This Amazing Gift of Being

Why do we have this amazing gift of being?

The ability to experience, to think and to imagine, to care and to love?

I love the words of a little-known writer, Thomas Traherne. He writes about the gift of life in a poem called ‘Salutation’:

1

These little Limbs,

These Eyes and Hands which here I find,

These rosie Cheeks wherewith my Life begins,

Where have ye been? Behind

What Curtain were ye from me hid so long!

Where was? in what Abyss, my Speaking Tongue?

2

When silent I,

So many thousand thousand years,

Beneath the Dust did in a Chaos lie,

How could I Smiles or Tears,

Or Lips or Hands or Eyes or Ears perceiv?

Welcome ye Treasures which I now receive.

3

I that so long

Was Nothing from Eternity,

Did little think such Joys as Ear or Tongue,

To Celebrate or See:

Such Sounds to hear, such Hands to feel, such Feet,

Beneath the Skies, on such a Ground to meet.

4

New Burnished Joys!

Which yellow Gold and Pearl excel!

Such Sacred Treasures are the Limbs in Boys,

In which a Soul doth Dwell;

Their Organized Joints, and Azure veins

More Wealth include, then all the World contains.

5

From Dust I rise,

And out of Nothing now awake,

These Brighter Regions which salute mine Eyes,

A Gift from God I take.

The Earth, the Seas, the Light, the Day, the Skies,

The Sun and Stars are mine; if those I prize.

6

Long time before

I in my Mother’s Womb was born,

A God preparing did this Glorious Store,

The World for me adorn.

Into this Eden so Divine and fair,

So Wide and Bright, I come his Son and Heir.

7

A Stranger here

Strange Things doth meet, strange Glories See;

Strange Treasures lodged in this fair World appear,

Strange all, and New to me.

But that they mine should be, who nothing was,

That Strangest is of all, yet brought to pass.

‘The Salutation’ by Thomas Traherne

He thinks about the gift of his body, of his experience, of having life itself.

He sees life as emerging from nothing – we each have our own personal “Big Bang” as another writer, Richard Rohr, said, and he takes it all as a gift from God.

I find it a beautiful poem. A poem that speaks to me about the beauty of the experience of life.

Life can be good when we are able to be grateful for each day of our existence, and gift our gift of being to others, as well as enjoy life for what it is.

Whose earth is it?

When I came across this flock of ewes and lambs in March this year, they looked at me as if to question my right to be in their field.

Whose earth is it anyway?

Is it ours to do with as we please? Or is it “shared space” – even shared creation, as many living things actually create the environment we need for life.

It is good to be made to stop and think.

Perhaps the earth is more sacred than many of often think.

Perhaps we should behave more like guests than owners.

Whose earth is it anyway?

Sheep and lambs, Hanwood, Shropshire, March 2021

Emerging from the Mist

This week, the Wrekin – that beautiful distinctive hill of Shropshire photographed here – was crowned by cloud and mist. It was something beautiful but indistinct.

Just as life sometimes is so confusing, so disorientating, such a muddle.

The end of the day can be an opportunity to discover the meaning of the day. Was it in a beautiful sight? Was it in a precious relationship? Was it in a powerful moment of experience? Was it a day without anything special, just the usual, wonderful gift of life?

Isn’t life good when we have had a meaningful day?

What causes you confusion in life

And what brings you meaning ?

The Wrekin, Shropshire, May 2021

New Life

Whoever decided to time Easter with springtime in the UK was a genius!

Easter is about new life, and all around us in Shropshire in Staffordshire new lambs are tottering, frisking, staying close to mum, or basking in the sun (or the snow!).

I’ve had some delightful encounters with new families like this…

…this…

…and this…

What brings us new life?

The sight of new life seems to move us instinctively with a warm heart-connection with the fragile, vulnerable young life we see before us – whether animal or human. After all, we were all there once!

Perhaps it is also the heart movement of hope. We see a new life with opportunities ahead of him or her. We are reminded that life is open, about potential, about what is good.

In the spring in the UK in rural Shropshire this is so easy. We are blessed with beautiful countryside all around.

But perhaps the seeds of new life are everywhere potentially if we look closely enough?

Take a look around yourself now.

Are you inspired by hope in anything you see?

The Blossoming of Human Life

Blossom is everywhere in Shropshire at the moment.

I have been reading a book called Wayfaring by Margaret Silf, and some of her words got me thinking about how human life is a kind of blossoming:

“Each human life reflects the same pattern as the universe itself – beginning from a single point, infinitesimally small, and expanding outwards, constantly revealing more and more of its immeasurable potential”

Wayfaring, p.1

There has been the deadness of winter, and now life starts again in the world of trees, bushes and wild flowers. The warmth and light of our distant star, the sun, miraculously calls forth a response from life here on earth.

And we also come from nothing. We depend on the love of others, not a distant star, and yet we also long for “light” of a different kind – the light of hope, the light of relationships, the light of love.

Enjoy the blossoming of human life!

Blossom, Shropshire, March 2021

What is Lif4Gd?

What makes life good for you?

And how can we all live life, for good?

Lif4Gd seeks to explore these questions.

I use personal experiences, and literature from the past, to explore life, and to explore what is good.

I am a writer, and I live in Shrewsbury in Shropshire, in the Midlands, in the UK.

Thank you for visiting my blog.

If you are interested in reading more of my writing, I invite you to visit Floweringpoverello.wordpress.com.

I hope you enjoy exploring Lif4Gd.

A view of Shrewsbury