Do you have sacred spaces, where you meet yourself and Him who breathed the world into being? Spaces in which you find refuge or comfort, exuberance or vitality? On this wild and windy autumn day, I have been thinking back to those spaces that have welcomed me, taken my mind off of myself and garnered my full attention for a time.
Spaces like the yard I nudged towards abundance when we lived in Pennsylvania.
Or the marsh that lies between us and the Potomac River, as day breaks and I watch and listen in the day.
Or a patch of leaves in the grass, so arresting that all I can do is stop and sigh a prayer of thanksgiving for the momentary gift of beauty.
And then there was Trail Wood, where my days were filled with noticing and reflection and a kinship with those who had gone before. The following is a piece that came out of that week, in deep appreciation for Edwin and Nellie Teale and the land they stewarded and loved.
Beneficence
I have been brought to this sacred space, for sacred it has
become to me who has never been here before. Perhaps a pilgrimage, I have come
to watch for fireflies over the fields by night, swallows by day…to listen to
crickets and katydids, to late summer bird song and, if I’m lucky, rain on the
roof of the old house. I have come to be a small piece of the history of this
place, whose future is yet to be written.
I spend my days
outside, a solitary audience, eager to witness the unfolding dramas of this
refuge. They come as unexpected gifts, barely audible echoes from Eden,
fulfillment of a life time’s longings.
She walks close behind me, as I sit at the picnic table,
the mama turkey, murmuring softly to her seven, worried-looking babies strung
out behind her, trying to keep up.
Again I sit, and a red-shouldered hawk drops into the nearby catalpa tree, steadily watching me watching him. Does he, as do I, sense communion, as we stare into one another’s eyes?
Again I sit, and a red-shouldered hawk drops into the nearby catalpa tree, steadily watching me watching him. Does he, as do I, sense communion, as we stare into one another’s eyes?
I wonder at the young rabbits grazing along the driveway,
watchful, but not overly concerned with my coming and going. And, in the
meadow, downy woodpeckers forage on mullein stalks, gazing steadily as I pass
by. Do wild creatures know when they are welcomed?
“A magic place?” he
asked me. A Beatrix Potter kind of place, it would seem.
If there be magic, it comes not by accident, but by the many long years of beneficence towards this land. A living invitation by one who loved the wild for its own sake, who equated ownership with stewardship, who was at home with the untamed inhabitants of this farm.
If there be magic, it comes not by accident, but by the many long years of beneficence towards this land. A living invitation by one who loved the wild for its own sake, who equated ownership with stewardship, who was at home with the untamed inhabitants of this farm.
There is holiness here, born of gratitude for what has been
given, where man is but a participant in the life around him and an observer of
that into which he cannot enter. Long years of kindliness have fostered
fellowship between the wild ones who have flourished within these bounds and
the humans who have lived alongside them. I pray that, far into the future,
when we who love this land are gone, the kinship between man and creature will
persist and this sanctuary, birthed and rooted in peaceful coexistence, will
live on.
Where are your own sacred spaces?
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