|

Writings
the
world's best lover
Originally
published in Body & Soul
July/August 2003
(Continued from page 1)
It felt that what I really yearned for was to fall into
the embrace of some great force, to communicate with
unknowable mystery, to know as my lover not a human man,
but the whole world. So began my quest for the inner
Beloved, a concept (known by different names) that runs
through the myths of diverse cultures, shows up in world
religions as a metaphor for the search for God, has
inspired ecstatic poets from Sufis to John Donne, and
features in Jungian psychology.
The
poet Rumi wrote, "There is some kiss we want with
our whole lives." The "kiss" we want
is a sense of oneness with our self and our surroundings.
We long to be at home wherever we go, to be in love
with the moment, to engage passionately with the people
we meet and the things we do. We long for a personal
connection with some force that is greater than ourselves
- call it God, the Goddess, a Higher Power, Earth, the
Life Force, quantum physics, the Tao - that transcends
our understanding and inspires us to create ourselves
beyond our perceived limitations.
Our
guide to the fulfillment of this yearning is what I
learned to call the Beloved, the inner presence who
draws us forth toward our own becoming, who is felt
in the blood and with the heartbeat, heard in nuggets
of intuition, creative inspiration, and a sensible delight
in who we are. The Beloved is the irresistible force
of attraction that calls us into the unknown and onto
the path meant just for us, making itself known as a
vividly felt, deeply personal, always beguiling companion
in the life of a man or woman. Allurement - the compelling
force that entices us to hurl our energy into what evokes
our curiosity and fascination - is the spice the Beloved
holds before our noses to get our attention. It coaxes
us to break out of our old and comfortable routines
and take a bold leap in a new direction for the sake
of something we are falling in love with, be it a person,
a place, a social cause, a project, an idea.
Does
every intriguing invitation that whets our appetite
come from the Beloved? Not at all. The question to ask
if there is any doubt is whether the act we contemplate
brings out the best in ourselves an somehow ennobles
others. A "call" to sink deeper into debt
by buying a new television or to sneak off for a mid-afternoon
tryst in a hotel room with your boss is probably not
an invitation from the Beloved but a prompting from
the greedy, often powerfully erotic force that limits
us by distracting us from our true (often fearsome)
path. The Beloved's allurement, rather, is a longing
that opens instead of limiting the lover. It is the
force Goethe called the Holy Longing, comparable to
the wild enthusiasm of the moth, "insane for the
light," to be consumed by the seductive flame.
In
classical Greece, the figure who helped a person negotiate
his way in and around that magnetizing force was an
actual semidivine agent called the daimon. The daimon
remembered why a person was born and served not only
as a personal guardian but also, according to Plutarch,m
as "the mediator of supernatural knowledge to the
human being he watches over."
For
Carl Jung, the daimon was no figment of the imagination
but a real force to be respected, listened to, and entered
into dialogue with. He saw the daimon as a personification
of the integrated Self, which might emerge when individuals
are able to cease projecting the needs of their own
psyches onto others and to truly accept and integrate
all their own complex opposites.
Although
I had read about the Beloved in myth and poetry, the
concept became personal as I grappled with my own explosive
passion. Shortly after I began my quest, nature provided
a vital clue. On a walk in Utah's Canyonlands, where
I was leading a wilderness program, it struck me that
all the world was searching for its Beloved: the desert
flower turned eagerly toward the sun; the river hastened
toward the sea; the canyon wren, singing without cease
its ribbon of song, yearned for its mate. I realized
that if I could live as if every step brought me closer
to the arms of a waiting over, that I could move with
passion and eagerness, motivated by what called me forth
rather than by what pushed from behind, such as a sense
of obligation or the expectations of others. I began
to take more time to follow these allurements, whether
that meant becoming actively involved in a social issue
that tugged at my heat or detouring from my paths (both
physical and metaphysical) to explore some new and beckoning
curiosity. I became more open and vulnerable, sharing
my search with others, whose fascination with the subject
prompted me to develop workshops in which people could
meet and come to know the Beloved in their own hearts.
What
is the face of this soul guide to our true and fearsome
path? The Beloved that people encounter is the one most
needed at that particular time in their life to bring
them further into their own completion. In workshops
I lead, men and women discover an astonishing array
of Beloved figures that seem to bear no relation to
their ages, upbringings, or sexual orientations. People
have encountered a native warrior, a Harvard professor,
light, the Virgin Mary, a waltz partner in a tuxedo,
and a spirit in a backyard oak tree. For some people,
the Beloved is felt as a physical surge of sexual energy
or warmth in the belly. My own concept of the Beloved
has changed over the years from a figure who resembled
the young man I was so enchanted with to a Berber poet,
tall and graceful, who keeps me moving forth as if the
world itself were a lover waiting to be discovered.
Whatever
we perceive it to be, said Yeats, is our destiny and
"would ever set us to the hardest work among those
not impossible." In the company of the Beloved,
we may feel at last empowered to undertake the hard
work that is "not impossible" and that we
have long put off. My own journey with the Beloved has
changed my life. It revived my postmenopausal sexuality
and shifted the foundations of my attitude toward my
own femininity. It deepened my relationships with my
husband, my friends, my colleagues, and my clients.
It emboldened me to offer programs, as well as ideas
and approaches within those programs, in a more spontaneous,
effusive manner, unafraid of being judged. It showed
me how to walk into the world as into the arms of a
waiting lover.
This
is the role of the Beloved, to move always slightly
ahead of us, tempting us to take the next step into
the mystery of our own passionate soul. Thus we must
go ever forth, becoming bigger than we dreamed we could
be, taking chances, developing into ourselves - waiting
for the Beloved to turn around and draw us to the next
place of allurement.
|