Playful
The inventiveness and playfulness of nature in all its forms are awaiting us every day, every minute, if we are ready to pay attention. Nothing is set in stone. All is in flux, eager to shift, all will change. All is happy to metamorphose: from blossoms to fruit to seed, from desperate for rain to deliriously lush, from egg to larvae to pupae, from tiny seedling to 140-year-old live oak, and on and on. My ferns are unfurling their arms ready to take in the light and breeze. The nasturtium plants are curling and draping themselves luxuriously over stones, steps, into the jade bush. When the flowers are done the caper-like seeds start to form in trios. This year the sweet peas are climbing up into the apple tree, the wisteria decides to show up late with its fragrant bloom. What unfolds is improvisational art, dancing with demands of the bigger forces. This is instrumental. There appears to be an agreement: why not try this? Or maybe that? Early on, this way of existing seems the only possibility for me – being an artist in the big web of life. But I don’t mind forms and rules – in fact we need them, they might invite more playfulness, stretching of boundaries, surprising evolution. Necessity or hardship, like the pandemic or any crisis, force us to be even more flexible and inventive.Unfolding: what will it be?
looking at the puffy perfect sphere of a dandelion
you remember the irresistible impulse to blow
into its perfectness – blow it to the wind
a hundred tiny celestial parachutes
all around you translucent seeds
floating off to a new destiny
delight – abandon
it’s gone
…….
…..
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..
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Thank you for this marvelous - and marvelling - piece of nature prose and poetry. You make me think of Whitman's "Nature, Containing All" ... "nature, the only complete, actual poem" as he says: "What is nature but change, in all its visible, and still more its invisible processes?
ReplyDeleteNature keeps up her long and harmless throes, her vital, copious, eternal procession,
An infinite number of currents and forces, and contributions, and temperatures, and cross-purposes,
Whose ceaseless play of counterpart upon counterpart brings constant restoration and vitality."
Thank you for Walt Whitman the great American mystic poet, our own Hafiz or Rumi... may restoration and vitality proceed!
DeleteYour poetic, almost musical words always inspire me to look deeper. I sit here gazing at Mount Konocti, a lava dome, visually seeing the result of the power of nature. Einstein spoke a lot about the magic of nature...."Joy in looking and comprehending is nature’s most beautiful gift" Thank you Karina for the timely reminder!
ReplyDeleteKarina this shot of the bee is wild!! All three are beautiful and make my heart ache for the garden 🐝🌱💗
ReplyDeleteI really needed that remind that God is change and everything's already changing. 🥰