In an Altered State (Part 2)



Awake

Finally I may be awake.

I step from the bus into another car park.  The landscape around me is red.  Red soil, red stones, red pillars and cliffs.  If it were painted, it would look unreal.

The red rocks of Sedona spring from the ground with a rough edged, youthful kind of enthusiasm.  Not for them the well rounded, whale back lines of other, older, landscapes.  Of course, the formation of the red cliffs, pillars and domes has taken a time unconnected to a single life and the rocks themselves are 300 million years old.  Geology relies on numbers with vapour trails of zeros, numbers that drift off towards a failure of understanding.  Numbers that simply stack oldness upon oldness.

But the sharp lines of the land show that it is still active and alive, that its geology is not dormant, that process is overcoming permanence.   Sedona sits on a great plateau that is being pushed upwards from below.  As the land grows higher, the forces of erosion and weathering cut it back down, creating the sharp edges and steep slopes.  Here the land may rise an inch in a human lifetime. It’s a landscape that, geologically speaking, is sprinting into the sky.  It’s a landscape that shows how deep time and small changes can cause remarkable things.

It’s also a landscape on to which people seem compelled to force meaning, but not necessarily understanding.

Even before we get out of the bus, our guide is talking about Earth Energy, crystals and vortexes.   I feel my spirits sag.  Sure, the domes of rock are impressive, and they do take on the form of giant funnels – or even the swirl of water as it disappears down the plughole of a bath.  But to explain these shapes in the landscape through spinning centres of energy, some coming up from the depths of the Earth, others retuning form whence it came, seems a step beyond credible imagination.  It seems to be an explanation that reaches for significance, but fails to bring meaning, and in doing so, overlooks the simple grain at a time reality of geology.  I am unsure if the other passengers on the bus feel as I do. In that situation I take the easy – if possibly cowardly – way out; I walk away and stay silent.



Maybe it’s the ghost of a bad night’s sleep, maybe it’s the lack of my own family rudder, but I feel adrift.  (There is, of course, the possibility that negative Earth energy could be corrupting my aura, but I consider that unlikely.) The landscape is remarkable, but I keep finding things that sit between it and me.  Human things.  Imposed things.  Things that take away my attention.  Back at the bus the guide names the rocks around us: Courthouse, Cathedral, Capitol, Bell.  All but one are named for agents of control – maybe even repression – as if somebody has tried to take a landscape and make it their own, knowing deep down that it was somebody else’s first.  It was done in Australia, and it seems to have been done here too.  If you wipe away the memory of all that went before, in your mind you have a clean slate, to claim as your own.  And in an empty land, it’s easy to ignore the people who were there first. The landscape is beautiful, one I would love to explore, but my thoughts are unsettling.  I feel like an uncharitable guest, a conclusion jumper on an air-conditioned day tour. 

And then things get worse.

Before we enter the main strip of Sedona, we turn off for Chapel of the Holy Cross.  Seen from below the chapel is a concrete building, with a coffin shaped outer skin, and an inner skeleton of a single cross.  Initially the building seems intriguing, but then a series of dark connections start to form in my mind.  The guidebook says that the Chapel “sits upon” two small red-rock domes.  But to my mind the better words would be “sits within”.   The visual connection between crosses and swords is clear for all to see – the handle, guards and blade of a sword form a perfect cross.  And here in this building, the blade of the sword is being driven into stone beneath it.   If the shape and form of these rocks did mean (or does mean) something to people, then this seems to be nothing short of symbolic murder, or at least, assault.  



As a kid I would often visit the town of Glastonbury in the green of the Somerset countryside, another town rich in crystal readings and talk of energy.  But it is also an epicentre of things Arthurian – the man-myth who became King by removing a sword from a stone.  In Sedona, a culture becomes king by driving a sword into a stone. 

On the pathway to the chapel, people make exclamations of faith, and stop to throw money on to the surrounding stones in the hope of influencing the future.   Around the edges of the ancient pathways that lead towards Glastonbury, archaeologists find concentrations of coins, jewellery and bladed weapons, thrown into the long gone waters, presumably in the hope of influencing the future too.  Ancient rituals and modern faith.  Pagan ritual on the way to church. 

On a sharp corner, below the chapel, cars and vans park so that people can use the two portable toilets that have been placed there because there are none at the chapel itself.  At the top of the hill one thing happens and at the bottom of the hill, it’s something else. 


By the time we leave the chapel I need time and space.  A place to think.  A place to stop thinking.  A place that does not feel like I am standing downstream of a bad idea. A place to look for the things that make sense to me; I go looking for water.


Oak Creek and its self made canyon run through Sedona like a breath of fresh air. Although homes and hotels flanked the part of it I saw, it was mercifully free from signs and symbols.   There was only a single sign that read “No Trespassing”.  It had been shot through at least ten times.  I struggled to know if that itself was a good or a bad thing.

The river was so clear that only the turbulence at the surface betrayed the water’s presence.  A gap in the clouds let the Sun peek through to show each and every grain on the tumbled rocks on the riverbed.  I hoped for fish, but found ducks and squirrels instead.  American Widgeon whistled to each other as they gathered in the hope of thrown snacks, and further upstream a pair of Wood Duck – the male richly coloured and ornate – cast suspicious glances at me before taking flight.  A squirrel splayed its legs around a tree trunk as it paused to watch me.  Tail flicks and high-pitched chattering suggested he was not best pleased to see me.  The feeling was not mutual.   Many of last year’s leaves were still fluffy packed between the water washed stones on the bank – I could feel another Webber B fracture in the offing.  A large rounded stone – maybe even a boulder – offered safety, rest and a patch of sunlight.  I accepted them all.  Small lizards, a surprise in the valley chill, emerged from hiding to sit in the sunshine too.  There were still no fish.

Clouds moved at speed across the sky, shedding their sea-born loads, eager to get somewhere else.  The water in the river was slowly gaining colour, its deeper parts hiding the bed.  It must have been raining upstream all morning. 



The path back up from the water opened the view of the whole creek, dense with trees, flanked by steep cliffs.  Thick banks of cloud gathered around the valley edge and threatened rain.  My mother would have said the blue-grey clouds promised snow.  Later in the afternoon she would have be proved to be correct.

I had entered Sedona feeling a kind of pressure building in me.  The kind of pressure that comes when people ask you questions you don’t want to answer truthfully.  A conflict between the role of the guest and the role of self, where you have little right to impose your opinions, but failing to do so feels dishonest.  It’s a fine line to tread.  Internally I stray, my face probably an open book.

In the last patch of vegetation before I return to the car park a jewelled flash of life lands on a branch in front of me.  It’s an Anna’s Humming Bird.  This is no silhouette of a bird, but a full view.  Metallic feathers.  Sparkling colours.  A tongue that seems to be licking its needle beak, seeking a last drop of nectar.  I don’t know who Anna was, but her bird sits for no more than ten perfect seconds, departing in a blur of wing buzz speed.

Each to their own.  I found what I was looking for down by the creek, in the noisy silence of a dry leaf woodland, slowly waking from winter.  I found it in the threat of spring snow.  In chance encounters with birds, squirrels and sun hungry lizards.  I took away more than I left, and while no place is unchanged by our presence, I doubt that the next person to walk that path would know I had been there.  The next visitors can make of it what they will, but they don’t need me, or my signs or symbols.  Whatever fine line I was walking has broadened.

By the time I reach the car park, some sense of balance has been restored.


Alert

As the bus winds up road, the morning rains wash down the creek to towards us.  The water time travels through the landscape and gives a glimpse into the future.  As the water browns and rises, a heron is flushed from the creek, and inexplicably lands on the road in front of us.  It’s a bird defined by length, spindly and fine. It looks at the bus along the length of its beak and takes flight to a more fishy location.  Heavy rain pounds the windows and the road runs with water.  Maybe the heron knew what it was doing.

I notice the bus has no windscreen wipers. The rain is being pushed by the speed of the wind, beading and flowing upwards and outwards, taking some kind of water repelling substance with it.  Another residue being added to the soil and water we all share.  Another complication, produced to save us from the toil of flicking a switch cunningly hidden behind the steering wheel.  I feel the line thinning, and turn to watch the rain become snow.

There is little conversation within the bus; the grey of the sky seems to have seeped through the windows and doors.  The snow becomes heavier but then suddenly stops.  We stop to look a small waterfall, but drive past a rock arch.  The uncertain weather tries its hand once more at rain. 

Eventually we pull into a car park next to some heavy wooden buildings.  A common Raven looks up from its exploration of a litterbin.  Even with the bus door open, the only sound is silence. I get out and, appropriately enough, turn my collar to the cold and damp.  I know where I am but I don’t really believe it.  How can what we have come to see still be hidden?  How can the most famous hole in the ground, a canyon so large it really is Grand, be just over there, but still out of sight?

A slight rise leads away from the car park towards a waist high rough stonewall.  The raven waits on the wall, watching a second tumble through the air.  The airborne bird flashes below the level of the wall, flying too fast to avoid the collision with the ground that never comes. It reappears at the same time as my line of sight passes the top of the wall.  Void. Air.  Absence. A deep space where logic would tell you none should be.  The trick of perspective hides the Grand Canyon until you are nearly on top of it, nearly in it, and reveals it like a surprise.  You know it’s going to be huge, and you know when you are going to see it, but the rush of revelation is shock.  It goes from hidden to visible in a few footfalls.  If the contours were reversed, so that the Earth had been thrown up rather than worn down, you would have been seeing for hours; the skyline, and maybe even gravity itself, would have been buckled by the presence on the horizon.  


But you stand there, feeling the tug of vertigo, secretly thankful for the litigation preventing wall and stare through sky where there should be land.  And down below, in the canyon base, you catch a glimpse of the Colorado River, robbed of the colour that gave it its name by the stillness upstream.  A small thing, green and clear.  A river tamed by dams, and human slowness.  A river that, in the past, cut down and through layer after layer of rock, down to some ancient foundation, hard enough to resist.  A river that, a grain at a time, formed the Grand Canyon.

If in carelessness, or deep sadness, you stepped from the stonewall and out into space, you would fall down through the long history of the Earth, travelling the layered time machine of the stacked strata until, with brutal suddenness, you would come to sudden halt at rocks laid down almost 2 billion years ago.  A collision of the two concrete realities that drive the world – geology and physics.  You would have fallen through a time scale as unimaginable as the terror of the fall itself.   The exposure of such rocks and the creation of such a landscape, would be impossible without the same time unimaginable and a river, cutting down as the land rises up to meet it,  shifting the world from one place to another one grain at a time.

It is in such places as this that the beauty of simplicity is revealed.

In such places there is a need for the company of the ones you love.  In the face of the simple scale and extent of world you can feel small and alone without a hand to hold, without a flash of red hair or a disbelieving look, changing into a startled smile.  With camera in hand I do my best to capture the fleeting surprise, the startled air of a place so big.  Deep down I know this is probably futile.


Above the canyon the sky seems stretched thin, like a response to the presence of air where there should be Earth.  Weak sunshine pulls distant faces close, and darkness pushes the close further away.  Above me the roulette of weather rests briefly on fine.  Soon the snow starts again.  Soon the cold returns with a sharp wind.  Too soon, we have to leave.

The possibility of sleep

When we pull over again we are on the edge of another desert.  Not the desert with cartoon perfect cactus we had passed through this morning, but one painted with soft light, cut through by the straight lines of wires and fences, rising to a horizon smoked with cloud.  What grass there is, grown from a flush of September rain, has been baked down to a pale yellow brown.  Wind blown fragments hang on wire fences and twist in the sharp wind.  The sand at my feet has a slight cast of red, and is studded with hundreds of pebbles, some of which were crystals, clear and shiny.


The late afternoon light is low and metallic, gold and copper.  The crystals shine.  Moving your head from side to side makes them sparkled. I pick up a fistful of sand and let it flow through my fingers.  The pebbles rattle as I shake my hand.  The sky is wonderful, but I was still looking at the ground.  I roll the pebbles in my hand – most are rounded – and that’s what attracted my attention.  Round stones means water.  In the desert.  A long, long time ago.

I tip my hand to the side and the stones slide off and fall back to the sandy ground.  People notice what I am doing and look at the ground too – eager hands started collecting the crystals.  I wish they had not noticed. 

I step away to look at the sky. It’s huge.  Storm clouds push from one side, the sun from another.  Wires that sing in the wind also catch the last of the light.  I lie on the ground to see the sky.  When I stand up I brush the sand from my hand; desert sand, water sand.

Back in the van, people curl up as best they can to sleep.  I wonder what will happen to the collected stones.  I wonder how many will end up pushed to the back of cupboards in fragile plastic bags, forgotten, or ignored.  

There is still sand on my hands. I roll the grains between my thumb and first finger until they fall to the floor, one grain at a time.

Out of the window the landscape flickers, flashes and merges.  The close is rapid, the distant still.  A fleeing earth, a constant sky.  A parallax warped vision.  I think about the day, one grainy flicker frame at a time.

It would soon be dark.  A long day was ending.  A strange and good day was ending.  

Once more, sleep beckons.

Comments

Anonymous said…
That really is some kind of alien landscape. Superb!
Fantastic place and great pictures.. Have a nice weekend..
Lee said…
Fascinating, very descriptive post...wonderfully written; and your photographs are brilliant...stunning.

Thank you. :)
Yamini MacLean said…
Hari OM
Been waiting for the next ep! Am in total accord with your take on the architecture; and faith is required by Man en masse no matter what that faith calls itself... like faith, energy exists but suffers from interpretation.

I wonder, too, if part of what was happening was 'tourist fatigue'; something I know I endured on the first OZ trip as I am much more the pioneer adventurer type and being stuck with a bus load of gawpers and souvenir hunters was perhaps not my favourite thing.

That said, you clearly treasure each moment paying due and ready attention. Lucky us!! YAM xx
Beth said…
Beautiful photos and narrative Stewart!
Bob Bushell said…
Fantastic photos you have been.
thewovenspoke said…
I love your post Stewart and enjoyed seeing a place I am familiar with thru someone else's perspective. Wonderful photos of the Canyon. Have a good day.

DW
TheChieftess said…
The first time I went to Sedona was for New Years Eve about 15 years ago...there was a dusting of snow on the red rock, all around us...it was gorgeous!!! And yes, I heard all the stories of the energy vortexes and could swear I felt a difference!!! When I went there with my husband about 6 years ago, his comment was..."Wow...I really feel...normal!!!"
The first time I visited, I got "Red Rock Fever" and started looking at potential jobs there...I was at a point in my life where I wanted a change and the Red Rocks drew me...I never did make that change, and I'm glad now...but I'm still drawn by the Red Rock...
Russell Jenkins said…
Wonderful places and brilliant pictures!
amanda said…
Your longer written posts are always well worth the time, Stewart.
I enjoyed this tour with you, and felt a deep understanding & appreciation for your reactions along the way.
I've only traveled the SouthWest once - an excursion that covered parts of Nevada, southern Utah, and Arizona. We were on the north rim side of the Grand Canyon, inaccessible at the time of our presence due to 9 ft. of snow blocking the roads in. The south rim is the way to go, but it's a long way around. Too long for the time frame we had available.
We enjoyed so much incredible natural beauty in the National Parks of Utah, and at the end of our trip before going home, we ended up at the Hoover Dam.. Man made wonder, that left me nearly suffering culture shock & depression at what humans have done to the Colorado River, changing it to suit them and ridiculous (is despicable too harsh a word?) desert cities like Las Vegas & all of it's foolish waste.
Assault on the earth, and "Pagan rituals on the way to church." Your way with words & imagery is profound.
You really hit home with your point on such landmark experiences as the Grand Canyon needing the company of the ones you love. To share them. The indescribable.
My mother went on a cross country journey last year on her own, hiking parks & so on solo as she went.. and I couldn't help but think - wouldn't it be better to see these amazing sights WITH someone? They say a joy shared is a joy doubled. I compared her situation to seeing a moose here in our area.. We see them often when we travel to northern Ontario, but most locals only see them a couple times in a lifetime, if that. They're here, they just have abundant forests & swamps to stay hidden in. But seeing a moose is always much better when you have someone with you who can back you up as to what cool creatures they are. ;)
I'm glad the day came full circle for you. Thank you for sharing (and sharing so well!)
Noushka said…
Your 2 latest posts are very intersting, Stewart, and call for a lengthy comment.
Unfortunately I don't have the time.
Thanks for sharing these feelings with us!
What a great trip...
Keep well!
At the risk of sounding curmudgeonly, having visited Sedona several times, from the days almost forty years ago when it was truly magnificent, I was seriously disillusioned when I last visited about five years ago. Land speculators from California have developed so much land and the town of Sedona itself has become the tee shirt and baseball capital of the west. If I never return again, it will not sadden me.
Lois said…
This is such a gorgeous area of the country. I am a nervous flyer, but mustered up enough courage to take a plane ride over the Grand Canyon a few years ago and it was breathtaking. I love reading your narrative and your pictures are beautiful!
Linda said…
Great photos! Years ago I went to the Grand Canyon and Sedona. When I first glimpsed those red rocks, I almost ran off the road!
Willow said…
It is entirely amazing all the different landscapes throughout the world . We of course don't see those red rock sights here in New England , but I was fortunate enough to see similar when I lived out West.
Thank you for this lovely share of gorgeous photos and great commentary .
i am pam said…
Both of your posts are interesting and deep. And photography is amazing. Thanks for sharing and keep doing so.
Where do I begin, Stewart? I wish I had time to sit and chat with you about all of this. You bring your Arthurian-inspired soul to my corner of the planet where people claim mystical experiences amid the desert rock formations. I have to admit I haven't made it to Sedona yet, but all that crystal nonsense annoys me no end. I think I would have felt the same way you did on the bus. On the other hand, neither have I been to most areas of Britain but the deep prehistoric beginnings of the Arthurian legend and archaeoastronomy fascinate me, and I have always longed explore the sites that so inspire me!

Here you also approach our wonderful Grand Canyon with a spiritual reverence that I can totally understand, and feel akin to. The photos are wonderful! You remind me of my 10-day Ireland tour by bus after jet-lag, with your need to sleep. How I connected with you as you tell us of this marvelous day! Loved this post so much!
Beate said…
Wow, those pictures are breathtaking! I so hope I'll be able to see those places myself one day. What an amazing trip!

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