Monday, October 15, 2018
Magic and Misery
Michael has come and gone. Everything is "back to normal." The debris that he left in the yard has been cleared and piled next to the street. The generator packed away in its storage shed, power having been restored to the neighborhood. The bird feeders are reattached to their poles, and garden beds inspected for damage to the freshly planted baby vegetables.
A few nights earlier, sleep having eluded me at 3 am in the morning, I stepped outside and sat down on my front porch. In the stillness of the night, I could feel the pulse of my neighborhood slowing down, allowing me also to slow down from all the stress and worrying about the storm. The sky was awash with stars, their magic permeating my being. with the lights of the neighborhood now off. A myriad of emotions enveloped me, from gratitude for all the blessing I have in my life, sadness for the misery of those who bore the brunt of Michael; and anger over the fact that my daughter and her future children will inherit a world where more intense future storms and other natural disasters will become the norm.
Back to normal. I'm not sure I want to go back to normal if it means continuing on our current path of ever increasing environmental degradation and the acceptance of policies and actions that contribute to earth's destruction. Will Michael and all the other future named storms not teach us the folly of our present path? What will it take to acknowledge that we need to change our ways? How many more Michaels will it take for us to learn our lesson?
Back to normal. For me, it means going back to the stars.
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Simply Living
I woke up early this morning to the exquisite smell of freshly laundered sheets, the sun rays softly peeking through the bedroom window shades, hearing the the song of birds breaking through the silence of the early morning, listening to the rhythmic breathing pattern of a person I've been with for 34 years. I felt the luxury of being able to just lie there and curl up deeper into the sheets and let all the these comforting sensations wash over me.
Lately, I've been pondering the meaning of what it means to live simply on this planet. I've come to think that it means more than just making choices and living a lifestyle that minimizes our ecological footprint on the earth, I think living simply also means staying very present and feeling the beauty of our common everyday actions: the satisfaction of decluttering a closet, refolding and reusing paper bags, noticing the movements of birds in the yard, baking cookies, reading a good book. I know I'm not saying anything particularly new or profound here. I guess it's really just the old Zen way of living. But it feels so nice to have figured out for myself the secret of living simply: simply live.
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