<![CDATA[April W. Vaughn - The Words]]>Sun, 22 Dec 2024 16:16:47 -0700Weebly<![CDATA[Kali & Duality]]>Thu, 16 Feb 2023 19:38:29 GMThttp://aprilwvaughn.com/the-words/kali-duality​For a number of years I have been partial to Kali, the Hindu goddess of destruction. Actually, destruction is just one aspect of Kali; she is also known as the goddess of time and change. A literal translation of her name is “the black one”. And in many texts she is referred to as “she who destroys.”  The Kalika Purana describes Kali as “possessing a soothing dark complexion, as perfectly beautiful, riding a lion, four-armed, holding a sword and blue lotuses, her hair unrestrained, body firm and youthful.“
I’ve been in many yoga classes where the teacher emphasizes opening your heart center, letting in light, and emanating peace and acceptance. And trust me, I think, we, the world needs as much of this attitude as we can get. But we also need balance. In even the most enlightened and gentle creatures there is darkness and aggression. It may be buried, repressed, or completely ignored but I believe it’s there in all of us. I believe we need to honor our dark natures and that it is important to recognize that without destruction we can’t have rebirth or new life or fresh energy.
I have been known to struggle with my dark side and my aggressive nature. I had this idea that yoga teachers should not have darkness or aggression. When I taught yoga, at times, I felt fraudulent in my teaching of yoga – talking about peace and light ALL the time. Let me put it this way: I was meditating once and as Rod Stryker’s voice was relaxing me into greatness, out of nowhere, I had a vision of someone breaking into our house and me blasting them away with a shotgun. 
In September of 2009 I started to train in Hung Gar Kung Fu. I started to learn ways to channel my aggression to times and places where it may truly be needed and appropriate. Kung Fu brought the fighter in me to the surface and then shaped my aggression into something that is more easily reconciled with the softer, more hidden, side of my personality. My former Sifu helped me understand that there is darkness in all of us, AND, that if applied in the right way at the right time, that darkness can be an extremely valuable tool. Kung Fu enabled me to truly accept my more aggressive tendencies. And something completely unexpected happened when I accepted my aggressive personality – I softened. It was like a veil lifted and I could see the yin and the yang. I could see the light and the dark. I could shoot the shotgun and open my heart to love and light.
Life is never a black or white proposition. I always knew this but at the same time I was missing that I could be aggressive and peaceful all at once. And while I do not bow to or worship any entity, Kali has become my patron goddess of sorts. She allows me to embrace destruction, aggression, and change. And in this embrace I find ease and light.  I am a hard shell with a soft interior. I am strong and weak. I am dark and light. Kali destroys and makes way for endless possibilities. Kali gives me a way to embrace my dual nature.
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<![CDATA[Years March By]]>Mon, 06 Feb 2023 07:00:00 GMThttp://aprilwvaughn.com/the-words/summary(Trigger warning: this post contains sesnitive topics including drug and child abuse.)
Born April Winn Ferry, 24th of April, 1974. Miami Beach, FL. When I go back and try to piece together the details of my arrival, the data is sketchy. The hospital seems to have been torn down. My mother is dead now, so of no use in data collection. My father, as is the way with fathers in the 1970s, wasn't actually there. My father recalls a phone call in the wee hours of the morning. A doctor on the other end of the line saying your daughter has been born but come quickly as she is unlikely to live through the day. He rubs the sleep out of his eyes, pulls on pants and a tee shirt. He's 22 years old with one son that he ushers off to grandparents. He gets to the hospital and doesn't remember much except that there was a problem with my lungs and severe jaundice. We know the outcome as I am sitting here writing this. I know how to make an entrance.

By the time I am 4, my parents’ marriage dissolves in a pile of broken dishes and slammed doors. I'm not sure of the extent of my mother's drug use at this point but if I had to place bets, well, I'd bet it was party-time most of the time.

A year. How does it feel to you looking back over a year? Fast or slow? Most of my formative years blur together. Except that year. Five years old. A new father. The memories are slow and torturous. Like an old VHS tape stretched to its final life playing everything in slow motion, grainy and garbled. A bedroom door creeps open, a dark figure looms. My brother cries as hands grip and shake him leaving clearly defined marks. My mother begs from a fetal position on the floor as another fist slams her face and another foot kicks her side. And then it gets bad. She flees. We flee.

Railroad tracks slick under foot as we walk. In search of refuge. A friend on the other side of the tracks. The right side of the tracks. Embrace. Tears stream down my mother's bruised and swollen face. A friend telling her she needs to leave for good, this time. Five minutes later fists pound on the door. I will kill you bitch. Just like I killed that fucking dog of yours. The dog I watched him kill through the cracks in the blinds of my bedroom. Bert and Ernie clutched to my chest. I  have lost the name of the dog over the years. A dalmatian. Maybe this is why I really hate the movie 101 Dalmatians. 
And then it is done. Five years old and too much knowledge; childhood lost. That chapter closed and after that nothing ever seems as bad. We move in with my mother's parents. Good Southern Baptists. A pastor and a pastor's wife. The only Godly part of this is the pastor's wife. She is the mask of piety and the protector of the small. I refuse to ever be alone in a room with my grandfather, Boompa. His lap always seems to be wanting the feel of a small granddaughter and his tongue always manages to find its way into her ear. I'm 6 now and this isn't that bad. Boompa is gone a lot. Off to Haiti saving those poor {insert word I won’t write}. Thank you God.

1980. A third father. A good and patient father. He sees the walls around me and gives me wide berth.

1982. I pick up the phone next to my mother's bed. This is 911 what is the nature of your emergency? Sirens blare. My third father crouches down with his back to the wall, head in his hands, tears down his face. I sit next to him and tell him we will be ok. The paramedics collect the needles strewn on the bedside table. Court. Three months in rehab should fix it all. The halls of The Care Unit are institutional yellow. It smells like burnt coffee and stale cigarettes. My third father opens the door to my mother's room and then slams it quickly. I hear a crash against the door and a cacophony of curse words. Heroin detox is ugly. Two weeks later color comes back to her face. We sit in an NA meeting next to a Hell's Angel. I investigate his tattoos. He gives me a wink. A white chip.

1983. I come home from school and my third father is loading his stereo speakers into the back of his Datsun. Damn it Tammy, you promised. The speakers are a terrible sign. Anything but the speakers. The sound of her begging washes over me. The speakers come back in. Another white chip.

The years roll forward.

​Three elementary schools. One middle school. Two high schools. Many houses.
Turns out you can't outrun your demons. They hide in the moving boxes just waiting for the moment to be unpacked.

1992. I graduate from high school just shy of “with honors”. I move to Tallahassee and attend Florida State University. I struggle. Classes are not all that motivating. I pass the first two years by the skin of my teeth.

1993. I become sick. A weird infection in my left leg. “Cause unknown”. Lupus is suspected but is later ruled out. Acute cellulitis develops. Amputation is discussed. And then suddenly, it's better. Leg saved. It is never the same.

1995. I become a bartender and thus a local celebrity. That is the way of small college towns. I meet a boy and then I meet his family. It's these moments with his family that are my first glimpse into the reality of my own family. Not everyone's mother has been married three times and court mandated to rehab after OD'ing on heroin. I know this somewhere in the recesses of my mind. But now I experience it firsthand. Resentment wells up and bottles within me for the next decade.

1998. We move to Seattle. The perfect boyfriend, with the significantly less dysfunctional family, and I. A year goes by and we break up. I stay and he moves to Boston. Seattle becomes the place of my transformation. The victim dies and the warrior is born. Riding on a sea shell out of the abyss of, what I later learn is, pretty typical dysfunction. This knowledge is somehow comforting and somehow maddening. Conversations are had over the years. Some wounds heal and others remain unresolved. A failed marriage, mine this time. Friends and careers come and go. In these transitory happenings I find the thing I've been searching for: Myself.

2010. I learn that the key to creating the life you want is to forgive and to value all that you already have. Honor yourself. Hold people accountable yet remember they struggle too. September 3 I build the courage to walk into a kung fu school. I simultaneously find two amazing gifts at one time: martial arts and my husband.

2012. My mother dies. Colon cancer. With her dies any hope of having a real mother someday. Two weeks later I find out I am pregnant. Oh shit, she's reincarnating in my womb. I reassure myself that she is elsewhere. The first of two sons.

Current. Things are never perfect. But there is perfection in the moments of our life. There is love and deep connection. There is a shared understanding of familial dysfunction. There is a worry that our sons will be really messed up by too much stability. What a crazy worry. The stability and love is worth the risk.
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