Yesterday we talked about The Story of Sedna and through her heartfelt tale of how she was thrown into the sea by her fearful father, we remembered the importance of compassion and forgiveness amidst the turbulence and coldness of the Northern seas. We remembered how some people are just incapable of loving – because they don’t know how to love. We remembered how when we don’t know how to love, we end up hurting those we supposedly love. We remembered how it feels to be in the bottoms of the cold waters, cut off from the parts of ourselves that once made us whole; and how it feels to be betrayed by those who were supposed to love us, care for us, and protect us; and how, rightly so, we should feel angered. And we also remembered – how compassion and tenderness can bring us back to heart, back to warmth, and of this, new life will begin.

Today I’ll tell you another Inuit story, a kind of continuation from the story of Sedna; a story that starts from the depths of the cold seas, all the way to the warmth of a little house in the tundra where a love was born. Today we’ll remember – that when love is a skeleton, we’ll sing love back to skin. 

The Story of Skeleton Woman.

(Retelling from the story told by Clarissa Pinkola Estes, who was told that story by a woman named Mary Uukalat.)

Sedna wasn’t the only girl thrown off into the freezing seas, there were many others. One such was a young girl who apparently made her father angry one morning, for reasons unknown, but certainly, not important enough to be told. To punish her, he dragged her to the cliffs, and threw her into the waters. She remained there at the bottom of the sea for years; the fish ate her and soon only a frail skeleton was left of her once beautiful body.

Until one day a fisherman caught her into his net, pulling her up unknowing what he had caught. The more she tried to free herself, the more tangled she became.

At first the fisherman was ecstatic because the weight of the net made him assume that he had caught a big fish! But when he pulled the net all the way back into his kayak, he saw the bones of the skeleton and screamed in horror, praying to Sedna to save him. His heart fell into his knees and his eyes hid in terror at the back of his head. In panic he knocked the girl off the edge of his kayak and started paddling to the shore like a crazy demon. But what he didn’t realize was that she was still tangled in the net, dragging behind him. At shore, he started running, faster and faster, and she behind him still.  He ran faster and faster fearing she was chasing him, because he’d hear little cracks as she dragged across the tundra.

When he reached his little snow house, finally at peace and happy, imagine his horror when he lit the oil lamp, and saw her all tangled in the net, like a little snow ball. One heal over her shoulder, one knee inside her rib cage, one foot over her elbow. A little time passed as he watched her, and he could not say later what it was, perhaps the firelight softened her gentle feminine features, or maybe it was the fact that he was a lonely man. But as if suddenly, a feeling of some kindness came into his breathing. Slowly he reached out his hands and, using words softly like a mother to her child, he began to untangle her from the fishing net.

All night he stayed up, untangling her, until all her bones were laid gently on the floor, where he even laid some fur in between them, as if to keep her warm. He even used some of his own hair to keep the fire burning longer. The entire time, the poor girl didn’t move, didn’t show him any signs she still had life inside her, for she feared he’d throw her over a cliff like her father once did, but that this time, her bones will be broken forever and she’ll never be able to return again.

At one point, the man fell asleep and started dreaming. A tear formed and came from his eye, and down his cheek. We never know why these tears come to us in dreams – sometimes it is because of sadness, and sometimes it is because of love’s longing. But as the tear made its way like a warm river across the man’s cheek, the girl raised herself above him. Gently, as he once touched her too, she touched his cheek to drink the tear. She drank until all her many years’ long of thirst were soothed. Now lying beside him, she reached her hands, pinned them to his chest, and she took his heart. She started drumming on his heart, with a rhythm of kindness, forgiveness, tenderness and love. And the more she drummed and hummed and sang, the more flesh wrapped around her bones. Her divide between her legs, her breasts, her lips, her hair, her eyes, her hands and legs and arms. And there she was, the beautiful young girl she once was.

She sang some more, and drummed some more. She sang the man’s clothes off his body, she sang his soul back to love, back to skin. Skin against skin, she then gently slipped into his bed, returning the great drum, his heart, back to him.

And that is how they awakened, wrapped around each other, tangled from their night, but in another way now, a good and lasting way. Since then, the people say or so I was told, no matter what they hunt or what hunts them, with patience and compassion, it nourished them along the way, across the tundra and all seas, all the way back to their small snow house, where by the oil lamp, skins and hearts stayed always warm, for the rest of their days, and then, after, again.

Sometimes love is a Skeleton Woman.

This story is so rich in symbolism and meaning that I’d need a whole essay to share my thoughts and feelings about it. Of course Estes has an amazing chapter all dedicated to it, and the transformation of life-death-life that takes place for every lover in the relationship as it shifts through its various phases. So if you are interested, I highly recommend her book Women Who Run With the Wolves where she talks in length about the story, and shares many other stories and wisdoms too.

Initially we all look for that diamond to catch, the fish in our net, the animal in our hunt. It’s an accidental finding of a great treasure. It’s exciting. It’s unknown and anything unknown is mysterious, tempting and seductive, and it wraps our entire body in a dream. But once caught, once it gives itself to us, we face the reality that we need to give back in exchange. And here is where modern relationships fail – people refuse to give back and share a space of honesty and real intimacy. We all have imperfections, we will always have misunderstandings, we will have many struggles too. There will always be challenges, so I suppose the question should be: Who do you choose to face the challenges with? And I suppose everyone will hurt us too – so who is worth being hurt for? Because then, we’ll need to forgive them also, if we want to continue forward.

We’ll always have parts of us, and of our partners, that will go away and we’ll grieve. The parts of us that never became, the dreams that never happened, the disappointments, betrayals, losses, failures, and pains. We’ll mourn for these parts. All these parts harden us. In these hardening conditions, when we feel stripped down to our bones, barely holding on, we need someone to show us a softening – so that our skin comes back, so that we come back. We need compassion. We need tenderness. We need forgiveness – we need to forgive ourselves over and over and over again, no matter how many times we forget, fall and fail. We need support. We need understanding. We need patience too. Because it may take some time.

This is the symbolism of the skeleton also, in my opinion. The skeleton is the structure that holds us, and we need it to be of strong support, especially in our vulnerable times, so that we can be held by it, raised by it, supported by it. What makes it strong? It’s all that I already mentioned – compassion, tenderness, patience, forgiveness, devotion, trust – these are all the untanglings needed to love.

The inability to untangle the Skeleton Woman is what causes many relationships to fail. To love, we must be strong in spirit and wise from experience. The fear of many in relationships is that things will change – there will be a kind of death of a phase, and we don’t want that. Well, things will change. But in that change is already something else rebirthing itself – there is another life ready to be formed. Skeleton Woman is an opportunity, an invitation for a new deepening.

If it is truly love we are making, we must be willing to untangle some bones. We must be willing to touch and hold the parts that are not-so beautiful. And when putting the pieces together, we must be gentle, because if it is a tiny little bone out of its place, the whole will be disturbed. We must protect our movements through life, because we are all unique in our paths – and yet we must pay attention to the little limps along the phases and cycles and structures of our love. In simple words – we must attention to our lover and learn their unique movements. Love and attention mean the same thing in their essence.

Often times, we give to another what we need, and not what they need. We must be willing to re-explore and re-discover and even re-learn about one another, because we all change, our inners worlds change too. No matter how many years we’ve lived together under the same roof, we’ll never know another person completely. There will always be wild parts, unknown, in our partners, just like in ourseves too. And we must be willing to kiss them, and hold them, not in the way we always did, but in the way they need to be, right now.

And after we untangle some stuff, we then need to tangle ourselves, in another way, in a good and lasting way. True love, sacred love, true intimacy, require a kind of tangling, where divisions dissolve, and we become one.

The man gives his whole heart to her. He surrenders his tear also. He cries for her. He cries for himself also. And in his deep compassion and empathy, she nourishes her soul – she soothes all these deep pains and injustices that she suffered. She finds her way, in the way of water, from the depth of aloneness and loneliness and abandonment, to the warm skin of his body. His rhythm of kindness, the kindness in his heart, is what gives her her life back. And in the exchange, they can now both understand each other more truly and more deeply. There is sleep of trust. A state of innocence, purity and openness. He is no longer afraid – for all he sees and finally understands is that she may seem scary not because she is bad but because she was sad, and the pain robbed her skin of warmth.

When trust pulls us, love begins to thrive. And we come into the deep knowing, that whatever will be will be. And we need to fall into this sleep of trust, where in the purity of its waters, fears will be washed away, and tears will become the release needed to birth a new life again. In relationships, we can’t solve the same problems with the same thinking or solutions. We need a different perspective and a new way; we need to allow a process of change within us and get a bit creative. His tears also symbolize that he is facing his own fears and wounds, rather than projecting them onto her, which will allow for great self awareness, emotional intelligence and a deepening of their mutual understanding.

And it is the surrender of his tear, that pulls her closer to him, building her trust in him because she now sees that this is a safe space for her, through all the ways he cared for her before. As in many tales, tears call things to us, and it is tears that keep the evil away because through crying we soften ourselves and practice more self compassion. In the Handless Maiden, the only reason why the devil can’t take the maiden’s soul is because she starts crying – and this water cleanses and purifies her, it keeps her in tenderness, it shows she has feelings, and deep wells of vision and perspective, despite the violence and injustice thrown upon her.

In a way, the fisherman’s heart breaks in the story – it breaks open. And the humility in this, the compassion in this, make tears fall, and love comes upon him. It is a love that he always had within himself, but like many of us, we sometimes forget about it.

The later phases of love are portrayed by the drumming of the heart, and the singing. All creation begins with sound – sound or a word, said loud, whispered, or even intensely thought. These mystical ways of creations is what initiates the changes of our life. This is why it is so important to be mindful of what we speak and listen to. There is also the dance of body and soul. The singing off the clothes of the one we love is a common folk motif in many cultures – and this was known as calling their soul towards you for a deeper connection. We speak ourselves and our lovers into existence, love itself becomes a prayer. A devotion of taking them in our soul, and caring for them the way we would for all parts of ourselves. Some days they’ll feel like all bones, and we’ll help take care of them; other days, we’ll be the ones that need the more caring putting ourselves together. Even the old parts, the skeleton parts, require to be made love to. We can be being together, dancing our natures together.

Like I wrote in Peeling Cinnamon, love is a knowing, and of being known, not of flesh, but through the flesh. Knowing, being known. Seeing, being seen.

A lot of women may think that men don’t want to know us but that’s not always true. So when a man asks to know you, to know your parts, all of them, open to him, tell him. Tell him not because – tell him because his soul asked you to.

The giving of our body becomes the last phase in this story of love, so don’t hurry to share your bed with a lover. Make a little soul singing before that. Connect emotionally, spiritually, mentally. This is why soulmate connections are so powerful and undeniable – because it’s a soul to soul love, it transcends the physical, and lasts lifetimes. In this tale, there is certainly a mating between the mortal and immortal, between body and soul – and the drumming and singing off the clothes are what symbolize that. It is a call for a soul love, called by our human heart and human hands.

Sleep of trust, surrender of tear, untangle to love, and then tangle to love. Soul-sized is the land of our heart. With a kindness of rhythm, we walk and explore the unique physical, emotional and spiritual wild lands of love, and of each other. In each relationship, a soul will be born, and will grow. And if the two learn the patient art of love, and of honouring, no matter what they hunt, or what hunts them, with tenderness and compassion, skin against skin, they can find their way back, across the tundra, seas, and in their little snow house, hold each other beside warm fires, for the rest of their days, and then after again.

Available now is my three-part series on love & intimacy:

In Kiss on the Beloved’s Wrist, we explore the need for trust, surrender and holding a loving safe space. In the second part, Peeling Cinnamon, love becomes the cinnamon peeler, as we peel the layers of ourselves to reach the deep intimacy that true love demands; to find that love is a knowing not of flesh, but through the flesh. And in Sing Love Back to Skin, we sing soul back to love back to skin, because sometimes love is a skeleton and we need to sing warmth back to skin, having circled the staircases of our many years, to lay beside each other, skin against skin, awakening our body into remembering the love we may still share.  

For more of my writings, browse through my Art of Love.

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