I have been playing “House” this week in Santa Fe,
pretending I live here for five starry nights and six bright New Mexico-blue filled
days. I brought the boys (8 and 9) out for Spring Break, taking on the 1300-mile
drive alone as my husband is back in Dallas working. Due to the nature of my
work at the museum, we aren’t together much, the boys and I, and this
concentrated time has been precious and unparalleled. We will always have Santa
Fe.
Whom will we take care of and who will take care of us?
In my continuing study of compassion and lately
self-compassion, I wanted to give us this time together in the spirit of good health
inside and out. Our first stop was Whole Foods, where we filled the basket up
with healthy, “whole” foods and made a pledge to cook at the house as much as
possible. I am learning from Mark Hyman’s study of eating whole foods and
healthy fats, and his books (Blood Sugar
Solution, Ten-day Detox, Eat Fat, Get Thin) are the inspiration
for our menus.
Our second pledge was to spend as much time as possible off-line
and outside. The playground at the Fort Marcy Recreation Center has been our
respite and our source of sunshine and all things local. The moms I met
compassionately fortified me with dozens of ideas of where to find art and fun
for kids in Santa Fe. The boys made new friends we would meet back at the park
the next day. I sat for long big-sky hours reading Natalie Goldberg’s latest
tome The Great Spring. And yes, it is.
But it was on the hiking trail where I found real compassion
lives: alongside whispering pines and knotty juniper. Real compassion is found
where, not surprisingly we are happiest: on the trail. I first noticed the courtesy with which we happy hikers
greeted each other, “hello” and “how’s it going” at every passing. We smiled at
each other, sympaticos in this glorious human experience of the Bandelier
National Monument in the springtime. We made eye contact and smiled often.
Hikers stepped off of the trail for us, putting us before them. At the ladders
a natural priority was given to those coming down, as it was clear safely
descending 140 feet on wooden ladders was other’s first concern. It was
beautiful.
I also observed patience amid the cool breezes and quick
captures of a Mule Deer or two in the wilderness. It was the protocol that
families and groups would each climb up into a cave dwelling to experience it
together. The practice is to climb, peer, marvel, experience, imagine, capture
with the iphone and then climb back out. This process took several minutes for
each small group: complete with little toes seeking the next rung, cameras and
coats, and newborn babies in backpacks (yes). The courtesy and patience
expressed in that very long line in the sunshine was a marvel to experience. We
talked to each other. We shared the union of joy and anticipation. We carefully
stepped to one side for those bypassing the cave. It was peaceful and ordered.
No one was in a hurry. We were already in the place we needed to be. We were present.
Generosity is
also found in abundance on the hiking trails. A mother offered to take our
photograph (post 140-foot climb) in the Alcove House. Families offered helping
hands to each other as we met in craggy corners. As we crossed the river, one
family offered to share a picnic.
On these hikes this week in the Jemez, Little Tesuque and
Sangre de Christo ranges, I am learning that compassion lives where courtesy,
patience, being present and generous are a natural and intuitive way of being.
What if life was like this? How could we be as happy as we
are on the hiking trail, facing each bend with similar anticipation?
Whom will we meet?
What will we see?
Whom will we take care of and who will take care of us?
Compassion lives fully in this experience, the one where we
are all experiencing something beautiful and new, challenging and awesome.
And isn’t that life?
And isn’t that life?