“To affect the quality of the day is
the highest of the arts.”
-- Henry David Thoreau
How
many of us are really living the life we
dreamed when we were six years old, or
even twelve, maybe twenty-one?
Aren’t
we running too fast, over-scheduling ourselves,
feeling that we have no time?
What’s next?
Nothing in society
teaches us to live in the now—everything is “What’s
next?”
When we enter grade school, we feel the pressure to do well
so we can get into college. When we get to college we are asked, “What’s next?
What is our major? What job will we have?
We look for the ideal mate to make our lives fulfilled and joyful.
We wait for children. We wait for them to sleep through the night. We have an
eye on their education, their college.
Remember when you were a kid and you laid on the grass and
felt the cool dampness of it?
You were lying on a living pallet, and as you lie there with
the sunshine a blanket of warm on your skin, you looked into the sky and
watched a whiff of white gas gather itself into a cloud.
Can’t you smell the grass, feel the sun?
Thoreau said, “I went to the woods because I
wanted to live deliberately, to front only the essential facts of life, and see if I could not learn
what it had to teach, and not when I came to die, discover that I had not
lived.”
Recently I
reread a book I had read about 20 years ago and loved the author all over
again. It was Dorothy Gilman, and her book was A New Kind of Country.
She was a lady alone, her boys
were in college, and for $10,500 she
bought a house and ten acres in Nova Scotia.
She went there to find a new kind of country, one in which she could “Front
only the essentials.”
During a Christmas visit back to New York, at a dinner party, the host turns
to her and says, “It’s high time you told us about your move to Nova Scotia. Which
I certainly envy you doing.”
“Yes,” his wife
says, “I’m so curious. Tell us, for instance, what you do every day.”
Dorothy was about t reply when
the friend who accompanied her to the party, said, “Oh, I can tell you that.
She gets up at dawn, chops wood, milks
the cows, builds fires, does a little writing, eats fish, and goes to bed at
sunset. Now tell me, she continues. “what you’ve
heard about the Johnsons’ divorce.”
I,
too, feel I must be working all day, to read a book during the day is somehow frivolous, so I squeeze in a little reading before
I fall asleep at night. I’m caught up with the need to be doing “important” stuff, too.
In his book, Medicine Power, Brad Steiger quotes a one-hundred-year-old medicine man named Thomas Largewhiskers. “I don’t know what you learned from books, but the most important thing I learned from my grandfathers
was that there is a part of the mind that we don’t really know about and it is that part that is most important in whether we become sick or remain well.”
Oh, It’s Halloween—go scare yourself silly.