Sunday, January 10, 2010

miscellany

Wiggle my fingers and try to find some butterfly words for you, to warm the winter freeze and let some light in, crack the dirty grey wash of the clouds a little. A distraction, a diversion, a nothing, a something, an offering; a tiny shy, gift.

Outside, the birds in the branches flitter, and twitter and hop to and fro in the wind. I like to think that they do small talk in the weather, the same as us. The coldest winter since when, the old folk, fresh water, best feeders, oh, it's so cold, should have migrated, the Spring. But more likely it's all survival and territory, things we have forgotten, instincts lost through lack of need.

The trees are our friends though. So sad we've lost sight of that too. Even the colonials knew about the value and beauty of trees, and planted them on this land that wasn't theirs, so they stand today, long outlasting the empire. While kids in council estates swing out of them, hack them down, burn them, carve them up. Can't bear to see such evidence of life in the midst of concrete futurelessness. How sad, to grow up without a favourite tree, without the comfort and shelter of your arm around a strong bough, bark pressed against your face. A hiding place, a franchise.





And soon it will be Summer. There will be soft green grass, an oak tree, blue sky, and the sun filtering through the green canopy. And before that Spring, with the masses of tiny glowing leaves paintbrushed onto the beech trees, against the smooth silver bark.

And we'll walk, hold my hand, through dappled sunlight, under green ceilings, through storybook woodscapes, spinning tales in the warm day.





want some butterfly animation?

11 comments:

www.geeksinrome.wordpress.com said...

Oh! I love that tree castle!

I'm so sad my kids don't have a favorite tree. Living in the city stinks. Thank goodness inlaws live in the boonies.

I still visit my favorite tree when we go home to my mom's. It was a ocean ship, space ship, and a 3-story building.

Jo said...

City life is magic too though. Espcially in Italy!

Ms. Moon said...

I have tried to get Mr. Moon to start building a tree house for Owen but he says it is too early. I shake my head knowingly. I know how long it takes to build a tree house. I know how quickly children grow.

Jo said...

Oh, you are so Wise, Ms M. Mr M should listen to you.

Danielle said...

@ jo

awww..that was beautiful...hm..i told you about my fav tree already...the ancient magnolia who stands where once my bedroom window was...its been there forever...and a while ago my aunt told me that the tree is sick now..that its slowly dying..maybe one or two more springs it will last...a heaven full of thick, white and pinkt petals....

Jo said...

It's so sad, Danielle. Still. A memory tree, keeps growing...

Bethany said...

Oh this worked for me, what magic. Thank you. Love your bird talk imaginings. And trees. Ah.
Beautiful writing.
Wow.

I had a tree I was in love with once.
It has a sad ending.
But I can still feel the cool bark against my little kid face after school.

Bethany said...

Oh, and when I first started working in the library, I ordered this amazing book about tree houses. The pictures were incredible. I've always dreamed about living in a tree. I think too I put another book on hold about contellations. And the older woman I was there to replace, who decided NOT to retire just yet when they thought she was, told me I needed to get my head out of the clouds!

Jo said...

Never, Bethany!!

My daughter is usually scathing about the pictures I liked, but she jumped on the treehouse one with wistful yearning and magic in her eyes :)

Maybe we should all still be living in the trees... and the clouds :)

Anonymous said...

This post is warmer than my favourite hot-water-bottle :)

Ms. Moon said...

Our chimp ancestors make nests every night in the trees. This explains a lot.