I've been tossing stuff in the apartment complex dumpster more than usual lately. See, I'm in the process of house hunting and I'd rather not take anything with us to the new house that we don't need or want anymore. While the search for a proper and affordable home is taking much longer than I anticipated, it has granted me enough time to de-clutter and reorganize the pantry, the bathroom cabinets, the walk-in closet, my dresser drawers, and the laundry closet. So far. There's always more. The process has been at times difficult, not because I cling to my stuff but because I realized in mid-purge that I haven't truly claimed this space in which I have been living for the last ten years.
Subconsciously, I viewed this apartment as temporary and didn't invest myself or care as much for it as I had when I lived in my own home. Not that anyone else could tell. No one who has visited me here would think that the place wasn't "mine." It, like every other space I've ever lived in, reflects my personality and very much looks like home. When I left my old life to make a new one, I naturally brought my stuff with me -- my furniture, my art, my books. I realize now that many of those things symbolically tied me to my old life and to the old me. Some items never quite fit right in this new space and always reminded me where they used to be, the spaces they were meant to fill, spaces that were no longer mine.
I have a nagging sense that one of the reasons it has taken so long to find a new home is that I had yet to completely let go of my old one. I haven't lived there in ten years, but I've missed it so much. My ex-husband Steve and I had the good fortune to customize the home as it was built, and I was able to choose so much about the space in which we lived and raised our children. Our children are grown now. Only one still lives at home, but he is in college and is looking toward a near future independence. Steve remarried last year. That's probably significant, but not as significant as the fact that because he did I am no longer welcome in the home I built. His new wife is "uncomfortable" with me visiting. Despite ten years of a close, co-parenting friendship shared with my ex-husband, and despite that I am happily ensconced in a solid and committed relationship with Mike, despite that I still have belongings stored in that home, I am persona non grata in his new life. For that, I am hurt. I have a very compelling and irrational desire to scoop up all of my stuff out of that house, including the wallpaper, the floors, the jacuzzi tub, the stained glass window at the stair landing, and my son -- who would not be scooped -- and close the door to that house forever. I want to raze it to the ground. I don't want any pieces of me left there, but there is no helping that. I played a huge part in creating and maintaining that house, that home. I blessed it with my self and now I must truly let it go. It's time. And it's hard.
It's rather like shedding a skin, a kind of arduous renewal. Like the Judgement card in tarot. There's nothing left in the past but ghosts, fond memories, and regret. Now, I am replacing the art on my walls with new perspective. I've tossed books in the dumpster, yes I did. (Don't judge me! I needed to do it.) I'm heeding the internal call to rise up and leave my old self in the grave. Meanwhile, I bought new pillows for the sofa and a new quilt for the bed. The outer is giving voice to the inner, one that speaks of fresh starts even as I stay, for now, in the same space. Feeling accomplished as I admire the organized pantry, the clean (empty!) spaces in my closets, and feeling lighter each time I toss another bag or box into the dumpster, I am moving ever so steadily out of the past me and into the future me.
This is precisely the sort of experience the Judgement card is referencing. In the Druid Craft tarot the artists renamed it "Rebirth" which places the focus more on the result of the process whereas "Judgement" places the focus on the process itself.
Druid Craft Tarot |
judg·ment
ˈjəjmənt
noun
noun: judgement
1.
the ability to make considered decisions or come to sensible conclusions.
Judgement is discernment and choosing. As I sift through my home spaces, I must discern the current value of the thing in my hand. Things that once held value but are no longer useful to me are removed, tossed, or donated to others who may find value in them. It requires objectivity and wisdom. The Judgement card is also about completing a major life cycle and is a time when one frees oneself from the past and its longstanding thought-patterns and behaviors that are no longer serving you and are, in fact, dragging you down, robbing you of energy and preventing progress, just like those clothes that don't fit are silently judging you and hogging up space in the closet. Ultimately, you are your own judge and jury and your own higher calling, so there really is no outside source judging you. It's all you, baby. You're in control of the process and the pace. Unlike Death, which is also a kind of metamorphosis, Judgement isn't thrust upon you by chance. Judgement is a choice made consciously and with intent. I have taken it slowly, one small space at a time, and I have broken up the process with choosing art and other decorative things that bring me pleasure. It's hard work digging out of a grave, so the breaks are necessary and restorative.
The Illuminated Tarot |
* This article was originally published here
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