light lessons
by bam
i was slinking into the early-morning light of my garden, when i startled to the sound of a chainsaw. (a chainsaw in morning’s newly-born hours is, by any definition, a startling eruption.) i looked up and there was a man high in the limbs of the woodland grove that hugs the other side of the fence, the fence that now borders my quiet, contemplative, pretend-cloister garden.
i swallowed my yelp, but let out a pipsqueak of question: “cutting down trees?” (my questions are so utterly incisive when chainsaws, at any hour, are involved.)
“only this one that’s in the way,” he replied as a tree as tall and willowy as our chimney came shimmying down. it was “in the way” of the soon-to-be hot tub that will gurgle and whir just the other side of said fence.
i swallowed back tears, and darted inside.
i couldn’t bear to look at the now naked space, where once a gnarly old serviceberry had offered its limbs as occasional nursery and everyday waystation for the sparrows, and robins, and cheery wee chickadees that flock––season by season, hour by hour––to my feeders and fountains and free-for-all baths.
hours later, though, i needed distraction in the form of a hose. so i cranked the faucet and started my rounds.
and that’s when i noticed: the light in that crook of my garden was suddenly dappled. and beautifully so. sunlight falling in splotches. and sprees. sunlight igniting the backsides of leaves. where once there’d been only monochrome of shadow, there now was shimmer and glint and translucence on flat plane of leaf and frill of each fern frond. the patch was a playlot for luminescence as never before. a landscape “tricked out in gilt,” is how annie dillard once wrote of the play of peekaboo light as it darted and dodged.
i almost swore i could hear the wide-mouthed leaves gulping down sunlight, a commodity they’d tasted far too little of over the long many years.
i stood there beholding. letting each molecule sink deep down within.
and i had to admit it was as lovely a light show as i’d seen since the one in the night sky the midnight before, when the great mama blue moon headlined the stage in her most zaftig dimensions.
seems light is my gospel of the week. moonlight leading me home in the night. sunlight alive where it’s not fallen in decades.
this whole holy earth, it seems, is straining to fill in my shadowy cracks with every last drop of all the light it can muster.
and i, like my forget-me-not’s leaves, am guzzling it greedily down.
after dousing myself in this splash of a light bath, this bit of earthly gospel from the center for spirituality in nature landed in my mailbox: more insight on light, the way the trees bend toward the light. botanically, biologically speaking, i mean. it’s the leaves that lead the way. specifically, the cells on the dark side of the leaves elongate and stretch toward the light, seeking photosynthesis, that alchemical wonder that stirs sunlight and water and carbon dioxide and somehow winds up with O2 and sugar, and moves the whole show along. the branches and twigs follow the lead of the leaves. so the tree actually bends, reaches toward light. and the question is asked: what would it mean to turn toward the light with all of our energy and substance and being? is their holy wisdom to drink in here?
it’s something to ponder, all right. so have a listen right here:
sometimes i think the folks in charge must have a check by name, letting them know i’m one of the ones who needs lessons in duplicate or triplicate. so when three times in 24 hours i’m struck by a lightbeam, i get the idea there’s something i’m supposed to be pondering.
what light lessons have struck you lately?
this beautiful poem, on how the world is saturated in prayer — voluntary and involuntary, spoken and sung, resounding and silent — is one i bumped into this week. it’s by carol ann duffy, one of the UK’s best-known poets, the first woman, and first openly LGBTQ+ person, to become poet laureate of the UK. it’s a poem with a bit of vernacular that might benefit from a few notes. so these, from my friends at SALT Project, a not-for-profit production company dedicated to visual storytelling and to my mind a humming hive of creativity:
(1) “Minims” are half-notes written on a page of musical notation.
(2) BBC Radio has long broadcast the “Shipping Forecast” for the various seas around the British Isles, waters divided into 31 sea areas, including Rockall, Malin, Dogger, and Finisterre. These regular broadcasts, especially the ones late at night, are for many Britons a deeply familiar touchstone: the announcer’s voice methodically reciting the sea areas all around the islands, one by one, forecasting the weather.
(3) And finally, “Finisterre” (pronounced “FIN-iss-tair,” rhymes with “BIN-kiss-fair”) literally means “end of the world”; the sea area’s name was recently changed to “FitztRoy,” but many Britons (such as the poet Duffy herself) grew up hearing the older name “Finisterre” repeatedly intoned on BBC Radio…
Prayer
Some days, although we cannot pray, a prayer
utters itself. So, a woman will lift
her head from the sieve of her hands and stare
at the minims sung by a tree, a sudden gift.
Some nights, although we are faithless, the truth
enters our hearts, that small familiar pain;
then a man will stand stock-still, hearing his youth
in the distant Latin chanting of a train.
Pray for us now. Grade 1 piano scales
console the lodger looking out across
a Midlands town. Then dusk, and someone calls
a child’s name as though they named their loss.
Darkness outside. Inside, the radio’s prayer —
Rockall. Malin. Dogger. Finisterre.
- Carol Ann Duffy
p.s. lots of chair birthdays in the days past: sharon b, jcv, my dear neighbor sarah who keeps us in sweets. and in the days ahead, my big brother john. happy blessed days to each and every one of you, and anyone else i might have happened to miss…


Yes, whenever the Powers that Be want me to hear something, I get the message three times from three different places. It is so like you to be able to literally “see the light“ in what is an otherwise untenable situation. Love you.
xoxoxox it’s like that old ditto paper, with the top sheet, the carbon, and the one underneath. i need things in triples before it seeps through…..
Whew! That poem.
“then a man will stand stock-still, hearing his youth
in the distant Latin chanting of a train.”
i know, right? whew! indeed. i was especially partial to “some days, although we cannot pray, a prayer utters itself.” the tethers of that desert space, where i can’t find the words, but the prayers come of their own light force….
I gulped when I began reading about the tree, the noise, the hot tub…and then you took us with you on your journey to new possibilities and the new light that has opened in your world. What a beautiful reminder of possibility. And echoing the way the universe likes to tickle and nudge our awareness, my next reading moment was from Tricycle Magazine and Jane Hirschfield. It blends beautifully. I think the magazine allows for one share and hope it adds light for us to lengthen and lean into. May the long weekend of glorious weather be a boon to all. ♥️ https://tricycle.org/magazine/jane-hirshfield-poetry/
as a huge jane H fan, i was trying to peek over there, but it’s not yet letting me in. i might just have to check her new book out from the library. sending love on what i cannot believe is the official back bookend of summer. but autumn, delicious autumn, is wriggling toward us. and that’s as glorious as glorious might be. time spelled out in radiance….
Early on Sunday morning, the light streaming through a stained glass window in my favorite sacred space caught my attention. A gorgeous Celtic knot design was GLOWING. It was the only part on the window that was illuminated. This ancient symbol of the Trinity spoke to my heart of the need to pay attention to the movement of the Spirit.
beautiful. where the light pours through…..
So interesting that the new fence took sunlight away…and now with the removal of the tree, the gift of sunlight has returned. Nothing is permanent.
amen!!!
This post resonates with me deeply, as you well know. It is tragic to lose a beloved tree to another’s whim. But it isn’t it just like you to discover and embrace the light. I love that you’re noticing new sunlight animating your garden… xoxo
Because nothing is ever facile, today I noticed my happy ferns might be scowling at the new neighborhood in which they’ve found themselves. They thought they lived in ShadyLand❤️
As always, so much to chew on! Yes, this was a week of light. I traipsed to the rocks south of Foster Beach, joining other moon gazers to marvel at our beautiful cosmic companion and her bright, broad reflection on rhythmic bands of waves. Even a radio nearby and a two-way conga line of cars making Simonds Drive nearly uncrossable could not diminish the wonder. This morning, on my late start to the market, a still breathtaking moon hung midway in the western sky, nearly round and looking translucent as tissue. I’ll watch again tonight. I’m making the most of this because who knows where I’ll be when a super blue moon returns in 2037. Meanwhile, end-of-day light comes sooner and sooner–it’s dark just past 7:30! Fall’s cloak is starting to wrap around dawn and dusk. Have to finish watering sooner!
I ached for that venerable serviceberry tree cut down for, well, never mind. A wonderful native species that I’d welcome in my front yard. (Don’t worry, weedy Norway maple, I couldn’t even have you cut down.) I am glad you found something positive in its sad, sudden departure. And I think your ferns will adapt. But another reminder that nothing is permanent, in spite of how we plot or gardens or our lives.
I loved listening online to the BBC Shipping Forecast. I pictured Brits picking it up on cathedral radios. I immediately thought of two instances of this service in PBS programs. The first involved a minor character in the old “As Time Goes By” series–an eccentric-to-the-hilt caretaker or neighbor of a rural coastal family property who set forth in fair weather and foul to file the critical weather reports. The second was a documentary on D-Day that featured the teenaged girl who filed the weather updates on which the launch of the invasion hung. So not just radio to be lulled to sleep by! (But what a classically sonorous BBC voice intoning the place names.)
Oh, bam, sorry I rambled again. But your light guides us onto all sorts of paths of thought. You are so enlightening!
dear beautiful karen, you never ever ramble. you always always entice. i could read your zigs and zags all day. your tender love for all this world, and all its inhabitants — its moons, its norway maples, its hard shells (me sighing here…..) — is as life infusing as anything i know. zig on, dear friend, any time. i’m listening. you make me want to run to the BBC to turn on the dial right now….
g’night sweet friend. thanks for this lullaby. xoxo