I am longing for that flair and excitement your posts exude these days. Can you bottle it and sell it? I'd sell both my legs to get rid of this flatness I'm struggling with right now...
Thanks, Erin. You will emerge from this grey cocoon that has sucked you in. Come for tea soon.
Barbara: Yes ... it does help to look for the kisses.
Today when I almost didn't make it up the hill through the sludge, and then pranced around town quite unsuitably dressed in a long skirt that dragged in the puddles of every parking lot and a fleece poncho that had to be held closed against the blasts of wind, all the while carrying multiple bags of groceries, I was finding it much harder to see miracles than it is when I am safely ensconced in my cozy house looking out at winter's beauty.
Welcome to Oma's world: a hermitage set on a pristine lake, nestled in mountains, surrounded by trees and inhabited by Oma, Kenya (her own dog) and the dogs she looks after.
In Oma's world there is time to see, really see, the natural landscape as it changes. When she is not outside with the dogs, Oma reads, writes and watches films. She has also returned to a lost hobby, knitting, tried pottery and felting with very limited success, and produced a great deal of funky furniture over the past year or so. She also teaches occasionally at a local language school.
Since moving to the hermitage she has discovered the secret to raising healthy house plants. They have to love their environment. We all do if we are to lead happy productive lives.
This summer she tried her hand at creating a garden, and has been consumed by it to the exclusion of most other occupations.
... a woman who has been many women and will likely continue to metamorphose right til the end ...
I have been a mother, a grandmother, a writer, a teacher, a traveler, a nomad,a hermit, a dog sitter, and a sporadic folk artist wannabe. Right now I am also a tiny-time-chef and caterer. Who knows where my travels will lead me as I travel down the final stretch of life's road?
4 comments:
I am longing for that flair and excitement your posts exude these days. Can you bottle it and sell it? I'd sell both my legs to get rid of this flatness I'm struggling with right now...
Re finding excitement...remembering that as Einstein said, "Either everything is a miracle or nothing is."
Simply attend.
Or, wait till the sun shines again.
It IS dreary out.
:-)
Thanks, Erin. You will emerge from this grey cocoon that has sucked you in. Come for tea soon.
Barbara: Yes ... it does help to look for the kisses.
Today when I almost didn't make it up the hill through the sludge, and then pranced around town quite unsuitably dressed in a long skirt that dragged in the puddles of every parking lot and a fleece poncho that had to be held closed against the blasts of wind, all the while carrying multiple bags of groceries, I was finding it much harder to see miracles than it is when I am safely ensconced in my cozy house looking out at winter's beauty.
Who said, "Experience is what we get when we don't get want we want?"
A skirt? You must be mad.
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