I woke up this
beautiful morning thinking of the words in Ecclesiastes 11:7
Truly the
light is sweet and a pleasant thing it is for the eye to behold the sun.
These words set me off
on a good track for the day. Lately, I’ve sometimes felt depressed and
discouraged but, really, I should not. There are so many good things in my life. So many
reasons to feel grateful. Simple pleasures. I have enough food, a warm home, good
neighbours, running water, a roof over my head. These things are worth
celebrating every day.
A friend of mine spoke to me about the deep satisfaction she feels after having had a leaky roof for some time to know that her roof is now solid and won’t let the rain in. The repair was coordinated by some of her dear friends, which was another reason for her to feel grateful. Friendship.
Lately I too have had several occasions to deeply appreciate what it means to have good friends. Connections with friends are more important than ever these days and they often offer a different way of looking at things. A long-time friend of mine who is a frequent traveler keeps a lively blog of her various journeys, including reports of her many artistic pursuits, sewing, reading, fashionable outfits, knitting, gourmet cooking, domestic and family activities, and so forth. It’s an impressive read and worth checking out:
https://www.materfamiliaswrites.com/
In a recent blog she
wrote: We’re
going back to Portugal! Grab your appetite and your curiosity, but you won’t
need a passport or a suitcase, nor even a credit card. She’s still
hoping to get to Portugal soon but, in the meantime, she’s used her blog to
share photos and experiences of her past trips. She writes about the idiosyncrasies
of some of the people and places she has encountered, the villages, the meals,
the unforgettable sardines. It’s entertaining for readers to share those
experiences and it must be wonderful for my friend to re-live her experiences
at a time when she can’t travel. (Note In order
to accompany her on her armchair trip to Portugal, you may have to scroll down
to the bottom of the blog post and enter "More Armchair Travel" under the Search line.)
We can all enjoy travel without getting on a plane. Memories offer
a kind of time travel and I find them heartening. As Penelope Lively wrote more
than once, the past is real and the re-living of it can be important. Recently,
someone on Twitter tweeted that his six-year-old daughter had asked, “What
happens to time that has passed?” A good question, I thought. A physicist
responded, proposing that it stays where it is, in space time, while we have moved past it. He compared this to walking down a road but being unable to
go back to where we came from.
Even though we can't re-inhabit the past, there's a way in which we can re-live it and perhaps re-member it -- put it back together -- from a later perspective. That can be instructive and often healing.
Today, among the many things for which I'm grateful, I'm celebrating both memory and friendship. They often go together. Talking with long-time friends about the past is one of the pleasures of old age. And with our deepest friendships, absence never lessens the connection. When we meet again, it is as though time hasn't passed.
Not all memories are happy, but our friendships have the capacity to help us heal old wounds. And that makes me recall Shakespeare’s Sonnet 30:
When
to the sessions of sweet silent thought
I
summon up remembrance of things past.
I sigh the lack of many a thing I sought,
And with old woes new wail my dear time's waste:
Then can I drown an eye, unus'd to flow,
For precious friends hid in death's dateless night,
And weep afresh love's long since cancell'd woe,
And moan th' expense of many a vanish'd sight;
Then can I grieve at grievances foregone,
And heavily from woe to woe tell o'er
The sad account of fore-bemoaned moan,
Which I new pay as if not paid before.
But if the while I think on thee, dear friend,
All losses are restor'd, and sorrows end.
Thank you so much for the kind words about my blog, Carol! I find your words here on friendship and memory and recognition of our good fortune inspiring and reassuring -- as I did our recent phone conversation. xo
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