RARE PEARLS OF GIFTED INSPIRATION- MARY OLIVER / “WILD GEESE”

Last week I briefly shared my feelings on inspiration and my fascination with those “rare pearls” that some artists experience as if they were gifted to them. Songs or poems that felt like they just came, all they had to do was write them down.⁣

“Wild Geese” is one of these gems, which originally started as an exercise in technique but once Mary Oliver started writing, it was the poem and it never changed.⁣
In an “On Being” interview with the brilliant Krista Tippett, she adds:⁣
“It was there in me. ⁣
Yes. ⁣
Once I heard those geese and said that line about anguish — and where that came from, I don’t know. ⁣
I’d say that’s one of the poems that…that just came.”

Original audio of Mary Oliver reading the poem, which I combined with footage from the 1973 film ‘The Flight of the Snow Geese’ by Jen and Des Bartlett.⁣

⁣WILD GEESE⁣
You do not have to be good.⁣
You do not have to walk on your knees⁣
for a hundred miles through the desert repenting.⁣
You only have to let the soft animal of your body⁣
love what it loves.⁣
Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine.⁣
Meanwhile the world goes on.⁣
Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain⁣
are moving across the landscapes,⁣
over the prairies and the deep trees,⁣
the mountains and the rivers.⁣
Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air,⁣
are heading home again.⁣
Whoever you are, no matter how lonely,⁣
the world offers itself to your imagination,⁣
calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting -⁣
over and over announcing your place⁣
in the family of things.⁣
- Mary Oliver

I truly love this poem, it feels like a meditation on wholeness and I am grateful that it exists.⁣

xez

RARE PEARLS OF GIFTED INSPIRATION I - Townes van Zandt / "If you needed me"

I used to believe that creativity and inspiration is something that is supposed to “happen” to you. Therefore, whenever creation didn’t come effortlessly, I told myself it was most likely due to a lack of talent.
Then I started to read more by creators I deeply admire, people like Nick Cave or Patti Smith, that explained that creativity is also like labour. You have to do the work, sit and be available...again and again. Listening to these words, gave me just that little bit of extra space to trust the process sometimes.

And yet- there is also simply MAGIC out there....songs or poems about which the writer has shared that they felt like the piece was ‘given’ to them- all they needed to do was write it down.
I would like to share a few of those rare pearls that are important to me personally and this is the first, “If you needed me” by Townes van Zandt.

Townes was staying with Guy and Susanna Clark when they all got the flu. As Townes describes in this recording from “Austin Pickers”, the song then came to him in a fever dream about being a folksinger that actually played this song.

He woke up, wrote down the verses in the middle of the night and went right back to sleep. 
The next morning he woke up, picked up a guitar and played it through.
It has never changed.

In a later interview Townes shared:
“The subconscious must be writing songs all the time. I’ve heard a lot of songwriters express the same feeling, that the song came from elsewhere.
It came through me.
The song was there.
I’ve had that feeling with certain other songs, Guy Clark songs or Bob Dylan songs. John Prine songs.
I feel, “Man, why didn’t I write that? That song was out there and I didn’t get it.”
You get that feeling the first time you hear it: “Man, that song was in me, too!””


Thank you Townes van Zandt, for writing the most beautiful songs to guide, comfort and move me.
xez