In Memory of Kathleen Sleight

The Spiritual Traveler


In Memory of Kathleen Sleight, 1         I was a close friend of Kathleen Sleight for over 25 years.  We were both devoted to the path of Eckankar, and we shared some very deep things in common, both in terms of our approach to life, and in terms of our experiences.   Those who knew both of us might find that a little hard to believe, because we came from very different generations and backgrounds.  But surface appearances can be deceiving.  A spiritual path such as Eckankar often produces strange friendships that are a mystery to other people.  What these individuals have in common is something that goes beyond the conventions of ordinary life.  It’s the stuff of human mystery.
         I went through some very difficult and dark periods in my life, and during some of these periods Kathleen was the only person I could talk to.  In that respect she was closer to me than all the other people I have known in Eckankar, and even closer than the few members of my own family.
         Kathleen and I both took life seriously.  I don’t mean to say that we didn’t have a sense of humor, but when it came to the gut issues of life, neither of us was inclined to mess around.  Kathleen liked to call a spade a spade, and she never took her eyes off the ball, in a spiritual sense.  I always liked to think that I was the same way.
         To a lot of people, Kathleen created problems for herself because of this attitude.  She was inclined to accept certain burdens in her life, because she felt that was her way of being of service.  Some people said that she let herself be pushed around and taken advantage of, but if you really knew Kathleen, you wouldn’t necessarily come to that conclusion.  She accepted responsibility for everything that she did and everything that happened to her.  If you tried to tell her that she would have been better off taking a different approach, she would give you sort of a weary look.  Then, with her jaw firmly set, she’d let you know that your words were useless (if you didn’t know that already).  She basically had the same attitude as Sinatra: she always did it her way, and she’d continue to do it her way.
         The following poem, by the poet A. E. Housman, was Kathleen’s favorite, and one of my favorites, as well.  It captures Kathleen’s viewpoint and personality, as well as a perspective that we had in common with one another.  It’s an attitude of wariness, of skepticism, of being ready for anything, and particularly for trouble.  Some would say that this attitude of expecting trouble only brings trouble.  But as Kathleen might have said, people can say what they like.

         I to my perils of cheat and charmer
         Came clad in armor
         By stars benign.

         Hope lies to mortals and most believe her
         But man’s deceiver
         Was never mine.

         The thoughts of others were light and fleeting
         Of lovers meeting,
         Of luck, or fame.

         Mine were of trouble, and mine were steady
         So I was ready
         When trouble came.

         Kathleen was very good at coming up with aphorisms.  Often they had the same fatalistic tone to them as the Housman poem.  Sometimes I tried to match her aphorisms with my own.  For instance, Kathleen came up with this dictum:
         “The longer the road, the lonelier it gets.”
         And I responded with this one:
         “The greater one’s strength, the less help one is allowed.”
         I wrote a poem, myself, at a time when I was going through a particularly rough period.  At the beginning, it captures the same fatalistic attitude, but it also has a hopeful tone to it at the end.  I wrote it primarily with myself in mind, but there’s something of Kathleen in it, too:

         My life is a tangled chain
         Of pity, grief, and woe
         Yet there is no one to explain
         What has made it so.

         There is but one who could have forged that chain
         It is myself, I know
         And there is no one to whom I can complain
         That I did make it so.

         If I could set out on a quest
         Unaided, all alone
         To separate each link from the rest
         And bring them singly home

         Then I would be like stout Cortez
         Who, in his thirst for gold,
         Brought back with him more treasure chests
         Than the world could hold.

         Thus, from a tangled history
         Of pity, grief, and woe
         I would wrest my victory
         Like the conquerors of long ago.

         In October 1978, Kathleen sent me a letter in which she had typed a brief four-line poem.  Like the previous poem, it has something to say about history.  Some people who knew Kathleen less well might be puzzled as to what her interest was in this.  But to those who knew her, or to those with the ears to hear and the hearts to understand, the poem and its connection to Kathleen will be clear:

         One cannot on past laurels rest
         Nor on the accolades of history
         All of that belongs to IT
         And IT remains a mystery.

         In her letter, Kathleen added this comment on the poem:
         “To me, the very fact that IT is a mystery and cannot ever really be known wholly is the paradox that keeps me always ready to go on and on, forever and ever, for millions of years, because I do so only one second at a time.  Days mean nothing.  It is always now and it is the seasons which march by.”
         Then she added, typically, “You take it from there.”
         Well, I took the poem and, with Kathleen’s permission, expanded to eight lines.  This is the way my version came out:

         One cannot on past laurels rest
         Nor on the accolades of history.
         Each day we wake to brings another test
         Of our endurance and self-mastery.

         Our imprint, in the sands of time impressed
         Must vanish with the tide of yesterday.
         Yet we remain, the guest
         Of God, in the presence of ITS mystery.

         Not long before this, I had stumbled upon a poem about death, written by T. E. Lawrence, a historical person in whom Kathleen and I were both interested.   It was written from a point of view that did not reflect an awareness of life after death.  Instead, it was concerned with the notion of being remembered by history.  Death, in this poem, is just a final state of rest:  

         When you are dead, when all you could not do
         Leaves quiet the worn hands, the weary head,
         Asking not any service more of you,
         Requiting you with peace, when you are dead;
         When, like a robe, you lay your body by,
         Unloosed at last: - how worn, and soiled, and frayed: -
         Is it not pleasant just to let it lie
         Unused, and be moth-eaten in the shade?
         Folding earth’s silence round you like a shroud,
         Will you just know that what you have is best: -
         Thus to have slipped unfamous from the crowd;
         Thus having failed and failed, to be at rest?
         Or having not to know?  Yet O my Dear,
         Since to be quit of self is to be blest
         To cheat the world, and leave no imprint here: -
         Is this not best?

         I sent the poem to Kathleen for her comment, and she gave her interpretation in the same letter I quoted from earlier.  The first four lines of the poem, she wrote, talked about a resting period, a respite from activity, which could be likened to a ‘rest point in eternity’, a phrase that Paul Twitchell, the founder of Eckankar, used in some of his writings to describe those points that come between our earthly wanderings.  The next five lines, she said, depict the individual, or Soul, as still in control in the process of giving up the body.  “You release yourself from the physical limitations of the body,” she wrote, “and it, being released, is left to return to its elements.”  The tenth line, ‘Will you just know that what you have is best,’ she wrote, expressed the awareness that is Soul, and the fourteenth line, ‘Since to be quit of self is to be blest,’ was Soul speaking to Soul.  
         On the line, ‘To cheat the world and leave no imprint here,’ she commented, “Any adulation is hollow glory from a spiritual point of view.  Saints and Masters do not think of themselves as such.  They know the magnitude of the whole and realize how small their contribution (is) to what is yet to be.”  Of the last line, ‘Is this not best?’ she wrote that the writer “ends with a question.  The day will come,” she added, “when you will have no further questions.  This has just come to me as of now.”
         Kathleen wrote numerous poems of her own, but they mysteriously disappeared, and were never recovered after her death.  The only one that her daughter Sibyl managed to find was one that she wrote for Tom Flamma, a prominent high initiate in Eckankar, just prior to his visit and lecture tour to the Detroit-Ann Arbor area in June 1973.  She sent it to him in a letter dated February 1974:

         In some far off forgotten place,
         Beyond the ken of time and space,
         Beyond Mind-
         Lies that which Is
         Primordial Source,
         Its Essence Pure,
         Undaunted.
         No thing,
         No form can hold nor stay
         Its Flow.
         One only can be still
         And Know!

         I don’t think I’m alone in feeling that Kathleen is most certainly now in that place that she spoke of in this poem.  Paul Twitchell also speaks of this place in his book Stranger by the River:
         “If you know that death is only an illusion, then there is little need for thee to have cause for fear.  Truth sustains you and this clay temple is dissolved when the physical body wears out; but Soul, which owes its origin, life and growth to God, will remain forever in the highest Mansion of the Lord.
         “God is a boundless ocean of spirit and love, and man being a drop from this ocean, it follows that he can never die and will always be as the fish in the river, forever swimming in the ocean of God’s mercy and love” (125).
         I cannot close this account without mentioning one of Kathleen’s favorite aphorisms that she was so fond of repeating:  
         “There is no shame, blame, fame, or sin in the pursuit of truth.”
         And her ultimate piece of advice:
         “Say that everything will be all right.”
 
Date Submitted:
1/2/04
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Copyright © The Spiritual Traveler, 2001