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04-01-2007, 04:17 AM | #1 | |||
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Hi...me again
but I just had to share this with you. No...it`s not wildly intellectual.Neither is it informative in the sense that I am able to bring you the latest news on a government bill,or the most recent update on scientific research.I will leave such incredibly useful postings to those of you who have the cerebral capacity and awesome patience to research such things. My offering is somewhat simple by comparison...but despite my recent burst of humour ,I have in fact just come through an extremely difficult week,both physically and mentally.I have experienced the physical exhaustion of three consecutive nights without sleep,owing to two poorly children,and a good dose of emotional misery to add to my load. Consequently,on Saturday,I slept until way past 1.00pm,my two sisters beside themselves because they couldn`t wake me...and two missed doses of medication in the process. However...I was encouraged to go for a stroll with my sister,the children and my two humungous dogs and believe me..it was the last thing I wanted to do.I couldn`t even contemplate the thought of dressing.But...insistence prevailed and off I went,lucky to live close to several tiny woods. Oh how glad I did. On entering the wood,it was as if I had stepped into another world. Shaded by leafy canopies,we trod over moss covered ground,the aroma released with each footstep...and surrounding us on all sides,the beginnings of new growth...wild honeysuckle throwing out its tendrils and festooning the trees with garlands of green.Underneath,a carpet of peat and new grass,peppered with the white flowers of wood anemone. I was like a child,expressing delight at each new cluster of beautiful flowers.Then I spotted the tiniest wild violet.Absolutely perfect and flawless...then some more...and even more. As our journey progressed,my mood increased for the better,my energy recharged and my spirit became renewed.This clearly was medicine for the soul and I forgot the trauma of the week that had just passed. How easy it is to ignore the treasures on our doorstep,and disregard the beauty of that which is offered for free. I almost wished I could remain there,amongst those simple gifts of nature. On emerging,I felt so uplifted and ready to tackle what was left of the day...the images of those beautiful flowers in my mind...The calm and tranquility had magically transferred to me that day.Absolutely nothing...was able to take away that glorious feeling that a simple woodland walk had given me.What a gift.I am still hypnotised by it. x |
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04-01-2007, 07:57 AM | #2 | ||
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This reminds me of the poem by Robert Browning:Oh to be in England......Having said this beauty can be found in lots of places if you look.Thank you Steff for reminding us of how beautiful the world can be.Your piece brought back many memories to my minds eye.I am luckier than most as we live in a particulaly beautiful part of Devon,England and you also reminded me not to take it for granted.
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04-01-2007, 05:47 PM | #3 | |||
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there are times when the weight of the world and all of it's problems overwelm me. i get so caught up in the things that i cannot change that i loose sight of the things that i can change. your beautiful post about stopping to smell the roses and to concentrate on the here and now came at a time when i was starting to freak out; thinking that i had bitten off more than i could chew. i took your advice, took a deep breathe and let the springtime weather chase all of my worries away at a friend's lake and A-frame. it was soooo peaceful, w/o a phone. and you are so right, i came home that evening, refreshed, refocused, recommitted and renewed. i can bear almost anything, but sleep deprivation is a killer. thanks for sharing your story!
__________________
Joan Blessington Snyder 55/17 . . "Hang tough...no way through it but to do it." Chris in the Morning Northern Exposure |
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04-02-2007, 02:36 AM | #4 | |||
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Sorry you had a bad week, Steffi, but Nature is always there to calm and soothe us. Some time ago I read a study on the recovery rates of hospital patients, and it turns out that those patients who can see trees from their hospital beds recover twice as fast as those who only see walls, or buildings. That should give us a hint, shouldn't it?
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04-02-2007, 03:44 AM | #5 | |||
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Hope I`ve spelt your name correctly.I can believe that.Some parts of my country are just strewn with blocks of high rise flats.Each time I gaze at these concrete monstrosities I wonder about the folk who live there and how they manage to see greenery.I feel so very sad for them...but not in a condescending way.They are maybe very happy living there....but it always makes me count my blessings that each way I look there are trees,and fields and meadows.Some folk move to the countryside and then moan about the cockerels crowing at an unearthly hour,or the smells from the pigfarm???? uh? What is THAT all about.Guess there`s no pleasing some people.I`m quite happy to stride about in wellies and sniff the cowdung [I do n`t mean I get my face down to it !!!!] At least it proves PD hasn`t taken my olfactory senses yet..lol Hope you are keeping well.Lovely to hear from you.
x |
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04-02-2007, 03:51 PM | #6 | ||
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Steffi:
There is even beauty in bare November days. Lloyd My November Guest My Sorrow, when she’s here with me, Thinks these dark days of autumn rain Are beautiful as days can be; She loves the bare, the withered tree; She walks the sodden pasture lane. Her pleasure will not let me stay. She talks and I am fain to list: She’s glad the birds are gone away, She’s glad her simple worsted gray Is silver now with clinging mist. The desolate, deserted trees, The faded earth, the heavy sky, The beauties she so truly sees, She thinks I have no eye for these, And vexes me for reason why. Not yesterday I learned to know The love of bare November days Before the coming of the snow, But it were vain to tell her so, And they are better for her praise Robert Frost (1874–1963). A Boy’s Will. 1915 |
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