This Ancient Melody

One hundred and fifteen days ago, I began a journey to find my way back to centre. My husband’s health was deteriorating and I was fighting embracing becoming a full-time caregiver. Everyday I struggled to navigate the jagged edges of a life I chose which now also contained so many unexpected notes of becoming something I never imagined being to the man I love. To avoid playing a discordant rhythm, I had to learn the keys of tenderness, compassion, and love, by rote, so that whatever each day may bring, I sing a song of joy. Which is why I chose to write a love poem a day for a year -to create a new song of love and joy that encompassed it all.

In my struggle to learn this new melody, the ‘critter’ and I have fought over sharps and flats. We’ve wrestled with who controls the beat and what tempo to play every day. With grace and patience, the sage within has held her silence, knowing that until I released my need for control, I would never hear her urgings to accet the peace of surrender. She is wise this sage woman within. She knows that until I embrace what each moment brings, I’ll never experience the joy of Being. Here. Now.

Slowly, with practice, I am finding the quiet between each note and discovering that the “constant din” softens when I listen into the hum of presence that is constantly playing bass to the refrain of Love I seek. I am learning to let the “bones” of this song of joy we sing, together, to be the ancient melody I play – and in its presence, I am free to stop trying to write music that no one can hear above the cacophony of the noise of my heart trying to find its beat drowns out its harmony.

To my sage within, who I have often ignored, thank you for guiding me back to the truth. To the sea that caresses the shores of hope and opens my mind to possibilities, thank you for sharing your ebb and flow. And to you, who have walked these many days with me:

May you find your own hearth. May you hear the voice of your own Sage. And may you too embrace the inexplicable joy of discovering, the song in your heart is the home of your dreams.

The ink is dry, the bones have appeared, and the circle is unbroken. Through writing a love poem a day for the past 115 days, I have moved from fighting the wind to dancing with it. I have shifted from silencing the music of the wind to setting myself free to live each day singing a song of joy, no matter what blows in through the windows opened wine. What a miracle! All of it!

May this season of love, light and joy bring you great tidings of comfort and joy and miracles for all!

A Song for Every Child
by Louise Gallagher

Look up!
A star shines bright
this winter’s night
and angels sing
of every child’s birthright

Peace. Hope. Love and Joy.
Peace. Hope. Love and Joy.

Sing Loud!
Let our voices be strong
Let our hands correct the world’s many wrongs
So that every child may one day hear
No guns, no hatred, and have nothing to fear.

Peace. Hope. Love and Joy.
Peace. Hope. Love and Joy.
Rejoice!
put down your arms of destruction
and take up the tools of construction
let’s build a world where all can be
kind, caring, loving and free.

Peace. Hope. Love and Joy.
Peace. Hope. Love and Joy.

____________________________________

To listen to the poem as a Christmas song, I asked an AI assistant to provide a musical score and voice. Listen to it HERE.

Don’t Let Fear Silence Your Song.

I joined the Island Singers last night. It’s a choir made up of people of all ages most of whom live on the island and love to sing. I was blown away by the friendliness and the quality of singing. The group’s familiarity with each other and the music created a beautiful tapestry of harmonies that swirled around me, sweet and rich like honey.

For me, though, it feels intimidating to walk into a group of experienced singers—most can read music—and let my voice be heard. My musical past is… checkered. Let’s just say my father’s insistence I play the accordion, coupled with my own teenage awkwardness, didn’t exactly foster a lifelong love of performing. Even years later, when a kind soul at a songwriting workshop offered me her accordion, my fingers fumbled on the keys, stiff and unfamiliar. Too much time, too much self-doubt.

That songwriting workshop in the early 2010’s, was the last time I sang in a choir of any sort. Lead by Eric Bibb, the incredible blues musician, I felt myself wanting to shrink into the corner when first I stepped into the music studio where the workshop was held. Surrounded by 7 professional musicans, there I stood, notebook and pen in hand, but no long list of professional musical accolades and definitely no instrument by my side, let alone the several most had with them.

And still, the community of musicians held strong, like a symonphony of chords making sweet music. They welcomed me in, put me at ease and even supported me in performing on stage the song I wrote during the workshop which Eric Bibb had set to music, “Fear Lives in her Belly”. Standing there, singing my own words, words about fear no less, was terrifying. And exhilarating. It was a glimpse of that raw, vulnerable place where true connection happens. .

Which brings me full circle back to singing with the choir. I love to sing. Mostly stopped in my teens and then, two years ago, sang in front of 250 people. At that event, I sang the same song I’d sung when I was 16, the one that only earned me more jeers and pokes from my brother. His words, like tiny daggers, had pierced my fragile teenage confidence, silencing my voice for years.

So here I am, years later, walking into the Island Singers, my heart pounding a familiar rhythm of fear. Will my voice hold up? Will I hit the right notes? Will they judge my rusty sight-reading? But there was something else too… a yearning to let that vulnerable part of me breathe. And it was in that vulnerability that I found my voice.

Surrounded by people passionate about singing and sharing song and entertaining audiences just for the sheer joy of it, confidence soared like a high note, drowning out the whispers of doubt. And in its melodious song, fear melted away, leaving a space for the quiet courage of vulnerability to emerge.

As a fellow choir member reminded me, “Sometimes I completely lose my place and have to just fake it ’til I find it again. Just keep singing along, and if you forget the words, just keep your lips moving and smile. No one will know the difference. It’s okay to not be perfect. We’re all here to support each other and just enjoy the music.”

No one will know.

No one will notice my nervousness if I keep smiling.

No one will realize my mind is devoid of the words if I keep moving my lips.

And my heart won’t dance for joy if I don’t sing and let my voice be heard.