
Nothing came to the surface for a blog entry, and I thought about writing about nothing until near the end of the day. There is a liquor store on the east side of
One of the wine displays was a French winery, Heron, and I thought about this majestic bird, catching glimpses of one on the Chesapeake Bay in the wee hours of the morning as I sat in the seven seat of crew boat, seeing one fly over Golden Ponds in
In high school, a friend, Chris, was filling out a multiple choice personality/ideal career test. The only question I remember is, “If you were a flower, what would you be?” My mom, Chris and I laughed after he read the question – especially because the friend was male and, though sensitive, still quite male and an adolescent. But I think these days, if I was a flower, I’d be a red poppy.
I am reading Richard Rohr’s, “Everything Belongs.” A Franciscan monk, Rohr talks about small mind and big mind, small mind being what we tend to have in the West, analytical, detail oriented, at its worst, clinging mind. Big mind is more Eastern, able to float in mystery, connect with that which is bigger. This helps me realize one thing I miss now in my “religion” and connect to in my faith, something I feared in church, where the mystery, mystical, something bigger, inexplicable and only feelable, fantasy “fits.” I love children’s books, like “Goodnight Moon” and “You Are My I Love You” that take us out of the concrete, sensical on language and words. They are feelable.
So I put it out there – if you were a bird, a flower or a tree, what would you be? Ridiculous questions that I wonder about. Perhaps part of big mind, nonsensical. At the very least, a little humor to round the sharp corners of recent events.
8 comments:
If I were a bird, I would be a bluebird. That color is so captivating! Everything about them is tiny but surprisingly concentrated and intense.
If I were a flower, I would be a lilac in May. Fragrant, usually shaped, wild and, of course, purple.
If I were a tree, I would be a giant maple tree, old and wise and rooted, with arms outstretched to meet the day and welcome the changing seasons.
If I were a bird, I would be an eagle with razor sharp eyesight and talons. I love the sound of their cry. It reminds me of home.
If I were a flower, I would be a sunflower, bright, gorgeous golden color that Crayola cannot duplicate and following the sun every moment.
If I were a tree, I would be a poplar tree, bending gently in the wind.
I'm glad to hear from you, I've been thinking about you.
If I were a bird I'd be a hummingbird, I've always loved how tiny they are and how fast they can flap their wings.
If I were a flower I'd be a red gerber daisy
If i were a tree I'd be a magnolia tree full of large, low branches that kids can climb on until they work their way to the top where they can see their world from a new perspective.
If I were a bird, I would be an albatross, ever soaring, never landing.
As a flower, I would be a columbine, surprising color combinations and shaped like a fairy space ship.
And if a tree, a flame locust, which seems to grow so easily, volunteering everywhere, with fern like leaf structure and punctuating the road sides in the fall with flaming red .
Being the type "A" personality I am, as a bird, I see myself as the Kingfisher. Partly for the title but mostly for the stern eyes and wonderful swoop of feathers off his head in majestic blue.
As a flower, I would be a wild onion blossom with no real beauty, just purposeful intrusion.
If I were a tree, a dogwood in bloom. Legend has it that this is the tree that Christ was nailed to. After which, God never let the dogwood grow large and wide ever again. When I look at the dogwood I think of how Christ has (and still is) changed me from something that caused Him harm into something that is beautiful and different.
I'd be a swallow, a tall bearded iris, a Chinese elm. And we'd read Daniel Pinkwater's Doodle Flute, and Rosemary Wells' Max's Christmas, and Jasper TomKins The Mountains Crack Up! and all the Mercer Mayer books, and oh so many more wonderful children's books.We'd read them while we fly and sway and float, all of us part of the wind.
I love you for asking these questions Alexa. I love trees too.
If I were a tree, I would be a cottonwood. This is my heritage, my family's tree--the ranch where we all grew up surrounded with huge gnarly cottonwoods, the treehouse my grandfather built us, in one of these cottonwoods, and always the discussion of drought, water levels, irrigation and whether the big cottonwood on the South side of the field was getting enough water. The cottonwoods are also part of my present as Jonathan proposed to me in one of these groves of cottonwoods...snow on the ground and us following the horse path to the perfect stopping spot--and then the ring--and then tears. It truly was magical.
Thanks for prompting this reflecting.
I think I'd be a hawk. Can you imagine seeing the world from several hundred feet up, effortlessly riding the thermals? And, here in Albany, NY, there are a lot of fat, slow squirrels, so I'd never go hungry.
I don't know enough flowers to make an intelligent comment about this...
If I were a tree, I'd be a Christmas Tree. Who doesn't like Christmas trees? But not the kind that gets cut down and tossed in a house, one of the big ones that is decorated in the town square after Thanksgiving. Then I'd get to be a Christmas tree for several hundred years, instead of one month.
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