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Parents of lost babies and potential of all kinds: come here to share the technicolour, the vividness, the despair, the heart-broken-open, the compassion we learn for others, having been through this mess — and see it reflected back at you, acknowledged, understood.

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Monday
Oct202008

of magic and faith

Kara L.C. Jones joins the Are You There, God? It's Me, Medusa blogolympics as a Wiccan practitioner who was raised Roman Catholic and spent 18 years exploring world religions. These days, she is not part of a coven or formal community, but follows an eclectic path of honoring holy days like Solstices and full moons, holding sacred the 'green' view of air, fire, water, earth, and spirit. Early influences of Virgin Mary still reach across, though often in the form of varied Goddess iconography like Kali, Venus, She-la-nagig and others.

Kara is interested in bereavement rituals like Day of the Dead and memorial henna painting, which came after the death of her son Dakota. As part of her grief path, she has written extensively about her life as a different kind of parent. She and her partner Hawk co-founded KotaPress to publish a grief blog and website, and to distribute her books Flash Of Life as well as Mrs. Duck & The Woman. Her art lives at The 1,000 Faces of Mother Henna.

 

Dakota's entire being was made up of faith and magic.

I first visioned this child as a young girl, showing up randomly in my dreams and meditation. She gave her father and I the same night time dream one night. We were both floored to discover we'd had the exact same dream, down to the details.

We went up to Paradise at Mount Rainier, and there in the snow, in all capital letters: DAKOTA. We drove up to Neah Bay, stopping at an overlook along the way, and there on a boulder, in all capital letters, spray-painted in blue: DAKOTA.

We weren't going to get married at first. Instead we tried for two years to just get pregnant. Nothing. Then we decided that our love, our partnership was worthy of commitment. The day after our wedding ceremony, we got pregnant. Summer Solstice pregnancy. Spring equinox birth predicted for our child who turned out to be a son. Every moment seemed like magic. I had faith in the magic.

And then I heard the words this baby is dead.

To say I shut down is an understatement. I was so angry at the Goddess. First for taking my child from me. And then extraordinarily angry at Her because I realized the grief was overwhelming, and I would need Her help to make it through this. The last thing I wanted was any help or renewed sense of belief in a Being who betrayed my dreams so deeply. How could She do this to us? How could she take my devotion to beauty and leave me transformed into a mad woman with a head full of snakes that seemed to turn people into stone?

People would ask how I was doing, and I would scream. They stood dumbfounded, staring at me.

Stone.

People would ask when are you going to try again? and I would scream that another child would not fix anything. They stood dumbfounded, staring.

Stone.

People would say Okay Kara, it's been three years, now it is time to move on and I would scream.

Stone.

I became incapable of maintaining or forming relationships because others would look at me, especially others who were happy or pregnant or had living children, and...

Stone.

Ultimately, I did not just lose my son. I lost myself. We lost relationships. We lost everything. We found ourselves homeless in our car on the infamous September 11th. There was nothing left to lose now except my mind.

At that point, we found our way to this magic little island in Puget Sound where I met a few other mothers of the Earth. Friends who understood what it meant to make ritual a part of every single day. Magicians who led the way to everyday miracles, Reiki, retreats, re-engagement in a sense of being part of the air, water, earth, fire, and spirit.

The Internet also had been a continuous blessing as bereaved parents from all over the world began contacting us about our books, offering to contribute writings to our site, to the Dictionary of Loss, and to the Different Kind of Parenting zine we'd created. It was through the MISS Foundation that I reconnected with my ability to create relationship. Dr. Jo from MISS reached out to us and her model of living life in the presence of grief changed everything for me. I began writing with her and Dr. DeFrain. Hawk and I began offering creative arts sessions at the annual MISS conferences. My online relationships were becoming flesh and blood.

++++

It was probably the gift of my good friend Lisa that brought me the whole way back to magic and faith. She simply asked me this:

What if we behave
make choices exactly where we are
given the options open to us in this moment
as if we are living our most cherished dream?

 

This little tool was the first that didn't try to fix what happened. It didn't require that I give up my different kind of parenthood. It acknowledged the grief and at the same time explored life after the death of a child, rather than make grief and life mutually exclusive.

It simply said This is where you are. This is what has happened. Given exactly where you are, with exactly what you have at hand, how do you cherish your dreams again? How do you dream again?

And so I found myself back in the present moment. If there is a Goddess, She could take care of the past and the future. All I have is right now. And if I think of NOW as my most cherished dream - always as my most cherished dream, then anything is possible again. Even happiness and play.

My son cannot be brought back. I can never be my pre-grief self again. The dreams of that previous self do not hold meaning here now.

++++

In this moment, I have a sink full of dirty dishes. So in my most cherished dream, I take the time to play with the soap bubbles. In this moment, we have a house full of hungry people. So in my most cherished dream, I take the time to make pancakes with our grandchildren. In this moment, I miss my son. So in my most cherished dream, I take the time to play with sugar, beads, foil, and icing and make sugar skulls for his altar.

The energy and experience of my different kind of parenthood has come back around to being part of everyday sacredness. And though Dakota is not here in the ways I originally visioned, he is still here - in all capital letters - he is still a being made up entirely of faith and magic.

DAKOTA.

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Reader Comments (17)

First off, I am completely in love with that sugar skull, but for deeper reasons than just the icing artistry of it. It's the smile. He seems to say "Hey man, don't be fussin' so much. If only you knew what I know, you'd know it's all gonna turn out okay!"

I think we are the ones who bring morbidity to death, who make it so fearful and so ostracized. Death is life, magic, a part of the journey of both those who go past it and those left behind. That sugar skull makes me smile and makes me sad at the same time. Why can't the world acknowledge our babies and ourselves, post-loss, with more warmth?

What your friend Lisa passed on to you was so wise, and yet so diffcult. The thought that life right now, exactly as it is, is a cherished dream, or is happening just as it's meant to? Hard to swallow sometimes. But until we do - or at least open ourselves up to the possibility - I don't think we can begin to be ourselves again.

Thank you so much for sharing your story with us, Kara. I loved your post.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterkate
Kara,
As always, you write so vividly. I appreciate so much the ways you and Hawk have taken your love for Dakota and allowed the world to share in it. He is indeed here in capital letters.

We still need to work on some sort of fabulous creative partnership between your work and Soulumination. I just know there is something there.

Thank you for sharing this. It is so lovely.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterLori
thanks for this lovely post.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterluna
Magic, faith and beauty indeed.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered Commentersteph
That was so wonderful. And I mean that as in full of wonder. I love what your friend told you because it fits. Its probably the first thing I've read that truly fits. You have to live life as it is right now. Not how it was or how you wanted it to be. That was eye-opening. Thank you.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterVicki
Beautiful post Kara, just beautiful.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered Commenterstat763
"I became incapable of maintaining or forming relationships because others would look at me, especially others who were happy or pregnant or had living children, and...

Stone."

Those words sum up how I feel exactly. I can never explain to others why it is so difficult for me to open up to people. I can't stand their reactions, the looks, and the silence that follows. It is heartwrenching to me. I can't comfort anyone else anymore. It didn't happen to them. I feel broken and like I don't quite fit into the rest of the world.

Thank you for sharing. There is comfort in your words.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJennifer
Thanks everyone for your kindnesses and feedback. I'm never sure when I'm sitting here in my little office if the words will really come across or not. Kate, I'm so glad you like the sugar skull -- we make them every year for our ofrenda. I keep threatening to some year host a bereavement retreat around the idea of making art like this for the holiday, etc. Some day...

Lori, nice to re-E-connect with you here :) Yes, I know there is something in collaboration, too. Guessing that when the time is right it will flow...

Jennifer, it took me a very long time to re-integrate back into the world at large. I was very grateful for the few people who stuck with me during the interim years who just let me be broken and slog along the best I could in parts and pieces. And even all these years later, I still really only feel totally whole and in context at the MISS conference each year. It's the one place on earth where I can be everything I am without my bereaved mum self being minimized.

Luna, Steph, Vicki, and Stat, thank you so much for reading and commenting, too. Vicki, I felt like my eyes were opened, too, the first time my friend Lisa said that to me. It was the miracle of shifting perspective, you know? Anyway...

Miracles!
k-
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMother Henna aka Kara
It's magical and bright, and I sense Dakota's colorful spirit through your words and love for him.
October 20, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterKymberli
Kara (and Hawk),
Beautiful. I am honored to know you both, and grateful to share Dakota's life and death. I would bring him back home to his beloved mom and dad if I could do magic, I would. I hold you in my heart.
All my love
J
October 21, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterDr Joanne
I just wanted you to know that your poems in Flash of Life were so helpful to me - I am a broom closet pagan in the Bible Belt and so was constantly being told "It was G-d's will" after my miscarriage and so in addition to being angry at my gods I was feeling trapped by my choice of path. My few comrades-in-faith here kept just telling me that my child would be reborn if I just got pregnant again, like that would help...and then after a while they just stopped talking about it. So at least when you wrote that, and wrote this I know "ok, I'm not the only one." and also "maybe someday the magic can come back." Thank you.
October 21, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous
Thank you for sharing your story and sharing your perspective, Kara. You've expressed so wonderfully the idea of living fully in the present, of appreciating and relishing it. I'm not there yet, but I'm hanging on to the hope that some day I will be.
October 22, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterErica
Beautiful... Lisa's question nails it completely. I felt so deeply connected when Tikva was alive. Living the dream completely. Now the challenge is to continue dreaming...
October 23, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterGal
I hear ya! Evan was supposed to be our magical child as well, pre-destined by over a year when someone reading my husband's tarot cards told him "your first child will be a son, he will make you proud" Followed by a spring Equinox egg painting wish ritual during which we painted the wish of a baby on our eggs, then went home and made Evan. When they told he had passed away at 42 weeks, I was shocked, but he is magic, he cant die yet. I felt lied to and abandoned by my God's. I hated them for a long time, now 9 months later and with a little help from the book When Bad Things Happen to Good People, I have managed to find a glimmer of peace again. Peace that maybe Evan's death wasen't a punishment from the God's after all.

However-I need more friends who can just accept me as broken, injured, wounded and forever changed. I loved him, he was my world for 9 months and then in the blink of an eye, he was gone for reasons no one can explain to me. Of course I am broken, just let me be.
October 24, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterJaime Maynard
I'm just overcome with gratitude for all your comments. Really. Thank you so much for taking the time to read, react, process, and then share your thoughts with me here.

Kimberli & Dr. Jo, thank you for sharing in my vision and holding us in your thoughts and hearts.

Anonymous, I'm so moved to know that the Flash book has been a bit of comfort and companionship on your path. It is always so lonely when others impose things like "meant to be"! My intention with the books has always been to have those words/ideas be there, out in the world for others to touchstone and maybe not feel so alone then. Thank you for sharing your experiences with me!

Erica and Gal, yes, Lisa's support and conversation and sharing the ideas of "now" and "dreaming" with me...well, she was just such a refreshing voice for us in the dark moments. It took lots and lots of time to test out stepping into NOW and to even think about dreaming again. I'd dip toes, step away, dip a foot, step away, dip to my knee, step away. That kind of testing, little by little. That was just the way my heart worked after being broken so. Be gentle with yourselves and give your hearts lots of time and space and experimentation.

Jaime, I hear you. I think it was a kind of secondary loss in our lives when we discovered that so many people we'd trusted previously, well, they just did not or could not accept us broken. They wanted us to clean it up or fix it or they wanted to prescribe a path for us. "Okay, it's been three years, time to be over it." That kind of thing. It took a very long time and a lot of slow, ins and outs of relationships to finally discover people who could just BE with us, accept whatever the moment held for us -- and that every moment might be different! It was too "unstable" a reality for most people. But the ones who "get it" -- well, they are gems and I'm so grateful for them in our lives.

A zillion trillion miracles to all of you!
Thank you so much!
k-
October 25, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMother Henna aka Kara
His name is a prayer, a reckoning, and an opening.

* D A K O T A *
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMartha
Thank you for that so much, Martha!
miracles to you,
k-
October 28, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterMother Henna aka Kara

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