We are coming to the end of many familiar and comfortable ways of life in the next few months, and the beginnings of the new we cannot fully know. For everything you get, you give up something else.
I am advising myself to not lament what is lost, but celebrate and anticipate what can be gained and appreciated on the other side of this move away from all that is familiar.
When we are assimilated into the borg (our future apartment life in a retirement village or elder reservation as I call it) my fifty-year wood burning history will have come to an end. Today’s late-March fire in the outdoor furnace will most likely be the last sustained fire that ever warms me twice.
Standing dead wood that I have found in our forest; wood whose heft and texture, form and distinctive sweet and sour smell I have known so well and so fondly; wood that I have cut, split, stacked and seen and felt through the glass door of our wood stove—the elements of this liturgy have had benefits far more than BTUs of heat they have provided.
I think back to our first wood stove in 1975. The wood-centered lifestyle over the decades has taught me much. A few of these lessons almost killed me. I have the scars to prove it.
Once, a cherry snag bounced back and took me down. I learned on that occasion that I should no longer be felling trees big enough to do me in. Not long after, I decided I would buy wood already cut into stove lengths and properly close to the ground.
The most immediate lesson from the year of the painful cherry smack-down was for future wood to be nothing but "sissy wood." I told that story on myself in a 3-minute radio essay so near to the event that I remember limping a bit on the short walk from the parking lot into the WVTF studio in Roanoke in 2007.
🎤 Floyd County Lessons from the Woodlot Audio file, turn up speakers. 🎤
The shock of that experience lead me to consider “enough” so that we would find sufficiency in what we already have.
A year from now, we will have left behind the what, where and who that has given life meaning in rural Virginia. I have hope and trust that other people, places and comforts will fill in the empty spaces.
We will live thankfully with what we are given. We will have enough.
These two blog posts formed the basis for the radio essay, if you must know more or would rather read than listen.
**_Shifting Seasons_**
In youth, we danced with reckless, carefree glee,
Our hearts unburdened, dreams as vast as skies.
The world was ours, and time a gentle breeze,
Yet seasons change, and suns begin to rise.
As years unfold, we gather wisdom's weight,
The lines etched deep, like rivers on our face.
The mirror shows reflections of our fate,
And memories weave a tapestry of grace.
**Embrace the shift**, for life's a fleeting bloom,
A fragile rose that blooms and fades away.
The paths we tread, the rooms we call our home,
Each step a chapter in our mortal play.
**Adjust we must**, like oaks that bend with wind,
Their roots entrenched, yet branches reach for light.
New landscapes form, and old ones gently blend,
As twilight whispers secrets of the night.
**Let go of what no longer serves your soul**,
The heavy armor of your youthful pride.
**Embrace the quiet**, let acceptance roll,
For change is life's sweet rhythm, ebbing tide.
So raise a glass to days that slip like sand,
To laughter shared, and tears that cleanse the heart.
**In aging's arms**, we find a softer land,
Where shadows blend, and endings play their part.
**_For life's true beauty lies in how we sway,_**
**_Adjusting sails as seasons turn away._**
I am curious about the last photo. I love the rainbow of colors! Also, I greatly approve of your attitude toward your move. Because of it, I know you will enjoy your new home.