It’s been hard to get away from the news these days. Everywhere one looks there is something gone awry. Disorder, discord and destruction is seemingly the new normal. Tempers are running high while spirits are low. Between Mother Nature’s might and all the political unrest, our world feels unsettled and out of alignment. It’s an extraordinarily heartbreaking time at present. It’s overwhelming and one wonders what the point of it all might be. While I reach out to those struggling to recover from natural disasters and man-made horrors, my heart reminds me to seek solace in the gift of the ordinary.
We take ordinary for granted. In fact, we often complain about it right? Seeking excitement and the extraordinarily, we whine about the same old-same old, the mundane, the quotidian. But it’s precisely those humdrum, routine tasks that give us certain assurance. They tell us that all is as it should be. Things are normal. There is wondrous peace in that.
This past week, in trying to process all the goings on and looking for how I can be of most service, I’ve found such comfort in doing the unremarkable chores in the garden. Whilst weeding, I’ve observed the earthworms tilling the earth and the bees making their rounds. The seed pods rattling in the breeze that brings a fresh shower of leaves in colors of the sun. I’ve taken note of the slender green needles of emerging grass from the recently seeded front lawn. In tucking away the pots of tender plants into the greenhouse, I’m reassured that they will be warm and safe through the cold months. Picking Swiss chard for supper, I’m struck by how much I enjoy this vegetable and how it keeps giving well into early December. Washing out the large pots now emptied of their seasonal contents, I watch the birds raid the meadow for seeds and bugs. The low slant of the afternoon light sets aglow the asters as though reminding the butterflies and bees there remains only a few more hours before visiting hours are over. Meanwhile, in another corner, the light turns the swaying heads of ornamental grasses into feathers of polychromatic optic fibers. Cutting back the plants will have to wait another week or two – this senescence is so beautiful .
These familiar chores put my heart at ease and for one all too brief period, my fear, anxiety, anger, sorrow and frustration are forgotten. Ordinary is good.
I wrote the poem below three years ago. It expresses the same sentiments.
The Gift Of The Ordinary
The early demand
to make room
for still warm toes
and sleep tousled hair
against my languid self.
Sandwiched between
husband and child
Wide awake
much too hot
wouldn’t change a thing.
Quick kisses, rushed goodbyes
Sudden quiet amidst the dishes
Hours open
creative freedom
the comfort of home.
Laundry rituals, weekly menus
Deadlines, submissions
instep with
family time, date night
snatched moments of solitude.
Belonging, beloved
sleep deprived on a good day
Supported, cheered
trailing behind on paperwork
The gift of the ordinary.
–Shobha Vanchiswar
Note: I hope you will visit one or all of the art shows I’m in this month!
(c) 2017 Shobha Vanchiswar
[do_widget “Blog Subscriptions (Jetpack)”]