Thomas Merton
As B and I walked on Sunday - our platypus walk we call it that loops along the creek and through the Showgrounds and back to the main street to an early morning coffee - we stopped, as is our want, to see if there were any platypus about. We are unbelievably fortunate to live in a place where platypus live, a place where they are readily seen. Not every time we walk, but often enough. They are shy and precious.
They stop us in our tracks. We stop, in silence, we scan the creek, we wait patiently to see if the ripples appear; the air bubbles. We wait. We oftentimes think we could wait a lot longer, and see a lot more, but we are often on a mission so to speak - places to go, people to see.
This quote made me think about what it truly means to stop and be present in nature. To be one with the silence, letting it soak into our bones, to fill our minds, to overflow our thoughts. The simplest, yet hardest, of being.
It is so tempting to follow these words and to see how a life changes if more time is spent with silence.
"to belong completely to such silence" is a gift and I am fortunate that I can find my way to it by simply turning off my hearing aids ... it's always somewhat jarring when I turn them back on and the hums, beeps, and clicks of everyday life whoosh back into my head
ReplyDeleteIt must be pretty good Liz to be able to literally switch off like that; and to belong to that silence. I can imagine being resentful at times of returning to the noise. I am impressed that your hearing aids seem to work so well - we are having many issues here at the moment with money spent and not much hearing to 'show' for it for a couple of folk!
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