the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

Nine Prayer Candles: An Experiment In Meditative Writing

 

By Connie Robillard

 

 

     
 

In a small Native American mission I become fascinated with lighted candles placed on the edge of a beautiful garden. Each one lit with good intentions. I speak my simple prayer and back away with a question in my mind. Does anyone hear the meaning of the inner voice or does it echo into emptiness.

I wonder whose breath it is that blows out the candles. In a vision I see an image a gentle stranger with a loving heart that watches over them. This soul lets them burn into the night, allowing only the wind to blow them out. One who finds the flame too sacred for human breath?

As the points of light extinguish the prayers join the breeze bringing each one of them to their destination.

Listen to the words of those who have lit their candle and like me backed away from the flame.

The first candle.

At my birth was my life celebrated, bound in love, resignation, shame or joy?

The first point of light represents innocent spirits. A small white candle flickers yet refuses to die.

This is the wordless prayer offered by a small child held in her father's arms.

Amongst the prayers were ones for dying parents, sick children, lost and hopeful loves. Prayers for the poor, victims of war, prayers for peace and understanding.

The second candle

I stand in my crib looking out through a diamond shaped window. The glass has colors and a clear space for me to see, if I stand on my tiptoes, snow that looks like falling stars. I have been here watching for a long time. I wonder if anyone remembers who I am.

I lie on my side silently gripping the crib bars patiently waiting. I wait for someone to find me.

There is no memory of their coming but I am found.

Thank you gentle spirit for the one who found me.

The third candle

I remember his words:

"What did you say your name is?" I am too scared to say. "You must be stupid or something if you don't even know your own name. He pushes me up against the wall.

I hide my face, I want to climb under a chair and hide in the corner - I am ashamed of myself - It is in the face of another that names me worthless. It is I who breathes in the shame.

Help me to remember - In spite of another's words, I have value.

The fourth candle

"What did your face look like before your ancestors were born?" the man speaks with a controlled, finely toned and hypnotic voice.

I stand listening to the Sufi story as if in a trance - I gaze across a sea of one thousand faces - serene, loving - listening with their hearts.

Inside I am wishing that no one will ever wake me, life as I dream it will never end and someone will always love me.

I enjoy my illusion as I face the table lined with red and black madras material - Shadows dance on the altar of what appears to be liberation.

Thank you for whatever this is -

The fifth candle

My baby on my hip, my breasts heavy with milk. . There is no shame within me. I am in a natural state of being.

A woman sashays by to take the baby from me - She looks enough like me with her long blond hair - the baby barely notices the change of arms.. I think she is beautiful unlike my own dull face.

A strange man, puts his arm around my waist, pulls me tight and whispers in my ear "God love you baby."
We sway to the music; he looks into my eyes but does not see me. I don't want to be seen - I want to blend into his secret society by simply belonging.

I am intoxicated with ideology, incense and the music, lingo, rituals - pageantry, It is only in the darkness that I dare to question - what it is that I am catches me somewhere in my gut.

Thank you for my woman's body. Even when it brings me pain.

The sixth candle

Across the table from me sits a person that I love. She is family - the bond so strong with promises that seem as if they can never be broken.

I hear her words "my life is full. I do not need you." Inside I think - "but you want me right? I am family."

She turns her head slightly; her earring catches the light from the lamp. In an instant, her eyes darken.

I want to scream, "why are you doing this to me?

A part of me knows this is out of my hands - My heart breaks as she walks away. My little child part wants to run after her and cry. "Please don't leave me here alone."

My face turns red as if I have been slapped. The shame inside overwhelms my senses.

Gentle spirit help me to someday understand, what in this moment is impossible to know.

The seventh candle

I dream of a dark cave. Although I am afraid, I enter willingly. Inside I find light in the form of a fire reflected in a triangle of pure water. I bask in the beauty of welcoming light. With my heart I attempt to trace the dreams images believing them to be outside me. With my head I try to figure out the meaning of the symbols.

In a confused state I fall deeply into a dark and murky well, filled with the unknown.

I long to return to the lighted triangle of water where I experienced courage and clarity.

I awake with the inner knowing that the choice belongs to me. I can stay in the darkness of an abandoned well or return to the certainty of my inner world where there is a safe and sacred place that I alone created within the imagery of my dream.

This prayer honors healing dreams

The eighth candle

This candle is lit in honor of the well-intended life. I confess that I have lived imperfectly. I celebrate all of my choices, even when they looked to others like mistakes.

I give thanks to those who love me, those to whom I have made no difference and to those who hate me. I am grateful to all for lessons learned.

As for any successes I might have had according to what the world defines as success, I bow humbling before god and give her all the credit.

The ninth candle

With shallow breath I watch the shadows darken on the mission wall. I feel the heavy lateness of a day now nearly gone.

I pray that someone will come to mercifully blow out my candle for it is too sacred for my human breath. Like the others the tender of the flame, leaves it for the night wind. With courage I wait and with the shallowest of breath I inhale my own extinguished flame.

I imagine the prayers of others drifting through me, resonating and moving to a space beyond. They are both known and unknown, understood, misunderstood, loved and unloved.


The idea of creative writing exercises to be used in combination with a daily meditation is something that I use myself and suggest to clients.

 
     
 

Photos by Connie Robillard

 

     
 

Connie Robillard is a Certified and Licensed Clinical Mental Health Counselor in Londonderry, New Hampshire. Connie and co-writer / clinician Marcel A. Duclos give trauma healing workshops. Their book, Common Threads – Stories Of Life After Trauma, was published at the end of last year. See website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

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