First snow

While here in Darwin, the build-up is busy building-up with high level of humidity and a so far little 35 degree, in my native Switzerland, they received their first snowfall kicking an early start for the winter season.. Slightly envious 😉

20131111-211423.jpg

20131111-211523.jpg

20131111-211611.jpg
The photos were taken almost two years ago.. But it would look like that!

Tropical

Do you have a least favorite month? While I was living in the northern hemisphere, November was probably the worst month of the year for me.  November in Switzerland is dark, grey, cold. Not much else.

November in the Tropics is very different… I cannot decide yet if I like it… It certainly pushes you to some sort of edge. Remember, this is my first build-up season ever… November here is about building-up the heat, the humidity.. You feel the impatience in the sky (and in people). The massive cumulonimbus are growing intimidatingly… until the sky explodes in lightning and thunder and buckets of water are thrown down in a matter of minutes… Definitely a different and more lively experience!

Wounded.. (updated)

Only the wounded healer can truly heal
~Irvin D Yalom

20131102-075557.jpg

Allowing ourselves to go through our wound means we embrace the depth and the darkness that swallow us time to time. It means not being afraid of our own shadows but embracing them and knowing very deep that it will lead us to the light.

While writing those last words, The Journey from Mary Oliver came into my mind.. 

The Journey

One day you finally knew
what you had to do, and began,
though the voices around you
kept shouting
their bad advice —
though the whole house
began to tremble
and you felt the old tug
at your ankles.
“Mend my life!”
each voice cried.
But you didn’t stop.
You knew what you had to do,
though the wind pried
with its stiff fingers
at the very foundations,
though their melancholy
was terrible.
It was already late
enough, and a wild night,
and the road full of fallen
branches and stones.
But little by little,
as you left their voices behind,
the stars began to burn
through the sheets of clouds,
and there was a new voice
which you slowly
recognized as your own,
that kept you company
as you strode deeper and deeper
into the world,
determined to do
the only thing you could do —
determined to save
the only life you could save.

Climbing the mountain

or how to (not) be (so) lost in migration!

I am happy! It doesn’t happen easily to me… but at the moment, I am happy. It could last only a few hours but I am hoping it will stay with me longer. I am hoping that the learned lessons are really integrated and that Happiness is the way. But I also know that wobbliness alongside doubtful thoughts are just behind the corner… It’s called life;) So how do I stay solid and grounded, ready for the next storm? I am not sure..

But I have some ideas…

I have a home again. A house that feels home, with all my things around. With some love and colors on the walls. When I look around, I feel content. I have arrived. As we have recently re-settled in Darwin, these feelings could be simply relating to the end of our relocation from Queensland to the Northern Territory. Having a home is for me definitely one of the key that leads to happiness. Or contentment. It is a bit like coming back to the self. My heart sing and dance and laughs all at once!

I sense there is more to that.. The yearning of a home has been present for a long time. Migrating in another country is a lengthy process of adaptation, with many ups and downs. And while I’m writing this post, I realize that I am now on the other side. It’s been almost four years now that I’ve left New Zealand. It was such a difficult process for me, where I didn’t want to leave the life I had created there. My dear friends. A sense of direction and meaning. And the nurturing beauty of that land that had welcomed me and saw my rebirth.

What I mean by being on the other side is that I think I’ve made it. I climbed the hardest part and am now on the other side. Migrating in another country is like climbing a mountain. Even well equipped and trained, despite a strong desire and a heart full of hope, it will be a difficult climb. And the only thing that helps is time. It is somehow a grieving process…

There is no easy recipe here. To help a grieving process, you simply grieve. In other words and similarly, to help an adaptation process when you migrate in another country, you adapt. You learn about that extra bit of patience that is required from you and that you cannot find anymore. You wait patiently for months and months, while this strange feeling of being an alien, an outsider from everywhere you look, in everyone’s eyes who look at you, keeps creeping at your legs, at your heart, in your mind. You sit there patiently, with your doubts and your misunderstandings, with your broken hopes. And you wonder if you had made the right decision back then. These feelings can accompany you for some time. You will learn about your very own limits. All of them probably. These stages of adaptation can be extremely challenging. It is like loosing your identity, your sense of self. You’ve lost your ground. Everywhere you look is foreign, feels cold. Loneliness is your coat.

It is quite a debilitating experience. And the only advice I would give is make sure you get some help. Don’t wait too long (as I did). Feeling heard, understood and guided is needed during such a lonely experience. Hearing that the way I was feeling was somehow normal reassured me immensely. It offered me a new ground to build on.

Thank you Jacqui!

Part of my pile of books near my bed, is this little book called Just One Thing by Rick Hanson. Little book of wisdom (and practices) to tap into any time. In the intro, it says:

There are three fundamental phases to psychological and spiritual growth: Being with difficult material (e.g. old wounds, anger); Releasing it; and Replacing it with something more beneficial.

To be with it. To let go and to let in. Good advice;)

← Back

Thank you for your response. ✨

A growing tree

Last year, knowing that we were going to move up north, I realized how attached I was to the tree in front of the house. It provided a shelter for my thoughts and mood. And I wanted to take it with me. The tree was made of several actually… an amazing ecosystem with so many birds.. I loved hearing their birdy chat between each other. I also loved hearing and watching the wind through the tall branches, the leaves. Feeling the movement within. So appeasing, almost meditative.

I started to draft it, tried to portray this amazing tree..its beautiful and reassuring presence.

and then, got stuck…

Didn’t dare going further…
I didn’t have the skills and the experience and yet, I had a clear image of what I wanted on the canvas. Perhaps that’s why I found myself stuck.

Being home maybe does that to me… It allows me to go further, to experiment and try…

20131030-065925.jpg

20131030-065942.jpg

A work in progress..