Mountains

So.  I felt terrible about not trying for Prince tickets, but then  I realised I am actually too lazy and can’t cope with disappointment – how negative is that?  Regardless, I had an angst-ridden night, awake at 4.45, reading my inability, my stasis, in the face of the Purple One as a sign of the fact that life is passing me by, that i will never be a Zelig character and I should punish myself by continuing on this track of apathy and self-denial.  Night thoughts are the worse, aren’t they?

I took evasive action in the morning.  I unfollowed all things Prince and we headed up to Hadrian’s Wall, and I’m pleased to say that a day’s walking blasted the rest of the dross out of my head.  The wall itself is about 6 foot wide and only about 2 foot high in some places, but it just …goes.  There’s nothing to interrupt and barely a house, let alone a village on either side of the wall for miles.  The landscape is light green and rolling and reminded me of frontier.  It felt a lot more optimistic than the landscape of the Lake District and clear, a seventies-postcard clear sky.  

Well, the hills roll and the wall hugs them like a zipper.  In fact I’m not entirely sure that Hadrian didn’t build it to segregate the Scots from England, but to suture us together?  Who knows? Anyway, I was ‘ calfy-hearted ‘ to use a mum phrase (meaning a bit wimpy) when we started out at Cawfield: I’m putting it down to my night mind-wrestles.  Still, Northumberland seems to be the land that Health and Safety forgot; there’s no reflective tape, handrails or cautionary signs.  I imagine they have a pretty active St Johns service or something, but if you fall on your ass, tough tits.

Billed as ‘moderate’ on the guide, it looked nothing but; a series of hills growing in magnitude unfurled before us, the only foothold provided by loose rocks, tufts of grass and boggy mud.  You had to hope the wind kept blowing you forwards on the ascent so that you didn’t fly off. Yes, I was shitting myself, but I wasn’t going to be a not-do this time.  I climbed (on all fours) each rock rollercoaster toute seule.  I hated the before and loved the during and after.  2 out of 3 is a win, right?

 

The best thing about walking for me is not the views, its the genuine need for focus that it lends me.  If I don’t pay attention and shut my brain off from its chatter, I’ll fall.  For once, I don;t have a theme tune in my head, I’m not worrying about someone’s coursework, I’m not thinking about dinner, or missing Prince.  I’m thinking about where to put each foot

 

It’s probably the closest to a child state that I’ll achieve, but with a feeling of risk that you can only get as an adult.  It’s being in the zone, I guess they call it and it feels wonderful.  It staunches the mindshit for ten minutes.  Respite!

I never see much wildlife on these trips (they know to hide).  This time, sitting on a rock chatting to my mother (about bad red wine, prosaically), I heard a thundering and turned to see four hunters on horseback. Dressed in navy, they rose over the brow of the hill like some mythic being drawn out of the ground, followed by three dogs, so alive to the scent hat their eyese were defocused. The four hunters were caricature posh: the women wore girlish pony tails and the men were crimson and well-fed with tiny little chins.

And they all completely ignored me.  Angus (one of the four) was an absolute dear and hopped off to undo the gate and they took off, over the lonely rolling hills, a gradient so steep that they soon disappeared out of view.

I didn’t open the fence for them in some shit small form of protest.  Hunting is bulllying isn’t it? However, i don’t imagine the chicken in my pie had a ball while it was alive, either.  I’m not particularly up to date with the laws on hunting, so it is entirely possible that they were following a scent.  But I’ve always thought the ritual of it, the dressing up in matching outfits like they’re in a band is faintly ridiculous.  Seeing it up close, it felt like part of the landscape.  And if it’s their way of cutting out the brain chatter for an afternoon (and no animal is battered in the process) why the hell not?

 

So, this post is called Mountains for easons of both pleasure and pain.  Pain: it’s a favourite Prince song (still hurting but getting better!) And Pleasure: I feel like I climbed a few this weekend.

Loving Kindness

Noises Off Experiment:  Day 3

Ah.

Like Jon Snow, I’ve hit a bit of a wall (as has that probably now-overused metaphor).  Audio fast day two did not end well, and in the most surprising way.  I went to meditation class at the local Buddhist Centre, a wonderful and benevolent resource in the middle of Manchester, a class that I often attend and in the normal run of things, something that provides an oasis in the week.  But my current detox seems to have turned everything on its head.

“Tonight we’re going to go through the Loving Kindness, or Metta Bhavana meditation” said Kevin (admittedly not a superficially Buddhist-y title, but I’m sure he has another one that he’s too modest to use  during seminars).  I’ve done this meditation before and it’s lovely; you focus on a different person for each of the five stages and wish them happiness and health.  The challenge is that the penultimate stage you must send out good wishes to someone you find difficult.  Well, it was a barfight in my mind!  The silence and concentration around me magnified  my thoughts, turning them into a polyphony of sounds stretching back to the start of the day to the chiropractors appointment that I had cancelled and forwards all the way to weighing up potential problems with my summer holiday.  The more I turned attention to my breathing, the harder my mind distracted me, the mental equivalent of this:

 

I know a song that can get on your nerves

Get on your nerves,

Get on your nerves,

Get on your nerves,

I know a song that can get on your nerves

And this is how it goes:

I know a song etc etc till you fall down screaming.

 

Loving Kindness turned into Ire and Spite:  I failed to think a singularly nice thought about anyone and although Kevin has said that this happens and it’s okay, just observe the thoughts and let them go, I couldn’t!   Which was the aim of this week.  Ay me.

 

Subsequently, my ears are now craving a ditty, a jingle, a tune to give me respite from my thoughts and allow me to vacate the old headspace.  Meditation class last night showed me how frustrating and fraught living in my head is and how difficult simple can be.

 

4 to go ….