I think we're doing a pretty good job of living with the uncertainty of it all: we're older now, less impatient, more inclined to believe that things have a way of falling into place if you let them. But it's still an uncomfortable place to sit, and we seem to spend a lot of time distracting ourselves and amusing ourselves as a way of softening both the hope and the potential of disappointment. All of which explains why I found these words from David Whyte's poem, Winter Apple, so moving:
Wait longer
than you would,
go against yourself,
find the pale nobility
of quiet that ripening
demands...
demands...
taste...
the sweet inward stillness
of the wait itself.
the sweet inward stillness
of the wait itself.
I am trying hard to think of this as a ripening time; working to take on that mantle, the pale nobility of quiet; doing my best to taste that sweet inward stillness.
But some days it's a struggle. Hard not to be haunted by the longing for what's next...
1 comment:
I love 'ripening times'.
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