Bua Beltane Boy - Tending a May Birth-Death-Day
The May Day bank holiday weekend has, for the last sixteen years, been a bittersweet time of year. When the summer is bursting through in all its fine greenery, and traditional May Day festival rites welcome in the luscious fertility of this time, I am keeping a great lament, for this is the time that I gave birth to death instead of new life. My son Vincent was stillborn on Monday 2 May 2006.
As a death doula, I’ve been making time for my personal grief tending, besides enjoying the new life abound in our beautiful green South Downs. I made a pilgrimage up to my sacred, healing hill, which has been a place of recovery for me down the years, and a place where my own magical practice has flourished and deepened.
After an early morning visit to the old chalk pit hawthorn tree, which is in a relationship with an ivy deeply entwined around its trunk and branches, I climbed the steep hill to the Bronze Age burial mound where I undertook my overnight Utiseta in 2020. There I spent time in contemplation and ceremony, in relationship with my Scottish ancestors who celebrated Beltane with fires and rituals on the hill tops around Birse in Aberdeenshire. I travelled to Ireland to dance with my ancestors there, and then all my Sussex ancestors joined us whose lands I looked out across from my elevated position.
Most of all, I spent time with my son. Imagining how he might be now at sixteen. When someone dies, our relationship lives on, very much alive, if we let it. It can be a very rich,rewarding relationship in ‘spirit’, and the communication continues. I’ve also found that reading to the dead is a great act of love and grief tending. So I spent time reading aloud to my son, and in doing so he responded. Reading to him followed by deep listening, writing and song, allows me to cultivate a sense of knowing this child who I felt grow and move inside me. His birth changed my life, just as a child changes any parents life.
Reading to the dead is a practice I want to develop further, as part of my offering as a death doula.
Today, I am so grateful, for although I shall always carry a great grief at the physical absence of my son (I have no other living children), I feel blessed to be able to walk, talk and grow with him, as we both grow in spirit.
His words to me for his sixteenth birthday were these, after reading some tales from the Over the Nine Waves, A book of Irish legends by Marie Heaney.
Bua Beltane Boy
Mother do not weep for me
as we climb this hill together
For the sun god shines upon us
the fires are lit and the cattle freed
from disease for another year.
The soil is blessed
and bluebells carpet
the forest where I sleep
after a night of May Day merry making
with my sweet, sweet love.
She is fair, as bonny and blue eyed
as the Straits of Moyle
on a calm day
when the swan songs of Lir
blow ashore.
Mother, do not weep for me
for today I am sixteen summers,
fast becoming a man
the grandfathers remind me
that you became a woman at sixteen
when, banished from the castle,
you took your sword and planted it
with an Irishman at your side.
There began the great betrayal.
But Mother it is over now
the battles you fought,
and for me,
the longest, hardest battle lost,
though the ancestors tell me
I had tried to enter your middle world too soon
I was not ready,
so, they called me back
for another lifetime of learning
for they had much to teach you through me,
from this side of the veil.
I know now how to raid cattle
to ride my horse faster than the wind
to make a leather heron bag
to carry my magic as I leap
from stone mountain to stone mountain
to stand on the Cliffs of Moher
for to dive and cartwheel with red-legged choughs
as my black wings spread strong and firm.
For I am dochloite and you named me
Uinseann.
As I navigate the nine waves
to stand on the shores of Ireland
know that, as Amergin before me:
"I am the wind on the sea
I am the wave of the ocean
I am a powerful bull
I am an eagle on the rock
I am the brightness of the sun
I am a fierce wild boar
I am a salmon in the pool
I am the wisdom of art
I am the spear, sharp in battle
I am the god that puts fire in the brain"
Mother, know that I am also underground
in the sidhes and the cairns
in the world of beauty imperishable
in this Land of the Ever Young
although I age, it is not within earthly time,
in this place with the grandmothers and the grandfathers,
on your mother's and father's,
on my father's mother's side.
Mother, be gentle on my father,
forgive him,
for his faraway grief for me
is locked away in his salmon bag
locked away in the ghetto
where the Mermaid of Warsaw
is calling forth another cycle,
one which is also my birthright,
that too you would be telling me,
so why not tell it now,
why not unlock the stories
from my father's leather satchel
in all their complexity,
I wish to hear you sing them.
So, Mother, lament no more
for I am your bonny, bua Beltane Boy.
Uinseann
Uinseann
Uinseann