It's been a while since I've been conscious of these moments.
This morning I went for a short walk with my smallest boy around the back of a road we normally drive down. I had been here years ago but had forgotten the delight of walking along this path which plunges you down into the bush and opens up a view of a waterfall.
Unexpected, a world away from where we'd just been.
The sound of birds and rushing water replaces the busy road, cars, machinery and industrial sounds of the factory units just a few hundred metres away.
I picked some wild jasmine and we walked back with the scent of jasmine following us...
Pause
...an exercise in appreciating moments in time... "“We can't enchant the world, which makes its own magic; but we can enchant ourselves by paying deep attention” - Dianne Ackerman
Saturday, 1 November 2014
Tuesday, 30 September 2014
Kingfisher
The moment was just after 4pm, sitting out in the quiet of the sleepout (I just can't call it a studio, it sounds too...pretentious...)
It's spring so there's that gorgeous spring smell of various flowers all mingled with warm grass (a smell not encountered for a while). Lots of birds, but kingfisher calls always catch my attention with memories of other places. My grandmothers house on the Hokianga Harbour, the unique mangrove smell - salty humid clay, kingfisher calls, snapping shrimp. But also holidays on Great Barrier Island, summer, walking along narrow clay paths next to mangrove swamps, humid salty air and the water lapping around the trees, on a mission to finish a long walk, or, closer to home, paddling down the Puhoi River.
There's a certain spot here over the wood shed where our Kingfisher always sits, looking down searching for skinks (methinks...) over white streaks of kingfisher poo.
It's spring so there's that gorgeous spring smell of various flowers all mingled with warm grass (a smell not encountered for a while). Lots of birds, but kingfisher calls always catch my attention with memories of other places. My grandmothers house on the Hokianga Harbour, the unique mangrove smell - salty humid clay, kingfisher calls, snapping shrimp. But also holidays on Great Barrier Island, summer, walking along narrow clay paths next to mangrove swamps, humid salty air and the water lapping around the trees, on a mission to finish a long walk, or, closer to home, paddling down the Puhoi River.
There's a certain spot here over the wood shed where our Kingfisher always sits, looking down searching for skinks (methinks...) over white streaks of kingfisher poo.
Friday, 26 September 2014
When..?
Typical of me, I'm analysing when these pauses in time, moments, occur.
They're usually associated with something multisensory, involving nature in some form.
Or, my children or memories of childhood, or complete immersion in something sensory that is not visual (eg. smelling a familiar pleasant scent, eating a meal, listening to certain kinds of music).
Too much on my mind lately to really recall any particular moments - I guess you could say this is precisely when I should be stopping and noticing them!
They're usually associated with something multisensory, involving nature in some form.
Or, my children or memories of childhood, or complete immersion in something sensory that is not visual (eg. smelling a familiar pleasant scent, eating a meal, listening to certain kinds of music).
Too much on my mind lately to really recall any particular moments - I guess you could say this is precisely when I should be stopping and noticing them!
Wednesday, 24 September 2014
Who is this person?
This moment occurred during breakfast when I had one of those rare beautiful moments of seeing one of my sons as not my son but as a funny smart gorgeous person...It's a really delightful experience.
It is tricky to explain, but it's similar to the visual example of when you try and imagine you've never seen yourself when looking in a mirror to appraise this unknown person (usually to answer something mundane like 'do I look frumpy in this?')
It is tricky to explain, but it's similar to the visual example of when you try and imagine you've never seen yourself when looking in a mirror to appraise this unknown person (usually to answer something mundane like 'do I look frumpy in this?')
Tuesday, 23 September 2014
Dawn choruses
My brief moment today was probably very early (again).
Lying in bed with my eyes closed, listening to the chorus of thrush and blackbirds with the occasional late-to-bed morepork. I'm normally out running or doing something equally absurd at this time of the day so to be still lying in bed is unusual. I'm usually not so aware of the sounds.
Morning Chorus (mp3)
Listening, I realised that the sounds of these birds are identical to when I was a child. That early morning choir is then one of the few constant thing throughout my life I suppose. I would hate to live somewhere for long where I couldn't hear this.
Lying in bed with my eyes closed, listening to the chorus of thrush and blackbirds with the occasional late-to-bed morepork. I'm normally out running or doing something equally absurd at this time of the day so to be still lying in bed is unusual. I'm usually not so aware of the sounds.
Morning Chorus (mp3)
Listening, I realised that the sounds of these birds are identical to when I was a child. That early morning choir is then one of the few constant thing throughout my life I suppose. I would hate to live somewhere for long where I couldn't hear this.
Monday, 22 September 2014
Texts & gales.
The first moment today didn't start until around 7.30am on a crowded bus into town. So many damp bodies crammed into the 881; at least I have a seat. I checked my phone and there were my first ever texts from the smallest son. They took me out of the damp noisy bus and into my own thoughts for a while with a big smile on my face.
Busy morning. Then, sitting in studio on the 5th floor, with a glimpse outside at the rain (only a glimpse, yep, don't get me started - they're huge double height windows but covered mostly by external shade louvres). The rain was so hard and the wind so strong that the roof opposite looked like it was being brushed with waves of rain, almost like smoke curling down.
Busy morning. Then, sitting in studio on the 5th floor, with a glimpse outside at the rain (only a glimpse, yep, don't get me started - they're huge double height windows but covered mostly by external shade louvres). The rain was so hard and the wind so strong that the roof opposite looked like it was being brushed with waves of rain, almost like smoke curling down.
Sunday, 21 September 2014
Sounds of home
This moment started at 7.15am, lying in bed on a Sunday morning with the faint scent of freshly made tea, knowing that I don't have to be anywhere or do anything in particular this morning.
(I'd jumped out of bed to look at the weird yellow light outside with hail and a rainbow, made my smallest son look out of his window as well - 'Gee mum thanks for making me share that with you' - then made a quick cup of Dilmah).
The view through the open curtains gives me kanuka, rewa rewa, nikau, but mostly spindly tall tea tree trying to reach the sun, dark and slightly ominous except for the flashes of sunlight, glimpses of sky and darting waxeyes. It's a better view now, friendlier than it used to be because I know it so well but also because the trees now let me see through them, they're grown up and are too busy reaching the sky to be shy.
There is such a thing as a too quiet house. I'm glad this house is not very soundproof so the subtle sounds of my family can reach me. I heard my smallest son making noises in the kitchen - is he making a cup of tea? The faint 'ping' of the jug, maybe. The clunck of the microwave door, the door to the garage opening to collect bread from the freezer, the scattered spluttering sound of the old fashioned egg beater he likes to use for scrambled eggs. Burnt toast and the urgent woosh of the kitchen extractor (urgent, before the smoke detector knows what's going on). I know exactly what's going on.
He made me breakfast in bed!
Except, I got up but that's okay.
We both agree that we can't eat it all anyhow, so the blackbirds and strange grey pigeons will get English Muffins this morning.
(I'd jumped out of bed to look at the weird yellow light outside with hail and a rainbow, made my smallest son look out of his window as well - 'Gee mum thanks for making me share that with you' - then made a quick cup of Dilmah).
The view through the open curtains gives me kanuka, rewa rewa, nikau, but mostly spindly tall tea tree trying to reach the sun, dark and slightly ominous except for the flashes of sunlight, glimpses of sky and darting waxeyes. It's a better view now, friendlier than it used to be because I know it so well but also because the trees now let me see through them, they're grown up and are too busy reaching the sky to be shy.
There is such a thing as a too quiet house. I'm glad this house is not very soundproof so the subtle sounds of my family can reach me. I heard my smallest son making noises in the kitchen - is he making a cup of tea? The faint 'ping' of the jug, maybe. The clunck of the microwave door, the door to the garage opening to collect bread from the freezer, the scattered spluttering sound of the old fashioned egg beater he likes to use for scrambled eggs. Burnt toast and the urgent woosh of the kitchen extractor (urgent, before the smoke detector knows what's going on). I know exactly what's going on.
He made me breakfast in bed!
Except, I got up but that's okay.
We both agree that we can't eat it all anyhow, so the blackbirds and strange grey pigeons will get English Muffins this morning.
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