Chasing down the muse -- Cherril Doty
Cherril Doty
Creativity requires both falling into the unknown and standing in
one’s own center.
This anonymous quote immediately comes to mind as I sit down to write
this column after 16 days on the Colorado River in the Grand Canyon.
Falling into the unknown while having the sense of finding the very core
of myself aptly describes what this trip down the river and back into
time and through time was for me.
Caught up somewhere in the jumble of the past 18 days and reentry, I
emerge from the adventure filled with the magic, wonder and awe that only
comes from this level of immersion in the process of living.
Between Lee’s Ferry put-in and Diamond Creek take-out, the Colorado
River flows for 226 miles. The river has been the sculptor of the Grand
Canyon. The story of nearly two-billion years unfolds on either side as
one rafts down this seductive river of voluminous silence. This is a
silence that stretches and twists and turns, a silence that fills up the
senses, a silence that seals new friendships -- with places, with people,
with self.
Each day fills with expectation and anticipation of nothing less than
MORE! -- neither knowing nor caring exactly what that “more!” entails.
Giving over to the experience -- this, too, a sort of falling into the
unknown, of giving up parts of myself to source the true core of self.
Fairy tales of the mind reflecting the magic of this monumental place
run wildly rampant, as swift as the river’s current itself. In the
silence of the days, images and ghosts of images everywhere glut my
senses to the brim. Colors and sounds and textures fill my mind and
heart. Yellow columbine, ferns and soft green moss -- cool, dark -- a
respite from the blazing desert sun. Rushing waterfalls appear out of
nowhere in the midst of arid red desert. Cumulus clouds chase gathering
nimbus across a blue sky.
Pale aqua waters of the Little Colorado and the Havasu rivers spill
into the verdant green of the Colorado, rock cathedrals, bighorn sheep,
falcon, deer and the lonesome coyote. Anasazi granaries show evidence of
the people who have come long before us. And those “voices” in the river
that seem to call out to me and absorb into my soul -- dreamlike, deep
and yet, at once, fleeting.
Floating unbound in this spacious healing silence -- the silence of
simply being and then sitting at the river’s edge in early morning
sunlight as a yellow-green oriole alights on a nearby willow branch to my
left. I gaze across at dark granite rock ledges that are apartment-like
homes to lavender-winged swallows who emerge from nooks and crannies to
catch a breakfast of bugs just over the rolling surface of green water
and I remember another silence -- the one filled with light and pale
green bubbles when nature’s river wave grabbed me up and I was plummeted
out of the paddle boat into the water -- falling into the unknown and yet
swimming in my own center as I encounter my own demon aversion to water.
Then, the clarity created in the experience itself as golden sun beams
down.
The rush of not yet fully understood creative energy is engendered in
me at every turn. There is so much to say, to impart in words and images
that I simply don’t know where to choose to begin. What will be the
result of this “Chase after the Muse” as she speaks to me in the colors
of joy, in the thrill of the chase?
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