these tell the story
of a life I know too well
disoriented in the dark
the way too hard to tell
captured by a restless sleep
longing for some light
I stumble over things unseen
too afraid to fight
excerpt from “scars”
This song has its beginnings in a reflection by Gunilla Norris on what it means to be “embodied”. “Our bodies…tell our stories” the thought which inspired; what stories do our bodies tell about us? the question which compelled.
She was just short of eight when her dad died. Some time after his death – months? a year? more? – her mum played what was probably a very necessary game of musical rooms (if houses hold memories then how much more so its’ individual parts). Rooms were re-decorated, furniture moved. And one night a little girl went to sleep in one room only to wake up, disoriented, in another, or so it feels now.
She woke in the night, got out of bed, climbed over furniture she hadn’t remembered was there. Her room was not her room… Woke in the morning, denied the darkness, the sting of legs newly scarred.
The image of that little girl, hands out in front of her, trying to find her way forward in the dark is the point at which the ink hit the page. That night, however near or far from the event of her dad’s death it actually was, has become symbolic of the disorientation she felt at that time and has sometimes felt since. These tell the story…
this is for all the hurt and the hoping
this is for all just as we are
the tales and the tunes we share
are meant for the holding
and give us new soul to walk
however far
excerpt from “however far”
No (wo)man is an island, a poet once wrote (kind of). Thursday’s Child was born of such truth. Our songs try to express in ways which are honest the hopes and heartaches that are part of all our lives. So, too, the poetry, stories and reflections we share through worship, workshops and now this website.
In giving voice to such honest reflection we hope that ‘far to go’ people (and we count ourselves among them) might know they do not journey alone.
It feels an enormous privilege: to sing and know that folk are hearing their own stories in the fragments we write. What we do becomes, then, less about performing and more about being together on the road. That’s what we hope our writings might become for others: songs that sustain, songs for the road.
Welcome to “however far”…