I’ve shared in a past post that for as long as I can remember, I’ve been a writer. Words are something I’ve always felt at ease with and writing has long been an outlet for my right-brain creative bent. I also like to draw and create things with paper or fabric, but I’m not as adept as those things. I started writing stories and poems in elementary school and carried that passion into adulthood. I didn’t keep everything I wrote, but I have a collection of things I need to organize into something other than scattered notebooks and journals in various hiding places.
At some point life got in the way and my creativity with words dried up. There were a few factors, but I went through a very long dry spell. My mind was consumed with raising a family, and work, and all the busyness that comes in the middle between youthful exuberance and post work re-evaluation of priorities. At one point my writing became a purge of sadness or frustration or impatience or disillusionment so that even I didn’t want to read it.
Maybe in my more “advanced” years, I’ve become more
observant and introspective. Or maybe
when I quit my job and felt no real focus or direction, it gave my heart and
mind an opening to ponder life creatively once again. The desire and drive to record my thoughts
has come back to life. I recently wrote
a poem about this renewal process. What needs revival
in your life? What passion have you put on hold? Maybe it's time to start watering and fertilizing.
Evergreen
I had so much expectation early on about creative brilliance,
like a sapling that
stretches upward and outward to bear foliage.
More branches emerge
with each new season,
breaking free of
winter’s death with fragrant blossoms,
new shoots growing toward
the sunlight, watered by spring’s soft rains.
But summer scorched
the tender leaves and dried them on the vines.
Distraction and heat
left diligence abandoned until growth ceased.
I thought the young
tree had died without chance of revival;
left to its own
devices and survival instincts, dormancy won the day.
The natural ebb and
flow of months, from deep frost to near drought
did not result in
death, but only rest and waiting.
Then one autumn, roots
held the needed moisture to look beyond winter
to spring’s renewals
and regrowth and hope of becoming.
As the first days of
sun’s lengthened rays primed the longing for a
new era of
maturation, a determination to live and produce revived.
Passion and
creativity have a way of surviving the seasons and years
and find a way to
overcome the winds and weeds that threaten to choke.
Now a thriving tree
with strong trunk and abundant leaves,
the words pour out
like ripened fruit, a harvest’s bounty.
I covenant to water
and nurture and protect so it can continue to thrive,
and share the yield
so nothing is ever again wasted or lost.
I always love waiting to see what you will write about another good job ❤️❤️
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jen!
DeleteAnother great blog Cathey. Love the poem. ��
ReplyDeleteThank you, Anna! <3
DeleteLove the poem. You are talented. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThanks again, Donna!
DeleteYou did it again 👏 another great blog Cathey 🙏💜
ReplyDeleteThanks, Irene!
DeleteLove the poem - great blog once again
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Jody!
DeletePure brilliance Cathey! Love your blogs. Thanks...🤗🙏
ReplyDeleteThank you so much!!
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