Wednesday, December 19, 2012
return of the light
Happy winter solstice everyone, it's coming up very soon, and the world will turn toward the light once again. And happy birthday to me, today. Here I sit at age 45 with more gray hair than ever before and a lap full of blessings I will count like early valentines. Twenty sweet years with Ryan. Our loving peaceful home. An animal companion who reminds me how to live in the moment, dear Hodge. Two businesses that are more than just businesses, they are vocations, and I love them for it - painting, bookselling. Little gardens sleeping under coverlets of fresh snow. A new nephew on the way, soon. A niece about to set out on a great adventure. I want to celebrate all of this and so much more. The difficult things, the dark things, people and situations I wish were so different, I hold in my heart too, and try to surround them with light.
In our home we celebrate Christmas, this is how I was raised, and as I've mentioned before, my middle name is Noël, so this time of year means a lot to me. But my family encompasses a broad range of belief systems. We count among our numbers a pagan, a few mystics, a faerie, a Catholic, many Episcopalians, a few Congregationalists, a pantheist (that would be me), and more. All that is to say, there is room here for all, whatever you celebrate, or even if you don't celebrate. Here is a chickadee nesting among the holiday lights and winter reading, in our living room, just for good cheer:
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Happy birthday, dear Sarah.
As it is your birthday AND Christmas time, a little something from Christopher Morley seems very appropriate.
On Reading Aloud
ONCE we read Tennyson aloud
In our great fireside chair;
Between the lines my lips could touch
Her April-scented hair.
How very fond I was, to think
The printed poems fair,
When close within my arms I held
A living lyric there!
As it is your birthday AND Christmas time, a little something from Christopher Morley seems very appropriate.
On Reading Aloud
ONCE we read Tennyson aloud
In our great fireside chair;
Between the lines my lips could touch
Her April-scented hair.
How very fond I was, to think
The printed poems fair,
When close within my arms I held
A living lyric there!
Antony dear, many thanks and the same to you!
Anon, people are "living lyrics," aren't they... Morley is always in my thoughts this time of year, masquerading as "John Mistletoe."
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Anon, people are "living lyrics," aren't they... Morley is always in my thoughts this time of year, masquerading as "John Mistletoe."
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