One
Today I smudged my room with juniper I'd harvested and dried myself several weeks ago, from a young tree which had lost its roots and fallen in a wind storm.
It is a rainy day, and this week I am leaning into grief for something I won't specify but which, for all its brevity, tore something of me on its way out of my life.
I recently re-read Tomorrow and Tomorrow and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin, which is the only book that was able to hold my attention in the last several weeks. I enjoyed it more as an audiobook, I think, but it is still a beautiful novel about friend-love, which is a thing we humans don't dedicate nearly enough art to but should. I have moved on to Hagstone by Sinéad Gleeson, a title that snagged me from the first. It makes me want to seek out the lonely island of its setting where women rule, a modern place that feels ancient. I want to bind myself to rocks and wind by root and vine and feather. I want to swim naked in the ocean from a beach where no one wanders. It is a novel about art, but it also transforms, perhaps unintentionally, the reality of my aloneness into something sacred, rather than something to be feared.
I spotted a garden I'd never seen before on a walk I've taken many times. A reminder that there is always something new to see if you open your eyes and take the time.

hi, every time i read something you write it feels like a hug to my soul. i’ll be here lurking.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much :) your presence is always welcome and your compliments have always meant a lot to me.
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