I was taught not to be

When I was small I was told that my shoulders were to be covered .

Modesty meant that we should never expose our small, 6 year old tummies. Cover them up.

When I learned about becoming a woman, I felt sentenced to an eternity of imprisonments. Existing forever as a second-class citizen and that my body, my mind, my soul, was only meant for one thing:

birthing children.

Giving birth was my inconsolable fear from the small age of 5,

Until I was 27 and had borne my second baby.

By the time I was 7, I absorbed the culture around me and believed I was lesser than every male man and child that existed and would ever exist.

When I was a teenager the boys explicitly told me that I was less than them in God’s eyes.

They told me that women don’t need to be educated and do not deserve equal access to education.

My school career counsellor told me to be a teacher because it’s a good career for a mother.

My religious instructor taught me that staring in the mirror at myself was vain. And that masturbating was bad; I didn’t know what masturbating was though.

I was so afraid of my own body that when I might have caught a glimpse in the mirror, I dared not to look.

My own skin terrified me.

I was so afraid of breaking rules that I didn’t know I could free bleed in the shower. I thought my blood was dirty.

I was always supposed to be the image of a good woman. Even when I was still a girl.

I existed, embarrassed to exist.

I bled, embarrassed to bleed.

I suffered, embarrassed to suffer.

I felt guilty for feeling angry.

I

felt

guilty.

And I’m still angry.

Mind Sailing

I keep thinking about what the future will be like

But more than that,

What I want it to be like.

I don’t know if I believe in manifesting,

but I believe in choices.

.

Life is not always choosing between certain paths because every once in a while you arrive at a seashore.

From there you can take a boat where there are no bounds.

You just trust that deep down in your soul you are connected to the water that keeps you floating.

The great Mother that rocks you to and fro

will bring you to a place

no one has been

and you will feel you have arrived

home.

Leaving, Arriving, and Being Home.

I love new places after I’ve arrived. The waiting, the planning, the packing, and the anticipation of leaving, results in me doing child’s pose on the floor taking long, deep breaths. I felt at home there.

The arrival. The dwelling. The exploring. That’s where I love to be.

We arrived to our little inlet, with our little beach. We ate pizza, we played Dutch Blitz, we sat by the window and talked to our little hummingbird friend. I felt at home there.

We took a little boat to a remote island and walked on hand split cedar planks. I felt at home there.

We watched the waves as they crashed into the rocks. I don’t think anything is quite as wild and powerful as the ocean in a winter storm. Her unruly anger is at the same time terrifying and so breathtaking. I felt at home there.

Here are some more of the photos I took so that I can always go back: