There is uncommon beauty to be found in this area.
There is also uncommon silence. And a feeling of solitude.
May Sarton says,
“There is a wilder solitude in winter
Where every sense is pricked alive and keen.”
There is uncommon beauty to be found in this area.
There is also uncommon silence. And a feeling of solitude.
May Sarton says,
“There is a wilder solitude in winter
Where every sense is pricked alive and keen.”
This day brings the joy of reuniting with two long-time friends, both artists in their own way.
Bonnie is a massage therapist I’ve been going to for a decade. She sculpts my muscles and my circulatory system into ways of healing and rejuvenation.
That’s her place up ahead on the right.
But first, this new day brings 17 degrees outside, and a warming fire inside.
I’ve anticipated and looked with expectation to snow during this trip. I’ve checked my weather apps over and over. Yes, snow was forecast. We rented a SUV that could power us through snow-covered roads. And so I waited.
Yesterday afternoon we arrived in Taos, gathered provisions at CID’s, the local grocery store, and moved into our casa. I made a dozen trips from the woodshed to the house carrying firewood. Then we waited.
ANTICIPATION.
All the blinds were left open so we wouldn’t miss the snow if we woke up in the night. Around midnight there it was. The sky was colored in shades of pink and yellow. The trees glistened in the night sky.
Followed by the requisite fire.
Descending into Albuquerque the view below offered a glimpse of one hoped-for expectation for this Epiphany journey. Snow. Just a dusting, but still, my heart felt a tug of promise.
With the traveling friends reunion complete, we set out for a late meal of wonderfully delicious small dishes.
2016 was filled with road blocks and detours. One of those “road blocks” will open in a few days.
For the past twenty-two years I’ve traveled to New Mexico during Advent. Advent 2016 passed without the New Mexico trip. It was hard to miss, hard for me to experience Advent in any way without New Mexico.
But now New Mexico is just ahead. The Advent 2016 road block is about to open, and the journey can begin. In place of Advent, will be Epiphany in northern New Mexico.
Epiphany is that in between time between Christmas and Lent. The time when Jesus is baptized and then begins to grow into the role God has chosen for him. As Canon John Thompson-Quartey stated, “In this season of Epiphany, when we are a bit removed from the baby in the creche, we are now faced with a grown up God who walks among us as Jesus of Nazareth.”
I’m in kind of an in-between time myself. A time between the work and the roles I have shed, and the mantle of new work and roles I’m about to don.
I guess sometimes there may be reasons for road blocks and detours. More importantly is how one deals with these un-planned-for happenings, both from the perspective of dealing with uncertainity and change, and perhaps even seeing them as opportunities for needed change.
All this to say, tomorrow I fly away- literally! For retreat with my best traveling friend in a small town nestled in a snow-covered valley in northern New Mexico. I can smell the pinon fires, I can taste the blue corn enchiladas, I can imagine the beauty and the bitter cold. I am so ready!