeness scattered across my home. This and many grant proposals, the new book I wrote of my Magical Yoga Philosophy, and I don’t know how many other little and big things –

But really, I don’t write like I should anymore. And so tonight, sitting here on yoga things and feeling rather sorry for myself that all these years have passed with lonely Friday- and- Saturday- nights and still nobody who Sees my Soul (because to See me is to read me, after all), I decided it was time to answer for my sins. To name them, anyway. I am a writer always, even more than I am anything else. More than the fire I dance with and the salt water that sings in my blood, more than the stars that I pray to and the child that I love, more than my tragedies and triumphs and all the worlds I will save, more than every thirst trap I post and ecstatic dance that I host and friend that I adore and more and more and more – I have come here to live, and then to write about it, and to share my perspective however bizarre or traumatic, beautiful or big, with you.

I think maybe the first time I realized I was editing as I wrote was when it occurred to me that, really, deep down, more than anything – I did want someone to read it. Even as a tiny child writing my first ever poem, “Smoke, Smoke, Smoke,” about the cigarette plumes filling my house, my nose, and my mouth, I wanted someone to find my notebooks and read them aloud.

I guess I just also always hoped that moment would be one of love and acceptance, rather than scorn and hatred. Even still – I never stopped writing, did I? Maybe no matter how many rejections roll in, from publishers’ generic versions of “no,” from lovers who choose some -one or -thing else other than me, parents who die, funding proposals that get denied – maybe no matter how many times my words are read and met with … not-love … I can’t stop writing them because I can’t stop hoping that they’ll still save me, somehow.

Maybe they already have.