Diary of an Elf is a reoccurring feature here on AliceAlways.com. Alice shares her story as her elf-self.
It was one of those crisp winter mornings when I finally left the closet of Elf Cabin Number 9 at Santa’s Magical Realm at the North Pole.
It seems that the other elves at the cabin had left to go on holiday and taken whatever blocked the closet door. I assume it was luggage, as all the bags that are usually stored under the beds were gone.
My recent rereading the novels of Tolkien filled my head. My life in what we call The Real World had its challenges.
At this moment, I really identify with Frodo in The Lord of the Rings. Frodo is the Ring-bearer who must journey to the darkest depths of Mordor and throw the Ring of Sauron into Mount Doom.
As I am writing this, the Led Zeppelin song, Ramble On is playing in my head. The exact lyric I hear is:
‘T was in the darkest depths of Mordor
I met a girl so fair
But Gollum, and the evil one
crept up and slipped away with her
I am dealing with my own burden which is my own thinking process. Sometimes I feel that I am in the darkest place imaginable. Recently I totaled my car in an accident and contemplated suicide.
My life has been a struggle and I am still working on releasing limiting beliefs that plague my conscious and unconscious thoughts.
I am a work in progress. I will get through this and not succumb to the darkness.
In The Lord of the Rings, many are tempted by Sauron’s Ring, especially the Ring-bearers. On one level, the Ring represents the thing we hold onto even if it is causing us undo suffering. It is a tangible object in J.R.R. Tolkien’s books, but deep down inside it is a thought, either conscious or unconscious.
For some, letting go is easy. For others, the repetition of unwanted thoughts can play like a broken record in our heads.
But as the elf queen Galadriel said to Frodo, even the smallest person can change the course of the future.
We are not our burdens, we are not our doubts.
We must all rise above what holds us in a dark place by releasing whatever is causing our suffering.
To do that, we must believe that we are able to get through whatever challenge we are going through.
Frodo is the unlikely hero, a small hobbit with an enormous task. He volunteers to take the ring by saying, “I will do it, though I do not know the way.”
He doesn’t follow a map, instead, he is guided by circumstances. He perseveres because he trusts that he will get there.
It is Frodo’s faith that gets him to Mount Doom. He knows what he has to do and he keeps moving in the necessary direction until he accomplishes his goal.
We all can do the impossible.
We just need to have faith that we can do it.
Always,
Alice Always the Elf