Thanksgiving Day, 2018
Have a happy day. This is the time of traditional harvest festivals, and Thanksgiving, despite its political overtones, is in some sense, a continuation of that tradition. I know, the Pilgrims and Indians scenario is a travesty, a glossing over of a continent lost by indigenous peoples, but I would hope we could all recognize on this day and every day that we have much for which we should give thanks. Blessings.
The Hickory behind our building stands taller than her peers and this morning her golden leaves were backlit like a girl's hair showing highlights in the sun. Catching the suns rays, the leaves transformed to a transparent aura surrounding her branches. The slightest breeze made them shimmer and they began to fall like butterflies fluttering their wings, descending for a rest. For that moment, I am thankful
Later in the day, I walked to my neighbors house for a visit. On my way back, I heard a hissing sound, low in the understory trees to my left, along the roadside. A quick glance revealed a Carolina Wren behind the leaves and branches. Perhaps she was the same wren who nested on my porch last summer. The feathers bore a pattern of rich dark brown and lighter brown or beige with lines of black spots on the margins of the tail and wings. The tail was upright, as wrens and chipmunks usually hold their tails. I watched for minute to see what the wren would do when another gave the boisterous call of wrens. Such enthusiasm for a bird smaller than my hand! I turned to look, and when I glanced back, the wren I had been observing was gone.
Later, I drove to a friends house for Thanksgiving dinner. Some mutual friends arrived and we visited, awaiting the arrival of his family from Georgia. A houseful of his parents, siblings and nephews and nieces ate dinner with us interlopers, some of us strangers to them. Then I built a fire in the back yard. We gathered around the fire, guitars were pulled out of vehicles and the singing began. After a bit we all departed to separate homes. What a day for which to give thanks.
The Hickory behind our building stands taller than her peers and this morning her golden leaves were backlit like a girl's hair showing highlights in the sun. Catching the suns rays, the leaves transformed to a transparent aura surrounding her branches. The slightest breeze made them shimmer and they began to fall like butterflies fluttering their wings, descending for a rest. For that moment, I am thankful
Later in the day, I walked to my neighbors house for a visit. On my way back, I heard a hissing sound, low in the understory trees to my left, along the roadside. A quick glance revealed a Carolina Wren behind the leaves and branches. Perhaps she was the same wren who nested on my porch last summer. The feathers bore a pattern of rich dark brown and lighter brown or beige with lines of black spots on the margins of the tail and wings. The tail was upright, as wrens and chipmunks usually hold their tails. I watched for minute to see what the wren would do when another gave the boisterous call of wrens. Such enthusiasm for a bird smaller than my hand! I turned to look, and when I glanced back, the wren I had been observing was gone.
Later, I drove to a friends house for Thanksgiving dinner. Some mutual friends arrived and we visited, awaiting the arrival of his family from Georgia. A houseful of his parents, siblings and nephews and nieces ate dinner with us interlopers, some of us strangers to them. Then I built a fire in the back yard. We gathered around the fire, guitars were pulled out of vehicles and the singing began. After a bit we all departed to separate homes. What a day for which to give thanks.
Published on November 22, 2018 17:29
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