June 01, 2005
Into the Woods
by Lorraine Berry
"I went into the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." Henry David Thoreau
I have just returned from a full week of seclusion. I went to the Catskills, checked into a motel along the banks of a river, and spent seven days in my own company. During that time, I had no access to the Internet, nor to my cell phone. A few friends knew where I was; they called me intermittently on the motel phone. I saw people every day when I went for my meals; I chatted with the people who lived in the small town where I was, and one night, I even drove down to Manhattan for a date, but for the most part, I wrote, I hiked, and I read. Alone.
What I want to talk about is solitude.
May Sarton once said that loneliness was the absence of the other but solitude was the company of the self. I've just experienced that. It's not the first time in my life that I've enjoyed a period of time alone and not been frightened by it, but it's taken me a long time to reach a point where the idea of going off by myself, without a companion, does not fill me with dread.
Loneliness is a terrible sensation. The absence of others opens up before us like the maws of hell; and the desolation of isolation feels like being hugged by the ice-cold arms of death itself. Perhaps the fear of being alone is the fear of death; it's the one journey that we must take alone. There will be no one there to accompany us, and the struggle against that feeling drives many of us to behaviours that are ultimately harmful, even if the things we do seem to be staving off loneliness at the time.
My week away was amazing. Its purpose was to finish my novel, which, I'm happy to report, I did. The novel is done. After some revisions, it will be ready to shop around for possible publication. But I didn't write for publication. I wrote to communicate, to set free the ideas in my head, to give parts of myself voice. Ironically, I did this while being quiet.
While I'm engaging in a solipsistic recitation of a week spent alone, I'm aware of a few things that I think are relevant to my politics. One of them is that my ability to go into the woods for a week is a privilege. The motel was incredibly inexpensive, but still, a week in a motel is not cheap. If I had camped, I would have needed equipment; my point being that a week in the wilderness these days is only for the privileged classes who can afford to get away from it all, or the everyday life of the rural poor who call those areas their home. Economically disadvantaged, I assume that they are able to enjoy the natural beauty that those of us trapped in urban and suburban sprawl long for.
I could tell you about the experience of my hikes into the wilderness every day. Of how I never saw another human being; of the pair of eagles that flew just over my head; of the newborn fawn, still wet from his mother's body; the snakes I nearly stepped on; the mother grouse that feigned not being able to fly in order to lead me away from her nest; of the multitude of wildflowers in the woods. There. I guess I have told you. But really? I hope you get to experience some facet of this yourself.
The other thing that was reiterated to me by my trip is the sense that if only we could make peace with isolation, with solitude, and not feel the panic of loneliness, our politics would benefit. The need for company, for relationships, can lead to issues of domination and control and cruelty and abuse. Yes. Relationships are powerful and can be fulfilling and lovely. But our fear of being alone can drive us to do cruel things to keep some people near. It works its way up the chain of our relationships, so that our politics becomes a macrocosm of crying, grasping need. Of pure want. Of suffering.
I walked in a local graveyard. There were too many children's graves there. Some of them were recent; in a town as small as it was, there seemed to be too many adolescents and children in the ground. There was also something stunning: carved into the side of the cemetery, overlooking the river, was a huge granite memorial with Chinese inscriptions and carvings of Chinese ancestors. The only sensation that I can use to describe this monument and its setting, the absolute peace that I felt when I sat in the middle of it with the sun kissing my face and the breeze off the river keeping me cool, is perfection. Quiet perfection.
There is no point to this diary. It is a simple acknowledgement on my part of the power of this community; of how, having returned from being away, I wanted to make contact again. Of how grateful I am for all of this. Of how much gratitude I have for both community and solitude.
So, I'm grateful to be back. Grateful to be alive. And eventually, I'll read all the news I missed for the week and re-immerse myself in the politics before us. But I'll carry the wilderness with me, just as I carried this community with me into the woods.
Posted by in Creativity, Ephemera, Epiphany, Life
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Say it loud, say it proud!
welcome back! i am one of the lucky folks that gets to live in the woods, on the north coast of california. with that privelige come some concessions...like not enough money.
but for me, it's all worth it. whenever it all gets to be too much, i can walk among the redwoods, or on a secluded beach, and "it" all makes sense again.
and being alone is a wonderful thing-i wish i had realized that much earlier in my life!
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Comment by: jeff at June 1, 2005 04:00 PM
I am currently in an self-imposed exile of sorts, and your post is quite timely. I too feel at peace and contented with my alone time... thankfully. Your ability to convey these feelings are very eloquent, and best of luck shopping your book.
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Comment by: Jeff at June 1, 2005 06:44 PM
Welcome back, Lorraine...glad you your time was well spent.
I don't know if you're familiar with it, but I once performed a Samuel Barber song from a cycle set to poetry of Irish monks, the "Hermit Songs" (originally composed for Leontyne Price). Here are the lyrics for the last song in that cycle:
The Desire for HermitageAh! To be all alone in a little cell
with nobody near me;
beloved that pilgrimage before the last pilgrimage to death.
Singing the passing hours to cloudy Heaven;
Feeding upon dry bread and water from the cold spring.
That will be an end to evil when I am alone
in a lovely little corner among tombs
far from the houses of the great.
Ah! To be all alone in a littie cell, to be alone, all alone:
Alone I came into the world
alone I shall go from it.
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Comment by: liza at June 2, 2005 12:54 AM
I AM SO JEALOUS!
I long for solitude.
I long for quietude.
More so than hot, sloppy, make me scream not moan sex.
I SO WANT TO BE ALONE.
And it's true. It is a privilege.
I am so glad you had the means to do it. And I am slap happy to have you back. But, gurl, I'm envious indeed.
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Comment by: The Noon at June 2, 2005 01:54 AM
Lorraine, did you take any pictures? Not that the piece needs any, your descriptions are crisp, but to give a different perspective of the place, including the children's graves.
Being the youngest of three girls, I learned to be alone when I was little, my two older sisters ganged up early against me -- I was my father's and my grandmother's favorite. Many trips I've taken by myself, to stunning Jupiter/Juno Beach (which I recommend), to Key West, and to see Ground Zero when I drove from Fort Lauderdale to NYC, alone I cried that day.
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Comment by: lorraine at June 2, 2005 08:20 AM
I don't own a camera--isn't that positively pathetic?
I am glad to be back, but already, I keep thinking about wanting to be back in the woods, alone. It almost makes you feel selfish to acknowledge such a thing, as if you don't like the people you love, but I just think we're geared to spending time alone and this culture places too much pressure on us to always be part of the pack.
Liza. I hear ya. Hot sex is unbelievable, but sometimes, being alone is all a girl needs.
I'm debating revealing the name of the motel I stayed at. I've stayed there twice; they're wonderful people, but I don't want to "give away" my secret hiding place. Isn't that awful of me?
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Comment by: spyder at June 2, 2005 05:11 PM
Lorraine wrote:
"If I had camped, I would have needed equipment; my point being that a week in the wilderness these days is only for the privileged classes who can afford to get away from it all, or the everyday life of the rural poor who call those areas their home. Economically disadvantaged, I assume that they are able to enjoy the natural beauty that those of us trapped in urban and suburban sprawl long for."
Out here in the Northwest, we have an interesting view of natural beauty in our lives. One aspect of this is that those who are the poorest of the poor, spend a great deal of time camping out, in the trees, hollows, vacant lots, landscaped climes around freeways and roads, and so forth. They literally live off the land and that which surrounds them. If the US was more like the rest of the non-industrialized world(well if it was more like the other G14 this would never be an issue), it wouldn't be illegal to dumpster dive, live off the land, access landfills and dump sites for recyclable resources, and so forth.


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Comment by: anne at June 1, 2005 03:25 PM