Time to review resolution accomplishments
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CATHARINE COOPER
Could the days be more beautiful? Dawns break in violet pinks that
open to warm afternoons. Evenings slide into play with brilliant
reds, yellows and deep purple. Even the moon has taken up the act,
dragging a golden shadow across the sea’s surface.
December opens her arms as the last month of the year and I am
lost to the 11 preceding. As always, I am stunned at how quickly the
calendar pages turn, and wonder why the “to do” list grows in greater
proportion than the time I have allotted to tasks.
One of the items to make an appearance this time of year is a
review of the resolutions I made on the first of January. How have
they played in my micro and macro existence? What have I discovered
or uncovered? What is left to learn?
On the heels of 2002’s resolution to embrace obstacles and
challenges, 2003’s call to patience and understanding had appeared,
at first, to be a dream assignment. I mean, what’s so hard about
patience? Except -- if you are a high energy component like me --
everything. And understanding? Well, without patience this is one
hard nut to crack.
The pursuit of understanding can only occur by relinquishing
preconceived ideas and judgments. This was an expected course of
action, but more difficult in implementation than in conception. As
the sum of my experiences, I am informed by my early caretakers, and
driven by peer pressures and friends to formulate a life course of
actions. Much of what I hold to be true may be, in fact, simply
environmental programming.
Personal tastes in clothing, housing style and politics are
components of my self-definition. I have years invested in my
judgments and to suspend them, to allow myself to open my mind to
another belief system, for even a moment, requires serious diligence.
But how else can I really claim to understand another person? How
really, can I say I have an open mind? How can I be instrumental in
healing wounds on the planet without embracing that which is
different from myself?
Patience, in her own way, has required rigorous attention. On the
heels of exploring the foundation of understanding, I have been
forced to seek not the quick fix, to jump not at my first conclusion,
but to allow each moment the power and weight of its predecessor. I
have had to learn to forgo my belief in the right course of action,
so that the rhythm of others may be explored. I have had to learn to
breath more slowly and, in some instances, to take smaller steps.
This attribute continues to challenge my hurry-up sense of life.
A morning kayak on Newport’s Back Bay provides the perfect
opportunity to slow down and reflect on both resolutions. Brilliant
sunlight shines warm on my face and not a ripple of wind marks the
surface. The bay is mirror-like with a plethora of sea birds. The
stillness is unbroken except for their chatter and the occasional
launch of aviation from the adjacent airport.
I find myself drifting in estuarine grasses, binoculars in hand,
surrounded by sandpipers, dowitchers and terns. Lazily, I turn off
the to-do list and float, mesmerized by their chirping, feeding and
bathing rituals. Time stops. When I “wake up,” my fellow kayakers are
halfway down the bay. But rather than hurry after them, I stay with
the Great Egret, poised in search of breakfast. I linger until he
springs from coil to the capture of a fish. I gift myself with to
match his patience.
Paddling once again, the resident osprey lifts from his channel
perch, spreading massive wings as he scans the bay for food.
Understanding the cause and effect of agricultural poisoning, led to
the DDT ban and the slow return of this gracious raptor to our
shoreline. I think, as I paddle, that maybe understanding is the key
to balance in more than our ecosystem. Maybe it is the key to balance
in our world at large.
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