Creekbank Blog

The writing blog of Curt Iles and Creekbank Stories. Our mission: To connect hearts to God by using stories of encouragement and inspiration.

Friday, March 30, 2007

Preface: The Mockingbird’s Midnight Song
From The Mockingbird's Song by Curt Iles

To learn more, visit www.creekbank.net


-But at midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the prisoners were listening to them (Acts 16:25).

It’s the middle of another restless and sleepless night. Being exhausted both physically and mentally, yet unable to get the thing you need most - sleep, is so frustrating. So I finally wearily rolled out of bed. That’s what all of the sleep books tell you to do when you have insomnia. Get out of bed and do something. Read. Eat a snack. Watch TV. Pray.

I’ve tried all of these night after night and very seldom do any of them work. My mind and heart seem to be racing along at one hundred miles per hour. Nothing seems to be able to slow down the sadness and anxiety inside me.
On this particular night, I decide to walk outside. It’s about midnight, cloudy, and there is no moon. In the rural area where I live, outdoor light is not overwhelming so the yard is very dark, even as my eyes adjust to being outside. I’ve always loved being outside at night - looking at the stars, tracing the path of an overhead jet, and just soaking in the soothing sounds of a country night..
But in my depression and insomnia, my soul feels just as black as the darkness surrounding me. I’m completely enveloped in it. I stand there, trying to concentrate and pray in the quiet darkness. I think back to the books I’ve read by those who’ve been depressed. These books all have something in common. They always describe their depression in terms of darkness, night, or blackness. One writer called it, “The black night of the soul.” Author
William Styron described it as “The black dog of despair.”[i] Winston Churchill, also a depression sufferer, called it “my black dog.”
Tonight the silence is deafening. It is as if even the night creatures, such as the crickets, owls, frogs, and barking dogs, have found a hiding place to escape the darkness.
Then suddenly from the river birch tree in our driveway comes clear beautiful singing. It is a mockingbird. If you aren’t from the South and haven’t heard this bird, it is hard to describe its song. It is loud and is made up of about seven sequences of sounds - some stolen from other birds or nearby common sounds. In the classic book, Louisiana Birds, [ii] ornithologist George Lowery tells of a “mockingbird that so successfully imitated a dinner bell that it frequently caused the farm hands to come out of the field expecting their noon meal.”
This midnight bird in our tree is a real singer who sits up high in the tree as the guardian of our yard. And he sings - and sings loudly - and with passion. To him, it doesn’t matter that it is a dark moonless night when any respectable bird should be silently sleeping.
This mockingbird is going to sing even if it is midnight - even if it is dark. - even if no one else hears his song. He is chirping away for the simple pure joy of singing. Moreover, the fact that he has the entire sound stage to himself makes his song seem louder and fuller. It is the end of the opera and the great soloist is singing the aria - he needs no accompaniment. Any other sounds would only diminish the incredible beauty of this virtuoso solo.
This bird unknowingly gives me a great gift - I’m reminded of how a follower of God can sing - even in the darkness - even in tough circumstances.
And I’m reminded by this bird, and really by the God who created both him and his song, that I will get through this time of darkness. There is still hope for the restoration of
joy and even though now it seems I’ve lost my song, it is still deep within me and one day will be sung loudly and joyfully once again.
I’d like to say my depression ended on that night, but that would not be true. The mockingbird that sang at midnight was only one of a thousand steps on my road to restored health and joyful living. I firmly believe it was a gift from God just for me. It is a gift that I now pass on to you.
The gift of a mockingbird,
in the darkness,
singing at midnight.






[i] William Styron Darkness Visible: A Memoir of Madness ( London: Vintage Books copyright 1990)

[ii] George Lowery, Louisiana Birds (Baton Rouge: LSU Press
copyright 1960) 394


3 Webster’s Contemporary American English Dictionary (Merriam Webster Copyright 2003)

Labels:

2 Comments:

At 10:14 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

"The transparent self"comes to mind as I think of this writing - I only wish everyone would be so truthful about our inner selves! Thanks, Curt, for sharing!

 
At 5:04 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Your writing stirs familiar memories, those I'm still not willing to expose to others as you have. My empathy connects with your openness. In one sense, it's comforting to read of someone else's struggle with this darkness. In another private sense, the inability to 'pull yourself up by your own bootstraps' cannot be enabled even by reading of another's struggle. It takes the hand of God working a continual miraculous healing from deep within. Your dependence on this aspect of a daily walk with Christ shines through all of your writing. That aspect is what distinguishes your book from many others written about this illness. Clinical depression is an ongoing, daily struggle for so many of us. I'm thankful for professional counselors who teach Biblical principles which direct the victim in developing this daily dependence upon the Lord. Professional counselors are also trained to recognize the symptoms that require medical treatment. Sadly, professional counseling is out of reach financially for most who suffer. Pastors are not trained to deal with the realities of clinical depression. I have seen so many pastors blunder out of ignorance as they attempt to provide guidance. The churches that provide on-staff professional counselors are providing a vital service to their parishioners. Thank you for putting parts of The Mockingbird's Song online.

 

Post a Comment

<< Home