THE LULU CHRONICLES
Atticus- wet and happy |
It was spring today. It may go back to being winter
tomorrow, but today you could almost hear the soft, lime green tulip sprouts
breaking through the damp thawed earth. It was glorious. It was all I could do
to keep myself from scooping up a handful of mud and burying my nose into its
mossy, cool, goopy smell.
This is the
first spring for Atticus the pup. Last week the pond was still frozen. Today,
the ice is all gone and Atticus couldn’t figure out why he couldn’t walk on
water. However, once he waded up to his chest, the call of the wild captured
his soul and he realized that this was what he was born to do.
This is my first spring too. The first one without the Hubs.
As I sat on the swing overlooking our pond, I ached to see him across the way
on his tractor. I could almost feel his weight sitting next to me on the swing,
the one that he had built. He loved putzing around this place. I could see him
planting a tree across the pond, or sitting next to his burn pile in his ball
cap, or gathering the limbs from under the willows that winter had coaxed down.
I could hear him in his workshop tuning up his John Deere. Spring always got
him chomping at the bit to get outside and work these three little acres of
ours.
This afternoon it was just me. As the ground under foot
yawned and rubbed the sleep out of its eyes, I missed Gary so much I could
hardly walk. How he loved watching the earth wake up from the vantage point of
South Moon. Yeah, that’s what we named this place. It’s taken from a book
written by Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, South
Moon Under. This was our place. Our haven. Now what?
I sat for a long time watching Atticus romp like a schoolboy
on a playground. As he discovered nature’s bounty in dead bullfrogs, damp
sticks and open spaces, I pondered. I talked to Gary. I talked to God. I talked
to both of them at the same time. I asked them what they were going to do with
me. I wanted to know the plan. Neither one of them were real forth coming. A
message is whispered through the willows and blown across the pond. Keep moving. Keep breathing in and out.
Wait. Trust. Be still. Listen. Fear not. Go see if the tractor will start.
Gary would have liked Atticus, especially today, dripping
wet, dried leaves stuck on his tail, and a soggy stick clamped in his jaws.
It was spring today. My first.
deb
2 comments:
my love to you Deb. Sometimes the hardest thing is the silence but it is also healing at times. Please remember we are growing through this process and Your faith in God's timing will get through one more day at a time.
Thank you, Pat. You are such an encourager. I'm praying for you as well. Much love...
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