sips of intent

17 comments on sips of intent

buy a tea for ra

 Originally Posted at The Seekers Dungeon I’m re-posting here in an attempt to get this house in order, and to remind myself about the power of intent.

I grew up on Indian tea– dark black grounds nesting in a stainless steel sifter, resting in a black skillet. The hot water boils around it, the stovefire simmers, and the heavy milk sprawls on top like a sheen of plastic. Everything about it looks dirty and it probably is– you’re not supposed to wash a black skillet, you know.

But when the tea pours, it is pure. Mama lifts the skillet in one hand, balancing the strainer in the other, and tips the heavy weight of the pan to the side. The strainer catches stray pieces of cardamon, loose grounds, and clumps of milk. The tea itself is a solid, heavy consistency. Some of it spills, always. It is spicy, scented, hot, and sweet– an introduction to a million sensory experiences at once.

Good morning, chai says. Here’s a sampling of all the things you could experience today.

Coffee is different, a sharp contrast. My first sip made me cringe. Its aromatic bitterness wipes all sensory experiences away.

Good morning, coffee says. I’ve wiped the blackboard clean for you. Now there’s plenty of space to make today whatever you want it to be.

It’s an acquired taste, but the wonderful thing about taste is that you can acquire as much as you want. There’s no limit to the sensory experiences you can endure.

Milk separates. Raw tea surrenders entirely to hot water. Fire rattles the spices, but doesn’t break them down. Life shifts. Things change.

We sift what we can, we wash what we want, and morning happens whether or not we greet it with a warm mug of softly simmered liquid.

The only difference is the one thing that stays the same:
The power of our intent.

When we wake up, what sort of flavors are we hoping to find from life? What senses do we plan to stimulate? What experiences are we going to digest?

tea2No matter our surroundings, those things are always up to us. We find what we seek, so our intent makes the morning.

I grew up on Indian tea.
I started each morning, balancing a million tastes on the tip of my tongue, sipping on the warm prospect of a billion possibilities. The tea was heavy, but life was light, and I zoomed past it all.

I became a coffee drinker– a coffee lover– in my late teens. I’d open my eyes, overwhelmed by the twists and turns of my dreams. I’d roll out of bed, slowed by the smells and sights of my missions and goals. I’d groggily watch as the coffee dripped itself into existence.

The dark grounds hidden in the plastic machine. The water is heated by invisible currents of heat, and the magic of the contraption seeps it through a filter of paper, into a glass carafe. Everything about it looks dirty and it probably is– you’re not supposed to wash a coffee pot, you know.

But when the coffee pours, it is pure. I lift the glass in one hand, pouring the liquid into a big mug with artful practice. A little drips down the side and sizzles on the hotpot when I set the pot down, always. It smells like burn, coffee, and fire.

I drink it hot and black.
The black is welcome. It clears the senses. It scrubs the blackboard clean and I think– I can dream anything I want into existence today.

I am as powerful as my intent.

The coffee is dark as night, and light in substance, but life has become heavy.

Life has become something I never consciously created. I second-guess my thoughts now, terrified they may manifest into a reality of flavors I cannot enjoy.
The black is a little less welcoming now.
A little more frightening.

I write on the dark– let me be love.
But I think of the grief that exploded in me when I lost my love. My heart separates itself like the milk, a thin layer of protection rests on top, hardening to covering the rest– and I quickly erase.

I write on the dark — let me be great.
But I think of the small pieces of the world, broken on the way to anyone’s greatness. I think of Good, surrendering like the raw tea– and I quickly erase.

I write on the dark — let me see possibility.
But I remember how crushing it was to see the potential of the universe from the smallness of a box. I remember the fire, and how it rattled the spice of me, how it rattled my cage, and I am afraid, so I quickly erase.

I write on the dark — let me be kind. but you can barely read the claim, over the smudges in my intent and the thick consistency of my fear.

My life looks dirty, and it probably is. You’re not supposed to wash away the things that happen to you, you know. They spill whenever I move. My experiences drip down the side of me. It sizzles where I stand and I smell like bitter and sweet, always.

But when I live, it is pure.
It is kind.

And for right now, that is enough intent to greet the morning.

17 responses to “sips of intent”

  1. projectechoshadow Avatar

    Ne jamais oublier ce pour quoi vous vous battez

    ECHO ECHO

    Like

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      Never ✊🏾♥️

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Sreejit Poole Avatar

    As moving today as the first time I read it. I’m a coffee drinker. I need to start the day by blacking out my natural bitterness so that I can have a chance at productivity. 🙂 Bitter plus bitter equals fresh start.

    Liked by 6 people

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      😂 I like that reasoning

      Liked by 2 people

  3. jgroeber Avatar

    Yes to the power of intent, to the spilling of things, to you.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      🥂 to spilling things, and having that be okay. 💗

      Liked by 1 person

  4. dav pauli's mind Avatar

    Wow! I am deaf, dumb and blind compared to you. I love Indian tea but have never drank coffee, being offended by the aroma. But, say I used something like lemons for comparison – I don’t think I would ever have seen the symbolism you were inspired to write of. Whew.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      Aw thanks, Dav. ♥️ I enjoy your brand of imagination/writing/seeing, too.

      Like

  5. donnae Avatar

    ❤ you ❤ your writing

    Liked by 2 people

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      ♥️ you back

      Like

  6. Photography Journal Blog Avatar

    I just really enjoyed reading this. I drink both coffee and tea 🙂 Also, I shared this in my Twitter feed.
    Cheers, Amy

    Liked by 2 people

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      Thank you for sharing this! And yep, tea and coffee is the best! 😃

      Liked by 1 person

  7. sadiewolf2014 Avatar
    sadiewolf2014

    Wonderful, completely wonderful. The beginning made me feel you were describing how I feel right now in India, sweet sensory overload just stepping out of the door… And the rest, so perfect, so moving. You are an amazing writer xxx

    Liked by 1 person

    1. rarasaur Avatar

      Thank you for your kind words, and for reading ♥️

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Vanessence Avatar

    Now I must have tea, and coffee, and intention! You are inspiring, Rara. Spill yourself everywhere. xoxox ❤

    Liked by 2 people

  9. […] my perfectionism T-bones my attempts to consistently output, well, anything. Personally, I blame Ra for creating a blog post so good I felt obligated not to publish anything unless it was of similar caliber. It’s really weird […]

    Like

  10. Mark Armstrong Avatar

    Writing on the dark is much easier than writing in the dark. Unless you’ve got a very big writing tablet, of course… 😊

    Liked by 1 person

Rawr?