Showing posts with label first memory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label first memory. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

A Day To Remember

My first memory was when I was 3 years old. My family was driving through Yellowstone National Park. I had fallen asleep in the back seat of the car. My memory is of waking up, looking out of the car window and seeing a moose. I have a distinct body memory of the beginning darkness of dusk, the rich green-lush magical world, the absolute silence. It was that experience that imprinted on me, heightening my senses and awakening my soul.

Yesterday I spent the day driving with a friend to Steamboat Springs. One of the amazing things about living in Colorado is being able to go to the mountains often. We drove through Rocky Mountain National Park both ways to and from Steamboat Springs.

As we entered the park I was flooded with the memory/experience that had taken my breath away when I was three. I could feel my heart quicken, my body begin to relax, my senses on alert. I rolled down the window. A blast of cool air filled with the intoxicating smell of conifer trees hit my face and nose. The feeling of letting go of my everyday world gradually followed. I was entering an old familiar place of hightened awareness anticipating sensual surprises that might present themselves.

The first animals we saw were elk. It was a sight I had never experienced. An entire herd of elk was migrating across a river in the early morning sun. They lowered themselves into the water without breaking stride and swam across, slowly walking up on the other side. There were females, youngsters, males with large racks and, bringing up the rear, the oldest male with a rack so enormous he could hardly hold it up. They grazed their way across the road in front of our stopped vehicle and were occasionally nudged forward by a high-pitched call from one of the large males. It was awesome!

After we continued our journey, we saw hawks catching currents, floating and gliding way above the trees. They would suddenly drop into a straight-down dive as they hunted unseen-to-us creatures on the ground. We also saw lots of squirrels and hundreds of tiny chipmunks scampering ererywhere. We even saw a rabbit by the side of the road.

As we climbed toward the tundra the conifer trees began to thin out. We began to see beautiful groves of huge aspen. Even though it is still August, patches of their gold leaves were shimmering through the sun beams.

When we reached the tundra and drove along the trecherous winding road, it felt as though we were on top of the world. We crossed the Continental Divide where the water flows East or West on our continent. As I was contimplating that fact, I looked out over layers and layers of mountains. The morning sun hit the various faces depending on the direction of the mountain. Pinks, blues, greens and greys popped out of the haze as far as I could see.

We started our trek down the other side. By this time the amazing beauty and lack of oxygen had put me into a state of joy and bliss. In between moments of silence I found myself smiling, laughing and singing at every turn of the road.

Then we spied her. A gigantic female moose was next to the road in a swampy area munching leaves. We quickly pulled over and got out to take photos and watch her. We had to be cautious, knowing moose can get aggressive. She was strong and I was surprised at how small and closely set her eyes were. She was simply magnificant! After she had munched a while she began to come up the embankment. We quickly got back in the truck and continued on.

We drove along the Colorado river and watched it meander in and out of the mountains. We curved our way back down from the tundra, seeing in reverse order shrubs, aspen and then the conifer trees surrounded by huge boulders.

We arrived at Steamboat Springs. Our destination, after getting directions from some locals, was an outdoor hot springs with seven cascading pools with progressively hotter water. The springs were surrounded by aspen trees that were so tall--when I floated on my back they looked like they touched to sky. After a marvelous soak it was time to start back...

To our amazement, the mountains on the way back through the park looked completely different than on the way over. It was raining lightly and gradually moving toward dusk. The mountains looked huge as they popped up out of the mist.

I lost count of how many rainbows we saw! At almost every turn was another breath-taking view of the mountains with an intense rainbow. It was totally magical and spectacular! We couldn't help but stop at practically every turnout to take photos. As we climbed higher and higher it got colder and colder until it was too cold to get out of the truck.

When I finally got into bed that night I felt fulfilled and deeply blessed. My body was relaxed and all my senses were humming. My emotions and mind were still and I was filled with a calm sense of contentment. My soul was fully awakened, aligned with myself in perfect balance. Just before I fell asleep I remembered my 3 year old experience of waking up and seeing the moose. I smiled...

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL PARK

This is my first memory: My family is taking a trip to Yellowstone National Park. It is 1954 and we are driving our new yellow and white Ford. I am in the back seat asleep as we enter the park. I sit up and sleepily look out of the car window and am a bit disoriented about where I am. All of a sudden we drive around a corner and see a herd of about a dozen moose. They are grazing on some grass quite a distance away (far enough for us to see them well, yet feel safe). I did not know what they were. They were huge and the park was a beautiful cacophony of blues and greens and felt very serene. I was 4 years old.

I remember a lot about this trip to Yellowstone. Of course, Old Faithful was fun and my brother and sister and I tried to be the one to say exactly when it would blow. There were tiny cabins that we stayed in to the right of Old Faithful. I especially remember the geysers and walking on the path through them. I can still see the blue, green and yellow water bubbling up from the earth and smell the sulfur and other fumes wafting up. There was a tremendously strong river that went through one part of the park and it had made a deep canyon. At one place there were steps—hundreds of them—that went down, down, down, to a small platform where water with incredible force splashed us. That was pretty scary and I remember gladly taking my dad’s hand so I wouldn’t go tumbling in.

Then, of course, there was feeding the bears out of the car window. I remember feeding them Twinkie pieces and even having my picture taken alone with a bear standing outside the car. What were my parents thinking ?!???????? This activity is strictly forbidden today.

The next time I went to Yellowstone National Park I was twenty-five and traveling and camping cross-country for the summer with a friend. We had camped in a field looking at the Grand Tetons the night before entering Yellowstone. It was a perfect evening with a totally clear sky with a gazillion stars, a full moon, a camp fire and the outline of the mountains majestically looming above in the distance. Ahhh... What can I say…

The first thing I saw when we entered Yellowstone Park (no, I was not sleeping!) was a pair of white swans floating gracefully down a beautiful blue stream. I was enchanted. The natural wonders of the park were the same as I had remembered them from when I was four. The little cabins had been replaced by an awesome lodge made from huge logs. It was magnificent! Right outside the lodge we waited for Old Faithful to go, and it did right when it was supposed to, to the delight of the small crowd gathered around it.

I started thinking about Yellowstone again last week when I heard a report on NPR radio about the power of the potential volcanic eruption in Yellowstone. They said it would be many thousands of times greater that Mt. St. Helens. Geologists believe the Yellowstone volcanoes erupted 2.1 million, 1.3 million and 650,000 years ago, showing a release cycle of approximately every 650,000 years.

Then I was at a friend’s house playing cards and she had a National Geographic with Yellowstone National Park on the front cover and many pictures and an article inside. It also talked about the volcanic activity at Yellowstone.

Last night I opened my July issue of Sedona Journal of Emergence magazine to an article on Yellowstone National Park and the Great Tetons. This article, entitled The Ascension Infinity Portal: The Bossom of Gaia was written by James Tyboronn. It spoke about the parks as a micro-portrait of all the titanic forces that form our Earth today.

According to this article, this area is vaulted to a higher energy place, as has been prophesized. It occurred on the Solstice of June 21, 009, when the two vortexes of Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons merged into one called the “infinity ascension portal”. The article brings up some interesting points of views and explains the template of vortex-portal systems, how Yellowstone is the Serengeti of North America, the Clemental Kingdom and Obsidian Cliff, the crown chakra resonances, the helix counter spin flow, the unique healing of the geysers, the new ascension infinity vortex-portal, the elixir of life, and the balancing force of the volcanoes.

This article is fascinating and soul-opening and very much worth reading. The article points out the healing place Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons have become and how they are far more than National Parks. Tyboronn says “The unique area of Yellowstone and the Grand Tetons is the classic reproduction of all the harmonics and frequencies of the heavens that are available to us on the ascending Earth plane. It is a harmonic symphony, caring all the frequencial notes of the ascension. It will strongly emerge as a new pilgrimage site.”

I am thrilled that my first memory was in Yellowstone Park. In talking with people who have visited, they all have fantastic stories to tell about their being there. I am already planning a trip there again to experience the wonders and healing power of this sacred place.