Tag: life

  • A Meeting Place for the Sun

    It is one mile from my front porch steps to the giant oak tree, just past the cemetery gate. It’s a good walk for talking, for watching out for bumps in the sidewalk, and for noticing details. Chris and I choose things we like; hanging ferns, stained glass around door frames, etched windows, red geraniums. We look for painted shutters, unique mailboxes, bird feeders that fend off squirrels, squirrel feeders. The day after Halloween we found the sidewalks littered with candy that never made it into pillow cases. We count how many cats we pass and politely explain to the ones that want to follow us that we are not taking any new pets at the moment, and encourage them to go on home. Most walks we take together are after dinner, and since we turned our clocks back an hour, we have to eat pretty early to catch the sunset at the cemetery. Chris’s watch alerts us that we’ve gone a mile, and just as we meet the base of the tallest oak, we get a moment with the sun. This ephemeral echo reminds us the feeling of happiness, which is a fleeting feeling we must acknowledge. Moments that bring us contentment are mysterious, it’s hard to pin down those times when we are really smiling. They can’t always be called upon, planned, or choreographed into the day, they just appear, and we must recognize when the universe drops a rose at our feet. Roses last a short while, their petals let go and shrivel. Even the glow of lightning bugs can’t be contained in jelly jars forever. Sometimes reaching just pushes something further away; all you can do is pay attention, and accept that every once in a while, pleasure flutters by.

     “The serene philosophy of the pink rose is steadying. Its fragrant, delicate petals open fully and are ready to fall, without regret or disillusion, after only a day in the sun.-Rachel Peden

     If we get to the cemetery late, we get out our cameras and try to capture as best we can our experience. It’s too bad our minds don’t work as well as our eyes, if only we could retrieve mental images with such detail and luster; a camera can give eternity to a moment. We try different angles, turn around, and see the setting hues change in an instant. On this particular night, you could have stood still and watched the world turn. I am in awe of the mighty fireball in the sky, the one that sustains our lives at a perfect distance, which happens to be 93 million miles. Its light finds us in our beds early, it peeks into our homes and gives the furry friends a square on the floor to bask in.

    Of course we walk with care as we weave our way towards the oldest part of the cemetery, graves there date all the way back to the 1840s. It is humbling to notice how short lives were before modern medicine and scientific knowledge. However, I do believe people before us had more resilience, or what is called “grit.” We chase over the Moores, the Smiths, the Kincaids, and the Pritchards to get the best views, we can see the water tower from the edge of the hillside. As we walk the mile back home at dusk we are silent, no need to disrupt what our senses are savoring.

     On adventurous mornings, I crawl out from beneath warm quilts to greet the sun in the same place we parted in the evenings. One mile to the base of the tallest oak, and well, hello sunshine. As the sun lifts heavy fog, it gives the dead place life. Headstones seem joyful to be warmed after a cold night, and the long shadows are whimsical.  I must offer a nod of respect to those deceased; their memorials individually are mournful, but the collection of them all against rolling hills gives us beauty after death. If one day my own headstone sits still against the sun as it rises or sets, I sure hope someone walking by remembers me. There is no more peaceful a place to greet the sun by morning or to tuck it in at night than in the presence of resting souls and white tailed deer.

    On the hardest days we have, it’s comforting to know the sun will eventually bring with it better days. If we remember to trust in its ancient wisdom, we can be reminded that a bright day can come up short for those that have not endured the dark ones. Remember the light that is waiting for you at the end of your dark tunnel, and cherish your days best you can before you take your final rest  by the oak in the stillness.

    As always, dear reader, thank you for reading and please, drop me a line because I DO love to chat!

    Find me on instagram @mintpatchmonologue

    readnwrite11@gmail.com

  • A Letter to the Great Pumpkin…

    Dear GreatPumpkin,
    I believe you are real, I can feel your presence every year, I can sense when the portal for your arrival is open. It’s when the spider webs stretch across thresholds, when the breeze starts to bite, and the shadows grow long. Because of you, our worlds shroud with mystery and magic, we get to bundle up for the first time, and run a muck after dark. We get to break rules, stay up late, tell ghost stories and get foundered on sugar. All of us share the amusement and delight of Halloween Night. There is no goblin too young, no ghoul too old to relish in your enchantment. You bring with you innovation that has no bounds; you make witchcraft and wizardry real. It’s all just a bunch of Hocus Pocus, and for goodness’ sake, that is what we need! Your inspiration seduces us to become creative beasts, tempts us for thrill and devilry. Our memories become resurrected from decades gone, our favorite characters come out to play. When you arrive, our souls become haunted with the forgotten bliss of mischief, and indulgence; fright and laughter intertwine and bring us joy, just when we need it the most. You give us the gift of disguise.

    Sometimes the real nightmare is having to be ourselves in a lonely world, but once a year we invite as many visitors that will come, and the dark night becomes a bright one.

    As little ones take off into the night, the neighborhood keeps a vigilant eye on their missions for madness, and candy. Theatrics flood the streets, there are front porch performances, illusions, and despite all the treats, the tricks are ever present too. Oh, Great Pumpkin, please bring me a black flame candle so I can bring the wide eyes of my inner child back from the dead, I will howl at the moon, just for you. In anticipation of your visit I have hot glued feathers to my sleeves, drawn round, black eyes on white sheets, mourned Frankenstein’s mortal monster, carved life into the biggest pumpkin I could find, and filled the popcorn bowl with Clark Bars.

    Dearest Pumpkin, please back come every year so that we can forever rejoice in imagination. May we all be entranced with artistry, and wit, with curiosity, and celebrate the faculty of transformation; the chance to become as powerful as Count Dracula, if not only but for one glorious night a year. Thank you, All Mighty and Great Pumpkin for granting all of our spirits a chance to shine, to pretend, and to believe.

    PS. Please bring my friend Linus something special, so that he too can keep the faith, and unfurl his joy unto the non-believers.

    Thank you for reading! As always, please reach out because I DO love to chat!!

    readnwrite11@gmail.com