Oppression ... and its undoing. (Hexagram 47)


Thoreau said it most succinctly:

"The masses of men lead lives of quiet desperation."

We can be slaves to a regime -- to whatever institution it may be; we can lose our autonomy to an illness or injury; we can get hooked on a person, a belief, a substance, a rutted, mindless habit -- locked in and loaded up with whatever is ours -- not to claim, but to endure. Some poison is locked and loaded upon us -- aiming to kill.

And yet.

"... the wonder is that people who have been broken like sparrows caught by a cat's claw should find three strengths: the strength to go on living, the strength to continue their search for [Love], and the strength to reach out to others, to give and receive compassion." (Dame Julian of Norwich)

At the very least, many of us experience the endless-workday oppression of time; as Mary Rose O'Reilley wrote, "Time oppresses me. I crawl to God across the face of a clock." She was crawling until a brief conversation in a barn became a vocational immersion into sheep farming -- a complete change at every level of being into a wholly new way of living.

If there's a hell, it's in the cruelty we humans inflict on others, ourselves, and Creation. It's said that some First Nations people were asked by an anthropologist what they called America before its Caucasian colonization. Their reply: "Ours."

When we enslave ourselves, we're wed to a habit that houses a regime that wants to crush us.

Whatever we do to ourselves, we do to others ... Whatever we do to others, we do to ourselves ... and so it goes. Until.

Until we realize that we are like olives: only when we are crushed do we yield what is best in us.

This wisdom comes from the Talmud ... and I can only say that I hope it doesn't always take a crushing to yield the sweetest nectar -- !

Turns out it doesn't. Robert A. Johnson, a devoted student and scholar of Carl Jung, understood that "exhaustion is ... sometimes the best tool for enlightenment, as it gets the ego out of the way. It finally just wears down so that the divine can pour through." Sometimes exhaustion means, Enough of this now. Something new wants to be born through the ruptures that have carved into your life ...

The divine pours through an artist I've come to know online. Her name is Karin Bartimole, and she's known in her bones, through long illness, both crushing oppression and the outpouring of nectar from her wounds. She lays out her whole soul in her creations, roams the entire range of human experience. Sometimes, her offerings look like this:




... at other times, she soars:





... and often, she remains close to the center of things, holding to life, breath, and colour ...



Karin's blog has become a daily touchstone for me and for many other people. Her art is exquisite ... her character, perpetually generous and kind.

She models the renewal that is always possible -- and inevitable -- no matter our circumstances. (Think Nelson Mandela's 27 years in prison ... and then his ascendance to being Prime Minister of South Africa.) As Jack Balkin, author of The Laws of Change: I Ching and the Philosophy of Life, writes in his commentary for Hexagram 47: "Periods of oppression and exhaustion contain the seeds of regeneration and renewal. At the very darkest moment the light is almost ready to shine again." If, as the oracle suggests, we persevere with devotion through mire and darkness, we will experience regeneration. An illness may not be cured; an imprisonment will not immediately end; an addiction will not magically dissolve. A mind that admits light, though, will conquer despair. If there is any boon to oppression, it comes through carving out a character that will survive any hardship; new light eventually laps at every horizon.



Top and bottom illustrations: artists unknown ... and thanked.
All other art by Karin Bartimole.

Comments

Renee said…
Jaliya of course I especially loved when I saw that you were talking about our Karin.

Karin has been a teacher to me and I will ever be grateful to her.

I adore this post, just as I adore you. I know that you dear one are a remarkable teacher too.

This post was brilliant all around. The first picture was a hard one to see but something that so many people need to see.

Love Renee xoxo
Karin Bartimole said…
Jaliya, I am so deeply honored by your writing about me here in such a beautiful way. That first image sends shivers through me - it is so perfectly powerful. The quotes you've chosen - amazing. And Olives - using olives as the metaphor just makes me smile. They were my food of choice - the treat I'd request and find each year in my Christmas stocking! I thank you my friend, for this generous gift.
much love, Karin
Jaliya said…
Karin, you're welcome ... It's amazing how we've never met face to face, yet we meet and come to know one another so profoundly through our written conversations. Yum xoxo

I know that the first image batters the eye ... I went back and forth on whether to use it ... It is so evocative, so perfectly saying, "This is oppression" ... and Karin, your presence and art *undo* oppression ... :-)

... and I can't stop shaking my head at your long love of olives!! :-D

Synchronicity abounds!

Renee ... you are a teacher too ... xoxo ... BTW, have you had a cold snap out there yet? Our maples are flaming with red here and there ... no hard frost yet ... Typical Canadian, eh -- have to go on and on about the weather ... ;-D

xoxo
Karin Bartimole said…
olive (i*love) synchronicity and knowing without knowing we know!!
Good choice-the image you does pack a punch, because it's real. It portrays so well, the evil of one against another, of oppression... can you imagine the reaction folks sitting at home watching their nightly news might have had, hearing about water boarding, if it were a story accompanied by this image?! Maybe it would have received the outrage it deserved, and those responsible would actually be held accountable.
Thank you again - I feel humbled by your words, while I believe it is true. we both "undo oppression" simply by doing what we do here, along with so many healing souls.
And that Renee - what a teacher indeed!!
my word verification is dared backwards ❤
Renee said…
It was through our dear Karin that I got to you.

Bless her for that.

Love Renee xoxo

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