Weep and Set Yourself Free

 

What is it you want to change?
Your hair, your face, your body?
Why?

For God is in love with all those things
and he might weep when they are gone.

~ St. Catherine of Sienna

Dr. Sun Yat Sen garden, Vancouver, BC

Weep…

for what you’ve judged
and  made so very wrong.

Weep…

for all that you’ve lost,
that can never be regained.

Weep…

let go, and
release what’s been held.

Allow what is,
and accept what is not.

Weep…

forgive,
and set yourself free.

 

 

21 conversations started on “Weep and Set Yourself Free

    1. Ellen Berg Scheduling cries…what a concept! Also, just letting it out as it shows up. I’ve noticed tears sneaking up on me recently and in the past I would have kept them in at all costs. Now? I let them out, I smile at them, I wonder what they’re here to tell me. And there’s something about the word weep that really appeals to me, quite a different feeling from cry, you know?

      1. Sandi Amorim Ellen Berg The idea of scheduling cries came up because, in my job, I just can’t let it out in the moment.  Not in front of children, and certainly not in front of adolescents.  (Excluding Big Deal things.  I cried when I was reading Of Mice and Men aloud…a couple of times.  Cried when one of my former students committed suicide.  That sort of stuff.)
        In any case, I was finding I never cried those tears unless I put them on the schedule.  I know it sounds strange, but it’s been a really healthy practice for me.  
        The summer I had to put my most special cat down, though, I wept all the time.  Didn’t judge the tears, just let them come.  Weeping cleans you out.

    1. Sandra Pawula Thanks so much Sandra. I found the quote in a journal from a couple of years ago and had just recently taken the photo of the weeping willow. Seemed serendipitous 🙂

  1. Lovely Sandi – I’ve noticed being more willing to weep at things that touch my heart.  Great quote and poem too.  I shall remember this.
    Love Elle
    xoxo

  2. “Willow, weep for me.”  I was very drawn to weeping willow trees when I was a child.  It felt magical to sit under one.  I suspect it still does.  There were years and years when I wasn’t able to weep.  I’m so glad I can now.  Tears tell me my heart is open.  A beautiful poem, Sandi.

  3. “Willow, weep for me.”  I was very drawn to weeping willow trees when I was a child.  It felt magical to sit under one.  I suspect it still does.  There were years and years when I wasn’t able to weep.  I’m so glad I can now.  Tears tell me my heart is open.  A beautiful poem, Sandi.

  4. Love this Sandi – tears are another way of detoxing too…emotions but also our tears are one way toxins leave our body.  Feel so good too.

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