Krause Springs / Austin, TX // River Story

2014-02-18_0003 I don't drink at all, but I've heard of people who save really good bottles for no other reason than they are really good bottles. They leave them on a shelf and drink them little by little; savoring.

That's how it was with this River Story. I'd edit one image and then close my computer.

When I edit, there's this whole conversation that happens between me and the subjects and ancient medicine women and the waters and a million other luminous things. My editing process is a whole lot of intuitive communion with energy. This session brought me SO much.

These women. These three incredible souls. Janica's mother with her quiet, regal bravery. Little Bailey with her light-filled singing soul. and Janica, bringing her fierce brand of kindness and laughter to the world.

Not to mention, the location, Krause Springs, is in my top 5 most miraculous places I have ever been to. I bet I could find words to illustrate this crazy magical environment, but that's not really fair. I want you to come here, stand in the middle of the wind chime forest, let your legs sink into the waterfall-fed springs, and feel what happens in your own heart. It's in my backyard now, and I truly cannot wait to share it with you!

This morning I finished this session. And even though I am a tiny bit sad to see it complete, mostly I am just so completely grateful for every last drop of pure magic it brought to my life.

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Austin, TX

"I would love to live like a river flows...carried by the surprise of its own unfolding." - John O'Donohue

 

Two weeks ago, I was lying on my back on the freezing cold floor of the Airstream. I woke up that morning, turned to kiss Lily's cheek, and suddenly the entire world spun around and around in all directions. All at once I was upside down and backwards.

Vertigo.

It happened once before when I was pregnant, but that certainly wasn't comforting. My eyes darted back and forth and all I could do was shout for Thomas.

I tried to walk it off, but that made everything worse, and so there I was, flat on my back, for 8.5 hours.

As I laid there so many thoughts raced through my head. As much as we loved living in the Airstream and exploring incredible pockets of the world, I could feel it coming to a close. I had heard Braedon crying a few nights before in the middle of the night, and when I asked what was wrong, he said he missed having friends and a school. Each day Lily questioned when her tap dance lessons began again, and Thomas shuffled around never saying a word, but I just knew. I just knew.

You would think being stuck to the floor for an entire day would be torture, but here's what happened: Thomas took the children to our super amazing friend's house in Houston and I had the entire 8.5 hours to myself. In silence. The Universe literally put me in time out. I couldn't move even if I wanted to. And in that space, in that giant block of solitary confinement, something really incredible happened: I let go.

When we set out on this adventure, I knew nothing was certain. We didn't even map out our course. But, I did know the ending. I knew it the way a child knows the lullaby sung to them each night. I knew it without knowing. It was part of me.

I could see the image in my head. So clear. The waves crashing all around my hips, my legs tangled in sea grass. I’d be laughing. The way marathon runners laugh when they feel the ribbon slide across their bellies. That finish line: The Powerful Pacific Ocean.

As I lay on the floor, tears rolling down my face at times, I let go of that image. I surrendered. Whenever I am physically sick, there is always something I am being taught, and that day, the lesson was undoubtably: balance. I was sick beyond belief and freezing cold, but sometimes the most crucial lessons are the hardest ones to swallow.

So I closed my eyes and whispered a prayer, "If this whole incredible journey is coming to a fork in the road, could I please be shown clearly which direction is truly meant to be."

A few days later, a remarkable, unbelievable, too-good-to-ever-be-true job offer arrived for Thomas. A few days after that, an incredible private school accepted our children. A few days after that, the sweetest little bungalow I have ever laid eyes on opened up for rent in a picturesque city neighborhood, and they chose our application.

Well, shit. That's pretty clear.

I will not lie and say it was an easy surrender or transition. Picture a two year old having a three-day tantrum and that's probably pretty close to accurate. But even in my most defiant moments, I held tight to those flat-on-my-back-world-spinning-truths.

Balance.

Is it possible to have a home, and remain untethered? Is is possible to put our children in school and not compromise their spiritual and intellectual liberation? Is it possible to have a day job and still feel deeply rooted in your family?

I don't know. But what I do know is that I refuse to answer NO without trying. Without opening my heart to the flow of endless possibilities that life has to offer. I am ready to explore a life of balance. Of camping in the wilderness completely unplugged some days and others cooking muffins in colorful paper cups for the library fundraiser...

Did I fall in love with Austin? It wasn't love at first sight, no. But I did fall in love with the spark in my children's eyes, and the way Thomas stands so much taller.

Is this everything I have ever dreamed of for an ending? Maybe not, BUT, this is all part of the beautiful and ever-changing current of the adventure I signed up for over a year ago. This isn't the end. Not even close.

Maybe it's time to just sit still for a moment, and work on some of my own inner healing. Light my own heart-flame that so needs some tending. Maybe this is everything I need (even if not so much of what I want) in this moment.

I am grateful.

And when I tell you this place has the most gorgeous river waters I have ever seen in my entire life, please know I am definitely not kidding.

I hope you'll come to visit, so we can explore them, together.

 

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Him. Always.

My sweet boy. So often I sit down to write you love letters. To share about how much I love your laugh, your imagination, your kindest heart. I admire you more than anyone. I am so humbled to be your Mom. But each and every time I try to put pen to paper, the tears begin to fall, and I end up curled up on your bed, my palm on your heart as you sleep, smelling your hair and whispering how much I adore you.

 

 

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