On this bright spring morning of birdsong, rushing water, leafbuds and smiling flowers, I found myself thinking, 'How sad it must be to die in winter, knowing you will never see another spring'.
But then how sad to see spring if you knew that was it and you would never see the explosion of joy and delight and life that is high summer. And who wouldn't want one last autumn experience of glorious leaves, harvest home, woodsmoke and misty mornings? Or indeed the beauty of a frost-jewelled, snuggled-round-the-hearth-fire-with-loved-ones midwinter?
Never wanting to leave the party for fear of missing something, when would be the ideal time to bow out? Given the choice, I suspect many of us never would. Perhaps it's best then, that most of us don't have the choice, or even the foreknowledge of when.
Perhaps with the human instinct to look forward to what's coming next, the best idea is to see the end of this life not as a full stop, but as a step forward on the next great adventure. We may be leaving behind daffodils and swallows and sea urchins and elephants and picnics in the park - and I for one will miss them all greatly. But when it's time to peek around the next corner, I'm curious to see what's there too.
And if it should turn out that there is nothing round that final corner after all, well - hasn't it been an amazing and beautiful party?
I hope I'll see a good few more seasons yet. But just in case this should be my last spring, I'm going to drink in and savour every last delicious drop.
It really is a most beautiful morning. I hope yours is too.
autumn is here for me... the mornings are chilly, the afternoon shadows have that autumnal 'feel'... my garden is beginning to slow down...yes, gorgeous in my part of the world right now.
ReplyDeleteeven though I don't look forward to leaving my loved ones here when my time comes... I cannot wait to see my loved ones on the other side... and meet up with my ancestors that I never knew :)
What a beautiful post. Pics, too! It's a gorgeous day in Washington DC, too, made of the same ingredients (except rushing water).
ReplyDeleteI think Halloween is the "perfect" time to die, seasonally, at least, though like you I cherish the sensate experience of living a human life. It is a precious existence, as the Buddhists always say. It really really is.
Have a wonderful time at camp. Big love to all.
Beautiful post. I think those sentiments apply to all endings really don't they?
ReplyDeletewhat beautiful words...
ReplyDeleteI've got something on my blog for you !!!
ReplyDeleteMy beautiful grandmother, who will be 102 this September, has been "ready" to die for several years...yet as each season approaches its close, she always makes a quiet comment like "Oh, I think I'll hang on awhile longer just so I can see the snow once more." (or 'the hummingbirds' or 'the deer that eat corn outside my window') Her life has been such a full and rich one, but I had begun to feel sad for her current life as a shut-in, unable to work the soil with her hands any longer. Your post is lovely, and gave me a new vantage point to view what gives my beloved gram joy today. Thank you and blessed be!
ReplyDeleteDana