Autumn leaf with a heart chewed out of it.

There's a little love hidden here, for those with eyes to see it.

During our reading session yesterday, M. stumbled across a word she didn’t know:  plenty.

At first I tried synonyms to explain her new vocabulary word.  Plenty is ample, abundant, bountiful.  But none of those clicked.

Plenty can also be requisite, sufficient, satisfactory.  No, she still wasn’t getting the message.

I tried again.  “Hmm… basically, plenty is more than you need.  It could be a lot more than you need, or just barely over the amount you need.”

M. tilted her head to the side, her big brown eyes thoughtful.  Then she nodded and bent to write it in her ever-expanding vocabulary notebook.

When she looked up again, I asked, “How can you tell when you have more than you need?”  Besides wanting to solidify the lesson and use the word “plenty” in a few sentences, I was genuinely curious as to her response.  Keep in mind M. was born in a trailer park and has been raised in poverty.  Even now, her family would be in trouble without food stamps and regular trips to the local food pantry.

Slowly a smile spread across her face, the smile that says that she thinks I’m joking or being silly.  “You’re still alive!” she shouted out proudly, as though this were the winning answer to a game show question.

Kind of puts things into perspective; don’t you think?

Today is Thanksgiving Day in my country.  It’s a time for us to pause and remember with gratitude the people in our lives and the simple and beautiful blessings we tend to take for granted every day.  It’s a moment to revel in our plenty, whatever that is for each of us.

For all my American friends, I wish you a wonderful holiday, complete with laughter and joy and homemade pecan pie (because I’m not too fond of the pumpkin version) — and an extra special dose of tolerance for that one relative who just gets on your last nerve.

And for everyone, regardless of nationality, I wish you a heart that overflows with wonder and gratitude for the beauty around you, for the moments of peace you are privileged to experience, for all the love in your life… and for the very Earth that supports each footstep and every breath you take.

We are so very fortunate to be alive.  It’s as simple as that.

Namasté, y’all.

A wild grapevine displays a high-flying golden heart.

A wild grapevine displays a high-flying golden heart.

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“A morning glory at my window satisfies me more than the metaphysics of books.”

~Walt Whitman

Grandpa Ott Morning Glory.

You may have guessed by now that I’m a huge Whitman fan.  His words do get featured pretty regularly in the “Quote of the Week” that appears in the sidebar.

But, as much as I adore morning glories (and especially my heirloom Grandpa Ott Morning Glories, which may well have been in existence during Whitman’s lifetime), I’ll have to disagree with the poet on this one.

Of course, it depends on the book, but…

Walt, come on, couldn’t we just have both?

Morning glories clinging to the porch railing.

Sure we could.

In fact, I did it this morning, sitting on the porch steps, alternately engrossed in my beautiful book, and then letting that book slide off into my lap as I got to daydreaming, or watching the bees in the mint patch, or wondering if the next ‘Cherokee Purple’ tomato plans to ripen up anytime soon, or holding my breath and sitting ever so still as the male ruby-throated hummingbird came within eight inches of my face, not certain if I was a huge flower or not — but not willing to pass up a source of nectar this promising without checking it out first.

(Hint:  When you plan to be still in the garden, wear an orange or pink or scarlet shirt.  Sitting in a sunbeam doesn’t hurt your chances for a hummingbird encounter, either.  Sometimes, if you are very fortunate, a butterfly will land on your shoulder, too.)

I guess I’m just that kind of person.  The kind who wants to have her cake and eat it, too.  Shortly after F. and I first met, he accused me of being greedy — but not for money.  The very idea made me laugh — and then laugh some more when I realized how true it was.  I wasn’t used to thinking of the term “greed” apart from the Wall-Street-style connotation, and at first glance it didn’t seem to fit my lifestyle of simple pleasures enjoyed to their fullest.

It is now one of our little jokes, because it’s so true.  Yes, I am greedy for all the joy this world has to offer, whether it’s the sun-drenched or the rain-soaked kind — or any of the million possibilities between them… and the transcendent joy of the shimmering rainbow when they meet.  I am greedy for friendship, for beauty, for laughter, for wonder, for love, for inspiration, for sweetness and spice, for peace, and for connection — with other beings, with Nature, with the Divine.

I’ll take the magic of books, please – and a stained-glass morning glory with a honeybee feasting in its glowing throat.  If it’s not too much to ask.

Wishing you a weekend filled with whatever satisfies you most.

Namasté, y’all.

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“I wish I could show you when you are lonely or in darkness the astonishing light of your own being.”

~ Hafiz

Dedicated to anyone out there who’s going through a rough time right now.

I know it hasn’t been easy.

Some friends of mine are going through tough stuff right now.

Really tough.

Sometimes it seems to be everywhere simultaneously.  So many things are going wrong.  So many problems, everywhere you look, sprouting up just like mushrooms after a long, soft, autumn rain.

Our ideas of how things are supposed to be, well, they end up being as short-lived as the morning glories who spiral open so triumphantly as soon as the sun clears the horizon — and then they’re finished by noon.

Finished.

The conditions that were perfect for them before are no longer what prevails.  Yet everything keeps on going on, singing, stretching, unfolding… creating fruit where there was nothing before, spreading more roots to be able to stand taller than ever, bearing seeds, those tiny miracles… soaking up the sun, swallowing the rain, growing.

Things change.  Our ideas change.  We change.

The path can look so scary in places, I know.  Believe me, I know.*

But I also know that one day you’ll look back on this part of the journey and be grateful you were here.  You’ll see that it was important for you to become the person you could be.  The even more beautiful and amazing version of you than the one you are living now.

It might be impossible to believe that now, to hold that place in your heart open.  You know the one.  It’s the place that forever cradles hope, the place that sees possibility and opportunity in absolute disaster, the place that knows you are fabulous and that you always — always — deserve love, exactly as you are.

Its voice sounds a little bit like Pollyanna sometimes.  And that’s cute when things are looking up, or just so-so, or just bad enough that a pep talk can make a quick attitude adjustment.  But when you’re really suffering, sometimes what you really want to do is scream at it, tell it to shut up, lock it in the closet, and get on with your dark night of the soul.

Panic tends to shut off our connection to that place.  Not that your fears are illegitimate.  On the contrary.  I’ve heard many of them, and I’ve got my own share, believe me.  I’m the last person to discount the things that keep you up at night.  But whatever it is, you are more than this.  You are being given these precise challenges for your own highest spiritual growth.

I hesitated to write that last part.  Some of you might get mad.  But honesty is part of the package here .

Should I instead have given you clichés, soothed you by telling you it will all get better soon?  That you’ll certainly come out smelling like a rose?  That might not be true, I’m afraid.  It might even get worse.  I am no prophetess, and I cannot see the future.

Besides, most commercially-grown roses have had the scent bred right out of them.  They smell like the plastic in which they’re wrapped, with a lingering whiff of the fungicide in which they’ve been dipped to pass through a Customs inspection.

Hey, we’re being straight with each other here; right?

That is why you need access to that place in your heart.   It doesn’t do plastic or fake, ever.  And it won’t ever lie.  It will carry you through the darkest days.  It is on intimate terms with “the astonishing light of your being.”

And if you cannot get there lately (or for a while now), if that place seems closed off, the doors padlocked, the lights shut off, as if everybody has gone home for the off-season, or as if maybe it’s been abandoned for good, then that is the magic I have for you tonight.

I am your placeholder.

I am holding the door open, as someone once did for me when it all got so very lopsided and confusing, so terrifying and sad.  I am the one holding a candle there inside, showing you that all is safe, and that you can trust in the process of your own unfolding, no matter what.

If you look very closely, you will see that my “candle” is actually a mirror, reflecting your very own light.

Namasté, y’all.

*Someday I may tell my own harrowing “story” on the blog.  I am not quite able to be that vulnerable in a public space yet.  However, I can assure you it was not a pretty, easy, gentle path… and I’m now so grateful for every gut-wrenching step.

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