The Prodigal Daughter Returns to the Garden
On warm summer breezes in my adolescence, I’d catch a faint scent of it with the wind. The garden. The garden. The garden of my Wider Self... Abandoned. Forgotten. Beckoning me Home.
The smell of gardenias and blackberries. Visions of rainbows, new growth and giant trees. A soul remembering of magic and sunshine, planted dreams and absolute, total freedom. It is my true home, my safe place, my heaven.
So, how could I ever leave it? How could I forget about it?
At risk of sounding like a victim, I would point the first finger at society... cultural conditioning.
Don’t get me wrong, I am a FIRM believer in the fact that this is a “no victim universe” and (on some level or another) we have all chosen our circumstances for a reason. However, I have looked my captors straight in the eye and I recognize their faces.
In the culture I grew up in, we are asked to break away from our inner child and to abandon our garden. To replace these beautiful wild, natural feelings with maturity - cold indifference and a room with white walls, hardwood floors. This is how you earn the respected title of “adult”... leave the child behind. Forget about the garden. Abandon the wild passion of your youth and become “civilized”.
I tell this story, as my own, but I am acutely aware that this story is not just mine. This is the story of many modern day women and men. We are conditioned to follow this path, the path of leaving our garden and abandoning our birthright (our magic) to become a responsible member of society. Yet there is a breaking point! There is a breaking point when even the grandest comforts and closest community leave us feeling unfulfilled and we yearn, we deeply desire to come back to our true selves. We feel the heartbeat of something deeper inside us, calling us home. This is our hero's journey. Returning to the garden. Reclaiming our magic.
So my story goes like this too.
The princess, heir to her own divine inheritance and abundance of her soul, cut herself off at the roots when things got painful around her childhood and hometown memories. When it came time to grow up, she abandoned her garden and flew far far away, thinking “that’s child stuff. I don’t need that.”
Decades later, in a corporate job, living in a nice place near the beach, she would feel lost, empty, forgotten, unfulfilled. She would miss something she could barely remember. Yet, she would know that she was meant for it. Longing for even a small taste of her Higher Self’s kingdom, she would begin searching. Many teachers and many paths would lead her in circles. She would find many methodologies and many different tools and slowly she would begin to spiral back, inward.
It would be painful. It would be rewarding. It would be disgusting, hard and lonely. It would be fulfilling, joyful and fun. It would be all the things that the journey is meant to be.
And on a warm summer day in her early 20s, she would find the truth of who she is again. She would begin to remember her own personal magic and on certain days a light breeze would bring to her nose, the smell of her garden.
And now, even as I’m writing this, I hear some of your voices. I hear my own voice (the voice of the “mature adult”) laughing, saying “are you crazy?” “you believe in fairies and giants and magic again?” I can understand if you feel any skepticism towards this garden because at the time of my writing this (November 2018), the mature adult in me is still resisting the garden too. “Things can’t just be butterflies and rainbows all the time,” she says… and they aren’t!
But, in my garden that is reality. And in my garden I am home. And in my garden, I am Queen.
I clawed my way back to this... bloody knuckles and knees. I fought for this. So the opinions of one million enemies and one million friends could not tell me that what I’m saying is wrong because I know it in my own heart. Even the voice of that “mature adult” Courtney cannot claim this isn’t real. I have seen it with my own internal eye. I have felt the joy, the peace, the return to myself within this very garden. It has healed me and allowed me a way to work with my wounds that transcends all “talk therapy” and “logic”. It is a deep medicine… this coming home to yourself.
Your garden holds a million rememberings and lost friends, metaphors and manifestations of real-world problems that you see in your life. Like my friend Gilligan, the giant, banished from my garden for being too clumsy and awkward, for loving too much and making friends with even the people who look like enemies. A lost fragment of myself that embarrassed me in my early teens and was kicked out of the garden. He recently appeared to help me fix a hole in the garden wall that only he understood (hint: it has to do with giving my power away). And this is how I’m healing.
You need not live in exile any longer. Return to yourself, to your garden, to your magic. You are waiting for you there, in a million beautiful forms, ready to welcome you home with the unconditional love that is also your birthright.
This is the work that I do. This is my story. The prodigal daughter returns to the garden. And maybe your story goes like this, too.
This creative writing blog post was written in November 2018, after doing 1-on-1 sessions using a modality called Body Dives with Sasha Zeilig and shamanic meditations with Alexandra Roxo in her Moon Club. Since then I (Courtney Forcefield) have gone on to study Carl Jung’s “Active Imagination” techniques, as well as practicing shamanic meditation with other practitioners.
From using a combination of these modalities over the past 5 years, I have developed my own modality I call “Inner Myth”. This involves meeting the archetypes of your inner world and interacting with them in order to understand yourself, your subconscious, and your own healing/development journey better. If you’re interested in doing this work together, please schedule a free 30-minute chat with me at your earliest convenience.
Xoxo,
Courtney