Although I must admit that the thought of cleaning the
garage has been lurking in the back of my mind, not to mention that the storage
in the Wayback (our auxillary building) needs organizing. When I was studying
for my Real Estate exam, clutter bothered the heck out of me. Now that the exam
is over—who sees clutter?
It's fascinating how perceptions change, and I
understand why the world has appeared so crazy for the last few years.
Many people have been on edge, out of work, sick,
irritated, or tired of being home all the time. That isn't a good recipe for
world peace and happiness. And we see clutter--you know what I mean, not in the
house or yard, but out there, in the marketplace, the airwaves, and the media.
It seems that many people thought a reset was in order. But we aren't computers
that can go back to a previous date—when we thought the world was grand… but
wasn't.
We are ever-advancing creators on the leading edge.
And where are the bright-eyed, busy-tailed young
people of the sixties? Oh, one cut my hair yesterday. When I asked her why she
was in Eugene, Oregon, having lived in Florida, she said she followed the
Grateful Dead.
The youth of the 60s were out to change the world, and
they did. They worked on Civil rights. Martin Luther King Jr. was hard at work
trying to end segregation, and people from the North and the South marched with
him in peaceful protest. The NAACP was busy negotiating. Reproduction rights
were coming into effect. Dress codes were addressed, and a man could grow
facial hair and not be penalized. That women should have equal pay for equal
work was considered fair and reasonable. Many followed Martin Luther King, Jr.
in his efforts to promote change non-violently, following the premise of
Mahatma Gandhi, who used non-violence resistance to end colonial rule in India.
Yet both men were shot down-- Luther doing his work, Gandhi on the way to a
prayer meeting.
We still have Saber Tooth Tigers lurking outside our
caves.
Oh, but I was talking about New Year's Resolutions,
saying I hate them. I don't hate them. I just don't do them, and why people jam
them in our faces is beyond me.
They just make us feel guilty for not doing the cleanup
things that ought to be done. Even proponents
of New Year’s resolutions say they don’t last. We’re focusing on minutia when
we could be aiming for the skies.
What if we decided to end our resistance of doing the thing that ignites
our souls and go for it. That's the work.
Most everyone has a dream, something they wish they
were doing but aren't, or their vision has yet to materialize, and they are
frustrated. Don't despair. That's part of the process.
Our soul is advancing.
Our spirit is uplifted by the dream. We plan and
fantasize, being creative gets our juices flowing. Keep telling yourself that
it is possible. Dreams uplift the spirit. And imagine, what if we got happy along the
way to it? Are we afraid if we get happy, we will give it up? Yet being happy escalates
the process.
We have the great privilege of living on this gorgeous
planet. Yes, dream of space and advance into space, but to look at it to leave
behind something we have messed up seems to be wasted energy to me. Doom’s Day
people have made some of us believe our planet is a lost cause.
It’s winter now, but I trust that spring will come,
the grass will grow, flowers will sprout, baby birdies will appear in nests and
fawns will appear in the forests. I trust that life will continue. It is our
job to steward the planet so they will thrive.
Even though the shortest day of the year appeared on
December 21, my chickens began laying again. You know chickens have clocks
attached to the sunlight, so I was surprised to find three eggs, as I have
three hens, plus Blackie, who could be old, I don’t know her age, she adopted us.
I will know if she begins laying again, for her eggs are a light brown, while
the others are sea-foam green. In the fall, chickens molt, meaning shed old
feathers, and need to grow new ones. That takes protein, and they usually stop
laying. I turned them out today to scrounge in the yard, and to pick up some
additional protein. They talked to me, so I guess they forgave me for leaving
them in their pen for the last few days.
Our pioneering spirit will carry us through. We want
our babies to grow up and have babies. That's the natural order of things. And
respect your mother, sisters, and girlfriends. Don’t cover them up and keep them
ignorant. Talk about a waste.
I praise the people who do clean up. They remove
plastic from the beaches. They wash shore birds encased in oil. They recycle.
They search for an alternative to plastic wrap and create non-plastic packing
materials. Now some companies are using mycelium, a fungus mat that grows
beneath the soil. This information came to me this week from my grandson.) If
dried, mycelium is absorbent, lightweight, and works better than Styrofoam.
Plus, it composts.
And we can grow food for everyone on the planet without
poisoning the soil—for if we kill the land, we're in deep doo doo. Speaking of
doo doo, I have heard that the cows have saved India (where the people do not
eat them). The cows keep the soil fertilized, pull carts, and give milk.
The wildlife here are exquisite, and if you have ever
befriended animals, you know how superb they can be. Recently a native tribe
writer wrote about the Orcas of the Northern US and how they have a matriarchal
society, where the elder female leads the pod to the best food and show how to
teach the young. The Orcas mirror us under the water/ They love their pod,
mates, and babies the same as we do.
We love the animals. We go to Zoos to see them. We go
to Sea World, aquariums, and museums to see them, or replicas of them, and to learn
about them. We adopt them. We save them if we can when we find one orphaned or
injured. We go to Africa to view them in the wild. We cruise Alaska’s shores
hoping to see a bear, a moose, or a whale.
We owe it to our life forms to keep the planet
livable. And we owe it to our children. Do the people who put up billboards
proclaiming that a baby's heartbeat begins at 22 days gestation also work to
see that the world is a friendly place where all that precious life can grow
wild and free?
Don't tell me about parasites and fleas.
Carry on, my dears. You are the hope of the future.
Jo