curiosity
a top-knotted little orb
delicious inside
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curiosity
a top-knotted little orb
delicious inside
beginning or end
often woven together
it’s our perception
hamsa socks today
evil eye body armor
I am ready world
textures of winter
soft, hard, sharp smooth, compact, loose
nature’s resilience
packing up Christmas
memories tucked in a box
until December
morning wake-up call
we’re bright-eyed and bushy tailed
what kids remember
between night and day
a pause before jumping in
savoring this time
patterns emerging
made visible by snowflakes
changing as I watch
patina of age
strong, sturdy through the seasons
looks often deceive
new year, new journal
pristine possibilities
hope and fear collide
#HaikuChallenge19
It’s that time of year, a season filled with anticipation of new beginnings. For the past several years I have hosted a Haiku Challenge as a way to jump start mindfulness in the new year. I consider haiku morsels of mindfulness…delicious in their simplicity and awareness of the present moment. You do not need to consider yourself a poet to create haiku…and you don’t even need to follow the formula you probably learned in elementary school — three lines made up of 5 syllables, 7 syllables, 5 syllables. Modern haiku do not need the formal structure that we are familiar with, but certainly can be written in this pattern. They do need to be written in the present tense as an observation that evokes awareness, thought or emotion. I love the description I once read…”a haiku is a poem that can be said in one breath”.
Come play in the haiku sandbox this January with like-minded folks! I will be writing one haiku a day for the month of January and posting them on my blog (StressResources.com/blog) Facebook (StressResources) Twitter (@pamressler) and Instagram (@StressResources) using the hashtags #HaikuChallenge19. Feel free to join in each day or only occasionally…be sure to share the hashtag #HaikuChallenge19 with friends…and let’s get writing!
Song for Autumn
In the deep falldon't you imagine the leaves think how
comfortable it will be to touch
the earth instead of the
nothingness of air and the endless
freshets of wind? And don't you think
the trees themselves, especially those with mossy,
warm caves, begin to think
of the birds that will come - six, a dozen - to sleep
inside their bodies? And don't you hear
the goldenrod whispering goodbye,
the everlasting being crowned with the first
tuffets of snow? The pond
vanishes, and the white field over which
the fox runs so quickly brings out
its blue shadows. And the wind pumps its
bellows. And at evening especially,
the piled firewood shifts a little,
longing to be on its way.
~Mary Oliver
Autumn is one of my favorite seasons...conjuring up memories of the clean slate of a new school year, along with the blazing beauty and distinctive tastes and scents of fall. Nature doesn't whisper but shouts for us to notice her in this season...a perfect reminder that mindfulness is always available if we simply pause and notice.
During this season, sandwiched between the extremes of summer and winter, how might you bring a bit more awareness, a bit more mindfulness into your everyday? For me, it is finding that one bit of beauty each day that i can focus on with my senses...perhaps it is a maple leaf that is the most brilliant shade of orange, or maybe the distinctive scent of smoke from a wood stove, or the anticipation of the crunch and sweet juice from a freshly picked apple. In our busyness, we often forget to harness the power of one bit of beauty...autumn shakes us awake to notice, if we let her.
"And one has to understand that braveness is not the absence of fear but rather the strength to keep on going forward despite the fear."-Paulo Coelho
Perhaps you were as drawn to the news reports of twelve soccer players and their coach trapped in a cave in Thailand this summer, like me. A miraculous story of survival, and of the power of the practice of meditation in times of crisis.
As we learned upon their rescue, the boys' coach, Ekapol Chantawong, had studied vipassana or mindfulness meditation as a youth in a Buddhist monastery. Under the most challenging of circumstances, he taught his young charges to observe, to slow their breath, and to remain calm in the face of the unknown. Through their meditation practice, they conserved oxygen, and avoided panic despite lack of food and uncertainty of rescue. Not many of us will have the need to practice mindfulness trapped in a flooded cave for two weeks; however we will be faced with obstacles, fear and challenges in our lives. How will we meet these challenges...with calm or chaos? The choice and the power is ours.
I work with building resiliency...how do we work with the anxiety of the unknown, fear of the future which can become particularly acute when waiting for results of medical tests or procedures. While modern medicine and science has given us miricles it has also given us a particular type of anxiety...now dubbed "scanxiety". Scanxiety, while most frequently associated with cancer, is also prevelant with other chronic, progressive diseases. I was honored to be asked by my friend and colleague, Marie Ennis-O'Connor, to share a few of my thoughts on tips for coping with scanxiety for her excellent post: Coping with Scanxiety: Practical Tips from Cancer Patients
"If you surrender completely to the moments as they pass, you live more richly those moments." ~ Anne Morrow Lindbergh
Summertime is here! Do you find it is hard to change your pace and make the summer flow differently than the other seasons? Does surrendering to summer feel scary or sublime? "Surrendering" as in the Anne Morrow Lindbergh's quote is full of intention and courage...can we make a mindful choice to be present a bit more this summer?
Here are a few quick and simple suggestions for more mindful moments this summer:
1. Notice a sunset
2. Enjoy an ice cream cone
3. Paint a rock
4. Pick a wildflower and bring it home to enjoy
5. Listen to a birdsong
I would love to hear about your summertime moments of mindfulness -- what do you do to surrender to summer?
No more sweet blossoms
felled by winter, heart exposed
still giving back joy
Moments
A month of moments
strung together by haiku
gratitude abounds
Bench in Winter
Contemplative place
invitation to observe
first must sit in snow
(Timber Cove, California Ansel Adams)
Wild Dance
Wild dance of power
exploding on the shoreline
rhythm of the surf
Tulip
Look deeply inside
kaleidoscope of colors
patterns of nature