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Dancing on Mars ( published by All Things That Matter Press)—is available for Nook at Barnes and Noble online and at Amazon in paperback, Kindle, and audio. To check out reviews or order your own version: http://www.amazon.com/Dancing-Mars-Lucinda-Shirley/product-reviews/0985006617/ref=sr_1_1_cm_cr_acr_txt?ie=UTF8&showViewpoints=1


One reader says, "Dancing on Mars is a genre-bender, mixing interview, memoir and original poems. It's a feast, not an appetizer!"

Here's how author Cassie Premo Steele describes it: "They say 'the truth shall set you free,' and here it is: a truth-telling memoir about growing up in the small-town, segregated South—politics, sex and religion; relationship, marriage and motherhood; loss, healing, feminism and enlightenment; and the bare beauty of a life by the water's edge. . . ."

There are also some fascinating insights from other women on the subject of living married and single lifestyles— and a sprinkling of original poems to amplify relevant prose.

One reviewer says, "This is EveryWoman's book—every age, every experience. You will laugh, cry and learn through this fascinating, honest and courageous journey to one woman's truth, but you won't put it down." A few wise men have enjoyed it and learned more about women.

You'll find a book trailer here and photos from the hometown in Dancing on Mars. I'll be posting comments and sharing book reviews, writing about themes presented in the book, and sometimes commenting on the events of the day. Humor will be in the mix; it's a high-value aspect of my life.

Please click "follow" to receive new posts from this blog. Also, you can click the Facebook "like" icon if you like what you read. And there's an option to "recommend on Google." Promotional possibilities abound. Would you kindly visit my Facebook author page and "like" it? http://www.facebook.com/pages/Lucinda-Shirley-author-Dancing-on-Mars/189083217857282.

Writers need readers almost as much as we need oxygen, so major thanks for being here. I'll be happy to hear from you!

Lucinda

Friday, December 30, 2011

About "Jack"

Just before settling in to sleep last night,  I learned that my therapist and friend -- the man I call "Jack" in Dancing on Mars -- had passed away.  Whatever meanings "passing away" might hold, it means to me that he's longer in this physical world.  I have all faith in his capacity to adjust to new circumstances in a dimension we cannot see and to welcome whatever wondrous things await him there.

I can't imagine it was easy for him to leave this world though; he was so alive in it.  And he had so much love for his wife and family and such peace-centered passion for life in general.  He purposefully and purposely lived it fully.

I had not cried -- not a gut-wrenching, gully-washing cry -- in a long time.  But the dam burst last night, and still today I'm weepy.   Although I knew he had been dealing with cancer, his death has left a hole in my soul -- a hole in my solar plexus, for sure. (I can almost hear him asking me to describe that hole in my solar plexus.)  But we can't grieve in advance, believing that our pain will be lessened in the end.  It doesn't work that way, or it doesn't for me.

His beautiful obituary had this to say about his work as a clinical psychologist:  "He loved the landscape of the brave soul willing to find more self, and to help remove the weeds which choke out the light, to assist in moving the boulders which stifle breath and life."

As I was coming to the end of a decade of work with him, I wrote a poem about reincarnation -- in part, to celebrate him and honor our work together.  He helped me learn to live.  He helped me move massive "boulders" and rid my life of some  "choking weeds."  He helped me begin to like myself,  even love myself.  He helped me understand the power of forgiveness.  He helped me understand many things.   He taught me to go deeper, to expand my life.  I have no doubt I have known him in other lifetimes.  I will stop here and share that poem with you, as a tribute to "Jack."  I will miss him terribly, yet I know he is part of who I am now.  And my gratitude is immeasurable. 

                                You

          If from a mist over some foreign sea
            you spiral your Self into being,
            or in a field of daisies dance into life
            on the four leaves of a green clover
            or come from the bones of a great silver fish
            or as a raindrop falling
            on a place long rainless,
            whether you appear as liquid light
            in the eyes of an old man
            or emerge from a deep river bed,
            red clay kissing your fingers,
            whether from a mother’s belly
            or the belly of a huge round ship,
            I would know you
                though I might not read the text of your face
            I would surely know you.
   
            If in centuries beyond this time
            you take birth
                whatever body, whatever circumstance,
                whether in this place or far away,
                through a door hidden altogether from me,
            I will know you are here         or there,
            back
                beyond names, beyond language,
                beyond the shadows of reason.
   
            I will know
                and once again my heart will be glad
                you are.