A friend of mine wrote, “I really hope the New Year will see changes in my attitude. I have to stop w/ the pity parties, the hatred toward the consequences of my choices or lack thereof. There’s enough good in my life. I may not have all I expected to have in life at this age, but what I have, I want and I need to care for it.”
Perspective. That’s one of the gifts of aging. Of course, nobody wants to talk about aging, but things go better if we keep on learning.
Many birds here under the Mogollon Rim enjoy eating acorns – this one is a Stellar Jay one of the small, rounded nuts in its beak.
The woodpeckers have learned they can’t use our outer walls for a granary, to store the little acorns for winter food, although they certainly made hay while the sun shone. But our trusty bird netting surrounding the whole house has thwarted their storage intentions.
A few years back, we discovered about three hundred and fifty holes in our house…beak-sized and drilled with great intensity over the months we were absent. And each hole contained a treasure in woodpecker language: food.
These little 1/2 inch acorns pepper the mountain oaks around here, but who would have thought they’d end up in our house? Lance filled the holes with some foamy goo he found at the hardware store, and after it hardened, the netting provided a way OUT of being attacked.
A way out…just what we needed–we’d tried everything, hanging shiny CD’s from the eaves to scare the acorn-carriers away, etc. The birdies, of course, still sought a way in, but have had to accept what they cannot change, while we had to change the things we could.
In this new year before us, and those two phrases depict many of our desires. Sometimes we seek a way in…into a deeper relationship, into a more serene existence, into success. Other times, a way out describes what we need. Still other times, we need to embrace acceptance.
Perspective…just another way of looking at things. I’m going to try to remember this in 2018.
Great post that we all need to remember and practice. Thanks for the reminder!
and thanks for stopping, Carole.
Perspective can change anything. ☺️
Amen to that.
Now more than ever – my daughter-in-law (37 years old) inoperable stage 4 lung cancer had her two year anniversary in October with no new tumors.
With the new year a new mass has been discovered.
I cannot change that diagnosis – I and her family must accept however this disease chooses to attack her. Hope is the ONLY thing here.
Praying for mercy.
HOPE…now there’s a meaning-filled word to claim for 2018. I hope everyone who reads your comment starts praying for your family.