Shining some Light on the Subject . . .

By the light, of the silvery moon, I want to spoon, to my honey I’ll croon loves tune  . . .

Last night . . . we walked up from the harbor with this half-moon shining down on us the whole way.  We couldn’t see it when we got to the darkest part of the street, but when we came out from under the trees and into our driveway, it was there, waiting for us, suspended over the barn.  This is our harvest moon, on it’s way . . . growing (waxing), until the twelfth, when it will be full and pop up like an enormous orange pumpkin right at the end of our street.

It provided just enough light to brighten the white things; the picket fence and the japanese anemones seemed to be lit from inside. It was a beautiful evening; the air was filled with the sound of crickets.

Inside I kicked off my flip flops, and from our kitchen window I could see the moon bouncing off the trim of the yellow house out back of us; I walked out the side porch, barefoot, and across the cool dry grass to take this photo . . . even though it’s in the shade, the birch tree had a little coating of moonlight too. . .

Later, that moon followed us right up the stairs.

The change of season from summer to fall has always been my favorite time of year…it’s stirs me to the core when church bells ring from across the street, and the white steeple peeks through the branches of our maple tree; or when I go clamming with Joe, standing knee-deep in the shimmering pond, the tide beginning to come in, swirling around our legs; fair weather clouds streaming by the white-trimmed cottages along the shore.  Or when the breeze carrying that first little autumn chill through the trees, like it did this morning, sweeps across the dirt road where we walk.  I love to stretch out on a blanket on the lawn and look up through crossed branches; just lie there, listening to the wind and the birds, hoping my kitty will deign to lie down with me.  There’s every reason to be excited and looking forward to the future…every day is more beautiful than the one before.

But a few years back, right in the midst of all this wonderfulness, I discovered something about seasonal rhythms; mine had gotten a little off, was not quite right, but I never put two and two together. It was my girlfriend Margot who figured it out for me.

She stopped over unannounced to have tea one golden September afternoon a few years ago.  I was, at the time of her knock, just up from a nap and scraping up the last crisp brown bits from a frying pan where I’d cooked left-over mashed potatoes into a big pancake (brown and crusty on the outside, soft and melty inside with a river of butter).

Even though it was pushing 4 pm, I was still in my jammies but had covered the fact, somewhat, with a navy blue sweatshirt that said TOO MEAN TO MARRY on it; my hair was stuck to the side of my head.  As I shuffled to the sink, slippers scuffing the wood floor, to fill the tea kettle, Margot surveyed the scene and asked, because she is my dear friend, “How’re you feeling?”  I said, “I don’t know, kind of miserable for some reason…just no energy. I don’t feel like doing anything.”

Thank God for girlfriends! “You know what?” she said,  “I don’t even have to look at the calendar … I already know the days are getting shorter just by looking at you . . .  you did this last September, remember? You got all depressed the minute the days start getting shorter —  I think you have S.A.D.”

Basic food group for SAD sufferers

“What?” I protested, “That sad-people disease? I don’t have that. No way. I have the happy gene.”

Then I burst into tears.

She hugged me, and gently started reminding me of the clues, about how I was still wearing my jammies for instance, and it was four in the afternoon; how I didn’t feel like going anywhere; that I was almost licking the potato pancake pan (apparently consumption of large quantities of starch, butter, and chocolate is a symptom); and how I had lamented to her that if I ran away, as I would like to, the big drawback would be that I would have to take “me” with me. She was unflinching, “And honey, what about those two-hour naps?”

Thank goodness for Margot, my best friend forever!  If it wasn’t for her, I would have gone obliviously through life, letting depression cloud up my favorite season and half the year, assuring myself there was nothing wrong, thinking it was just the prospect of winter that was bothering me.

That conversation took place some years back, I had all the symptoms of seasonal affective disorder, but just didn’t know it.  Now I have a light box, which I keep on my art table, and flip on about 5 am, when the days start getting shorter.  If you wait until you’re already in the throes of it, it’s too late, you need to start in September.  I also found out that taking Vitamin D helps a lot.  Now, with that, plus this light box and our walk every morning, I feel great.

I just paint, or work on the computer while it’s on, it works even if it’s pointed at the back of my head!  All the normal happiness and love of the seasons returned, I am SAD free, the happy gene reigns supreme.  And, I found out I could still stay in my jammies all day if I want to, and sometimes I really do, and eat potato pancakes (in moderation) and not be sad! Hooray!

Just thought I would mention it because this morning when I turned on my light it occurred to me that there could be others suffering with this  (even 4 to 5% of children are said to have it!) — it’s not like anyone is going to die of it, but who really needs it?  Do you (or someone you love) have sort of a little nagging despair in the back of your mind?  Worried about summer being over?  Thinking about running away?  Not dressing? Eating entire boxes of cookies?  Can’t get the energy to enjoy life the way you want?  You might want to try a light box.

So you can feel the joy and dance by the light of the moon all winter long. 

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Just a Peep

 

Just a peep about birds this morning.  You already know I like them, because there’s one singing at you every time you come to this website! I thought I would tell you about the inspiration for the ones I have decorating my shelves, and for the ones I love to paint . . .  they have such interesting details for my tiny brush, beaks, eyes, feet and claws; plus their soft colors and sometimes quizzical expressions; always at their best with musical notes coming out of their mouths. 

I’m not the only one who enjoys painting them . . .  I look for old bird books while on our travels . . . some of them have beautiful art in them.   I found this one in England. 

We aren’t the kind of birdwatchers that go out to the woods with binoculars; we don’t have the patience to wait for them to show up. But we have three feeders hanging from the wisteria trellis outside our kitchen windows, and a bird bath sitting a little further out by the picket fence, which means they come to us.  Which makes it so very handy for drawing them!  Yesterday I removed the screen from one of the windows so I could photograph the feeders with a clear view.  The birds did not care for this sudden closeness . . . no matter how stealthily I approached, most of them would all fly off together in a cacophony of wings and indignant peeps.  This was the best I could do.

I began feeding birds (and when you feed birds, you automatically feed squirrels because where there is bird seed, there are squirrels) when I moved to the island, noticing and falling in love with all the beautiful nature around me. Seeing a cardinal for the first time was a big part of the inspiration. Where I grew up in southern California and then on the Central Coast, there were no cardinals.  Until I moved here, I’d never seen one. It was like magic for me; how could there be such a red bird?  I needed to see more of them!  They were Christmas come alive.  Like valentines in the snow; they’re the only color in the winter when all else is brown, black, gray or white.  I now recognize the little twisty noise they make, I often hear them before I see them.  And they mate for life; I’ll never forget the first time I saw a brilliant red cardinal come to the feeder, delicately take a sunflower seed, fly with it to a nearby rhododendren where the female was perched, and place it in her beak.

When I bought my first house on the island, there was an ancient, almost falling apart, bird feeder hanging by old chain from a branch of an oak tree outside the kitchen window; the wood of this homemade feeder was weathered and gray and lichen grew on the roof of it.  I bought my first bag of bird seed at the local farm store, filled the feeder, and from that moment on, every time I was at the sink, washing dishes or rinsing vegetables, I was kept entertained with the flutterings, songs, baby-feeding, and comings and goings, of chicadees, nuthatches, wrens, bright-yellow finches, and my forever favorites, the cardinals.  The trees were full of them, perched in a line on branches, waiting their turn at the feeders.  I discovered that blue jays are bullies, too big for the feeders, but they manage to attach themselves anyway and scare the little birds away. Yellow, brown, blue, black and red birds, spots of color in the woods. Pretty soon my trees were filled with bird feeders and there were little flocks of ground feeders under them . . . One little movement, if I went out the back door, they’d all fly away at once.

Henry David Thoreau wrote that he “once had a sparrow alight upon my shoulder for a moment while I was hoeing in a village garden and I felt I was more distinguished by that circumstance than I would be by any honor bestowed upon me.”  I’m so jealous, I’ve been waiting, but no sparrows have landed on me yet.  I do try to lure them with  interesting feeders, which come in all shapes and sizes, some better than others.  This one with the red roof was great because lots of birds could crowd inside at one time, out of the rain and snow, and it was easy to fill with seed; the squirrels liked it because they thought it was a perfect little house, a big grocery-filled kitchen, just for them.

This is as close as they will let me get at bath time.  Birds are on a schedule, like us, they feed at certain times, morning and night with a few visits during the day, and bath time seems to take place in the late afternoon sun. When I come back from tea at Lowely’s, and find bunnies grazing on the lawn, doves (cooing) on the barn, cardinals and squirrels feeding from seed dropped from the feeders into the driveway, and birds frolicking at the bird bath, I feel like my garden is Disneyland!

♥  ♥  ♥

So yesterday, The birds still weren’t used to the screen being gone and me right there . . . but somebody, try to guess who, had no problem at all . . .

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I could show you three different videos of this same squirrel coming back! But I couldn’t get the birds to cooperate.  I won’t give up, will try again.  Watching them is sort of like watching fish swim around in a tank, only better, mesmerizing! We love them year round, but especially in the winter; their happy, light-hearted energy with feathers blowing in the icy wind as they swing on the feeders gives whimsy to a scene which might otherwise be just gray leafless trees and cold white sky.  And if you feed them all winter, they stick around in the summer and eat mosquitoes! So if you have a tree that might like to feel more useful this winter, once he is finished with his job of shading you or giving you fruit, you can give him (and you) the gift of a bird feeder. 

 Bird song is the first nature thing I hear in the morning — probably seeing Cinderella as a child is what turned me into a bird lover!  I mean, please, they make beds!  

 My first birds, age six, crayons.  My heart was in it from the beginning. 

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