
First came the deep snows, then village snow ploughs carelessly dropping their loads of white stuff on hedgerows, groves and solitary trees with careless insouciance all winter long. We have been on the receiving end of a remarkable amount of snow this winter, and we may reasonably expect a fair amount of snow to arrive before the end of March, but my dear little trees are nodding and sending out a heady perfume which signals a tantalizing and imminent change in the seasons. They have begun their preparations for Oestara (or the Vernal Equinox) and springtime, and they simply cannot be dissuaded from expressing their pleasure.
The words resilient and resilience come from the Latin resiliēns, meaning to leap back, and we use them often without ever thinking about their essence, about what they really mean. When something is resilient, it exists in a state of innate balance and buoyancy, possessing the happy faculty of springing back or rebounding to its true form after being subjected to abuse, adversity or unnatural compression.
That sounds like Buddha nature to me.
3 comments:
Unfortunately, Tabor's trees are soft and too fat and these snow falls have broken many a large branch and quite a few holly crowns. I am hoping careful pruning will save most.
I've been thinking a lot about the word "resilience". That seems to be the quality I want most in my own character right now.
Thanks for the (once again) timely post.
I have been pondering "resilience" as well. I am learning that this Buddha nature is present in me....and even when I don't feel it, it's there. Surely it will raise it's own compressed head to the sunshine in the coming days if I create the space for it to unfurl.
Post a Comment