In the midst of winter and the ice that clings to the delicate branches and blades, I find myself an empathetic mate to our furnace fighting to fire itself up some days. Not audible to my ears, the subtle noises of the furnace were like that gentle tapping of the shoulder reminding me to move. Progressing to a voluminous clatter, I found myself with an ear to a wall in search of its source, all the while ignoring the center of the house; the hub of energy that keeps this place pulsing, once again I could relate. Until one morning when the thermostat registered at 58 degrees, it could no longer be ignored, as much as I wanted to stay hidden under my warm covers atop my toasty featherbed beneath me, the reality was all too clear and way too cold, I had to do something and fortunately I knew who to call.
When Chuck our trusted technician and fixer of most things arrived, his smile relieved some of the tension but the fear of the unknown remained. As he set his toolbox down and made himself comfortable in what most yogis would consider an impressive squat he began his investigation. Gently removing the exterior panel, the first step was to sit quietly and listen as he took a moment to fire the furnace up. Giving it its best effort the pilot light aflame and signals beginning to fire, it was not long before the raucous rattle made itself known. I watched as Chuck methodically made his way through each step of the process using his grounding wires like the two paddles placed on a heart that had stopped beating in hopes of breathing some new life into our furnace. Thankfully, like a relieved medical team, Chuck and I exhaled as the furnace began to beat, still rattling yet slowly setting itself to its work of warming our home. Despite the success of the resuscitation, the diagnosis remained grim.
Chuck explained the issue and the price of the parts required and with a little prodding and gentle poking we could probably keep this furnace through the rest of this winter, but in the end it would need to be replaced. Thankfully it is not our only furnace and in Kentucky winter can look like ice today, snowfall next week to be followed the next week by 60 degrees and sunny. So we will continue to nurse, to wiggle the wires and give thanks every time this dear old furnace ignites recognizing its value and willingness to work despite its clanks and creaks observing its glowing light within.
My reading today as I sat on my mat to begin my yoga practice was from a treasured book Resonate with Stillness and today’s words warmed my heart and juggled a few wires of my own. “The relationship between the Guru and the disciple is one of light, where forms become formless, where light merges not light. The light of the disciple merges into the Guru’s light and becomes a divine flame.” As these words washed through my mind, I couldn’t help but smile as I reflected on my keen and earnest prayers as I stared at the pilot light of my dying furnace. Interestingly enough as the ice gently danced on our windows as it fell clinging to whatever might support it, I wondered aloud to my husband, “We’ll still have heat if the power goes out, right?” As soon as I said it, a proverbial light went on recalling the electricity required to ignite the pilot light despite the flow of energy just waiting to be tapped. Thankfully our power remained, the rattling reverberated and we gave thanks and acknowledged our good fortunes as we slept soundly in our warm beds.
Just like the furnace, we have an endless flow of energy available to us but too often we let our pilot light go out. We lost touch with what fires us up, what drives our days and fills them with passion, creativity, joy. We have to take the time to listen, remove some of our hard shell and reignite our pilot light within. For each one of us that is going to take some jiggling of our hard wires, some silent prayers that this works, some serious recharging and sometimes a hand to lift us up and an ear to listen. It’s hard work and it’s much more tempting to stay hidden under the covers most mornings, but if winter reminds us of anything, aligning with the light beats the long dark night any day.
There is comfort in the unease of the creaking and rattling though, because no matter how crossed your signals may get, how weak your moving parts become, there is always a light within, that “Divine flame” which fires from the center, warms your worth, and speaks your purpose now and for generations to come. For when your parts no longer become available and it seems you are beyond repair, the flow of energy remains, your divine flame continues to burn.
Spring is nearing despite the forecasts and the days are lengthening letting a little more light in with each new day, I encourage you to do the same. Stay warm. I’m off to rattle some wires!