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Out of the Ordinary

Examining life; playing with thanks

A tool, this litany of gratitude.  Like a key that opens a door or a gate,  secures a roller skate,  winds up a music box or a clock,  starts the car – we don't need to believe a key works or understand how it works;  we just need to use it to bring about a result.

A recent 'playing'.  Driving down Foul Bay Road from Lansdowne to Oak Bay Avenue.

I am grateful for the sight of those Olympic Mountains far in the distance and the memories of, at times,  sensing the snow on their peaks,  and for now realizing I can travel through my eyes to a different country without leaving home.

I am graterful for the garage sale signs on telephone poles that I can READ clearly as I drive by, the date and time and address.  

I am grateful for the group of wallflowers against a stone wall, their brilliance and their fragrance.

I appreciate being able, on this yet-chilly morning, to have the heater on in the car and the driver's window open for both incar warmth and outcar fresh air and sounds and scents.

I am grateful for brick houses.

I am grateful for seeing, in a driveway,  a small, round cat sitting on the roof of a van and bending down to watch as a  person loads or unloads something into the vehicle.

I am grateful for the construction at the intersection of  Foul Bay and Oak Bay which has traffic in a stop and go pattern with human directives;  for the chance to sit and watch a backhoe revealing what is under the road and the bucket lifting and dumping the contents into a truck;   for the thought that if the grandkids were in the car they would share my interest.

I am glad to watch and respond to the flagman's (actually a flagwoman's) gestures;  graceful and no-nonsense;  are they taught how to do these signals or learn them by rote or are they purely instinctive, I wonder,  as I am arm-swooshed  through the intersection, and drive, gratefully, on.

 

Comments

2 responses to “Examining life; playing with thanks”

  1. Thanks for sharing. As my mother used to always say “life should be happy”, take time and notice the details, even the small ones.

  2. I can ‘hear’ her voice …. Special memory.