Local waters that were open over the weekend are now covered (again) with ice, which is covered with snow. We haven’t checked larger waters since the beginning of the most recent really cold spell, which continues to linger. All morning we had snow showers and around mid-day a couple of sun snow showers. We don’t yet seem to have reached the “all is calm, all is bright” phase so there’s something to look forward to.
a member of the local red squirrel band
Photo by J. Harrington
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The local band of red squirrels seems really appreciative of the heated bird bath as a source of drinking water. Black-capped chickadees more than other bird species also stop frequently for a quick sip. Without birds at the feeders and squirrels in the trees and on the deck, winter would be almost too dismal and dreary to open the drapes to look out. (Can you tell I’m not a winter person?)
black-capped chickadee in line for feeder
Photo by J. Harrington
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I’ve been practicing, albeit very imperfectly, themes of mindfulness such as acceptance, impermanence, non-clinging (‘letting go”), and compassion. It seems to help quite a bit in coping with the state of the world these days. In fact, this practice reminds me of something I learned long ago when I was much younger. There is no good reason to wander the world with all your hot buttons held out so anyone and everyone can punch them. Gather them up and keep them in your pocket or back pack so you can be an actor rather than constantly being a reactor after someone has punched your button. Other folks might refer to such behavior as practicing self control. Do you do that? What do you call it? Does it help?
Sapphics Against Anger
Angered, may I be near a glass of water;May my first impulse be to think of Silence,Its deities (who are they? do, in fact, theyExist? etc.).May I recall what Aristotle says ofThe subject: to give vent to rage is not toRelease it but to be increasingly proneTo its incursions.May I imagine being in the Inferno,Hearing it asked: “Virgilio mio, who’sThat sulking with Achilles there?” and hearingVirgil say: “Dante,That fellow, at the slightest provocation,Slammed phone receivers down, and waved his arms likeA madman. What Attila did to Europe,What Genghis Khan didTo Asia, that poor dope did to his marriage.”May I, that is, put learning to good purpose,Mindful that melancholy is a sin, thoughStylish at present.Better than rage is the post-dinner quiet,The sink’s warm turbulence, the streaming platters,The suds rehearsing down the drain in spiralsIn the last rinsing.For what is, after all, the good life save thatConducted thoughtfully, and what is passionIf not the holiest of powers, sustainingOnly if mastered.
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Thanks for visiting. Come again when you can.
Please be kind to each other while you can.
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