Nature and Mindset
"Great things are done when men and mountains
meet."
-William Blake
"Nature always wears the colors of the spirit."
"The earth laughs in flowers."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
Nature is honest, if sometimes unkind, and truth is honest,
if sometimes unkind.
It's fascinating how even something as seemingly mundane as
unusual weather can provoke reflection and stimulate change in our perceptions
and routines. Nature has a way of affecting us deeply, whether through its
beauty, its power, or its unpredictability.
In the case of South Carolina's unusual weather stimulating
the growth of local flowers, it's like nature is presenting a tangible
manifestation of its own dynamism and resilience. This can serve as a reminder
of the ever-changing nature of life and the interconnectedness of all living
things.
Solomon wrote that everything has its time and
season, its place and purpose.
Such is the way, looking at a hard freeze taking place in the
United States. A difficult moment which requires hardiness and
forethought has come to us: covering the spigots, putting our plants indoors
and so forth.
But it has a purpose, the hard winter. Some plants
require a freeze in their off season. Such as in Colorado, where
snowfalls that melt in spring provide a great deal of the water supply
downstream.
And imagine that glowing spring, with flowers, as if they
were smiling, themselves.
Solomon goes on to say that there is "nothing new under
the sun", that everything that troubles us now, is nothing particularly
different that past troubles that the people of the world faced. We need
not complain too bitterly of the cold, but put it into a more linear
perspective, and understand that it has happened before.
Nature is
honest, and sometimes unkind.
We often find ourselves at the mercy of time and
circumstance.
Just like young trees that bend and flex during harsh
weather, only to emerge stronger and more resilient, we too can learn to adapt
and yield when necessary.
The natural world offers valuable lessons in resilience and
resourcefulness. Young trees bend during harsh weather, and they live on
thanks to that bending, where the set-in-place larger, older trees can be more
easily toppled, by water and wind.
Do we too bend when necessary?
Can we benefit from any particular circumstance?
By embracing flexibility and humility, we can benefit from life's challenges
and circumstances in countless ways, beyond mere financial gain.
Personal growth, inner peace, and tranquility are just a few examples of the
valuable rewards that can arise from embracing life's twists and turns.
"Adopt the pace of nature: her secret is
patience."
-Ralph Waldo Emerson
"The thankful receiver bears a plentiful
harvest."
-William Blake
The
aftermath of life's storms
Somewhat whimsically, we note how clean and polished
everything looks after a storm. “Polished and clean” as in formerly
harried by harsh winds and driving rain. After the storm, the quiet is
welcome as the atmospheric pressure changes…..
We hear that only handful of people across the region died in the storm, and we
think it wasn’t bad at all.
Yet for those few families, the storm was plenty bad enough, as it took
something important away from them.
Let us put in into a more realistic perspective, and express gratitude to God
for those who remain.
"Every bird that cuts the airy way is an immense
world of delight, enclosing the fruitage of the universe."
-William Blake
...she compasses the whole world, and penetrates into the
vanity, and mere outside (wanting substance and solidity) of it, and stretches
herself unto the infiniteness of eternity; and the revolution or restoration of
all things after a certain period of time, to the same state and place as
before, she fetches about, and doth comprehend in herself; and considers
withal, and sees clearly this, that neither they that shall follow us, shall
see any new thing, that we have not seen, nor they that went before, anything
more than we: but that he that is once come to forty (if he have any wit at
all) can in a manner (for that they are all of one kind) see all things, both
past and future....
-Marcus Aurelius
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