Living Deliberately

"I went to the woods because I wished to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn what it had to teach, and not, when I came to die, discover that I had not lived." Henry David Thoreau, Walden, 1854

Tuesday, March 08, 2005

Misting Rain

This morning for the first time in weeks the temperature was above freezing when I awoke. The house felt like it could breathe for the first time in a season. I know it is supposed to pass for colder air today, but even now the rains mist down through forty degree air. The snows are slowly loosing their territorial battle, melting back first from the base of trees and large structures carrying the suns energy in along the side and underneath the frozen mass. Here, outside my window today, the daffodils have been uncovered overnight by the warm air. They look healthy, vibrant. They don't seem to have been significantly impacted by the foot of snow that covered them for the past two weeks. These rains will be soaked up by the hungry trees. Another freeze and snow may come, but the pace of the vegetation is set for the impending season.

To criticise from a position of weakness is no longer tolerated in this great land of ours. To be weak is to be wrong. To have stumbled is to have been flawed. Ayn Rand would lick her chops with fervent delight could she see what was happening in our economy today. Are there alternatives anywhere putting down roots?

A slow fog begins to lift from the melting snow, filling the lower reaches of the forest with a pleasing hue.

1 Comments:

At 12:04 AM, Blogger monkey salon said...

To criticise from a position of weakness is no longer tolerated in this great land of ours. To be weak is to be wrong. To have stumbled is to have been flawed. Ayn Rand would lick her chops with fervent delight could she see what was happening in our economy today. Are there alternatives anywhere putting down roots?

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yes, yes, ya'll. actually the republican party, largely, has managed to make care and concern a weakness. we're not talking practice of religion, as they like to think they are doing (are they?!). that sort of care seems mostly to spin wheels or spew intolerance, hatred, disharmony. we are weak because we care enough to be angry, hurt, frustrated, ashamed. we care enough to want it to be better. to know it can be. just how...

there are plenty of alternatives, i believe. but when you are weak you do not win battles. just some fights. it's slow, as our activist concerned citizen artist brother's and sister's before us used to say. we're still saying it. is patience really a virtue? patient about what? for what?

still.
peace... and spring after all the snow melts and the winds die down a bit. then...

flowers.

 

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