
I am coining a new phrase- SDD or Seasonal Disorientation Disorder. Since February 1st it has felt like spring here in Northeast Ohio. If it had been March or April, you would expect the yo-yo extremes of warm sunny days coaxing out the early flowers and returning songbirds followed by freezing nights and a few inches of snow. But it seems we have added another whole month to springtime. Now that it is March, there are already robins, nest builders, returning geese couples, early booming plants and benches that beckon you to sit a while in the warm sun. It seems wrong to cut winter short (unlike in Alaska where they had record snowfalls) and yet delight in wearing only a light sweater or jacket to walk and jog along clear paths.
We are fortunate that lovely weather is the result of climatic disruptions. Others around the country and the world watch droughts and floods and violent storms destroy their way of life, with the looming certainty that the usual order has forever been changed. I know I do my best to limit my climate unsustainable consumerism as an individual living in my community in America. But as an individual I don’t have much of an impact on the sweeping reforms necessary to ensure that my grandsons will have a safe planet to live on. But I can vote!
My spiritual practice stabilizes me in a big picture of humanity’s sojourn on Earth. There is nothing in the universe that does not expand and contract, passing through stasis points on either end. What remains constant is the source of creation itself, called by many names, accessed, and sought after by science and diverse paths, all leading to acknowledge our impermanence. I can live with that. I do live with that intimately as my body ages and declines in its own unique way.
Today I am grateful for mobility scooters and sunshine, friends and neighbors, nurses and physical therapists, and the joy of being alive to witness being one of eight billion people on earth. Consider that we are a very small percentage of the billions of beings that we share the planet with. Even the few tiny ants that have begun to traverse the desert of my bathroom floor are part of my world each spring. Taking every moment that I have, just to be alive, is the joyful thing that I, as an individual, can do my best to inhabit every day.

Outside
I will go outside where pond-gazing is magnetic,
to spy on turtles rising from the mud of
gold and copper leaves tossed
like wishes into the autumn murk

caught frozen mid-decay

in ice mandalas sliding across the ballroom floor
released into black waters shimmering in
warm spring sunlight
rippled by today’s breeze,
by old thoughts dropped
into the dark brew.
The bounded certainty
of my room, weighted by shoulds,
maybes, papers, internet messages
hold a lingering whiff of
a delicious morning meditation
urging me out, get out, let go,
hand myself over
to the unseasonably early spring embrace.
Spacious skies invoke breathing,
geese preening, songbirds nesting,
stillness dissolving into silence.

Crazy early spring here too, but I’m still skeptical. It always, always snows one more time in April! There’s a meme going that lists the seasons (in Canada, but could be Chicago, too, but for climate change), as:
winter
fool’s spring (<you are here)
second winter
spring of deception
third winter
mud season
actual spring
summer
false fall
second summer (one week)
actual fall
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I love that Anne,
When we lived in Vermont many a year ago, it was “three months of winter and one month of damn poor sledding…”
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😆
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“We are fortunate that lovely weather is the result of climatic disruptions.”
I hope that everyone realizes that while we may be having unusually nice weather, it’s not a sign that we don’t still have to do something about climate change.
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Right you are, Earl- in my community we all say,” we know this warm weather isn’t right but it sure is lovely right now..”
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You write that, “There is nothing in the universe that does not expand and contract, passing through stasis points on either end.” It seems we’ve both found inspiration in similar realms. My version of your statement has become the foundation, the center of the spiral of my Continuum teaching. Whether it’s inhalation/exhalation, form/dissolve, curl/uncurl, condense/dissipate, flex/extend, contract/relax, or gather/disperse, I love exploring the movement of (and in) the space and the stillness of the pauses in between. It’s a delight to be sharing a path with you, Judi. Thanks for all the inspiration and beautiful words.
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Bonnie, back at you and light to light. Judi
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