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THE WILLOW TREE OVERTURE, a fairy tale for enlightenment
Lanterns light a path where the crone gathers what she needs to brew a tea that shimmers. Take three sips, recite a love poem, and offer the crone a kiss. Come, sit by the blazing fire. The crone is ready to tell the tale of long-lost bliss. Listen.
Itâs up to you to find what meaning you will.
It came to pass one late summerâs day that a princess grew tired of being in a long, deep sleep and escaped a castle tower.Â
Taking an unknown road, she came upon a faraway forest village. She was exhausted from traveling and decided to stay for a while. This, despite the fact that the people who lived in this faraway forest village could only offer the princess a crude hut made of branch and not stone.
Come morning of the autumn equinox, a crispy wind blew across the land to swirl and settle over a patch of nearby willow trees on a lake. The spirits of the women within the trees wakened. They stepped free of root and limb and leaf. The weight of flesh came upon themâmostlyâand they walked, their nearly boneless arms blowing in the wind, up to the village to give their kissing blessings upon it.
The princess was in a foul mood that fateful morning, for torrents of rain the day before had made a muddy mess of the village. She stood at a well drawing up a bucket of water when she caught sight of the willow women.
Her eyes grew as big as those of any wolf. Quick as a hare she scampered to hide in her hut. Peeking through a crack in the half-rotted wood of the door, she shuddered at the impossible. For she had no idea such a thing could exist:
Willowy women, with strange arched backs, whose supple arms billowed in the wind!Â
The princess drew back just as a willow womanâs kiss was set upon her hutâs door.
For the rest of the day, the princess found herself in bliss. Every single thing she laid eyes upon was sheer beautyâbe it the splash of chrysanthemum color, a spiderâs knotted silk net, or mud upon her skirts. All of it seemed as impossible, as wondrous, as a tree woman with waterfall arms.
Every breath the princess took was deep and fresh and new. Never had she felt so alive.
Right then and there, the princess fell in love with being in bliss. And the mystery of the willow women who knew how to give a kiss.
It so happened that the very next morning the bliss was gone and everything was ordinary again for the princess. Worse, she was found by a royal scout and whisked back to the castle. The king had died in her absence. She was crowned queen and now could not leave. She had responsibilities.
As she performed tiresome duties of decreeing whatnot, all the queen could think of was her blissed-out day bestowed upon her by the mysterious willow women. Nothing at all about the castle or crown interested her in comparison.
âIf only I could shirk the burden of this crown and return to the willows,â she complained to the moon as it waxed and waned. She was so desperate over it all that one bitter winterâs night, the moon spoke back:
Â
Bliss
must be courted, now, by you.  Â
Her name is Mysteryâ
and she must be wooed.
Â
âThis is beyond me to do,â the queen said after thinking it over. She wasnât one for romance. âIs there another way thatâs tried and true?â
But the moon in its glowing white wisdom refused to say another word.
It wasnât long until the queen developed quite the reputation. She sulked despite her bejeweled gowns and only ever wanted to talk about being kissed by willow trees. Time and again she sneaked out a castle window to run away to the faraway forest village and the willow women, but she never got far before she was caught and returned to the throne.
âThis is a horrible, boring place to be,â shouted the queen from where she sat above them all. âWhat I really, really want is the kiss of Mystery!â
Her advisors gathered together to confer about the state of their queen. âIf we satisfy her with Mystery, perhaps she will behave better,â they agreed.
A wise woman, a crone, was fetched. She wore purple flowers in her hair.
âDo something about the queen and her desire for Mystery, please,â the advisors beseeched the crone. They shoved her into the throne room, then slammed and locked the door.
The queen perked up. She recognized that before her stood a crone. âTell me,â the queen wheedled, âdo you know the secret of courting Mystery? The moon told me that to be in bliss, I must woo Mystery. The problem is that I find romance ridiculous, so I need help with this.â
The crone tittered. âYou donât know how to be in love with the world? Is this true? How very sad.â
âI wouldnât say that,â the queen said, both ashamed and confused. She fiddled with her crown. âLook. Can you help me or not?â
The crone wished aloud for a breath of fresh winter’s air. As it happened, the queen had a secret door her latest batch of advisors knew nothing about. Soon the crone and queen were strolling the castle gardens, which were not pretty.
âWhy are the gardens neglected?â the crone asked.
âI donât know,â the queen answered, noticing the trampled winter flowers and vines of thorns. She rubbed her cold arms. âI donât give attention to such things.â
âAh. Now we know the problem! My queen, perhaps you donât realize, but youâre in a deep sleep. You need to wake.â
The queen shook her head. âNo, that was before. Itâs why I escaped the castle tower in the first place. Should I run away again?â She clasped her hands and got excited. âWill you help me to escape back to the faraway forest village with the magical willow women?â
âNo. Tell me exactly what the moon said to you instead,â instructed the crone.
The queen deflated. She quoted the moon.
Â
Bliss
must be courted, now, by you.  Â
Her name is Mysteryâ
and she must be wooed.
Â
âWell, there you go,â the crone said. As if all was solved.
The queen blinked. She had the distinct feeling she was missing something. âHelp?â she ventured, flushing pink.
âOpen your eyes, my queen,â the crone invited. Her eyes and voice grew sharp as the biting winter wind. âStop twiddling that crown and pay attention! Any lover desires only to be SEEN in an everlasting way. Should Mystery be different? Youâve been waiting for bliss to appear as it did once before. But the next step in this dance belongs to you. Here. Now. What will you do?â Â Â
The queen looked about herself. All she saw was a weedy garden, a gray winter sky clotted with clouds…and a crone with the most beautiful purple flowers in her hair.
Something within the queen shifted. It yawned and stirred.
âOpen your eyes and see, my queen,â the crone crooned. âOpen your eyes and see what has always and already been here, waiting for you to take notice.â And when the queen wasnât looking, the crone blew a helpful kiss.
âBut I donât understandâŚâ the queenâs voice trailed away. A sudden warm, fragrant something passed through her body. She felt her limbs melt. She breathed in and r e l a x e d.
And looked about herself again.
Mystery.
Mystery was everywhere she could see. Equally, in each and every thing, spread out for her to see and yet hardly believe…
A vine that somehow knew how to grow thorns. A crushed flower that bled the exact same color as wine. Pin-leaves beaded with ice. A sky that was covered by clouds and didnât mind.
âItâs happened again,â the queen whispered through her tears. She gasped in surprise. âIt was so easy! I can’t believe it. I only ever had to look and truly see!â
The crone with purple flowers in her hair winked and went on home. The advisors found their queen serene and vibrant with bliss. How relieved they were that she made no more escape attempts after this. Of course not. There was no need whatsoever.
Mystery was as much here as there and everywhere.
From that day on, the queen of bliss courted and wooed Mystery in this way:
By noticing. By paying attention. By appreciating with eyes of wonder. After all, that anything could actually exist is a thrilling and impossible bliss. Is it not?
Are you awake?
Another surprise was yet to come. One day, Mystery made the next and climactic moveâ
And married the queen, making her One, which means wholly real and true.
As a divine wedding gift, a willow tree grew overnight outside the queenâs tower. The branches lifted toward heaven only to arch and reach back down for the earth, in love. Wind blew, and limbs brushed the ground with leafy kisses of bliss that could be felt for an entire day by anyone who walked there.
Mystery always makes the first move.
If you enjoyed this willowy love tale of mystery and wonder and want more, I hope you subscribe to CRONE TALES. đ
Featured image of hut by Florian Kurz–don’t you just love it?!
Image of tree woman by Stefan Keller
Image of castle landscape by Johannes Plenio
Image of ice beaded plant by Gabe Rebra
Image of willow fronds by Annie Spratt
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The Tale of the Salt Woman, a fairy tale for enlightenment
Sailors sing of desire and longing for the sea, and the crone takes notice. âThere once was a woman who knew best how to long for the sea,â she says, and sits to tell the tale of an impossible visitor to a tavern long, long ago. Listen.
Itâs up to you to find what meaning you will.
There once was a barmaid who worked in a tavern by the sea so that she could feel a part of the worldâs stories.
Ships made reckless port there in a harbor nestled betwixt misted cliffs and sharp rocks. Sailors regularly spilled onto the pier from exotic lands, but one day a woman arrived at the tavern from nowhere.
She was made of salt and wearing a cloak with a hood. She smiled the most mysterious smile.
âHow did you get a salt body?â asked the fascinated barmaid.
âI do not know how I came to be,â said the salt woman with wondrous accuracy. âBut I am a teller of unknowing tales and will enlighten your patrons in exchange for smoked cod and ale.â
The barkeep and sailors laughed, but the salt womanâs unusual beauty tempted them to listen. As it turned out, they were smitten by her strange stories which always ended in mystery. Sailors soon found themselves helplessly composing bits of poetry on rags and stuffing them into empty mugs for her to find.
âYou are the moon fallen to the sea,â many notes read, for her face was round and bright within her dark and hooded cloak.
The barmaid fell in love with the salt woman as well, but in a deeper sort of way. She noticed the steady, inviting pull of the salt womanâs gaze and, over time, developed an inexplicable and soulful longing. This is when it dawned on the barmaid that she no longer desired the brash knowing which wagged from the tongues of sailors. For the salt woman claimed to know nothing at all for certain, and how much better would it be to understand the look of wonder which incessantly played across that moon of a salt face?
One day a cruel pirate fell in love with the salt woman. He stole her away to his ship and quickly set sail, leaving his crew behind so he could have the salt woman all to himself. It did not go well. For the salt woman spent her days and nights attempting to jump overboard.
She would not be possessed.
This enraged the pirate. âStop it this minute!â he shouted, tying her to the helm with ingenious knots.
Soon thereafter, a great storm battered the ship and washed the pirate overboard to drown. The salt woman prayed the ship would go under as did he. She preferred not to live life tied to a helm, but the ship sailed on upon the heaving sea.
Wind took the creaking ship wherever it liked. One morn the salt woman woke and lifted her moon face to see the harbor from which sheâd been stolen, the one with the tavern. And she marveled at the skill it would require to make safe port.
A commotion did arise. Sailors shouted upon sight of the pirateâs ship with its tattered sails. The barmaid ran for the pier ahead of them all, waving her arms and screaming a warning. But the ship did not turn as it should.
âNo!â the barmaid cried out in anguish.
The salt woman looked back over her shoulder and, with a mysterious smile, lifted a pale hand in farewell as the ship broke apart against the sharp rocks and misted cliffs.Â
The barmaid witnessed the salt woman dissolve into the sea.
This is where the story of the stolen salt woman ends. Do not weep, for she was not lost but forever in wonderâŚat first for how she came to be, and later at her immensity.
The sailors grieved but soon returned to their ale, forgetting the gift of the salt woman.
It was different for the barmaid. She refused to leave the pier. There she gazed at the sea for weeks, contemplating the mystery of it all. This filled the barmaid with a longing she couldnât grasp. She felt overwhelming wonder.
Wonder is timeless and thus has power to summon seemingly impossible things.
Of a sudden, the sea swelled into a towering wave, and sailors wailed to see it coming for their ships at anchor. Yet the barmaid stood immovable upon the pier as the waters soared to crest high above her head.
After the wave had fallen and the sea breathed itself back in, the sailors rushed onto the pier to check on their ships.
There they found the barmaid stripped of her longing and transfigured by salt. Â
Standing tall as a pillar and hearing the sailors gasp behind her, she turned to look over her shoulderâ
With a mysterious smile.
If you’d like to share your thoughts or have comments on this tale, I’d love to hear from you! You may do so below đ
Also, if you enjoyed this salty tale and like to make your own meaning of stories, I hope you subscribe to Crone Tales HERE.
*featured image of pier by David Mark
*image of towering wave by Adam Azim