Can we fall from Grace?

Published on December 2nd, 2011

by Larisa Stow

 

Larisa with her father Bill Stow and all the Stow family, Thanksgiving 2011

Larisa next to her father Bill Stow, with all the Stow family, Thanksgiving 2011

Last night I got a call from my dad.  This is not an ordinary occurrence.  While my father and I are close, we haven’t had the kind of relationship where we just regularly pick up the phone and call each other.  I am grateful that this is changing.  Since my dad began to pursue his dream of writing, I have witnessed a softening within him that has created openings in different areas of his life.  My dad had just revisited his own private journal from thirty years ago – a document of his time with his spiritual teacher and mentor, the renowned mystical philosopher Franklin Merrell-Wolff.  Reading his own entries brought back the lessons he was going through at the time, and helped him to integrate the pieces he is facing right now.

This link will take you to the page where you can download the Franklin Merrell-Wolff Fellowship’s newsletter (in .pdf format) that features an interview with my father Bill Stow, speaking on his time with Franklin Merrell-Wolff.

My love for my father is ridiculously deep.  As a child, I used to think that one day I would grow up and marry him.  He was my knight in shining armor.  Like most of us who fall in love, we only see the best in our beloved – and it’s true that I saw him as sort of a demi-god that could do no wrong.  Growing up, I watched my father wear his strengths proudly.  I didn’t feel allowed to see his fears and weaknesses, though I craved to see this other side of him, as I knew this would bring us even closer.  It wasn’t until entering adulthood that I began to see him as a full spectrum human.  However, it wasn’t easy to see, as he wasn’t ready for me to see it.  It made me re-evaluate how I see the whole of the world, and the frailties of humanity.

Hearing my dad’s voice last night brought deep levels of healing into my heart.  He shared about his love for Franklin, and how privileged he felt to have seen all sides of his teacher.  While my father’s main memories of Franklin are those of his greatness, he also remembers seeing a “scared little man” who’d lost his way for a period after his wife died.  My father didn’t think less of Franklin when he saw his mentor’s other side.  Quite the contrary, the experience opened his heart and made Franklin more real and accessible to him.  As my father was sharing this with me, he began to open and share about his own vulnerabilities.   His voice full of emotion, he revealed fears and regrets that just years before he kept hidden away in a secret place to which I had not been privy to.  As he talked, he became extremely soft and full of love.  I felt something shift inside my own heart as I received his truth.  A wave of peace and acceptance ran through my body.  As he forgave himself, he gave me permission to forgive myself, and the world around me, for our perceived weaknesses.

Why do we expect perfection from our teachers, our leaders, our role models?  Is it because we expect perfection from ourselves?  And what does this expectation bring into our lives?  More love… or more fear?    I have had the opportunity to spend time with great teachers, leaders and gurus.  I have also had the vantage point of watching them “fall from grace” in the eyes of the world.  But now I question the whole human concept of “falling from grace” (in contrast with God’s Grace, that cannot be earned and lost based on human judgments).  The concept presupposes that grace is a particular “right” place in consciousness or a “right” place with God.

We are full-spectrum beings.  Is it really “a fall from grace” – or are we expressing aspects of our consciousness that we have disowned, aspects that are seeking to integrate?  And what would happen if we stood less in judgment of these facets and became more curious about them?  What would be possible?  I believe we would experience deeper levels of intimacy, connection and true authenticity.  These deeper levels opened up for me and my father last night.

In my experience, we are not just the light.  We are also shadow.  This polarity births creativity and pushes us into new territory.  When we make choices that push up against what we and others believe is “right”, we tend to feel guilty and seek to hide from the eyes and judgment of others.  What would happen if we felt safe to expose these sides?  Do children that are constantly ridiculed and punished by their parents for expressing their shadow grow into healthy happy adults in the way children who are consistently nurtured and loved unconditionally do?  The answer is obviously… no.  So why do we continue to place this burden on ourselves, and one another?

In my youth I had very strong opinions of what I believed was “right action”, and I held judgment against those who crossed those lines.  In my attempt to live up to those ideals, I have indeed fallen far short – both in the eyes of others, and more importantly, in myself.  Yet, in the midst of this, I believe that I am doing the best I can to live in accordance with my soul’s evolution; so I work hard to forgive myself.  This extremely humbling journey has given me even more compassion for the struggles and sufferings of others.   If I am unable to meet my own ideals, how can I begin to expect others to meet them?  So I ask the question: do we meet our “shadow self” with fear – or do we shine love upon it,  just as the sun shines unconditionally upon all creatures?  Choosing love lifts my consciousness and the consciousness of those around me; so I choose to love myself and others full-spectrum, no matter what.

Sharing all that we are is essential to growth and healing.  I am so thankful that my father felt safe enough to share his full-spectrum self.   What would a rainbow be, without all its colors?  Or the moon, without the dark of the night sky?  Every seasoned artist knows that shading is necessary to bring a two-dimensional piece to life.  Full-spectrum is who we are, whether we are ready to embrace that realization or not.  It takes a lot of courage to embrace the aspects of ourselves and others that are less than “correct.”

The famous “hugging saint” Amma is known for hugging thousands (if not millions) of people each year. She is pure unconditional love.  It is documented that she has healed lepers by licking their wounds.  The thought of looking at wounds is hard enough for me to entertain, much less the idea of licking them!  In her acts of unconditional love, Amma reminds us that every aspect of consciousness is worthy of our love.

I meditate on Christ ’s words, “Lord, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”  Perhaps if we start seeing each other, and even more importantly ourselves, with these eyes of compassion… the world will begin to experience the healing that comes from unconditional love.  The only thing required is to start from where we are – courageously willing to share from our highest truth, with one loved one at a time, just as my father did with me last night.

 

 

 

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WANT TO USE THIS ARTICLE IN YOUR E-ZINE OR WEB SITE?
Please do!  Just be sure to include the following blurb with it:

Larisa Stow is the lead singer/songwriter of Larisa Stow & Shakti Tribe at www.shaktitribe.com and is a Transformational Life Coach specializing in extreme thought makeovers and personality-soul alignment.  If you are ready to raise your vibration, visit www.larisastowcoaching.com to learn more about one on one coaching and playshops.

Comments

  1. Posted by Alicia Mathewson on December 7th, 2011, 04:04 [Reply]

    IN response to your newsletter:
    wow. thank you. You don’t know me. I discovered you on facebook somehow and then saw you live for the first time at Bhaktifest this last September. I loved the experience. so much power. so much grace.

    Then last night while on retreat here in Ireland (www.sq-retreats.com) where I come to be with my highest self and my teacher Derek O’Neill I dreamt about you (among other things). In the dream you called me on the phone and needed help in a performance. you needed me to be on stage on with you for some reason – your regular people had quit. In the dream I was thrilled, like I had won the lottery or something. I am a singer and songwriter and have just started chanting and integrating my spritual path with my musical career, so perhaps that was why I dreamt that. I am recording my first CD with that intention in the next few months, so much is manifesting all around me.

    The fun thing is though – and the deeper energy – is that I didn’t remember the dream until I saw this email, which compelled me to read the blog you wrote about your father. and that is the true healing. I am in a similar process with my father and the healing of my need to be perfect. it’s amazing when we open ourselves up how we truly are One.

    rock on sat nam. thank you for being you. and if the Divine wills perhaps we will share a stage someday – not just in the etheric.
    love love love
    Alicia

    Alicia Mathewson
    Singer of Songs
    writer, teacher, healer
    soundingstill@gmail.com
    646-345-5484

    http://www.aliciamathewson.com
    http://soundingstill.blogspot.com/

    http://www.sq-wellness.com
    Transforming Lives

  2. Posted by Kaleb on December 7th, 2011, 06:49 [Reply]

    How can there ever be true compassion if there is no forgiveness? How can there ever be unconditional love unless it shows itself in all places? Life itself is the practice. Opening up to the wisdom inherent in challenging circumstances gives us the opportunity to liberate others and thereby liberate ourselves. All of life must be forgiven, all of life must be loved before we can see the light of consciousness.

  3. Posted by Julie on December 7th, 2011, 06:52 [Reply]

    Larissa,

    I practiced with your wonderful band in Arizona a few years ago after my father had died.

    Your article touches my heart so deeply, thank you.

    We are not alone with our unforgiving selves.

    Namaste’

    Julie
    PO 124
    Rico, CO 81332

  4. Posted by Carole Craig on December 7th, 2011, 07:08 [Reply]

    I was deeply moved by your wisely and beautifully written article about your father.I believe that anyone I put on a pedestal thinking they are invincible inevitably brings me back to the pain I have not faced, a reflection of the shadow within me.
    Thank you Larissa. I love your passion and devotion.
    Sincerely
    Carole

  5. Posted by julian michael on December 7th, 2011, 08:09 [Reply]

    Larisa, thank you for your deep sharing. I had a chance to connect Soul to Soul with my Dad on a 5 hour trip to see my sister on back roads going to Vermont years ago. He then got Alzheimer’s and then passed 5 years later. What an amazing connection it was and still is. Because of reading this I posted on Face Book “My Numerology Pearls of the Day this as a reminder to people. Thank you for your loving heart & impetus to make a difference.

    Embrace your meditation & prayer on why you were born to your parents & they to you on 12-7-2011=23-5 Univ. Day. Reflect on your parents & the roof over your head, food & protection they gave you. Read “The Prophet” by Kahil Kabran on the chapter of what parents roles are. Give a shout out to them. Whatever they did, work out the positive & dark sides of your relationship with them through forgiveness & find love in your heart for them. Know that your Mother & Father is part of your evolution. A Cosmic Plan for you to understand a higher purpose of unconditional love. Be ready to speak & be with them from your loving awareness & infinite consciousness. Enjoy! Lv

  6. Posted by Sally Eckert-Smith on December 7th, 2011, 09:24 [Reply]

    Larisa. I am so humbled and appreciative to be the recipient of your gracious words and love!!! Thank you for sharing this glimpse into your heart!! I share this love with you just as your Father did with you last night!! I LOVE YOU!!

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