
Our woodland garden
September in Ohio
Looking out my window
everything is growing fervently
towards summer’s decline
grass, trees, bushes, flowers, heavy with
pods, cones, and berries
harboring the womb of new seeds
September morphing into fall
and the stinkbug clinging to the screen
wasp pushing off into the air
spider in her house glistening just there
they fill their days of living
dormant eggs left behind
Pieces of sky
framed by branches lofty and low
puzzle for the gods
each leaf soon to be fitted
in dazzling shades of death
will find its place
within the world frame
this boxed set of jigsaw billions
reaching up and out to the sun
as we roll by again and again
Today earthshine lit the face
of August’s waning blue moon
while the sun glared hot
sharing the same sky
my aged body birthing a new year
the moon, the sun, and I, illuminated
by one light, our evolving puzzle
a never ending wholeness
falling into place.
This is my birthday month, and both my younger daughter flying in from NY state and her older sister’s family will help me celebrate when the time comes. It is a challenge for someone with my declining mobility to navigate to my daughter’s home 45 minutes away with a portable wheelchair even with a room arranged to accommodate my need for rest and privacy. I want to keep accomplishing this expedition as long as I possibly can. But as MS continues to erode my nervous system, I am grateful to be able to make the trek at all.
I was hoping that being in my early 70’s would finally bring my chronological age closer to my body’s apparent age. Alas, my body zooms ahead in its losses to bring me in line with my fellow residents in this Assisted Living Area who range from their late 80’s into their 100’s. We all work with what we have and I am right at home with our trusty wheelchairs and rollators and scooters to get us where we need to be.
Weather everywhere no longer fits our tidy memories. Here in Ohio, August was quite chilly requiring sweatshirts every morning, and now this first week of September is hovering around 90. People complain of an abnormal amount of heat or cold or wet or drought-like conditions, as if we were able to control it. We have managed to create global warming, but not to create clear pathways to redirect our efforts towards solving the results of the disastrous impact on our shared planet.
Adapting to change inside and out requires an ongoing maturation of honoring desires within the reality of what is or is not possible. Acceptance is always the first and most difficult step towards undergoing real change. All twelve-step programs know this, as do all therapists of any stripe, as do all spiritual and religious teachings. It is hard to accept loss of any kind. Loss hurts. But using it as the doorway to lasting change brings a deep relief as we line up with what is in our power to choose going forward. I finally had to accept I needed an electric wheelchair and now only use my rollater in my room when I am able. Releasing any idea of this being ‘a defeat of my will against my struggling body’ only makes sense. Embracing the change is now a joy and results in a little more freedom even as I still cannot sit up in it for very long.
Acceptance of, and adapting to, change in all aspects of our daily and planetary citizen’s lives requires wisdom that we are sorely lacking. Creating a doorway leading to necessary change is my hope for us all.

Turkey vulture…..Here is a poem I wrote two weeks ago.
August Blue
I was outside under an August blue sky.
I say that,
knowing I cannot possibly
share with you the
irreplaceable blue of
photons interpreted by me.
I could not label this color
sapphire, lapis, prussian, or bird feather blue,
cerulean, cobalt or aegean.
Perhaps I could offer
Shattering Blue,
edges nuanced in the glowing bowl above.
Blue that submerged my eyes
drenched the emerald-green grass,
dead-stopping a friend
biking along our path
to recite a terrific poem
summoned on her phone
recalling the end of summer’s
final swim into
“dark waters of the unknown.”
Beneath the summoning blue a neighbor
looking forward to regrouping in
September, Monday morning
deep dives, sitting with companions,
an intimate yearning for true blue connections.
The wild untethered blue
encompassing me and
the deer and her fawn at the pond
the turkey vultures spiraling
with commanding grace
uplifted by sturdy blue.
The engulfing awe of
infinitely expansive blue exultation
inside my bounded human heart.
Thanks for the morsel of beauty conveyed in your words. The natural world reminds us every cycle of seasons that living in these aging bodies involves all the qualities you describe in your poetry. My spirit feels every age I’ve every been, but my body keeps feeling older and older. Ah, sister in embodiment, it’s good to travel this road with you. with love. . .
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and with you dear one. xoJ
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Acceptance of limitations. Yes, most difficult!
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Happy BIG day. Have a wonderful journey.
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Thanks Jac, they do keep on coming….xoJ
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Dear Judi, I’ve just discovered two things. 1, I want following you,and so have been missing your glorious photographs and your poems, which often touch me and usually make me think. So much hard-won wisdom is there. 2. Two years ago on national poetry day you left a beautiful poem as a comment, just six deep lines sounding in my mind. And I’d missed it completely! So sorry. Now I don’t seem to be able to comment there so here I am, better late than never. I appreciate how wisely you judge the content of your blogs. Keep writing and photographing, partly for your readers and partly for yourself.
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Rachel, thank you so much for reading and commenting. I love your work as you keep inspiring me from across the world! Blessings on us all as we keep ising the gifts we have have been given for as long as we can keep using them.
A sincere admirer, Judi
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