Tuesday, January 2, 2018

#2: Intermission


Growing up in Wisconsin, winters tended to be long and snowy and cold. The season demanded respect and preparation and a hardiness of its subjects -- it was inevitable and was best embraced. Snow tires, ice scrapers, shovels, picks, wood burning fireplaces and stoves, snow pants, down coats, woolen mittens, long underwear, ski pants, flannel bedding, hearty soups, and hot chocolates and hot teas and hot toddies were all a part of life, part of the rituals that helped one endure the deep freeze. 

Our childhoods were filled with snow angels, snow fights, snow men, and snow houses. Local parks and schools had ice rinks and shanties, sledding hills and toboggan runs, trails for snowshoes and cross country skis. Despite snow drifts that often hit the roof of our home and temperatures well below freezing for weeks at a time, school closings were infrequent. I remember waiting for the bus with my brother when the plow passed by, scooping up our book bags and lunches and musical instruments and athletic equipment. We had to dig them out of the tightly packed mounds of snow piled at the street corner and continue to wait for the bus which was late but certain to arrive. 

This year, our second winter in Virginia certainly has more bite, but I would still describe Virginia winters as tender. And, I really appreciate tender, although I do miss the snow. Don't get me wrong, I don't think I'll ever wish for snow drifts and blizzard conditions again. However, I deeply long for a long, soft snowfall that blankets the streets, nestles the branches of the trees, and silences the neighborhood. Such a snowfall opens up space for one to nest at home, to read a book cover to cover, to binge watch favorite movies or a new series, to bake and cook and nap and dream. 

Right before Christmas, we received a dusting of snow, and the forecast indicates we may get more in January. January is really the right time of year for snowfall, a bit of winter grace, an intermission from daily life that can add stress but also cultivate gratitude and foster reflection. I am thankful that the leaves cup the flakes and the ground permits snow cover and the air, cold and brisk, beckons for me to breathe deeply. For those in the throws of winter's grip north of here, I wish you strength and safety and solace in the knowledge that time and seasons march on. Written with warm thoughts, dear friends.

Winter Grace
Patricia Fargnoli

If you have seen the snow
under the lamppost
piled up like a white beaver hat on the picnic table
or somewhere slowly falling
into the brook
to be swallowed by water,
then you have seen beauty
and know it for its transience.
And if you have gone out in the snow
for only the pleasure
of walking barely protected
from the galaxies,
the flakes settling on your parka
like the dust from just-born stars,
the cold waking you
as if from long sleeping,
then you can understand
how, more often than not,
truth is found in silence,
how the natural world comes to you
if you go out to meet it,
its icy ditches filled with dead weeds,
its vacant birdhouses, and dens
full of the sleeping.
But this is the slowed-down season
held fast by darkness
and if no one comes to keep you company
then keep watch over your own solitude.
In that stillness, you will learn
with your whole body
the significance of cold
and the night,
which is otherwise always eluding you.

Monday, January 1, 2018

#1: Intentionality

Creative work needs solitude. It needs concentration, without interruptions. It needs the whole sky to fly in, and no eye watching until it comes to that certainty which it aspires to, but does not necessarily have at once. Privacy, then. A place apart--to pace, to chew pencils, to scribble and erase and scribble again. (23) Upstream by Mary Oliver

I am ashamed to say that I allowed the political upheaval of 2017 to violate my privacy. The shock of the last presidential election, the arrogance and offensive speech of our political leadership, and the announcement of breaking news was designed to invade our personal space on a daily basis. The goal may have been to shake up the establishment, but I believe that the outcome unhinged us as a nation to our very core. Our actions and words may have upended our deepest values and core beliefs such that we were even unaware of the impact.

For me personally, I tuned in to the political drama far too frequently: television news, radio news, news alerts on my cellphone, newsletters sent to my email. I vet my news sources well and trust their factual basis -- no Facebook or Twitter for me. However, I allowed them to infiltrate my personal well being, and I have had to learn to temper my political raging, to control the news I ingest rather than allow it to control me.

As such, my primary resolution for 2018 is to live with intentionality. I hope to:
  • cultivate gratitude and relish in relationships;
  • care for my body with healthy food and steady activity and exercise;
  • make room for rest and nature and vacations; 
  • read books with depth and breadth and imagination; and
  • garden and cook and create with purpose.
In regards to A Measured Word, I want to write on a daily basis with thoughts and meditations on a single word as well as a poem or quote or photo. I may struggle to meet the goal, but I need the creative outlet and solitude to collect my own thoughts and live with intentionality. In our political climate, it seems that we need to reorient our compasses -- to think for ourselves with common sense, truth, and our principles as guides rather than allow social media to think for us. 

To act based on what we know is right rather than what we heard someone else say takes effort, but I can't wait to get to work. What could be more exciting than to have 365 days of a brand new year ahead? Hand me the blank slate -- I am ready to write!

Some Days
by Philip Terman



Some days you have to turn off the news
and listen to the bird or truck
or the neighbor screaming out her life.
You have to close all the books and open
all the windows so that whatever swirls
inside can leave and whatever flutters
against the glass can enter. Some days
you have to unplug the phone and step
out to the porch and rock all afternoon
and allow the sun to tell you what to do.
The whole day has to lie ahead of you
like railroad tracks that drift off into gravel.
Some days you have to walk down the wooden
staircase through the evening fog to the river,
where the peach roses are closing,
sit on the grassy bank and wait for the two geese.