My Mothers Garden plus articles and information on Inspirational I love to talk
about Purposeful Living with others and share how it's affected my life. But
sometimes when I get to the part about doing what you need to do my listeners
eyes glaze over and I know I've lost them. I get the response that it doesn't
seem like much "fun" to find your purpose and do what you need to do. In
fact
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danmark , it sounds rather Calvinistic. It sounds like trudging
uphill in the rain with your head down ? oblivious to your surroundings.
"Where's the joy?", someone asked once. "What about fun and having a good
time?". I never really knew how to respond except to assure my listener that I
do have a lot of fun and I enjoy getting my purpose acplished. So far I haven't
been very convincing. Next time I'll tell them about my mother's garden. It was
in the North of England where I grew up. It probably wasn't particularly
beautiful by objective standards but it was Heaven to me. As soon as the
temperature climbed out of the fifties I'd rush out into the brief English
summer and throw a bedspread on the grass. We were on the Coast so the clouds
were always fantastically shaped and fast-moving and I would lie on my back
looking up at them and daydreaming. If we were lucky and our timing was right we
could sometimes get a tan as long as we were mindful about turning over
frequently. A big mistake in an English Summer was to tan on one side and assume
you'd do the other side the next day. Invariably that would be the last sunny
day for months and your skin would be striped red, brown and white like a
Neapolitan ice cream. Always, too, in the Summer there was the inevitable litter
of puppies rolling around from whichever mutt we had at the time. As a single
parent, my mother worked most of the time. When she did I was a latchkey kid.
When she was between jobs I loved spending time with her in the garden. She may
have missed cleaning the house some days but she never neglected her garden. She
daren't. We needed the vegetables. She had planted strawberries, blackcurrants,
gooseberries and rhubarb. Our vegetables were potatoes
nike
air max tilbud , of course, cabbages, lettuce, carrots and all the
root veggies you needed to get through a long winter. We had flowers, too. There
were hydrangea, her prized roses and a wild, flowering lilac tree. But it was
the vegetables we prized most. I loved the Summers when we were home together.
As the baby of the family I spent much of my time with her. While my brother and
sister were off doing whatever teenagers did in the North of England in the
sixties my mother and I would traipse out to the garden in the morning and stay
there till nightfall. Because we were so far North it was light until 10 "o"
clock at night. The evening light had a thin, clear quality to it. Each evening
the stars came out while the sky was still light. I couldn't have guessed that I
would one day live in a part of the world where this wouldn't happen. We always
had an old transister radio with us. We worked
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max , for the most part, in harmony and silence. We listened to the
BBC all day long. Each afternoon there was an orginal one hour play then
serializations of classics such as Great Expectations or Les Miserables which
left you hanging from day to day. There was Woman's Hour, endless quiz and edy
shows and, of course, The Archers " - an everyday story of country folk." We
would weed our way down the rows of cabbages, aerating as we went. The soil was
rich and dark and it never would have ourred to us to fertilize it. Looking back
I wonder what we did out there all day. There couldn't have been that much yard
work to do ? but somehow we made it last until well into the evening. Sometimes
we'd pull some rhubarb and my mother would take it into the house and simmer it
with a little honey and cinnamon until it was a fragrant puree and we'd eat it
warm with ice cream. Last week I was sick. I invariably considered illness to be
a character defect but this time I was pletely without energy. My body was
taking no nonsense and was clearly admonishing me that it couldn't clean my
house; make my writing deadlines AND get rid of the virus. I decided to take to
my bed for an entire day and give it time to do its thing. It rained the whole
day ? the tail end of a monsoon-like system peculiar to California. Ordinarily,
I have a great view of snow-capped mountains. But this day I could barely see to
the end of my garden which was misty and grey all day. The air deadened sound
contributing to my feeling of being cocooned. Too tired even to read, I turned
up the heat and brought my laptop to bed. These days you can stream BBC radio
live over the inter. And I did. I burrowed down as far as I could and drifted in
and out of sleep as the radio played. I listened to a play about a woman
Victorian private detective and discovered a new satirical radio blog. There
were also quizzes and edy shows from my childhood played in that curiously
British vaudeville style. I dozed and listened as memories of my childhood
summers washed over me. I could almost smell the lilacs. The next day was dry
and clear. Bored with lying in bed all day I was grateful for action. The rest
had done me good. It ourred to me that I had been sensible and had done exactly
what I needed to do. My purpose had been to rest to heal myself. I'd acplished
that. It also ourred to me that the radio had been pure pleasure which I had
layered on top of my purpose. I realized
adidas
zx flux , then, that the discovery and implementation of purpose
was not just an end to itself but also a foundation on which I could add actions
and feelings and, yes, fun which could enrich my own life and nurture others. It
was the opposite of my efforts to peel away the additional, man-made suffering
from the inevitable suffering of everyday