New Year 2014: On journeying, home & eternity
December 31, 2013 in Canada, North America, Travelogue
There has been a nuthatch at the feeder this week.
He arrives intermittently, among the crowd of doves and blue jays, chickadees and the occasional fleeting cardinal. Everyone is hungry; the ice has buried all of the natural food sources. He prefers the seed ring. The one my mom made in her fluted bundt pan. The one that hangs with a red and gold ribbon from the eave of the pergola.
Our neighbour, David, arrived the other morning just as we were sitting down to lunch. He’d come up with a sparrow hawk to show us. Dead. In a Ziploc bag. Apparently he’d bashed his head against a glass window. We admired his loveliness and the pristine state of his plumage before he was added to the freezer with the female cardinal that is being saved for Claire; another neighbour who’s an amateur ornithologist and collects good specimens for her club.
Dad washed his hands before returning to his cold bowl of soup, “Who turns up at lunchtime with a dead bird?” he good-naturedly ribbed his buddy.
I raised an eye brow, “This coming from the Gramps who gave my eleven year old a dead coyote face for Christmas?”
We giggled.
True story. Ez got the neck and face pelt of a coyote, tanned, of course, from the Grampsy-claus. My Dad is known for off beat gifts.
It has been a week of resting.
And eating. And walking. And photographing ice. And skating. And laughing.
There were guests for Christmas dinner. A day long walk with my friend. Uncle Dick’s family for an overnight. A pub evening with folks I haven’t seen since high school. Movies with popcorn. Scrabble (the game count is at: Jenn 3: Grammy: 1) We’ve napped. There has been sledding and cross country skiing. Board games have been played.
This year as brought us from Borneo, across three continents and right back home. It’s mind boggling if I think about it too much, but I don’t.
The snow is coming down in soft downy drifts this morning, as if it’s covering all of what’s left of last year in a clean, blank slate. We get to begin again tomorrow: a new day, a new year, a new opportunity to live life.
Dad was sitting in his rocker the other evening and I’d climbed into his lap. Well, as much of me as would fit, any way. He patted my hair and rubbed my back like he’s done since I was a tiny girl and cut straight to the chase, as he’s wont to do:
“It’s a wonderful thing to be an eternal being, isn’t it Sister? We’re sprung to life in an instant and then we live for eternity. Not when we die, who knows what that will be. Eternity is right now. We’re in it. It’s this second. This is eternity, right now. We live for eternity, but we only live for a second. This one second is all we have. It’s eternal. It’s now. It’s so unlikely that we’re here, and yet we are. It’s a good second, eternity.”
I smiled. I love my Daddy.
I am home.
And yet the road carries me forward…
Knowing that I’ve completed the biggest loop and can get no farther from my center than I’ve already been is comforting in many ways, literal and esoteric. There are more paths to follow. More trips to take. More journeys to follow to their mysterious ends, but we’re beginning to water the tap root that ties us to here. To reinvent home.
You already know that I don’t do New Year resolutions. For me, it’s more productive to try to remember that every single morning is a new year, a new moment, a fresh start, every second an eternity, the only one I get.
- This year I will spend time with people I’ve missed.
- I will reconnect with all things “home.”
- I will walk 500 miles with a friend.
- I’ll check the 50th state off of my bucket list.
- I’ll watch two of my kids flap their wings towards solo flight.
- We’ll make plans towards the next phase of life.
Those are my new year intentions. It’s what I hope to do. What I expect to do. What the road appears, from the little hill I’m standing on, to hold. The reality is that I can’t see around the next bend.
All expectations are mirages. This second is eternity.
And so… we step into the New Year.
What a wise papa you have… I understand better where your beautiful insights come from. I love this post, Jen. I wish you to be able to live that second, that eternity, with grace and laughter.
I was just pondering how, even if we’re walking a familiar road, we never really know what’s coming. I hope this new year is one of blessing and peace for you and yours!
HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL
beautiful, as always.
Love, love, love!
It is wonderful you are able to recharge at home before launching to new locals. Best wishes for healthy, terrific 2014.
We are just home from a lovely, balmy, New Year’s Eve which included good friends and singing round an open fire till 3 am this morning! The celebration was 140 km away on the other side of Melbourne so we took our caravan over to save us driving home so late at night. This morning, those who stayed over shared a scrumptious breakfast before we headed back home.
Our very best wishes to you all for the coming New Year. We hope that you all are able to achieve the goals you set for 2014.
Love from us both,
Norm & Margaret
Drysdale, Vic, Australia
Norm… thanks so much for that lovely reply… makes us homesick for your side of the world. I have a Christmas card here for you… will mail it soon… I guess that makes it a New Year’s card! 🙂
Thank you, everyone, for your kind words and wishes… the happiest of new years to all of us!
Hello again, Last night I finished reading Vagabonding by Rolf Potts and the last chapter starts with a Herman Melville Moby-Dick, quote that reminded me of your blog post.
“Round the world! There is much in that sound to inspire proud feelings; but whereto does all that circumnavigation conduct? Only through numberless perils to the very point whence we started, where those that we left behind secure were all the time before us.”
Thank you for sharing your journey though this blog. I have found it interesting, informative and encouraging. We’re returning to homeschooling next year and my family and I are headed off on adventures of our own for 4 months next fall. I’m hoping we all come away understanding a bit better what Tolkien meant by “The world is not in your maps and books. It’s out there.”
Happy travels to you in 2014
Thanks so much Kim… I love that book. I’ve purchased dozens of copies and given them away. Rolf is the real deal. That book is out on Audible.com as an audio book now and Rolf has honored me by including me in it at the end of a couple of chapters. Which reminds me… I should re-read it for inspiration this year… I always find something new and the quotes are great, aren’t they?
Best of luck with your new adventures this year. Do keep in touch, and let me know if there is any way we can help you forward!
Happy New year!