Wild Goose Chase, a Cautionary Tale

High Goose formation

The geese flew over this morning, honking their way South across a crystal blue sky. On the ground, plants were laced with frost, shimmering in the early morning light. The air was filled with the familiar and intimate sound of goose talk, chatter high above, about who knows what.

It’s a sound which evokes the sense of the year turning and of the seasons changing, whether it’s the Autumn flow South towards warmth and food, or the Spring flood back North towards the breeding grounds and long hours of daylight. A reminder to notice whats happening around us in the world, and to look up.

It got me thinking about the phrase ‘a wild goose chase’, which usually means a frustratingly fruitless search, often round in circles, for something non-existent. I began wondering in what way geese were connected to this irritating and pointless sort if search, however all my leads seemed to take me nowhere interesting.

There was a thought that in fact it related to an old 18th century type of horse race called a ‘goose chase’ where all the riders chased after one rider, in a sort of v-formation, like the geese in the sky. Somehow that didn’t feel very satisfactory, and why on earth it would gain the affix ‘wild’ didn’t seem clear, and why this would be any more pointless or fruitless than any other sort of horse race also didn’t click into place.

I was beginning to feel a little frustrated with my wild geese, and then I looked up again as another squadron honked their way through the skylanes. I suppose trying to follow these wild migrating fellows would be fruitless from the ground. They move fast and in relatively straight lines, unlike the old curling country roads which wind through the countryside below, to which our feet are firmly stuck. Trying to give chase could well end up in becoming lost, while gazing upwards.

In fact the best way to capture the wild geese is to sit tight in a spot where year after year they pay a regular stop off. Rather than chasing after them , wait patiently for them to come by your way. This satisfied me on a few levels, and left me laughing at myself for having run round in circles looking for an explanation, when a little patient observation and thought might have led me straight here.

So that’s what I did today, after my mental wild goose chase, I headed over to a bird sanctuary on the Firth of Forth to see if our seasonal visitors were going to make a touch down. Would a little patience pay off…..and the lesson of being where I am rather than chasing around after some thought or other be beautifully given to me today, by the wild geese?

There was a final twist in the tale. Tonight the geese flew in so late that I could barely capture them on the camera. As I waited, and waited, the air got colder and colder and I could feel winters shoulder nudging in, and just as my breath started forming clouds and the sun was dissappearing the air was filled with thousands of wild honks, but this is all I could get on the camera….

Wild Goose Chase

 
 Something Told the Wild Geese
by
Rachel FieldSomething told the wild geese
It was time to go,
Though the fields lay golden
Something whispered, “snow.”

Leaves were green and stirring,
Berries, luster-glossed,
But beneath warm feathers
Something cautioned, “frost.”

All the sagging orchards
Steamed with amber spice,
But each wild breast stiffened
At remembered ice.

Something told the wild geese
It was time to fly,
Summer sun was on their wings,
Winter in their cry.

Posted in green walks, mindfulness, nature photo, philosophy, photos, poem, spiritual, thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Chinese Guardians

20121006-213139.jpg

Female Shi shi, lion guardian, Forbidden City.

This photo is my response to the Travel Photo Challenge: Animals

Okay Im cheating a little with my mythic animal, but she is so magnificent I couldn’t resist sharing her. This shot shows a female Shi shi, stone lion, or lion guardian in the Forbidden City. I took it while staying in Beijing back in 2004, after walking and camping along the Great Wall for 8 days. It was so strange to suddenly be amongst such opulence after being immersed in the very rural mountains, for what had felt like a lifetime.

 
Almost all the other tourists I was brushing shoulders with here were Chinese, so I stood out a bit with my ‘bird nose’ which had fascinated the children we met up in the mountains! The children all wanted to touch our noses, as if they couldn’t believe they were real, or perhaps for good luck. In a similar way people were touching the Lion Guardians for luck and protection 🙂 You can see the most popular spots for rubbing, by the lack of gilding on the claws and on the cubs paws and head.

 
The female guardian is always on the left of the doorway looking from the outside, and she represents the circle of life, with the tiny fierce cub beneath her claws. The male holds an embroidered ball representing power or the flower of life. He protects the building’s structure while our lady lion protects the people within the building. I just think it is such beautiful embodied symbolism. Hope you enjoy!

Click here to join in the fun of the Travel Photo Challenge: Animals

Posted in ancient sites, history, mythology, photos, travel | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Weekly Photo Challenge: Happy

Here are some of the many things which make me happy. There are atleast two in every photo.

This has been such a lovely challenge to take part in, as I have been smiling all the time I’ve been choosing and uploading all these happy things which I am so lucky to have in my life. It has brought back lots of happy memories. There are lots more…but I thought I should stop after 21 images 🙂

Its been a lovely exercise in being mindful of the things which bring me joy everyday.

Join in the fun by visiting the link below, and see some other takes on the theme ‘Happy’

http://dailypost.wordpress.com/2012/10/05/weekly-photo-challenge-happy/

Posted in dogs, Edinburgh, food, green walks, mindfulness, nature photo, photos, spiritual, Uncategorized, weekly photo challenge | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Weekly Photo Challenge: Mine

I created this Daisy Heart three summers ago, so I can claim it’s mine…made with my two hands, my heart and my imagination, captured on my camera. I made it on the grass which fringes a favorite coral beach of mine, in Plockton. This beautiful village in Rosshire, where my mother grew up, I have visited several times a year every year of my life. Often I we will be the only people on this beach, as its a little hidden and off the beaten track, and there’s a bit of a scramble over rocks to reach it.

If we have been sitting enjoying the views, and the sounds, and the peace and solitude, and then some one else arrives I do feel a little possesive….as though they have burst into my private space. However the quiet serenity of this beach soon sweeps that naughty feeling away.

If I take friends who are visiting for the first time to this beach it does feel like I’m letting them into a very private space…I suppose its because I’ve sat so often on my own here, reading, painting, drawing or meditating….enjoying the space as mine.

The other reason I chose this Daisy Heart is that I wanted an image which expressed this life of mine. It is after all the only thing I can truely own, and waking up to this is a wild and exciting adventure, but one filled with love and truth. Owning ones own life sounds as simple as breathing, but all sorts of things get in our way. Often I have caught myself trying to live someone elses life! To be authentic and to live each day full of the wonder of life and all it brings is my aim….some days I manage better than others.

This is my life so I may as well get on with living it, joyfully if possible, hopefully full of gratitude and wonder, and open my own reality. This life is mine, and I claim it!

The Summer Day

Who made the world?
Who made the swan, and the black bear?
Who made the grasshopper?
This grasshopper, I mean-
the one who has flung herself out of the grass,
the one who is eating sugar out of my hand,
who is moving her jaws back and forth instead of up and down-
who is gazing around with her enormous and complicated eyes.
Now she lifts her pale forearms and thoroughly washes her face.
Now she snaps her wings open, and floats away.
I don’t know exactly what a prayer is.
I do know how to pay attention, how to fall down
into the grass, how to kneel in the grass,
how to be idle and blessed, how to stroll through the fields,
which is what I have been doing all day.
Tell me, what else should I have done?
Doesn’t everything die at last, and too soon?
Tell me, what is it you plan to do
With your one wild and precious life?

By Mary Oliver

Find some other great interpretations of the Photo Challenge : Mine here

And here are some others I liked

http://theblacktwig.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/weekly-photo-challenge-mine-of-books-and-moving/

http://windagainstcurrent.com/2012/10/01/weekly-photo-challenge-mine/

http://ldawkins.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/weekly-photo-challenge-mine/

http://margaretsmiscellany.com/2012/10/02/weekly-photo-challenge-mine/

http://theeternaltraveller.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/weekly-photo-challenge-mine/

http://renserberit.wordpress.com/2012/10/02/behind-the-trees/

Posted in art, mindfulness, nature photo, philosophy, photos, poem, spiritual, thoughts, verse, weekly photo challenge | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 6 Comments

Destination Death

At a funeral this week, while tears were streaming down my cheeks, I came to realise that I was actually crying for me, and for those left behind by the death of a beautiful person. It wasn’t the wonderful words her brother used to describe snippets of her amazing journey through life, which brought forth the tears, but the mournful way he looked at the coffin and simply said “I love you, I miss you so much”, which started the torrent. Even writing this now and remembering his face is tugging away at my heart and throat.

It’s the pain of loss which hurts so much, and a loss which can never be recovered, company which can never be shared again, which touches most of us so deeply. Death leaves a lonely space somewhere deep in our heart, a loneliness bourne of having risked connecting on a deep and meaningful level with another person, and then suddenly they leave us, never to return.

I spend a lot of my working days alongside people who are dying, and people who are about to lose someone. Often its the people alongside the dying person who can’t bear to talk about the immanent death, and try to prentend on some level thats its not going to happen. When we talk often people will say they dont want to get upset infront of the person who is dying, and that they dont want to upset or frighten them. When I have the same converstion with the dying person they are often bewildered as to why no one will let them speak about death, and why no one seems to be crying or upset that they are about to die.

My sense is that these two different groups of people are sharing parallel paths, which ultimately branch off from each other, with very different final destinations. The person who will end up grieving the loss of their beloved, and the person who will depart from this life and this world. One group is left to cope with the pain of loss, while the others have departed and are free.

But nothing that has lived is ever truely lost, for everything we experience lives on in our hearts and minds. Even when someone has died, we can usually still hear in our mind what they would say when something happens, or we mess up. Also we still think of them when we come across things they would have loved. If we were very close the life lessons we learned from or with them will also always be with us. The tears are cried because we feel the space, the lonlieness, and it is this which most of us fear when we hear that someone we love is dying.

In most cases the person dying is not afraid of death itself, of their life being over, but of the process of dying. The fear of potential pain, and loss of dignity are the two things which I hear over and over from the dying. Its the fear of the  process of dying, not death itself which challenges them to their core. Fear is such a powerful emotion that often when we are in its grip we believe everything we think as though it were a fact. A thought is not a fact, it is our response to an emotion or an event.

In fact the process of actual death is often very peaceful, its the thought of it which triggers the fear and anxiety. Our thinking ahead, into an imagined future allows our mind to fall into fear and anxiety. A whole story of pain and distress runs through our mind, and it feels as though its actually happening, or that is exactly how it will feel when it does happen. If we can stay with life as it actually is in this moment, often we will discover that things are managable, and there might yet be room for some laughter and joy.

These struggles with life and death are as old as time. When I came across this quote from Epictetus, a Greek philosopher from back in the 1st Centuary AD, its familiarity made me smile. These are eternal struggles about being alive and being human, and the joy of life is worth all of it. We shouldnt lose the joy of living under the cloud of thoughts of the fear of dying.

“It is not death or pain that is to be dreaded, but the fear of pain or death.” Epictetus.

Posted in friends, mindfulness, philosophy, photos, spiritual, thoughts | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Travel Theme: Foliage

Here is my offering for the Travel Theme Challenge: Foliage

These were taken last Autumn in the Birks of Aberfeldy, in Perthshire, Scotland. This is such a stunning ancient beech forest, that it has inspired lots of poets, writers and artists, and I could understand why when we visited. Robert Burns was so inspired he wrote a poem about the Birks, and there is a seat dedicated to him…alledgedly where he sat to write…but who will ever know!

The area around ‘Burns seat’ is a protected site of special scientific interest, as it is home to at least 10 spieces of moss. This moss garden has an especially tranquil feel, despite the rushing water and tumbling leaves, and it was a beautiful spot to sit and soak up the atmosphere of the gorge, in the slightly muffled air.

There are numerous paths winding through the ancient beech trees, and following and crossing the crystals clear icy waters which tumble through this steep rocky gorge. Each corner that you turn offers some new and magical sight, and there are numerous cascading waterfalls filling the air with tiny drops of dew and rainbows, known as the Falls of Moness. Parts of the rocky slopes are still covered in Scots Pines, remnants of the once mighty Caledonian Forest, which reach back 5,000 years into history. There is a feeling of deep antiquity and timelessness all along this gorge, and I cant help but think how little the scene will have changed over the span of time, and yet how it shifts everyday. Constant change, but in a steady rhythm. All of this helps me to have a good sense of my smallness in this world.

The Autumn colours were stunning, and looking at these photos has made me want to go back for a visit again this year. I suspect that if the leaves were continually these colours that it wouldn’t be such a wonderful visual treat. It would be normal, which of course makes me prone to switch into auto-pilot and not really notice. Also I think there is something special about things in transition. The change from day-to-day, even hour to hour really urges me to drink in what I’m experiencing fully and deeply.

I guess it’s a good mindfulness reminder to enjoy what is actually in front of us right now, as it will be different in the next moment. The shifting colours of this season of change, and the positional shift of the leaves from the trees to the ground, make for a great lesson in the constant flow and change of life. Nothing stands still, least of all autumn leaves, and the colours are just so uplifting. I’m away to walk the dogs through some of this years autumn woods closer to home.

Oh and I just have to mention the amazing independent bookshop and cafe we visited after our walk in the Birks. They serve a gorgeous collection of loose teas in cute cast iron tea pots, and its set in a renovated mill. So atmospheric

http://www.aberfeldywatermill.com/?gclid=CNDxob7_2rICFaTJtAodRS0A2g

You will find more great responses to this theme at:

http://wheresmybackpack.com/2012/09/28/travel-theme-foliage/

And here is a poem/song written by Robert Burns about the Birks

The Birks of Aberfeldy

Chorus.-Bonie lassie, will ye go,
Will ye go, will ye go,
Bonie lassie, will ye go
To the birks of Aberfeldy!

Now Simmer blinks on flowery braes,
And o’er the crystal streamlets plays;
Come let us spend the lightsome days,
In the birks of Aberfeldy.
Bonie lassie, &c.

While o’er their heads the hazels hing,
The little birdies blythely sing,
Or lightly flit on wanton wing,
In the birks of Aberfeldy.
Bonie lassie, &c.

The braes ascend like lofty wa’s,
The foaming stream deep-roaring fa’s,
O’erhung wi’ fragrant spreading shaws-
The birks of Aberfeldy.
Bonie lassie, &c.

The hoary cliffs are crown’d wi’ flowers,
White o’er the linns the burnie pours,
And rising, weets wi’ misty showers
The birks of Aberfeldy.
Bonie lassie, &c.

Let Fortune’s gifts at randoe flee,
They ne’er shall draw a wish frae me;
Supremely blest wi’ love and thee,
In the birks of Aberfeldy.
Bonie lassie, &c.

Posted in ancient history, ancient sites, green walks, history, mindfulness, nature photo, philosophy, photos, poem, verse, weekly photo challenge | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

So Sweet Blog Award

What a lovely way to start the day. I discovered I had been nominated for my first ever blog award. It’s amazing how something really nice which comes as a surprise makes us even happier than nice surprises we were expecting.

I think the unforeseeable nature of a pleasant surprise is so sweet because of the feeling of having no hand in making it happen. It’s as though the universe has decided to rain some good fortune on me for no apparent reason. The lack of anticipation and waiting for the thing to unfold brings an immediacy and fullness to the pleasure. Its instant gratification and a very plump juicy joy.

Just for being me, someone is saying ‘Well done, I like that’. In fact the feeling is so sweet its been making me smile all morning. The lovely someone who made me smile is Food and other Stuff

http://foodandotherstuff.com

Her blog is definitely sweet and well worth checking out. She asked me to nominate some blogs myself, and it feels like a really nice way to spread a little more awareness of blogs you might not have come across yet. A little publicity for blogs which have yet to reach the giddy heights of the traffic generated by freshly pressed! Every little bit helps I think 🙂

I love following these blogs….and you might too:

http://fostrickson.wordpress.com/      for the love of dogs and cats

http://lifeasiseeitwpblog.com/        for beautifully inspiring photos and thoughts from Nova Scotia

http://ladyfi.wordpress.com/   for gorgeous photos and quotes from a Brit living in Sweden

http://fortheloveofclouds.wordpress.com/    for everyday photos of clouds and nature

http://lijiun.wordpress.com/  lovely mindfulness site with lots of insights

http://icelandpenny.wordpress.com/  for walking stories

http://sagehaven.wordpress.com/  for inspiration and mindfully living

http://tamingtheinvisibledragon.com/  for mindful inspiration

Thanks again for the Award

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

Change Hurts

20120925-170824.jpg

Okay I know that everything changes all the time. My breath is in constant flow in and out of my body. My thoughts rise constantly in my mind like bubbles in fizzy water, restless and changing with every breath. Time is in constant motion as it changes from one minute to the next, and with this procession of time comes the ever changing light of day and night, and the ever shifting seasons of the earth. So with all this change within and without why does change hurt so much?

It seems I am a creature of habit, I like to feel that there are some constants which I can rely on in my life, and so the awareness and acceptance of constant change is something I seem to fight. I kid myself that much of what goes on around me and within me is steady and predictable. I guess it gives me a sense of solidity and certainty.

It seems I’m not alone with this, as almost everyone has a sense of this. We say “I am this kind of person”, “this is what I do”, ” this is what I like”, as though these things are fixed in stone. Yet nothing is truly fixed, not even stone, it just changes at a slower pace than we do. Perhaps the rate or predictability of the change has a bearing on how comfortable or sore it feels as we experience it.

Change we have chosen tends to be less painful and disorientating than change we didn’t see coming and happened out with our control. But change we chose can still hurt. I think it’s because all change involves loss. Before something new happens or comes along, I have to let go of whatever was filling up that space before. So if I’m going to make a new great friend, I might not have the time or space unless I let go of an existing relationship. Without letting go of the old there will be no space for new growth, and I suppose that’s exactly what Mother Nature does every Autumn, she helps the trees let go of this years growth, ready for a period of rest before next years new beginning.

So although change hurts its also exciting as it means something new is unfolding, and I suppose my experience depends on whether I’m looking back at the past or forward into the future at that moment! Also whether I’m resisting or accepting the change.

Resisting makes me brittle and hard and far more likely to break when the winds if change storm through my life. If I can accept what’s happening, I’m more likely to stay flexible and supple and adapt to what’s happening 🙂 But its not always easy! Today as I walked the dogs, after a wild Autumn storm last night, the path was littered with the top branches of the trees, as though some angry giant had pulled them off and thrown them down in anger. The leaves hadn’t even started to turn yellow and the acorns were still green, they had been plucked before they were ready by the wild storm. This I think is when change hurts most.

Posted in green walks, mindfulness, philosophy, photos, spiritual | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Travel Theme: White

20120924-164308.jpg

This amazing marble relief staircase is inside the Forbidden City, in Beijing. I took this photo back in 2004, and was captured by the shimmering white, swirling clouds and dragons, which seem to move in the shifting sunlight. It is wonderful that so much detail was carved, just to enrich the walk up or down the stairs. It reminded me a bit of the Celtic knot work in Scotland’s ancient past, with its lack of straight lines…..I guess I’m a curves kind of girl 🙂

The detail is just incredible, and worthy of a visual meditation, it held me for a good 20 minutes despite the crowds of other visitors. Sometimes it’s great to stop and just soak up some small detail, rather than being swept along with the business of rushing around making sure to see every corner of a place. I find taking time to be with the beauty and energy of a certain spot allows for a deeper appreciation and connection. After all it must have taken thousands of hours to carve, so why rush past?

see more interpretations of the theme White here:

http://wheresmybackpack.com/2012/09/20/travel-theme-white/

Posted in history, mindfulness, photos, travel, weekly photo challenge | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Weekly Photo Challenge (solitary)

20120923-145600.jpg

This is a solitary Banyan tree. Despite its many trunks this is one tree, which has grown on a host tree, which it then strangles and overcomes, before going on to sprout many hanging roots, which form new trunks! The atmosphere around this tree is very ephemeral, and there is a deep sense of spirit and space, filling the air with the solitary presence of this special tree.

In many cultures the Banyan tree is viewed as highly spiritual, and Buddha is said to have gained enlightenment under a Bodi tree, which is a member of the Banyan family. I certainly felt a deep all pervading stillness all around this tree. A stillness which filled my heart and mind as I gazed up in awe at its tangled roots and branches. It was as though time stood still and held its breath, and the whole world paused with me. A beautiful peaceful sense of solitude and calm filled me from the tips of my toes to the crown of my head.

I find solitude deeply refreshing, and I crave it, like water on a hot day. Much as I love people, I also love my space, and try to find a balance of solitude and company every day.

Posted in mindfulness, nature photo, photos, spiritual | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments