| Welcome
Hey All
We're getting hard frosts now.
In the morning, the ground and my garden are icy white. When the sun finally
makes it up above the tree tops, leaves fall in torrents as the heat hits
those ice-cold branches and the trees lose their grip on the summer canopy.
We can all attract into our
lives whatever it is we want easily and naturally by noticing the simple
daily events of our life. Especially if they are related to nature in some
way. There's a grain of something precious in every moment.
My intention in this newsletter,
if anything, is just to present the musings of a wandering woman.
Take what works for you. Discard what does not. I won't mind a bit.
"Time is like a handful of
sand - the tighter you grasp it, the faster it runs through your fingers"
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The
Sands of Time
These days, there is not much
space outside of the time I spend with my mother. So I have found when
I do not hand over my writing to others, what I am compelled to write about
becomes an extension of my conversations and reflections with Mom. The
two of us are spending a lot of time looking back. That's where she's most
comfortable. The farther back we go, the better her memory. Ask her about
an event or person in her childhood and you'll get minute details. Ask
her what she had for lunch the minute she finished the last morsel, and
you'll get a shrug.
Mom grew up on the Atlantic
Ocean just outside of Boston, Massachusetts. Her summers were spent with
family on Cape Cod. Her only move was to Michigan and the shores of a much
smaller body of water but still huge in its own right, Lake Michigan. This
is where Mom has spent the last 68 years of her life and where I grew up.
The other day we talked about
spending so much of one's life on or near a beach. There are many wonderful
and interesting things about beach life. Watching wildlife, digging clams,
and flying kites have been some of our favorites. But in our conversation,
Mom seemed to want to focus on sand. We agreed that our beach days will
always be a part of us and will forever be most defined by sand. Oh, such
a tiny thing for such a long life!
We've concluded that our hair,
toes, belly buttons and many other unmentionable crevices will always contain
at least a few grains of sand. A total cleaning is not possible. We'll
both die with sand in some crack. Likewise, we'll forever have sand in
our bed.
We are still astounded at how
possessions can get lost for a long, long time as the sand shifts and inches
forward and backward with the wind and the waves. And that often, with
that same shifting, the treasures are unearthed and things long lost return.
I remember that vividly with a stuffed toy cat that disappeared for a good
three months, only to return with no more damage than need of a good washing.
We agreed that sleeping on
the sand makes the best nap. Long after the day has cooled, that patch
of sand is still quite warm having absorbed the sun all day. Warm sand,
properly piled and molded, will allow for rest so deep you'll drool in
your sleep and wake with sand plastered to the side of your face.
We sighed as we remembered
the experience of standing at the water's edge and wiggling our feet in
the sand. Better than any foot massage we've ever had, our feet emerged
baby fresh and buffed.
I serve up this reflection
about sand as an opportunity for you to remember the environment that forever
defines you. What simple geography has played a big role in defining who
you are today? Prairie grasses, a cool and quite pine forest, rocks, an
orchard, a pasture? Search for that place in your own life journey. Your
eternity is as simple as a grain of sand. I’d love to hear your reflections
as you discover your own sands of time.
“To see a world in a
grain of sand
And Heaven in a wild flower
Hold infinity in the palm
of you hand
And eternity in an hour.”
Auguries of Innocence ~William
Blake
“They dined on mince and slices
of quince,
Which they ate with a runcible
spoon;
And hand in hand, on the edge
of the sand,
They danced by the light of
the moon.”
~Edward Lear
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Peace and much love
Deb
The Fine Print
A Note About My Recommendations
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