The Original Wound
author’s note:
Though Eden is lost
its loveliness
remains in the heart
and the imagination
-- Mary Oliver
THE ORIGINAL WOUND
According to this myth:
our problems first began
when the first human being
felt confused because
it sensed it was more than one.
Unable to resolve that tension
the human then split in half
and one half went East
while the other half went West.
Perhaps you’ve already guessed
the happy ending:
eventually
both halves will meet
halfway around the globe
and recognize their missing part
then join together again.
But no—
the resolution won’t be so simple
because
as it walked, the East half felt
the same inner tension
felt by its parent
and so
soon tore apart
and one half headed North
while the other half headed South.
The West half also felt that tension
and so
quickly broke in half
and one half walked North
while the other half walked South.
Following that pattern
those four halves soon became eight
and then those eight became sixteen
and then…well, you get the idea.
Because we can’t accept all we are
we keep breaking apart
and because those losses feel so painful
we keep searching
for something that might heal us:
at first, a thing might seem to be
the exact right thing
but in time, we discover
it’s not the thing
that can make us whole again
and then the wound weeps even louder.
I believe this myth explains why
you seemed so perfect
when I first met you:
in you I saw the thing
I felt to be missing—
the thing could make my life whole.
And you saw the same thing in me—
I seemed to fill a void
and for a moment at least
you didn’t feel that sense of loss.
But our mistake was blessed one:
it brought the two of us together
and as we’ve struggled to return
to that garden we first knew
we’ve looked deeper into ourselves
and in the process
discovered many parts we’d missed.
I don’t know if our union will hold
but by working to repair the break
we’ve both become more whole
and in that way help to heal the wound—
a cut that first began
when the first human being
couldn’t resolve the first conflict.
33 1/3 New Fables & Myths
dream steps blog
myth steps blog
you tube channel
© 2023, Michael R. Patton
Though Eden is lost
its loveliness
remains in the heart
and the imagination
-- Mary Oliver
THE ORIGINAL WOUND
According to this myth:
our problems first began
when the first human being
felt confused because
it sensed it was more than one.
Unable to resolve that tension
the human then split in half
and one half went East
while the other half went West.
Perhaps you’ve already guessed
the happy ending:
eventually
both halves will meet
halfway around the globe
and recognize their missing part
then join together again.
But no—
the resolution won’t be so simple
because
as it walked, the East half felt
the same inner tension
felt by its parent
and so
soon tore apart
and one half headed North
while the other half headed South.
The West half also felt that tension
and so
quickly broke in half
and one half walked North
while the other half walked South.
Following that pattern
those four halves soon became eight
and then those eight became sixteen
and then…well, you get the idea.
Because we can’t accept all we are
we keep breaking apart
and because those losses feel so painful
we keep searching
for something that might heal us:
at first, a thing might seem to be
the exact right thing
but in time, we discover
it’s not the thing
that can make us whole again
and then the wound weeps even louder.
I believe this myth explains why
you seemed so perfect
when I first met you:
in you I saw the thing
I felt to be missing—
the thing could make my life whole.
And you saw the same thing in me—
I seemed to fill a void
and for a moment at least
you didn’t feel that sense of loss.
But our mistake was blessed one:
it brought the two of us together
and as we’ve struggled to return
to that garden we first knew
we’ve looked deeper into ourselves
and in the process
discovered many parts we’d missed.
I don’t know if our union will hold
but by working to repair the break
we’ve both become more whole
and in that way help to heal the wound—
a cut that first began
when the first human being
couldn’t resolve the first conflict.
33 1/3 New Fables & Myths
dream steps blog
myth steps blog
you tube channel
© 2023, Michael R. Patton
Labels: conflict, couple, Eden, healing, love, mirror, myth, mythology, new age, new mythology, peace, poem, poetry, shadow, union, wholeness, wound
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