Time as a river is one of those metaphors that resonate for me.  I took this picture of the flow of the Pigeon River as we were coming home from our honeymoon, and it seemed just perfect for a post about the year’s forward movement.

I’m not usually one for lists.  But 2009 was so eventful, and so wonderful, that it didn’t seem strange at all to list some of the joys and thrills of it at its conclusion.  (Oh, my God/dess, does the fact that we’re almost to 2010 freak anyone else out a little bit?  It seems impossible….)

In fact, I was amazed at how much had happened this year, and the exercise reminded me yet again that I set my standards for myself way too high.  Before I made the list, just this morning actually, I’d been mentally berating myself for failing to get as much accomplished as I’d hoped during the calendar year.  Now I’m shaking my head, bemused at my own foolishness.  My list of achievements was obviously much longer than this, but I narrowed it down to the top 9 in three categories for the post.

Where possible, I’ve included links to my own blog posts, some of them from my other blog, to illustrate my selections.  Perhaps you missed out on some oldie-but-goodies.  Just roll your mouse over the item you’re interested in, and the linked portion will show.

It was a really fun exercise for me to go back and reread my earlier blog posts.  If you count both blogs, I’ve now written nearly 250 posts.  Isn’t that amazing?  I’m now not quite such a baby blogger.  I’d say maybe more like a toddler.

Without further ado:

9 Not-to-be-forgotten Events in 2009

  1. F. dug me a kitchen garden from our blank-slate, rented yard.  In it, I grew some of our food organically, trying to pursue a no-kill, cooperate-with-nature policy.
  2. The family heirloom seed was brought back from the brink of extinction in one glorious season.
  3. We joined a CSA and got almost all our food supply locally for about five months, including pork, chicken, eggs, fruit, vegetables, herbs, beef, butter, and milk.
  4. I quit smoking.
  5. In August, I started a blog.  Two, actually.
  6. A hummingbird flew so close to me her wing brushed my skin.
  7. I went on a retreat in the Blue Ridge Mountains with my closest girlfriends.
  8. F. and I got married.  And we did it in Walhalla, the county seat named after the mythical Nordic paradise.
  9. Our honeymoon was in Tennessee  — and the trip was a totally out-of-the-blue wedding gift.

9 Favorite Victory Garden Posts in ’09

  1. in a hurry to bloom (the one that started it all)
  2. fire ant confidential
  3. yin yang
  4. golden treasure
  5. the jig is up
  6. seeing things
  7. the unknown radish
  8. sweet reminder
  9. heritage

9 Excellent Performers in the ’09 Garden

  1. Family heirloom half-runner bean (It really needs a name; doesn’t it?)
  2. ‘Cherokee Purple’ heirloom tomato
  3. ‘Sumter’ cucumber
  4. Genovese basil
  5. Japanese eggplant ‘Ichiban’
  6. ‘Whirlybird’ nasturtiums
  7. Cardinal climber vine
  8. Heirloom morning glory ‘Grandpa Ott’s’
  9. ‘Fife Creek Cowhorn’ heirloom okra

No, a worm hasn’t been munching on my DSL cable.  But we had the same issue as in November, and this time the phone company technician was very competent and solved the problem lickety-split.  (At least, that is what I am hoping, having had service restored now for less than two hours.)

I saw this lovely apple-green worm, still aparently thriving, during my Thanksgiving stay at my sister’s house.  It is a lot easier to be fascinated by the worm’s activities, and not disturbed by his presence on your cardinal climber vine, when it’s the end of the season and the plants are already collapsing upon themselves.  And it was a lot easier to be calm about this latest upset in our household internet service, although I can only speculate as to the reasons.

For one thing, it’s almost Christmas, and we’ve had a delightful house guest with us for the past two days.

For another, tomorrow F. and I leave on our honeymoon.  As soon as we return, it’ll be time to visit relatives for the holidays.

A house guest, a honeymoon, & the holidays… add those together, and you’ve got me scrambling to pack and cook and clean and wrap presents and do laundry and get cards in the mailbox, plus double-check the cat sitter and other arrangements (someone has to water the tree!), all before we go tomorrow.

I think I’ll be able to keep the blog up and running during all this (pre-written, pre-photographed articles are a lifesaver).  But just in case I’m not able, the service interruption with no warning, during which I failed to keep publishing, is good practice in just letting it go.

Being at peace with what you cannot control.  I’m suspecting a whole bunch of us learn that lesson at the holidays — or if we refuse to take it in this year, will be doomed to repeat it in 2010.

Maybe it’s one of those lessons you never stop learning… or the fact that I wonder if it is may be a sign that it’s a lesson that I’ve still not learned.

How about you?  Have there been moments during the holiday season so far, or in the past, when you feel you’re being asked to learn to let it go?

Sending you peace from our little hollow in the forest…

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