John Darling: The mystery of the journeyless journey

Labyrinth walkers in a photo posted on John Darling's Facebook page in 2014.
December 31, 2023

Remembrance of labyrinths past — and yet to come

By John Darling

We take the kids to the labyrinth at Unitarian — been doing it for years. They have, I’m sure, many mysterious memories of people walking the winding path in the shadowed, candle-lit darkness, while someone plays the drum, rattles, piano or some strange, stringed instrument, as it moves them.

People are hushed, walking and sitting on the side of the room, thinking, pondering, contemplating. It’s this one good time of the year to do that, although the new solar year is already started. They do it here in the final four days of the calendar year and the first day of the new year.

John Darling

What’s amazing is that people know what to do. There is no instruction, just an invitation from the ancient labyrinth, to walk to the center. It’s absolutely fascinating, seeing what people do with this, a sacred space, just handed to them, free, open for many hours each night to make as sacred as they want to make it.

When I enter the room, I always feel such an immense sense of relief. Here, at last is a quiet and unmistakably sacred space, a chamber where no one can reach you on the phone, where no one can even strike up a conversation with you, not a long one anyway. They do look at you, though. Right in the eyes. And they smile. Not a big smile. More like a knowing smile, as if to say, can you believe the beauty of this place — not that any “thing” about it is beautiful. It’s not. It’s just a room, with a cloth labyrinth on the floor.

I always marvel at the how of things like this. People write long books and develop arduous seminars all hoping to get you to this place. They usually succeed, but it seems like a big investment in our Protestant-Victorian-Western belief that nothing is gained without much suffering and labor. So, how does this labyrinth do it?

It’s not the building. It’s not the religion normally practiced there. It’s no wise scripture therein. It seems a combination — the time of year (darkest hours, longest nights), the arduousness, mostly unconscious, of treading through these long days of dampness and little light and then the labyrinth itself: a mystery, a puzzle, a quandary, an unanswered question, a center to hold the answer to that question, if…if…if.

If it’s time for you to open your eyes to the answer to that question. If your heart has been hurt enough that it finally can let go, give up, surrender, not care if it’s losing the game, failing the quest — and you just open soul to universe and let them breathe on each other and finally kiss. And then wisdom, that understanding you’ve needed for so long, just passes between them and you mark off your steps out of the labyrinth.

That’s what it’s for. It the goalless goal, the questionless answer, the meaningless meaning, the journey without destination, the act of being present without understanding.

The labyrinth affirms this right off by taking you straightaway nearly to the center, the goal, then diverts you away to these winding, Byzantine switchbacks to nowhere, which serve the purpose of frustrating the mind and ego and all its sense of right-wrong, good-bad, success-failure — and it’s oh-so-dear need for control.

The mind is often petulant, wanting answers, thinking it has posed a good, wise question, which it will get answered and soon. But the more it clings to that, the more it comes up empty-handed — and tries to pronounce the labyrinth a childish waste of time.

But like all riddles, mazes, myths, koans, it’s meant to be a model of the mystery of life and death itself. Why are we born these delightful, enlightened joyous beings, only destined to many heartbreaks and frustrations (along with the other), then decline into the death of everything we’ve ever thought, done or been?

We don’t know, can’t know, though the religions salve us with promises of better places, provided we find the answer they’ve found. What the labyrinth salves us with is the beauty of living in the mystery, but not knowing the answers.

We used to be happy with that, back before civilization, you can feel it. We know how to walk this labyrinth. We know how to “drop down” into it and let it happen to us. We used to walk the earth this way. Once we were content in its mystery, which we could only witness, deeply feel, occasionally celebrate and know we were so much a part of it that it simply could not be spoken without separating us from it.

Which is where literacy, religion, beliefs and urban life have taken us. Ah, but the labyrinth, just in the past decade, has come back into our lives, a representation of “other,” which reminds us that the other still lives in us, in our cells and in the strange familiarity of the unfamiliar. Indeed, finally, what it teaches us is that it’s all familiar to us and there is no “other.”

Related story: Winding down: Labyrinth walk founder announces this year’s 25th annual New Year’s will be her last leading the walk

John Darling lived in Ashland from 1971 until he died at age 77 in January 2021. A US Marine Corps journalist, he went on to write for the Oregonian, Mail Tribune, Daily Tidings, and United Press International, among others, along with stints as a news anchor at KOBI, executive assistant to the Oregon Senate President and press secretary of campaigns for Oregon governor and U.S. Senate. Ashland.news is, with permission, publishing excerpts from his collection “The Divine Addiction: Essays Out of Oregon.”

Picture of Bert Etling

Bert Etling

Bert Etling is the executive editor of Ashland.news. Email him at [email protected].

Related Posts...

John Darling: A field of burning SUVs

John Darling: It’s getting warmer all over the world and it’s because of us. We’ve established that as fact now, but we’ve never warmed the globe before and we don’t know what it means. It’s human nature to plunge onward and find out, so we are.

Read More »

Our Sponsors

Siskiyou School's Winter Faire Festival and Holiday Market Ashland Oregon
Ashland Food Project Building Community Ashland Oregon
Ashland Climate Collaborative Sreets for Everyone Ashland Oregon

Latest posts

Requiring voter approval of new fees up for council discussion Monday, 210-unit apartment complex due for council action Tuesday

The Ashland City Council will again consider approval of the 210-unit Grand Terrace apartment complex off Highway 99 at the northwest city limit during its Tuesday, Nov. 4, business meeting. The council will also continue a discussion about a potential ballot measure that would require voter approval for new city taxes and fees during its Monday, Nov. 3, study session.

Read More >

Letter: Fund SNAP, not forced starvation in Gaza

John Marciano and Leslie Dwyer: There will be less money to pay for food programs here and across the country. This is an inhumane treatment of struggling families. At the same time, the U.S. has spent billions supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

Read More >

The mystery of the missing bee last seen on Mt. Ashland

It’s been nearly two decades since there was a confirmed sighting of the Franklin bumble bee, a bee native to the area around Mount Ashland. While the bee may still be alive, new research published last month gives sheds light on why the population declined so rapidly. The answer stretches back 100,000 years.

Read More >

Crossword: Fun(d)raising #02

This week’s theme: some fun fund puns. Solve it in your browser or download and print. Next Friday’s crossword: CrosspOLLInation 2026 Winter #01. Readers: take advantage of a matching gift opportunity to support Ashland.news. Organizations: sponsorship of crossword pages is still available. Ask about having your name appear in a future crossword!

Read More >

Our Sponsors

Conscious Design Build Ashland Oregon
Ashland Community Composting Ashland Oregon
Pronto Printing Ashland Medford Southern Oregon
City of Ashland Public Notice Ashland Oregon

Explore More...

As of Saturday, Nov. 1, Ashland resident Aubrie Grace Wilson will be among 15,980 people in Jackson County who won’t see their monthly allotment of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits, according to Oregon Department of Human Services. 
The Ashland City Council will again consider approval of the 210-unit Grand Terrace apartment complex off Highway 99 at the northwest city limit during its Tuesday, Nov. 4, business meeting. The council will also continue a discussion about a potential ballot measure that would require voter approval for new city taxes and fees during its Monday, Nov. 3, study session.
John Marciano and Leslie Dwyer: There will be less money to pay for food programs here and across the country. This is an inhumane treatment of struggling families. At the same time, the U.S. has spent billions supporting Israel’s genocide in Gaza.
It's been nearly two decades since there was a confirmed sighting of the Franklin bumble bee, a bee native to the area around Mount Ashland. While the bee may still be alive, new research published last month gives sheds light on why the population declined so rapidly. The answer stretches back 100,000 years.
An Ashland artist behind notable public art exhibits such as the Say Their Names memorial plaque and the planned Crystallizing Our Call will have a new exhibit at the upcoming November First Friday event in Ashland.

Don't Miss Our Top Stories

Get our newsletter delivered to your inbox three times a week.
It’s FREE and you can cancel anytime.

ashland.news logo

Subscribe to the newsletter and get local news sent directly to your inbox.

(It’s free)