A Sea Chanty

Today I felt drawn to the sea, so I headed down the valley to Muir Beach.  I spotted this bench, the tiny shiny rectangle on the hill, and decided to claim it as my meditation spot.

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As I sat, listening to the sea and wind, tasting the salt, I would occasionally lift my eyes and take in the waves running ashore.  I watched the patterns of  spindrift and seafoam.   They formed and reformed, never the same shapes, always restless.

Looking farther out to sea, I could see swells and the surfers.  Beyond them, I saw the deep waters over the San Andreas Fault, the Farallon Islands, and at last, the churning seas of the ill-named Pacific Ocean.

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I wondered at the bubbles, and took in the immensity of the ocean.  I puzzled at their entanglement.  How does one beget the other?  Part of a chant by Paramahansa Yogananda popped into my mind:

Wave on the sea, dissolve in the sea; Wave on the sea, dissolve in the sea.  I am the bubble, make me the sea; I am the bubble make me the sea.

So, since it seemed to answer my question, I began to chant quietly.  Then, as I realized the wind and waves were loud and I was alone perched on my bench, I started to chant louder.  Soon, I sang full voiced into the wind.  Make me the sea, oh make me the sea!  I am the bubble, make me the sea!

I quieted into meditation but soon sensed some hikers lurking behind me, evidently coveting my bench.  I relinquished it and walked the beach, studying the bubbles and the sea.

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This is not a beach known for shells, but I found an intact keyhole limpet.  I gave it to a little girl in a periwinkle sweater who tucked it into her pocket.  She pulled out a bit of broken mussel shell to show me the amazing nacre hidden inside.  Our small shared joy surrounded us like sunlight.

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Author: Juliana Jensen

Juliana is a traveler, dog lover, cancer survivor, gardener, artist, beginning contemplative, and, of course, a walker.

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