From Riantee Rand:
Our brother Redmond Gleeson passed away very recently. I have a poem dedicated to him. Also in our area of Elk/Mendocino three members, two poets themselves passed on the same night, the third, an artist and long time Subud member, very recently. I have poems or writing about all three of them I would like to share.
To Redmond the Day After he Journeyed to the Other Side
The day of Charles’ birthday
We never know the whole of a friend until he dies.
Above the ocean the headlands are ablaze
with the wildest of wild flowers
swaying in the breeze in a jubilant display
of colors
of shapes and shades,
standing proud or creeping low,
talking to each other in a soft hum human ears cannot catch. . .
I see your face Redmond, in every blossom, every tree, every rock,
ever since you took the journey to Everywhere
to that place where you can hear All.
On these headlands I can lend you my earthly eyes
to see their splendor and join in
the mist of vibrating hues weaving patterns from your life
and renew the intertwined net of relationships you had forgotten
when you fell into an oblivion of your making.
It’s a good time to die, sings the hermit thrush
in a great display of deep felt emotions,
a good time to be born, says the new mother,
as we celebrate Charles’ birthday on the tail of your passing.
Gathering memories and fantasies from dewdrops on blades of grass
I keep wondering.
What is left of the self once all is said and done?
What’s remain is the Self that never changes, never dies,
the true Self that was always there,
that Self that I recognized whenever we came together
at all the important times during our busy little life
often taken over by the drama of human experience,
the temptation of distraction,
life’s illusion.
Red, my most loyal of friends, I knew the best of you
when together we choose adventure,
wandering the earth in search of a better way,
a more exotic and bigger perspective,
treading in unknown territories to create danger
just for the hell of it,
often tasting the forbidden fruits to enter the eternal breath
and journey to the beginning of creation.
You gave such a display of your selves then;
the actor, the jester, the rambler, the warrior, the trader, the trickster,
but I always saw the hidden jewel behind it all.
And one day you became a father,
fathering again and again,
and as the great Father of All
you rescued all that needed rescuing and more.
In Ireland once
we came upon the tombstone of Count Redmond and his Seven Sons,
you were already up to number six by then
and you believed the seventh would grant you grace divine.
You often took from one to give to the other,
but what was left for yourself?
A timid fame that endlessly needed rekindling,
the gift of gab often hiding too big a heart
behind too small a joke,
the clowning that pushed away the deep questions,
the endless recitation, bits of verses, rhymes, rhythms and rants,
made up sing-songs about trivial details of daily life,
but how you could dance,
you the magnificent host of many celebrations.
When the party was over you juggled to earn a living
in whichever way you could
not always legit but with the best of intentions.
For some you were a rock,
always able to get out of trouble
even if it was trouble you created.
Your unconditional love for the family
sustained it through many storms.
Others yet marveled at the way you loved to push buttons,
making not very political correct statements in public places
as though you really believed them,
and the coyote in you never let us know if you believed them or not.
For many you were very wise,
embracing all roles with patience, acceptance and surrender,
an infinitely patient husband,
a forgiving father.
The difference between a master and a student, you once wisely quoted,
is that the master has mastered the art of being a student.
You did master that art well and played hide and seek with everyone. . .
but your spirit always shone bright for us all.
Our journey on earth is a journey that does not move,
to a place in God we have never left, the heart place.
We never know the whole of friends
until they remember that place.
Even in the last months of her life when she stayed in bed, mostly sleeping, she would open her eyes when family and the endless stream of visitors came to her bedside, and with a radiant smile she would murmur:
So Lillia, my friend of 58 year, where do I start to try and tell who you are to me?
You had to find your true self in nature, living in a shepherd’s tent, washing dishes and laundry in a stream, cooking in an outdoors kitchen or on the fire, considering each vegetable, each grain, each ingredient with great attention to extract the healing message each delivered, the gift to humanity most people could not see.
Then one, two three more babies came, one born in a school bus in the middle of a Colorado winter, the next in a small cabin by a rushing river, the third slipped out of the womb and was caught just in time by her father. You loved them all without restraint, unconditionally. You were mother earth in the eyes of many, many that will miss your undaunted spirit, miss the carefree artist, miss your vision, your wisdom, even if at times it was a bit thorny, giving egos a small pricking.
The Passing
It was fated from the beginning of the world
that Kendrick should let go of holding his molecules into form
and Rasunah should allow her cells to dissipate
later that night,
so quietly when everyone was asleep.
The color of rain lit their path but did not give direction
they had to find it for themselves
in the winds of water, in the slanted sound of light,
in the silence between notes from which music can ascend,
in the intersections where all things cross
and continue on.
They had to allow the unknown to reveal itself,
call for it in a nameless tongue,
they had to take the creator’s responsibility
to manifest in all realms of possibilities
and let themselves dissolve into love’s expansion.
No longer are they only
a favorite childhood verse,
the tears of their loved ones,
the kisses trailing behind, the regrets,
no longer the bloody history or their country,
no longer their buffoon president,
no longer the flower dispensing its immense scent,
nor the stunning bird defying the laws of gravity,
the ocean reclaiming the wave that believed it was separate,
for they are now all of that
and so much more. . .
They accepted the journey
from the mother’s womb into the world of shapes;
the spirit borrowed a body that grew into solidity
and struggled to emerge into form
out of that friendly, sheltered, nourishing fluid,
to enter the cocoon of beliefs
and ideas and concepts and lessons,
the world of separation, individuation,
the world of learning, of career, science, politics, corruption,
of stories; honor, fame, revenge, crime, passion. . .
and personality and specialness, and judgment. . .
the world of fear.
Separated from the Source of their being
they condensed into more density,
loading on the burden of ancestry, of history,
the belief in having to survive
that created the necessity of evolution.
The human paradigm was in place.
Finally
the worn down body
readies itself to shed it skin
of accumulated learning and educated knowledge.
The struggle to push through the narrow opening
brings on the old dread of leaving the familiar
for the unknown,
but the being,
ready to emerge out of the cocoon
chooses love as vehicle and defies density.
Using the wings of revelation,
it takes flight into the freedom of discovery
ceaselessly creating as it goes
the Now of universes.
I was born in Paris, France and my first book of poetry was published in that city. After traveling around the world with Redmond and Mardiah Gleeson for a year my husband Charles and I settled in Aspen, Colorado where I began writing in English. After seven years, Charles, our two daughters and I moved to the Mendocino Coast area where we lived in a cabin on an old mill site in the redwood forest. Our son was born there and I helped start a Waldorf school for the children scattered in that isolated area. Eventually Charles built a house in the forest closer to Mendocino. I helped with the finishing work and did the landscaping while writing articles and short stories for local and regional publications as well as French magazines. I also participated in numerous poetry series and radio shows. My poetry and short stories appeared in poetry reviews, magazines and anthologies all over the country. Two books of poetry were published by local presses, later a book about Subud, a collection of adventure stories, and a novel about postwar France.
Riantee, these are so lovely! I’m glad I opened this email and found these verses honoring out loved ones with such knowing, beauty, and regard. Thank you!
Thank you so much Riantee for these lovely poems & verses to remember and honour our brothers’ & sisters. I’m transformed by your memories written with honesty, love & kindness.
I remember driving up to Elk along the coast from Jenner for latihan a few times, long ago. Happy memories! My husband Kelly and I now live in New Mexico,
Thank you two simple words full of deep meaning. You have touched my heart and soul. Your words have brought alive people passed on and moments connecting my being with with past interactions and locations. With deep appreciation.