Embodied Intimacy, Transformative Inquiry, Creative Emergence

To Ground Myself in Nothing ~ finding our way in the liminal space

Posted by on Oct 3, 2017 in Featured Writing, Lifeletters & Articles | 4 comments

To Ground Myself in Nothing ~ finding our way in the liminal space

Now that I’ve been in Victoria for nearly two and a half years, I finally feel as if I have a life here. It’s not an idea, but an actual feeling in my body, that I am rooted here now, in a new life, that I am a vibrant part of the landscape, that I belong. It’s a glorious feeling and very interesting to me since I have been engrossed for several years in a deep study of the nature of belonging. Human beings have a deep primordial need to belong. This is not always a happy story since we often sacrifice vibrant and exquisite parts of ourselves in order to belong.

I was determined not to do that when I moved to Victoria. Of course, I had no idea what the breadth and depth of my need to belong really was and is. But what pulled me away from a deeply rooted belonging in a beloved community was the mysterious and compelling impulse to become. I knew that the current in my life was pulling me in some new direction, away from what was safe, solid and familiar. I chose to let that current take me.

It carried me into a realm I call ‘the in-between place.’ For about fourteen months I felt as if I had totally lost my ground. On the surface level, I was skittering around, getting lost all the time, not knowing how to do anything, not even how to use the parking meters. On an inner level, I was having nightmares, feeling overwhelmed, and then getting sick for over a year. Nothing felt solid, reliable, stable. I felt like I was in freefall, in a wasteland.

 

Clouds, liminal space

Sometimes we call this place transition, which feels like an overused word and one that has become quite clinical. Except when it’s used in the birth process-then we touch a much more visceral feeling of what transition really feels like: am I going to make it through my next breath?

Our culture doesn’t much like the in-between place, the liminal space that feels like we have nowhere to stand. We want to get through it as fast as possible. We don’t often stop to think that it could be actually valuable, essential and worthy of our attention and respect. That’s precisely what’s happening to me right now. I am looking back at the void-like experience I have passed through, and realizing that these experiences are woven right into the fabric of our existence. The glorious phase I am in right now will pass away again, and deliver me into another freefall. And without that darkness, that feeling of no ground, without that open space, none of what is emerging right now would be here. I’d be stuck right back inside my old familiar life, which was feeling extremely claustrophobic.

Other cultures have a very different relationship with this liminal space. They regard it as a potent place, a threshold, a space of possibility. When something is neither one thing nor the other, I can shed the bonds of everyday reality.

T. S. Eliot says it like this:

“To arrive where you are, to get from where you are not,
You must go by a way wherein there is no ecstasy.
In order to arrive at what you do not know
You must go by a way which is the way of ignorance.
In order to possess what you do not possess
You must go by the way of dispossession.
In order to arrive at what you are not
You must go through the way in which you are not.
And what you do not know is the only thing you know
And what you own is what you do not own
And where you are is where you are not.”

It’s true there is no ecstasy in this no place, at least not a recognizable ecstasy. But if I begin to deeply appreciate this place, this space that feels so empty, I might find a whole new way of being here, a way that is in resonance with the liminal nature of this space. The culture we live in has trained us to put our attention on what is solid, on what has form. Learning to value that which has no form is like learning to use a new muscle.

There are so many people passing through this in-between place: immigrants, teenagers, old people. People on airplanes, waiting in line, falling asleep at night. Perhaps this space is not at all what it seems.

Yehudit Sasportas, a brilliant and innovative Israeli artist, was once asked what drove her to create. She said something I have been contemplating ever since I heard her speak:
“I want to ground myself in nothing,” she said. “That’s what I am exploring in my art.”

I look at the photographs of the Las Vegas shooting, of the hurricane damage in Puerto Rico. I hear Donald Trump speaking, I feel the threat of nuclear war. I see my face growing older, and the face of my beloved partner. My friends face their own small catastrophes and struggles, day by day, as do I. It seems a wise and necessary thing, to learn how to ground myself in nothing.

with love,
Shayla

 

4 Comments

Join the conversation and post a comment.

  1. Michelle Wilsdon

    You cannot see
    my brain’s electrical impulses
    but they go through
    their own ecstasy
    which deems me
    normal or ill
    longing
    for the
    liminal
    quiet of nothing

  2. marsha Donner

    Thank you so much for this, perfect timing for this one who is tip toeing into the portal of possibility and nothing.

  3. Donna Nett

    The radical unknowing…… the most powerful place to be….. all options are available

Leave a Reply to marsha Donner Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *