For Now

DSC_0790The last week of school. A week teachers look forward to. I suppose I have too: Time off to rest and recuperate before heading back to the ‘dance’ in August. This year has been a full one: professionally and personally. Reconnected. Reconciled.  Beginning with myself then moving to others.   The dance has been slow, steady but lovely.

DanceSince last May I have been reminded that…..

Even good-intentioned people and situations have ‘danger, danger Will Robinson’ times.   In those times,  a generous, inquisitive spirit is needed.

Forgiveness does not equal acceptance.

It’s perfectly okay to walk away from a situation.  Being around negativity is….well,  a downer.

Friends and family…..there’s nothing like them.  Remind them how much you love them.  Nothing has to be extravagant except love.

Collage May

Find something you enjoy. A passion.  You are NEVER too old to learn something new or to remember something you once knew.

Spending quality time with friends and family is important but spending time with YOURSELF is grounding.

Sleep well. Eat well. Move well. Simplify.

Find ‘a purpose’ each day….something to be grateful for. Some days Avenue Qare more challenging than others. We’re human. We miss people. We get angry, frustrated, tired.  The ‘purpose’ may be hidden but it’s there waiting…..sometimes right around the next corner. Like magic, it appears out of nowhere. DSC_0770

 

 

Friends, family, sunsets, adventures, the aroma of the magnolias when you walk out the door in the evening.  Enjoy. Be grateful. Savor life.

Dance!!  “For now!” DSC_0803

 

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“The Tea Girls”

famThe first week of May.

Quite frankly, my head has been spinning about what to write. Motherhood. Children. Rites of passage. Joy. Gratitude. . . for mothers and children, school years ending and summers beginning, friends and family and forgiveness…..

Song a May Morning

I recently read an on-line story that the best Mother’s Day gifts  involved leaving mom alone. Admittedly when my children were very small quiet, some occasional  alone-time might have been very welcome.  Sleep was a rare commodity. Spending quality time with other adults, girl-friends was cherished.

Mother's Day 1994I’ve been blessed to have remarkable friends throughout my life. Male and Female. There are no time limits, labels or geography when it comes to those kind of friends. I have a friend who says: “time stands still on those kind of friendships.” She’s right.

When I first relocated to Baton Rouge, my children were young I joined a ‘play group’ with four other young mothers. We met at first on Tuesdays, then eventually branched out….sharing everything from swimming lessons to understanding what happened at the pediatrician to First Communions. Growing Up. Starting school. We were all ‘transplants’, none of us  had local family so it was nice knowing there was a safety net of friends.  Louise-Roe-Vintage-Women-Drinking-Tea-In-Nice-Dresses

It became the custom for our group to go to High Tea on the Saturday before Mother’s Day.  Clotted cream, lemon curd, scones….a May tradition.  Looking back, we started as young mothers going to ‘play dates’ and transformed into the ‘The Tea Girls’, a  diverse yet supportive group of friends. During ‘teas’ we shared our hopes and dreams for the future. Clearly being a mother was the most important work  any of us would do…..will ever do….but as creative individuals we had the support of each other to ‘bounce’ ideas: What about this business venture? What about grad school?

In the twenty- five plus years since we became friends some of us have moved to other cities, divorced, remarried, seen our own children get married. We have supported each other through the loss of parents and illness within the group. Friends, good friends, keep us grounded and healthy. They are a mirror for our soul. This group was that.women-holding-hands1

There is little doubt in my mind that much of the credit for my success as a mother came from the example of my own mother. If Yvonne was  gently whispering in one ear,  I was lucky enough to have  “The Tea Girls” whispering in the other. I’m grateful for both pieces of wisdom and for the Saturday before Mother’s Day….tea cup

Today, as we honor mothers I’ll be nibbling on scones and lifting my cup…to My Mother….to Your Mother….”Tea Girls”everywhere…..and to the children they raised…..

Time, on the edge of Forever

Time is like a river made up of the events which happen, and a violent stream; for as soon as a thing has been seen, it is carried away, and another comes in its place, and this will be carried away too.

 ~ Marcus Aurelius-MeditationsDSC_0439

Do you remember the old Star Trek episode “The City on the Edge of Forever”?  Kirk and Spock pursue an hallucinating McCoy to 1930’s New York City through ‘The Guardian of Forever’.  While in the past Kirk meets and falls in love with Edith Keeler. (of course he does, he’s James T. Kirk) Unbeknownst to Kirk, McCoy has stumbled into the mission where Edith takes him in. Meanwhile, through reviewing the Guardian’s images of the original and altered timelines, Spock has discovered that Edith was supposed to have died in a traffic accident which McCoy prevented.  Kirk knows that Edith must die in order for time to return to normal.  In the end, Kirk does what he believes is the right. “Time has resumed its shape. All is as it was before.”  

Forty seven years have passed since Harlan Ellison’s screenplay was first televised.  Last week I was reminded of that story, the fluidity of time.  People. Places.  Peace.DSC_0583

…..And found myself at the portal of my own “The Guardian of Forever”.

Children grow up. Parents age. Friends get sick, some die. It is the natural course of things. Surrender. Letting go. Time, like life, can be about choice. How we choose to spend it. Open to and examining the possible. Riding the wave of time.

Sometimes we grasp so tight, the ‘water’ slips through our fingers.  DSC_0280
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As much as wish for it, time doesn’t stand still…..nor would we really want it to.

 

 

 

 

“Seize the day, then let it go.”  ~ Marty Rubin 

Life happens bit-by-bit, drop-by-drop, moment-by-moment. Accepting people as they are and ourselves where we are. Discovering  joy along the current. Not perfection. Not manipulation. But joy. Even James T. Kirk knew he couldn’t trick “flow of time” but be content knowing he found peace.

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