Thank goodness for morning glory vines with new green
tendrils swaying in the air, seeking, then finding and wrapping themselves
around, the decorative metal garden trellis for support as they grow from earth
toward heaven. No one shows them how to do this. They just know. Star-shaped
morning glories have heart-shaped leaves, bloom in the morning, wither and die
in the afternoon. They remind us life is short. Spread heavenly beauty while
you can.
Glory is a source of admiration, resplendent beauty or
magnificence, a state of great prosperity, absolute gratification, contentment.
It represents the splendor and bliss of heaven, the time of greatest
achievement, success. It refers to the radiance or light surrounding the head
or whole figure of a sacred person. It can mean to triumph, rejoice proudly.
The vine’s continuous morning creation of a seemingly endless supply of indigo,
magenta and blue blossoms is a rich triumph, achievement, success. A reminder
of sacred prosperity. In the unified field of energy where all is one,
connected, I am that vine, those blossoms. Its qualities are my qualities. This
reminder is one of the glorious gifts of spending time in a garden.
Focusing on the morning glory's innate knowing of
how to do what it has not done before reminds me of the inner wisdom guiding me
as I once again face the unknown. There is great
comfort in knowing that this week. Once the rush of activity surrounding
hip surgery, hospital stay, home health care and visits from friends and family
was over, it became quiet. What now? What am I to do now in this silent
emptiness of living alone again? Do? Of course there are the writing projects.
There is walking the packed dirt trail along the sides of the acequia (irrigation ditch) in the bosque (forest), greeting the mother
duck with three ducklings, filling the orthopedic surgeon’s prescription to
“stay active, walk, don’t be a couch potato.” But that takes less than an hour.
What else am I to do with myself in
this time of healing? I don’t know what to do about the Caregiver’s Journey book I’m writing. I don’t know what to do with
my real estate license. I don’t know what to do about a troubling family
situation. Be. Oh. Thank you, Rob
Brezsny (“Free Will Astrology,” from the Albuquerque
Alibi ): “During the upcoming grace
period, it will make sense for you to be
perfectly content with the state of your life just as it is. To do so won’t make you lazy and
complacent. Just the opposite, in fact: it will charge your psychic batteries
and create a reservoir of motivational energy for the second half of 2012.” Do
be. Please forgive me here for remembering the metaphysical comedian who called
Frank Sinatra a master of enlightenment for his singing of “do-be-do-be-do.”