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On the Second Day of Summer

On the second evening of summer, from here at my desk and with the house all closed up against the heat, I could hear cicadas singing. I love them. I love them very much and as far as I had observed, this was their first chorus of the summer. I usually try to also notice their last song of the summer, but I’ve never yet been successful at that.

I stepped outside to my narrow balcony and they settled back down, as they do. Birds were carrying on and at the back of the yard, the barred owl took up calling. My neighbors were playing fiddle and guitar. And then, in the distance, I could hear the barred owl’s mate answering the call. As I turned my head in the hope of seeing it, I saw the tiniest sliver of a crescent moon in the Western sky. It must have risen very early. Next, a couple of fireflies lit and the cicadas made a false start at singing again.

Well, I don’t know that I need to say that I just stood there against the railing shaking my head and smiling in wonderment. I mean, wouldn’t you? One loveliness after another within a span of five minutes. Oh sure, these are all small things. The hum of life. The music of summer. The little pretties. All these things that make my heart glad.

I want to be that person who needs nothing more than these small things, ever. I want to to be the one who lets all grievances and petty irritations flutter on by. I want to remain unruffled by whatever little thises and thats wave in my face, trying to get a rise out of me. I want the kind of equanimity that keeps me sailing smoothly along, moment to moment, past the moments of beauty, all the way through the other decidedly not beautiful ones.

I do have equanimity sometimes. There are definitely moments, minutes, even hours or days when these small things are enough. I had no petty grievances right then, that evening. I am unruffled at times. And shouldn’t that be enough then, along with the cicadas, the owls, the crescent moon, the fireflies, the music? Just right then? No one is unruffled always. No one is consistently possessed of equanimity, not even the Dalai Lama. Where would the passion be? The life! The humanity.

So, since we are humans, these small moments of beauty and of contentment, brief or lasting, simply have to be enough. They are the gifts. And then we bumble along through the rest and we wait patiently for the next round of gifts that truly do come. And polite as we are, we say, “Thank you.”

“While getting lost in all those little things that seem so important, don’t forget the little things that matter . . .”― Virginia Alison

“The small things of life were often so much bigger than the great things . . . the trivial pleasure like cooking, one’s home, little poems especially sad ones, solitary walks, funny things seen and overheard.” ― Barbara Pym, Less Than Angels

“I live to enjoy life by the littlest things . . . Just the feeling itself of being alive, the absolute amazing fact that we are here right now, breathing, thinking, doing.” ― Marigold Wellington

If you’re looking for my cards or art, you’ll find all of that on my website. If you enjoy these letters, feel free to forward this one to anyone you think might like it. And if someone forwarded this one to you, you can sign up here to receive the letters right in your Inbox. Finally, you’ll find past letters and poems here.

Thanks for listening,
Kay

P.S. MerryThoughts is the name of my first book, out of print at the moment. The word is a British one, referring both to a wishbone and to the ritual of breaking the wishbone with the intention of either having a wish granted or being the one who marries first, thus the “merry thoughts.”

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Heat

I had considered writing about other things today, but there has just been no escaping the heat lately, and so here you are. Heat. It has been brutally hot here where I live almost every day in July and many days in June. The grass is drying up. Even the onions and things I never wanted in my flower bed are burning to a crisp. Hallelujah! Go, onions! Begone, ugly weeds! I suppose if you wait long enough the thing that’s bothering will eventually change or go away.

And I suppose we’d have to say that is true of excessive heat, too. Tomorrow we expect a high of 78. Woohoo!!

Still, I have been longing to be elsewhere. The Great Lakes, Maine, Cornwall, Aruba–all of these places call my name and yet I cannot manage to get to any of them. Evil people mercilessly post photos of their gorgeous beach vacations, day after day. Ugh. I have to practice lovingkindness very, very hard for them. “May you be happy.” At your magnificent beach.

I walk my dogs and play pickleball outdoors as early in the day as possible, then waste away, melted, until the next morning. Old Lady. I might as well stuff a hanky into the neckline of my flowered dress and carry a fan.

I belong to two online artist communities on Facebook, both based in the UK. Granted, they’ve just had their hottest day on record and it was a really hot one. But a couple of weeks earlier, when it was in the upper 90s here and 100% humidity, one of those lovely British artists was whingeing (see what I did there?) about the “searing” heat of 28 degrees Celsius. I looked it up. 82 Fahrenheit! 82!! I would have given my hanky and fan for that!

Just goes to show that all things are relative. And yes, I’m aware that all things do change, as well, and we’ll be griping about the ice, come February.

A way of dealing with this is to think about what we do have. I, for example, do have central air. Very lucky. I have indoor activities that I love, like painting, writing, reading, and eating out. Oh, wait. I don’t eat out because of Covid. Okay, I have many pairs of shorts and sleeveless tops, clean water to drink, and a bathtub. I have watermelon. I have television, for those wrung out, splayed across the couch evening hours. I really am lucky. I know this.

Even so, I really, really, really, really want to be gazing at, sitting at the edge of, or actually in a very large body of water. Right now. Poopoo.

“If there’s a single lesson that life teaches us, it’s that wishing doesn’t make it so.”― Lev Grossman, The Magicians

“Sometimes things become possible if we want them bad enough.” ― T.S. Eliot

“Because there’s nothing more beautiful than the way the ocean refuses to stop kissing the shoreline, no matter how many times it’s sent away.” ― Sarah Kay

If you’re looking for my cards or art, you’ll find all of that on my website. And if you enjoy these letters, feel free to forward this one to anyone you think might like it. And if someone forwarded this one to you, you can sign up here to receive the letters right in your Inbox. Finally, you’ll find past letters and poems here on my blog.

Thanks for listening,
Kay

P.S. MerryThoughts is the name of my first book, out of print at the moment. The word is a British one, referring both to a wishbone and to the ritual of breaking the wishbone with the intention of either having a wish granted or being the one who marries first, thus the “merry thoughts.”

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Songs of Summer

This katydid rode on my car for hours and hours one day.

The other night I heard the katydids singing for the first time this summer. I love them. I adore their clackety Katy Did, Katy Didn’t song. Well, it’s not actually singing but the rubbing together of two parts of their wings, a comblike part and another part that vibrates. But still, the males are calling for mates. And lucky me, it will be cool enough tonight that I can keep my windows open and have them sing me to sleep.

I am also very much enamored of cicadas, with their crescendo/diminuendo choruses, followed by many measures of silence. Filling in, the clackety-clack of katydids. And behind all of this, the steady hum of crickets. Throw in some peepers and other frog songs and you have a beautiful summer evening symphony. Love love love. The music of summer is one of my very favorite things about the season.

My notebook for noticing.

In writing this, which I thought would just be my musings about the evocative sounds of summer, I thought I’d read up a little about katydids. And now I am learning many things. For example, I’ve just read that the number of chirps katydids make per second varies with the temperature of their surroundings, so much so that one can get a fairly accurate temperature reading by counting the number of chirps they make. In America, the formula is: the number of chirps/15 seconds, plus 37 equals the temperature. Fascinating!

Katydids live for less than a year and it’s just now that they mate so the females can lay eggs in late summer. Here in Missouri, only the eggs can survive the winter. I’ve noticed that the adults don’t sing for all that long, either, which makes them particularly special to me.

I find katydids beautiful, too. Sleek and brilliant green, with their long wavy antennae, they are much prettier than grasshoppers could ever dream of being, and much less startling. They don’t hop crazily without warning, like grasshoppers. Katydids sort of fly/leap. Grasshoppers are rather unsettling, I feel. And they don’t sing nicely.

One year, I kept notes in a little planner about what was happening in my little corner of the natural world. I noted down the time of sunrise/sunset, high/low temperature for the day, rain/snow, etc., what was blooming or dying and when I first heard peepers, crickets, cicadas, and katydids. It would be nice to know when exactly they stop singing, but that has always escaped me.

The minutiae of life is what enriches it, I feel, especially in the natural world, which we take for granted. I remember once being rapturous about the first peepers I’d heard that summer and the person I was with said, “They’re just frogs,” hinting that I was a bit off my rocker. But life is what you make of it, and I say, why not celebrate these things, if you can? Why not love them? Why not?

“In all things of nature, there is something of the marvelous.” – Aristotle

“Be the celebrators, celebrate! Already there is too much—the flowers have bloomed, the birds are singing, the sun is there in the sky—celebrate it! You are breathing and you are alive and you have consciousness; celebrate it!” – Osho

If you’re looking for my cards or art, you’ll find all of that on my website. And if you enjoy these letters, feel free to forward this one to anyone you think might like it. Finally, you’ll find past letters and poems here.

Thanks for listening,
Kay

P.S. MerryThoughts is the name of my first book, out of print at the moment. The word is a British one, referring both to a wishbone and to the ritual of breaking the wishbone with the intention of either having a wish granted or being the one who marries first, thus the “merry thoughts.”

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Ticks

Ah! just in time and not a second too soon

not a moment to lose and just in the nick

by the literal scruff of the neck the poison’s

applied to kill the army of ticks that latch

(oh the jaws that bite the claws that catch!)

onto my dogs and yes oh yes it’s true

I cannot deny it me, two-legged me, as well.

Och!  I live this summer in paranoia

worried I might be out and about fine dining

nicely dressed clean coiffed made up

suddenly feeling the creepy crawling

on a leg an arm or worst of worst my face!

I’ve heard such stories, known of such things

and oh how easily it could happen in this hot

hot summer following a too warm winter

no harsh conditions to lay the beasts low

and me lacking the heart to ban my

darlings from my bed oh it could it could.

And after all, you know what they say,

Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t

mean they’re not out to get you.

They are no phantasm and out to get me

they certainly are.  They are.

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Turning of the World

Oh the lacy light of summer

favorite and best slanting across

early in the morning and if one

sleeps too late lolls awake fails to take

oneself (one’s dogs) out in the

world of it soon enough

well then it’s another thing

and one has missed that thing

but then there’s this and on and on

that goes for everyone knows

the world keeps turning

all things change

moment to moment

for better or worse

’til death do us part

and then who knows

maybe

after that as well.