Despair: David White
DESPAIR*
Despair
takes us in when we have nowhere else to go; when we feel the heart cannot
break anymore, when our world or our loved ones disappear, when we feel we
cannot be loved or do not deserve to be loved, when our God disappoints, or
when our body is carrying profound pain in a way that does not seem to go away.
Despair
is a haven with its own temporary form of beauty and of self compassion, it is
the invitation we accept when we want to remove ourselves from hurt. Despair,
is a last protection. To disappear through despair, is to seek a temporary but
necessary illusion, a place where we hope nothing can ever find us in the same
way again.
Despair
is a necessary and seasonal state of repair, a temporary healing absence, an
internal physiological and psychological winter when our previous forms of
participation in the world take a rest; it is a loss of horizon, it is the
place we go when we do not want to be found in the same way anymore. We give up
hope when certain particular wishes are no longer able to come true and despair
is the time in which we both endure and heal, even when we have not yet found
the new form of hope.
Despair
is strangely, the last bastion of hope; the wish being, that if we cannot be
found in the old way we cannot ever be touched or hurt in that way again.
Despair is the sweet but illusory abstraction of leaving the body while still
inhabiting it, so we can stop the body from feeling anymore. Despair is the
place we go when we no longer want to make a home in the world and where we
feel, with a beautifully cruel form of satisfaction, that we may never have
deserved that home in the first place. Despair, strangely, has its own sense of
achievement, and despair, even more strangely, needs despair to keep it alive.
Despair
turns to depression and abstraction when we try to make it stay beyond its
appointed season and start to shape our identity around its frozen
disappointments. But despair can only stay beyond its appointed time through
the forced artificiality of created distance, by abstracting ourselves from
bodily feeling, by trapping ourselves in the disappointed mind, by convincing
ourselves that the seasons have stopped and can never turn again, and perhaps,
most simply and importantly, by refusing to let the body breathe by its self,
fully and deeply. Despair is kept alive by freezing our sense of time and the
rhythms of time; when we no longer feel imprisoned by time, and when the season
is allowed to turn, despair cannot survive.
To
keep despair alive we have to abstract and immobilize our bodies, our faculties
of hearing, touch and smell, and keep the surrounding springtime of the world
at a distance. Despair needs a certain tending, a reinforcing, and isolation,
but the body left to itself will breathe, the ears will hear the first birdsong
of morning or catch the leaves being touched by the wind in the trees, and the
wind will blow away even the grayest cloud; will move even the most immovable
season; the heart will continue to beat and the world, we realize, will never
stop or go away.
The
antidote to despair is not to be found in the brave attempt to cheer ourselves
up with happy abstracts, but in paying a profound and courageous attention to
the body and the breath, independent of our imprisoning thoughts and stories,
even strangely, in paying attention to despair itself, and the way we hold it,
and which we realize, was never ours to own and to hold in the first place. To
see and experience despair fully in our body is to begin to see it as a
necessary, seasonal visitation, and the first step in letting it have its own
life, neither holding it nor moving it on before its time.
We
take the first steps out of despair by taking on its full weight and coming
fully to ground in our wish not to be here. We let our bodies and we let our
world breathe again. In that place, strangely, despair cannot do anything but
change into something else, into some other season, as it was meant to do, from
the beginning. Despair is a difficult, beautiful necessary, a binding
understanding between human beings caught in a fierce and difficult world where
half of our experience is mediated by loss, but it is a season, a wave form
passing through the body, not a prison surrounding us. A season left to itself
will always move, however slowly, under its own patience, power and volition.
Refusing
to despair about despair itself, we can let despair have its own natural life
and take a first step onto the foundational ground of human compassion, the
ability to see and understand and touch and even speak, the heartfelt grief of
another.
*‘DESPAIR’ From CONSOLATIONS:
The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words.
Source:Facebook post by Jyothy Jayan Warrier
The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words.
Source:Facebook post by Jyothy Jayan Warrier
Comments