Beauty and Imminent Loss
by Elouise
Does beauty become more beautiful as the end draws near?
The last few years of my life have confronted me with a kind of isolation I never thought I would experience. Not isolation from books or music or what’s happening in my back yard.
Rather, this is about isolation from people. People I love; people I’ve never met in person; people with stories about themselves that I’ll likely never hear.
This morning I read through some of my poems. My health is pretty good these days, as long as I obey my doctors’ orders. My spirit, however, feels caught in a web of weariness and sadness. Some is about the state of our country and this planet. Much is about our rush here in the USA to make sure we’re on the ‘right’ or ‘left’ side of things.
I’m keenly aware of how lonely it is to be a people-person who can no longer galivant with friends and neighbors. If you’re not an introvert, you might think I’ve never in my life known what it means to galivant. That would be a huge error on your part, though I’ll admit to this: I had to learn to have a good time. It didn’t come easy.
So….this morning I read through the March poems I included in Without a Flight Plan. This one hit the mark. Not too cheery; not too morose.
Beneath trees of my childhood
Beneath trees
of my childhood
memories flood my eyes with
dreams and sorrows
packed within
the space of one life
gazing at tamed
and untamed beauty
underestimated
until this moment
of imminent loss
~~~
I pray this day brings peace, beauty, and buckets of kindness to enjoy, and to give away.
Elouise♥
© Elouise Renich Fraser, 11 March 2023
Photo found at etsy.com, John McManus Fine Art
You are brave. You are. You get to the essence, the truth and in doing so help us sort things out. We are all sorting these days, trying to determine what to keep and treasure and what to discard. Your musings move me deeply. Thank you friend from afar. 💕
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Thank you, Janet. I’d like to think it’s a two-way street. You have shown me a side of “bravery” that I never would have dreamed of for myself! 🙂 And yes, it’s so hard to know what to keep and what to discard. I grew up in a family that never had enough–which seemed to push us to save everything, “just in case”! A tough nut to crack, much less throw away unopened! 🙂
Elouise
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Your first question and your poem remind me of what I’ve so often thought while gazing around at Autumnal leaves; such beauty, just before the fall to earth, the intense reds and oranges like the heated coals of a slowly deepening fire.
Yes, happy gallivanting is much missed – I can no longer gallivant either, which is a shame; but you know, I can be content and relieved with the simple reminder that All Is Well. And All Will Be Well. That makes me smile, and so the ambivalences of life are easier to bear.
Bless you!! ❤️💕♥️
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Thanks for your comments, Fran. Yes, it’s amazing how spectacular things are right before the end of Autumn. A final reminder of what’s yet to spring up from the ground next year, thanks to the coming and going of so much beauty. Also, I could use a dose of your simple reminder almost any time of the day or night: All Is Well, and All Will Be Well. Hugs, thanks, and a big smile from this side of the pond! 🙂
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Giving thanks that your new Lucy is prepared to guide you into a beautiful Spring. Your words verbal and written have and continue to touch many many lives. Always have been thankful for Systematic Theology and how it opened both mind and heart to God that I could not draw image of on the blackboard/greenboard. DKF
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Thanks, Dave. I’m so relieved that it’s done. The last few weeks have been a bit difficult, but Lucy II seems to be figuring out how to live with me (and I with her). We’re hoping to see our daughter and her husband later this week. We haven’t seen them (in person) since the Covid lockdown. Oregon is a long way from Pennsylvania. As for you and ST, it was a pleasure to have you in the Systematic Theology class! Never a dull moment, as I recall. 🙂
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I pray that the younger ones, whose early lives have been so impacted by the “Great Interruption” of the last several years, will experience galivanting, with all its immediate and eventual joys…thank you, dear Elouise, for being you and sharing you with all of us! P.S. Some excursions may not seem like galivanting, but could turn out to be…
🙂
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Thank you, Debbie. We could all use a bit of galivanting these days! I thought some of the church service yesterday was a fine example of congregational galivanting! Especially from the younger generation….:)
Elouise
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nostalgia… memories of the past… dreams of the future
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