Fox sparrows kick under the snowberry thicket, while chickadees peck about in cedar needle duff flinging fallen leaves with abandon, foraging under the gloomy gray November cold sky. Squirrels, furred and fattened, are not slowed while brush rabbits, calm, chew grass blades or just lie low, waiting, on what I do not know. Winter quickly comes in rain and cold. I've done what I could for the creatures - fallen leaves left to molder on the ground, twig and branch brush heap piles for the bugs. Here, a pile of small rocks lies still by the fence, there, cut logs on the ground, decaying and soft growing lichen as green moss on rock slithers. It is time to let the yard and all its inhabitants fend for themselves while I tend my own inner life within the stillness that only winter can bring. I'll be glad for the season's lights hanging about reminding me of how we all are finding the way through our own thickets where we may hide and where we may find what we need for life. ______________________________________________________________ Portland, Oregon - November 23, 2021
Lovely, Tom.
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