This evening in
December is quiet, and the hills and fields are shaded in the sky’s pastel
colors. Light has traveled beyond the earth’s edge and shadows will soon darken
and lengthen into night. Nature begins to settle down into the blues and grays
of winter.
I stand on my deck
and listen to the woods — the creaking of the trees in the light wind, the light
clack of empty black sunflower shells landing on each other, dropped by wrens
and finches at the feeder. My thoughts move among the trees as I halfway watch
the squirrels chase each other. Dusk fills the woods with shadows and I open to
the mystery of what is here.
The mystery of what is here. This is what I
need to feel again. The presence of the Eternal, the Power of nature, the beauty of this landscape. I
need to lose myself in this again.
If this quietness should
bring back a forgotten memory, an unresolved feeling, or an insight into
something that once seemed impenetrable, I would dwell on it. But I don’t need
anything to happen. The presence I feel standing here listening to nature is
enough.
The silence of the
woods with its blue shadows, the appearance of the sparkling stars overhead,
the slow journey of the earth through the dark, silent cosmos, remind me of
Sigurd Olson and the words he wrote from his listening point on the shore of
Lake Superior:
The
movement of a canoe is like a reed in the wind. Silence is part of it, and the
sounds of lapping water, bird songs, and wind in the trees. It is part of the
medium through which it floats, the sky, the water, the shore.
Last week, people walked
the streets of my neighborhood caroling of joy. Houses were full of revelers,
and lights glowed from every decorated window. When holiday parties became overheated,
people wandered outside to cool down. They listened to the woods quietly
celebrating winter, and felt hope in something unseen.
I love this quiet celebration of the earth, dark skies, and the Divine Presence found in silence. Best when I give up the fight with my jumping bean mind, breathe, and let nature fill me with patience and quiet. We're had a run of sunny days, but now a big snow is expected. I don't mind. I'm used to solitude and grateful for it (most of the time).
ReplyDeleteSilence is so hard to find this month with the increase in activities and people wanting to get together. But it's this silence that we long for. Thank you, Elaine.
Delete