Falling
Up
by Lavinia Plonka
I know better as I balance precariously on the log buried under the
honeysuckle and rambling rose. But the really good blackberries will
be just outside my reach if I remain on the manicured lawn. I can
balance, I’m a dancer. I’m a martial artist – sure
footed and in touch with my center. Heck, I teach Awareness Through
Movement®! I know what I’m doing.
As
I reach forward, carefully perched, I hear a sickening crack and in
1/25 of a second, I’m lying in the thorns, my bucket of berries
oozing juice on my pants, one vicious thorn separating a square of
my shirt from the rest of me and my butt throbbing against a heretofore
invisible branch.An ignominous fall, an irreversible descent. Not
just a falling down, but a fall from grace, or the illusion of it.
I consider myself lucky that it didn’t include a fall on my
face to make the cosmos’ revenge complete. Like Rome, my hubris
had not allowed me to see that my foundation log was rotten and I
fell like an empire, into the just reward for overreaching my own
grasp. Thank God my husband Ron was not witness to my descent. If
I am wounded, I will at least be able to manufacture a dramatic tale
instead of the foolishness that caused my crash.
Pride
being my only major wound, I repair to the solace of my dictionary
to learn all I can about this word: fall. According to the Oxford,
autumn is called fall because in Old England it was the “falling
leaf season.” Of course, leaves rarely just fall. They waft,
drift, blow and float their way down. Irreversible, but ah what a
ride!
It
seems we are always falling – down, behind, into debt, out of
grace, in love. Adam and Eve fell so badly, we still date things from
the “fall of man.” Thing is, it’s not the falling
that feels bad, it’s the landing. Some friends were describing
their first skydiving experiences (not high on my to do list) and
waxed rapturously on the sensation of descending. They too, wafted,
drifted and floated until their parachutes opened. A friend of mine
once said that Icarus’ problem was not that he made wings of
wax, or even that he flew too close to the sun, but that he didn’t
know how to land properly.How often I’ve stood on the edge of
a cliff and imagined launching myself. The empty space is like a siren’s
call, I tear myself away from the edge. For a moment, falling can
feel like flight. The absolute reversal of my relationship with the
vertical disrupts the vestibular receptors (those things that keep
us upright) and the resultant disorientation plunges the brain into
avian fantasy. Whether jumping off a waterfall or zooming down in
a rollercoaster, the poor brain can’t latch onto solid ground
and so….we scream. Or is it simply that in that moment, as I
fall into the arms of the irresistible temptation, as I collapse on
the couch into the pile of pillows, as I see the earth looming before
me, is it that yes, I realize I am totally out of control? AAAHHHHH!
(She’s down ladies and gentlemen, and now a word from our sponsor.)Now,
most people will blame gravity. What goes up must come down. An empire
can’t fall unless it’s risen. The higher you go, the harder
you fall. But what if it’s not true? Although I’m sure
there are mathematicians out there who would argue with all kinds
of equations, the truth is, those reasons are all made up. Sometimes
I think we just created gravity so we wouldn’t have so much
confusion in our existence. After all, if this is really a quantum
universe, where anything is possible, why not fall up? Is it because
then all the fun would be gone? If you slipped on a banana peel, you
wouldn’t crash. If you dove off the high dive, you wouldn’t
descend. We’d be metaphorically the poorer. How to describe
falling out of favor, falling for the man of your dreams, having a
falling out? Just think what it would do to the plastic surgery industry!
“The Quantum Approach to Sagging”, I can see it now on
Oprah. And autumn would never come.
We should rename
the law. Call it the law of falling. In the awful movie 2010, the
astronauts used falling into the orbit of one moon to sling shot themselves
over to another moon. You could call that the law of falling and catching
up. Imagine, a reversible descent! Perhaps the reason we laugh when
we see someone fall, the reason that we feel so helpless as we plummet,
is because we don’t see the moment when it can be reversed.
After all, you can fall into debt but catch up with your bills. You
can fall for the wrong guy, then catch yourself before it’s
too late. Reversibility can happen at any time during a fall. Frank
Sinatra once sang, “Each time I find myself falling flat on
my face, I pick myself up and get back in the race!” Perhaps
it has nothing to do with gravity at all, but with paying attention.
If I had been paying the right kind of attention, I would have noticed
the rotting log. And maybe, just maybe with enough clarity, I could
jump, and then fly back to the cliff. I just have to figure out the
math. Meanwhile, keep me away from the edge.
Lavinia
spends her days helping people who have fallen, are about to fall
or are worried they might fall in the near future discover reversibility
via the Feldenkrais Method of Movement Education. [ laviniaplonka.com
]