It's as if we're always preparing for something, the endless roll of the earth ripening us. Even on the most tranquil late August afternoon when heavy heads of phlox bow in the garden and the hummingbird sits still for a moment on a branch of an apple tree— even on such a day, evening approaches sooner than yesterday, and we cannot help noticing whole families of birds arrive together in the enclosure, young blue birds molted a misty grey, colored through no will of their own for a journey. On such an evening I ache for what I cannot keep—the birds, the phlox, the late-flying bees— though I would not forbid the frost, even if I could. There will be more to love and lose in what's to come and this too: desire to see it clear before it's gone.
—Mary Chivers from Claire B. Willis' Lasting Words: A Guide to Finding Meaning Toward the Close of Life
Very moving video... My husband and I find ourselves in this place now... in our early 70's... For so many years "spirituality" has been my life, but it no longer speaks to me, calls to me, if that makes sense... I'm in some kind of holding pattern, waiting - for what I don't know... I shall see what Claire's book has to say to me...
Very moving video... My husband and I find ourselves in this place now... in our early 70's... For so many years "spirituality" has been my life, but it no longer speaks to me, calls to me, if that makes sense... I'm in some kind of holding pattern, waiting - for what I don't know... I shall see what Claire's book has to say to me...
ReplyDeleteThank you for the post!