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The Light in the Dark

In a few days, we will be celebrating the winter solstice, the shortest day and longest night of the year. Even though we will be experiencing increasingly more daylight after December 21st, it can feel like the darkness on our planet is intensifying and the light diminishing. This can evoke fear if we don’t understand the fertility of the dark.

A way to get straight to the truth that darkness may not be something to be afraid of is to look at manure! Here is a substance that we deem has a high ‘yuck’ factor and doesn’t smell so good. And yet when you till it into the earth, it grows beautiful flowers.

The same is true in our lives. The dark times, the times when the challenges feel unmeetable, are not here because you have done something wrong, or God fell asleep on the job. Your challenges may feel like shit, but they are really fertilizer for your growth. Just as deep in the darkness of the earth are diamonds, rubies, and emeralds, your darkest challenges come with gems of truth hidden within them.

Manitoba medicine woman Agnus Whistling Elk once said, “If you look at something carefully, you will always be able to see its dark side. One cannot exist without the other. And yet we choose never to look into the shadows. Understand that it is what you choose not to observe in your life that controls your life. Everything begins with a circle of motion, without the positive and negative poles there would be no movement, no creation. Without the dark side, your beauty would not exist. Don’t be afraid to look at both sides. You need them both. You must honor all as part of the Great Spirit.”

As you celebrate the longest night on December 21, I invite you also to honor the fertility of the dark times in your life. You, like everybody else, have had your heart broken, have had moments where you wanted to die, have been woken up in the middle of the night in great despair. And you, like everybody else, will one day show up on your deathbed. Before that day, I invite you to befriend the difficult times so that rather than always trying to chase happiness, you discover the joy of showing up for life, all of it.

The wonderful thing is, as you discover how to ride the waves of life rather than continually grasping or resisting, you become a healing presence in the world. If you can trust the darkness in your life, then you can trust it around what’s happening on our planet. Rather than falling into fear or despair, you can hold the vision of the healing that is asking to come out of this seemingly shitty time.

I leave you with one of my favorite Wendell Berry quotes:

In the darkness of the moon, in flying snow, in the dead of winter,
war spreading, families dying, the world in danger,
I walk the rocky hillside, sowing clover.

Even though the hillside is rocky right now, will you sow clover with me?

Coming soon is Mary’s newest online interactive course, Falling in Love with You. Be on the lookout for upcoming specials for the course, which begins again on Feb. 1st.

  1. WOW!!! An absolutely gorgeous message, Mary!! Thank you for sharing wisdom, grace, love, and peace in your writings! I adore you! I have always loved the dark and have been curious about it. There is something so mysterious in the quiet of the early morning hours. I agree that meeting our dark side is necessary on our way back home to ourselves. I am so grateful to you!

    Much Love,
    Abbi

  2. Yes, Mary, I too love this Wendell Berry quote! With the clover is hope for a better day for a better future. For each hope lost, a better day is possible. I also love this quote:

    “My barn having burned down, I can now see the moon.” — Mizuta Masahide

    We may not get there right now, but tomorrow is not that far away. Merry Christmas! Sky Ann