somewhere, spring
by bam
it is elusive, this season that pulls and tugs on us, tells us it’s time to shed the woolen winter cloak, the pounds that have crept onto our laps, like children, who need to be nestled.
i’ve known for a while that it’s out there, teasing, taunting. i heard it in the birdsong one morning, as the snow was tumbling down. i laughed out loud, i did, the foolery of weather. thinking it can masquerade the turn of earth, the basking of our overpopulated island in the face of sun.
i can see it, too, in the white-blue light of march, beginning. i see it streaking in the windows, spilling on a bookshelf, shouting, “i am not the season you think i am.”
oh, never mind the ice, the snow.
it is out there, springtime is. it is contracting, deep beneath the icy-crusted soil, way beyond the stars where time ticks on, regardless of the swirling winds and piled-high precipitation.
the universe, yes, is deep in labor. spring is birthing, season churns from page to page. any week now, we’ll see the crowning of the springtime’s messy head, pushing through the cracks of winter finally stepping down, relenting.
if you look, hard enough, you can see it now.
on the tips of magnolia branches, where the velvet buds are clasped, in chilly prayer, awaiting one swift warm wind, and then, kapow, the whole of it, spring unbridled, will burst before our eyes.
you can spot it, if you watch the sparrows.
the ones i call my own are flitting in and out, already, of the little hole above my door, the one they call their home. the stoop is dumped with all the detritus of last year’s nesting fashion. this year, they seem to have a silken thread of royal blue hanging at their doorway.
the never-ending labors of the sparrows tickle me to no end. they chatter just outside my window, making quite a fuss, as she tells him, perhaps, to ditch the blue, go for something, hmm, a little softer on the eye.
i was in the woods the other day. squishing at every step. i was searching for those bravest wisps of woodsy carpet, the snowdrops, or the lime-green tight-wound clocksprings of the fiddlehead, a fern whose neck, perhaps, might be feeling pinched from all the hunching in a ball, deep beneath the loamy dappled floor, where all the winter’s work is done in dark seclusion.
there was not a tender shoot of promise to be found.
which made me think, of course. made me think how so much of life is just beyond our senses. but does that make it one breath less real, or only serve to exercise that muscle called Believing?
we can’t hear the words of those we’ve loved and lost, but does that mean they are no longer pulsing through our every blessed hour? we can’t see the unfolding of the dream we’re hoping for, but how do we know when the one who’ll make it happen is reaching for the telephone, or lining up the pieces to make the chessboard capture?
what if we learn–as the spinning of the earth and sun tries to teach, again and again–to trust that which we cannot see or hear? not yet, at least.
what if we take our cues in subtle ways–change of light, the lilt in cardinal’s morning song, barest wisp of green poking through the sodden gritty soil–and succumb to tug and pull of time?
what if, even when the cold winds blow in march, we believe that spring soon will be delivered?
it is, again, all about that thing called faith.
do we stalk the woods in search of spring, and walk out empty-hearted, or do we strip off our mittens, push back our hoods, and let the vernal-tipping sunlight sink deep into our marrow?
do you believe it’s coming? what signs have stirred you into knowing something fine is just around the corner? are you going batty? is the seasonal affective disorder dragging you deep down into the muck of the winter that will not take the hint, pack its bags and leave?
Well I’ve been losing it for a long time; winter’s just about plumb done me in. BUT.Those birds. I know they know better than I what’s coming. They’re hollering up a great big hallelujah chorus in our back yard. They cheer me so.What a beautiful point, and so well put–that even though we can’t see it, can’t see it at all here yet, warmth is coming, green is coming. It’s just a matter of belief, of faith, of hope deriving from faith and joy following upon hope and action deriving from hope and joy both. Somehow the faith thing is easier for me in the realms of the esoteric, the never-can-be-seen, the territory of the heart, the philosophical, the religious. In day to day existence, faced with the weather which you can no longer abide and the children whom you worry won’t turn out well and the kinfolk who get suddenly surprisingly sick and that endless mountain range of laundry–all that faith is a little harder for me. That practical stuff.Time to take a deep breath of this sweet cool transitional air out there today, and a big gulp of that blue-sky mercy, sunlight, and to step into my day with a little faith.
ms jcv, once again you remind me why i write…..so i can read your volleys which fly out, over my head (only in that i cannot reach so high, not that i cannot follow) and out of the park……..you are sublime and supreme. and i could read you every day…….hmm, let us ponder that of which you write…..there is something there, isn’t there, that the everyday befuddles us causes us to stumble, while the out there, the beyond, inspires and draws us along. it is perhaps the interface of both, the friction point, where supreme rubs up against the dirty laundry that our humanness is tested, is exercised, is stretched. to find what it takes to get around the foggy bend is to tap into the divinity within. to make it grow…….more thoughts?
oh my. i feel a little bad coming here to tell of my early, southern spring that comes in a rush, quite overnight. but i still identify closely with what you wrote above… spring has brought surprises and answers that i could never have dreamed of in winter. i still struggle to accept what has been given, and what is yet to come, but no matter how un-faithful i am, spring comes anyway, every year without fail.
and that is the profound unshakable truth…the thing that’s hard to swallow. no matter how unfaithful, it comes…….i think we think faith need be a big ol’ pill to swallow, when really it glides down our throats if we let it……love to see you here, ms ivy. i love the point you make, and the southern wind you bring……a southern spring, i can only imagine. all of us snowy things are rather frozen in the pictures in our mind…..
Beautiful point Ivy! That’s how grace is too: it comes unmerited and usually unasked.
Botanists say that trees need the powerful March winds to flex their trunks and main branches, so the sap is drawn up to nourish the budding leaves. Perhaps we need the gales of lifein the same way, though we dislike enduring them.- Jane Truax This woman was surely a northerner….and so we endure and endure. I too am worn down by this year’s winter BUT I did have my first light fragrant smell of spring on Saturday morning while walking my dog. I can tell you exactly where we stopped and the way the light came through the bare trees….and there it was….that earthy fragrance. It was light and fleeting, but it entered me and gave me hope. I have been thinking about it all week – even when I am reading dear Tom Skilling reports. I have been searching out references to spring like a madwoman….just to remind myself we are not alone in our quest….and so I leave you with one from the distant past – Our experiences trancends the centuries. If we had no winter, the spring would not be so pleasant: if we did not sometimes taste of adversity, prosperity would not be so welcome.- Anne Bradstreet, Meditations Divine and Moral, 1655Dear Ivy – your words are a wonderful reminder that spring is on her journey to us….give her our regards and tell her the welcome mat is out and she can pull up a chair!
I too heard the birds this early morning, in fact my heart leapt like a child listeningfor Santa’s reindeers on the roof. Yep, it is on it’s way…..hold on to your hats and get out your sunscreen everybody !
I love your photo with the whistlin’ blue birdfeeder amidst the brown and grey. PUAC is such an inviting place. Like the Goodings house…You never know what you’ll find.Looked at the Maple and Raywood Ash trees in the yard today…not yet, but nearly…God is a romantic. Just look at His interpretations of Spring…different each year. Unpredictable. But it always comes.
ohhhhh my beautiful circle of chair puller uppers, God is a romantic, the trees need gale winds to shake up the sap…..i swear the more i know of the what and why of nature, the more i am drawn into the unbelievable believing. you know? and doesn’t it just give you tingles to think that all of us–without knowing that each other is doing it–is out trying to catch that wisp of something in the light, the smell, the birdsong. and each one of us is so wired to tingle at the finding of it. isn’t it simply breath-catching to discover that under our personalities and our life stories, and our bruises and our banged-up bodies, we are really all so very much similarly, magnificently wired. it makes me wonder if the guy i will pass this morning on lower wacker drive, the one who squats all day on a refrigerator box, i wonder if he too feels the light coming down? i wonder if he has the luxury of tingling at the first whiff of spring, or have the years of brokenness stripped him of that joy? i haven’t a clue why my head leapt over to that thought, but i pray he knows that simple joy. may we all find a bit more spring as we go out today, and muck about in puddles. oh, i heard a great thing the other day, can’t for the life of me remember where, but it’s a springtime game, with or without children. the goal is this: go out in rubber boots, and rain slicker. puddle stomp. with goal of getting as wet as you can. if accompanied by children, watch them look at you as if you’ve lost your marbles (revel in this, people, grownups sans marbles are the very best, and unforgettable too). then run inside for a sudsy hot bath, and laugh all day at how very wet you got. it is spring, and only spring after a particularly freeze-thaw winter, that brings on such madness. lamcal, i love both your offerings from “the literature.” i have some camus for you, but i must dig it up. i’ve not committed it to memory. or if i did, i forgot…..xoxoxox
ahh, meditations on grace, beauty and the promise of a new season! I’ve come one day late to the table, but what a gift to receive the feast of leftovers!I too have heard the birds. I wanted to ask them, “do you know something I don’t know?”On wednesday I went running when it was still very dark out, I won’t reveal the exact time. By the end of the run the sky was turning a lighter blue, something I haven’t noticed on any of my runs this winter. I am now turning towards the dawn’s early light with gratitude, but I also know that come next sunday it will be darker in the morning, at least for a few weeks.I sit at my table and can see the blue sky out my window, and although my radiator still clinks along to keep me warm and toasty, I know that spring is on the other side of my home somewhere….. somehow.
I think I’ll drive out to Dodgeville on Sunday, tramp down to the meadow and breathe in the damp earth smell from the melting snow, grateful to have another year of promise and hope.
one of the most wonderful days of the year is fast approaching—-this Sunday when we return to daylight saving time–to me here in new jersey the true beginning of the year—–and earlier than ever in calendar 2008.we have had a relatively mild winter and last week the swans returned to the pond, the birds have been singing and the tulips are pushing up —-now 3 inches of growth—-such a vibrant, vivid green. hallelujah.
on tues. morn when the sheets and pillowcases came out of the washing machine, i hung them out on the line. an hour later they were back on the bed, and that evening my dreams were infused with a magnificent fresh air scent.and sitting outside, warming my bones on a pulled out kitchen chair in the sunshine while getting vitamin D, was pure delight. even with the teaser day—-66 on the porch thermometer—,it’s too early to clean the outdoor furniture—-just to dream of what is coming is joy enough.
Woah. We’ve had two warmish days and the strangest feeling has come over me. I want to clean my porch furniture.
Hope is awakened that we will soon spend hours AFTER work in day light and all the freedom this light brings to us.