Feathers
Brush My Heart: True Stories of Mothers Touching Their Daughters' Lives
After Death
by Sinclair Browning (Editor)
Genesis
I am fifty-five years old. I have had
broken bones, had stitches, given birth, lost my father when I was eleven,
had a home burn to the ground, been divorced, lost close friends, and
buried all of my grandparents as well as my ex-husband.
But none of it compares to the grief I felt
when my mother died. That was a pain that was so deep, so wrenching, that
the scar tissue still wraps my heart. It no longer threatens to strangle
me, for the wound is now softened from time to time with my mother's
afterlife gifts to me.
It is only recently that I have come to
understand that my mother's gifts are not unique, that mothers everywhere
send their children gifts from the afterlife. Unfortunately, we don't
always receive them. Sometimes our radios are turned too low; more
frequently we question what we instinctively know. In her book The
Secret Language of Signs, Denise Linn says that in every moment the
universe is whispering to us. There are signs everywhere, personal
messages from a world beyond our own.
But let me go back to the birth of this
book.
Every year I go on an all-women's horseback
ride. This is a great concept—125 women and their horses camped out in
the pines of northern Arizona. It is always a fun-filled four days, with
campfires, catered meals, and lots of talk and laughter. Sort of like a
giant slumber party for grown-ups.
One trip a few years ago was no different
and yet it was very, very different.
Late at night, with the moon turning blood
red in eclipse, my friend Linda Gray and I begin talking. As the night
wears on, she tells me a wonderful story about her mother's afterlife
gifts.
After her mother's death a butterfly
perched on Linda's shoulder.
"I knew it was from my mother,"
she says.
That started a steady stream of shoulder
perchers, later followed by hummingbirds. I will not relate the story
here, for Linda does it better justice in "Soul Birds."
When she finishes her story, I tell Linda
about my experience with my mother's afterlife gifts.
"You know," Linda says, "I'm
usually the one telling the story, and here you are telling me one."
Suddenly it hits me. If we have these
stories, surely there must be other women who have had similar
experiences. I go to bed, excited at the prospect.
I awaken in the middle of the night and
begin taking notes. Suddenly a book begins to take form.
Over coffee the next morning a friend who
is camped next to me says, "You know, I could hear some of your
conversation last night and it sounded so interesting. I really wanted to
get out of bed and join in, but it was too cold. What were you talking
about?"
Another friend joins us, and I as speak to
them of butterflies and hummingbirds, they both begin to cry.
That night, during the cocktail hour, I
mention the subject to two elderly sisters who come on this annual trek.
One of them begins telling her story. They are both crying. By now I know
that my chance conversation with Linda has evolved into something so
powerful, so strong, that it strikes a deep, resonant chord in all of our
hearts.
I go to Carroll Gabrielson's motor home,
where she sits with another woman. Carroll is in charge of the ride.
"I want to talk to you about something, and if I'm out of line, I
want you to tell me."
Carroll assures me that she will.
I tell a little about my mother and her
gift to me, and say I am thinking of writing a book. And then I take a
deep breath.
"I'm wondering if I could get up
tonight and tell a little about the project and see if any of the women
here have similar stories."
I'm apprehensive. Rejection is never
pleasant. It is only when Carroll reaches into an overhead bin and pulls
down a box of Kleenex that I realize that she and the other woman are
crying.
She, of course, thinks it is a wonderful
idea.
After the program that night, under the
northern Arizona stars with campfires flickering and women huddled around
them, I begin to speak. I tell about my mother's afterlife gift as though
it were the most natural topic in the world. It's dark and I cannot see
many of the women. I'm somewhat afraid that I am throwing a damper on the
evening. After all, who likes to talk about death? As I walk back to my
seat several women stop me.
"We have stories," they say. And
the sharing begins. A woman approaches me.
"I'm going to tell you a story,"
she begins. "I have told it to very few people because most won't
understand or they will scoff at it. After hearing you, I want to share it
because I know you will know what it means."
She has said it all. These are secret
stories. Stories we whisper to one another under the cover of night.
Stories we pass on with the caveat, "You'll never believe this,
but..."
Years ago my husband had a friend, Charlie,
who was quite ill. On his deathbed Charlie vowed that if there was a way
to tell my husband that things were all right where he was going, he would
do so. Months passed and whenever I asked my husband about Charlie, he'd
laugh and say, "He hasn't called yet."
Then one morning he awakened and said,
"You know, I had the strangest dream about Charlie last night. I was
walking through a park and he was sitting on a bench reading the
newspaper. I sat down next to him and said, 'Charles, how's it going?' and
he replied, 'Everything's just fine here.'"
My husband doubted that this was a message.
I didn't. I've since learned that one of the easiest ways for spirits to
communicate with us is through our dreams. It is also one of the easiest
ways for us to understand their messages.
The poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote an
interesting passage on dreams. He said:
What if you slept? And what if, in your
sleep, you dreamed? And what if, in your dream, you went to heaven and
there plucked a beautiful flower? And what if, when you awoke, you had the
flower in your hand? Ah, what then?
There is no question that seeing our
mothers, whether in vision or dream form, is a powerful thing. After my
mother died, at times, for no apparent reason, I'd tear through the house
desperately seeking a picture of her. It was almost as though I needed to
remember what she looked like. Then, when she came to me in dreams, that
was even better, for she was even more real. She walked and talked and had
all of the endearing mannerisms that I remembered about her.
Since ancient times, people have studied
their dreams in an effort to delve into personal exploration. Dreams are
also one of the easiest ways for spirits to communicate with those of us
still in the physical world.
Some mothers have appeared as visions,
others in dreams. It's not uncommon for the mother to appear in a much
younger incarnation than the age she was when she died. In some cases, she
has appeared not only at a younger age, but one that the daughter did not
recognize! The common denominator here seems to be health. Regardless of
what the mother died of, no matter how devastating the death, she appears
healthy, happy, and whole, with a spiritual glow about her. Mothers
trapped in wheelchairs walk and those shriveled from cancer are vibrant
again. This is a great gift for those of us who have lost our loved ones
to debilitating disease.
I believe that as women, we are the
intuitive ones. We must constantly be open to things we do not understand.
To receive, without question. To trust our hearts. In The Little
Prince, Antoine de Saint-Exupéy writes, "It is with the heart
that one sees rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye."
On an earthier note, it's kind of like
seeing a mountain lion. Years ago I was feeding my horses early one
morning and I caught a flash of color. Later I told my brother Lance,
"You know, I saw this thing, but I didn't really see it, but I think
maybe it was a mountain lion."
"If you thought it was, it probably
was," he said. If you think you're getting a message or a gift, you
probably are.
I don't know what the ethics are in all of
this spirit business. Maybe there are rules that say you can't pick up the
chalk and leave the message on the board. But I do know that the more we
talk, the better off we are all going to be. If we, as women, share these
feathers that brush our hearts, we will start a spiritual revolution that
will rival any that has come before.
Seventy women, from varied geographical
locations, occupations, and ethnicities, have contributed stories to this
book. Not all of the women have had great relationships with their mothers
before they died. One woman was so abused that she still bears scars from
her mother "teaching" her to stay out of the kitchen.
Like their contributors, the afterlife
gifts are diverse, ranging from tangible objects to visions and dreams,
from sounds and smells to life-saving warnings.
For the last three years, I've shared the
wonderful stories that have come my way with those who believe, while
opening the realm of possibility to those who do not. Women have found
catharsis and healing not only in writing the stories, but also in hearing
them. By sharing the afterlife gift stories, many of which go far beyond
mere chance, we get a definition of what lies beyond death. Contributor
Sandra Heater, Ph.D., writes:
I was having a lot of trouble with losing my
mother and completing the grieving process. It was a very difficult
emotional thing for me to do. Unfortunately, there's no way to rehearse
that loss. You feel totally bereft and nothing else quite fills that void.
Reading other women's stories about their connections with their mothers
is a validation for me. When something that is extraordinary and forceful
and inexplicable happens on one level, I am reassured that these things do
occur. Any time we go into an unknown realm, there's a human need to be
reassured that it's all right to be where we are. These are affirmations
that what happened to me... was not a figment of my imagination.
Feathers Brush My Heart has gone
from an idea one dark night to the book that is now in your hands. I must
say it's been a whirlwind odyssey.
One of my discoveries during the process
has been that the subject of death is not a gruesome one. For what we call
death is only a door opening to a place we will never really understand
until it is our time to be there. Those who have crossed that threshold do
not cease to exist. They are as real in their world as we are in ours.
And, if we're lucky, and aware, what comes through after death from those
loved ones who have gone before are gifts of love, humor, and hope.
This journey has also taught me another
important lesson: It only takes one.
One person to come forward, without
embarrassment or fear of censure, and say, "This is what happened to
me, and I am not afraid to tell you about it."
By sharing, we open our hearts to one
another, and there is no greater power on the face of this earth. In
closing, I would like to encourage each of you to share your stories. Each
telling will get easier, I promise. And as you share, perhaps more and
more people will come out into this open field, and all of our stories,
singly and collectively, will raise the consciousness of our great,
glorious world.
Peace and faith be with you.
SINCLAIR BROWNING
Copyright © 2002 by Sinclair Browning
Excerpt posted with permission from http://www.twbookmark.com
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