I don’t know if you've noticed the torch
of autumn as yet. It depends on where you live and whether your environment and
sensibilities present and choose to see the glory of nature manifest into a
fleeting brilliance of color.
My house is high on a ridge between a
river and a tributary creek. I am probably a thousand yards from the river and
several hundred feet from the creek. The ridge is about three hundred feet
above the river and maybe a hundred feet above the creek as it too flows to the
river. It is an extraordinary place to be.
I mention this because toward the river,
which is west of my home and down the slope there is a line of river trees that
have turned a seasonal golden yellow. When the sun sets over the far ridge the
yellows festoon their color into a curtain of gold. It is magnificent.
During the summer, when I look in that
same direction at sunset, it is a variegated curtain of green. Light green,
dark green, and all the bright greens you can think of only until the sunsets
over the far ridge.
In a very short time it changes; autumn
does that. In the next few weeks the yellows will be gone and the river will be in
full view through the lace of branches and trunks for the leaf scrim will have
dropped collectively to the ground.
I think the season’s change is a profound
lesson for humankind. To me both autumn and spring are sacred. In these two
opposing seasons we see the seeming death and life of nature.
The trees, grasses, and flowers pass. The
insects and some mammals disappear and essentially hibernate until the warmth
of spring encourages the return to active life. The trees especially are the
harbingers of endings and the heralds of new growth.
The human condition is similar to the
cycle of tree life. Like the trees when we pass we really don’t die. The body
passes, but the spirit, the sap of life, survives. We meld, we blend, and we
hibernate into the root cosmos until divine guidance gives us another
opportunity to return and grow bigger and better and more fully in the
appreciation of All That Is.
I acknowledge that this concept may be
both inimical and foreign to some beliefs systems. It doesn’t diminish your
dogma, nor does it augment mine. It is a thought that works for me until
another comes around that's better.
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