A Religious Experience
Mood:
cool
Topic: art in progress
My husband knows what a religious experience is. I don't. He was born and raised in the Bible belt and had his first of several when he was seventeen.
A few weeks ago I told him about a conversation I had with my four imaginary spirit guides.
Being a person with schizophrenia, you must understand what I mean by imaginary. They are no different then the images I see in my mind before I paint or when I am planning a painting. I never visually see my guides in front of me as if they were a hallucination. One of them, whom I call "The Lady" has visited me twice before in a dream and each time she visits it is to teach me something. The first time we meet the lesson was about communication. And the point, or punch line of the the dream was that it was time to tell Micheal that I loved him. Which I did in a letter the next day. The day after that he wrote me a letter saying that he loved me as well, and this exchange, three years ago, was the start of our real love relationship.
Two guides I met through a psychic I was friends with back in Winsted, Connecticut. I now have a picture in my mind of Genevieve Schweizer, my dead grandmother, and a gaurdian angel. If I talk to them in my imagination, they respond either by a physical gesture, additional imagry, or words. Again, the things are never seen or heard as real voices or hallucinations - it is communication through the old fashioned, much used process by which I create imagry for my artwork. It is a bit like having a dream while you are awake. A daydream. Only the plot is never very long. Spirits don't muck about. They aren't shy and they aren't misleading. Whenever we are told a new idea that idea may take us a day or two or more to understand, but such confusion is like the lifting of a vail. Once the vail is gone you see and understand perfectly well.
So, what happened three weeks ago.
I was lying on a fold-out bed at my mother's home. Mike and I were there to give Mom's carrage house apartment a new tile floor. It was the middle of the day and I was resting while Mike worked. The room was dark, all the shades drawn and a ceiling fan whirled quietly. My four friends were clear in my mind's eye. And the five of us began to have a conversation.
I asked the Lady why I couldn't image her face smiling. I mean, I could imagine it, I can imagine anything, but the picture was a characture of a smile. I was putting on her face what I wanted, manipulaing my imagination and the effect was a certain farce. All the time I have ever seen her she is very somber and dignified.
"Why won't you smile for me?" I asked her, silently, in my imagination.
"When you learn how to create in joy I will smile for you" she promised.
See, if you have been reading my posts you know that I work at my art wether I want to or not and at times I push myself almost like I am a machine. Always I have seen myself as a process person, the final product is the end result of many small steps each carefully measured. I am not messy, spontanious, or instinctual. I am intellectrual and driven. This is not just a style of work, this is the style of my personality. It has been so for years and years. I am after all the daughter of a research scientist.
Other things were discussed. But this exchange about art was the most significant. While I was with my four friends I had a feeling of being a cup full of wine. Full to the brim with a dark, sweet, liquid. Of this feeling the four told me that this is the way that they always feel on the other side of life.
At that time I had just finished painting a bedroom in our apartment the prettiest color green. I was preparing for the arrival of Mike's daughter London and her dog Cerberus to come live with us while London is going to school for her bachelor's degree.
Part of my good feeling was the love of a job well done. I created a room of serenity and peace. What London thought of it or did with it was beyond my control. All I knew was that I had prepared well for her visit.
My spirit friends pointed out that this is what they do in the spirit world. They prepare a world here for us. What we do with their gifts, whether we can see them and appreciate them is out of their control. But they are fullfilled with the act of creation, making a metaphorical room for each of us to inhabit. They are a step ahead of us in time just as I was a step ahead of London in time. I made her room while she was still living in Michigan, no doubt wondering what life would be like living with her father's new wife.
I am not certain what I told Mike of my waking dream. It all seemed so ordinary. Honestly, it was quite a surprise when he said, you've just had a religious experience.
When we returned to Vermont I began preparation plans to pull apart my paint easils and bolt them to the walls of my bedroom. I am going to be painting standing up. Now that London has arrived there is far less space in the apartment - no place for a standing easle. Frankly, her exuberent pup Cerberus can and does knock many things over with his tail. My paintings can be hiked up to the ceiling while they dry. No elbow, tail, or wet nose will harm them.
The mystery of what it means to "create in joy" is still present. But I am certain that pulling apart my easles and mounting paintings on the wall is a first step toward a new art. There are other guesses mulling about in my head.
What a lovely challenge is offered.
Posted by dignifyme
at 11:01 PM EDT
Updated: Wednesday, 19 July 2006 12:04 AM EDT