Saturday, March 26, 2011

Touching


 
I watched a glassblower on OPB this afternoon. It is such a beautiful, dynamic art to behold in its creation. I have a fear of explosions so, when I once sat in the same room as a glassblower, the roar and heat of the ovens unnerved me a bit, but the dance and movements of the artists and molten lumps of glass were mesmerizing. One small puff of air into a rod, or one tiny clip of needle-nosed pliers made indelible changes to each creation. Although the final products were all glass, the momentary influential touch of many things (heat, movement, chemistry, tools, and layers and twists of color) made each unique.


I almost didn’t notice him. There was certainly nothing noteworthy in the little gentleman, stooped with age, who shuffled past us in tiny half-steps like the comical character created by the hilarious Tim Conway. Or, rather, we passed him, since we were moving with much greater speed and efficiency. It was, after all, a vacation we had dubbed “Lorenzo’s Fitness Tour” because of all the walking and climbing that we did to squeeze in as much art, architecture, and breathtaking views as possible. On this day, we were entering one renaissance church in a succession of several that spanned the city so that we might continue our quest to flood our senses with frescos and marble statues, columns and mosaics.

He was dressed in what looked to be his Sunday best, albeit a little worn and humble, but what caught my attention was his bent stature and struggling pace. I was smug enough to pity him and think how impossible the cobbled streets would be for many people like him and my mom. I imagined him a local who had been to morning Mass and wondered that he did not have relatives to help him. Could he not afford a taxi or bus? But then my thoughts were intercepted by the carved font and tall ceilings as we stepped through the church door into another century.

I don’t remember where we went or in what order that day, but I’ll never forget coming out of the next church we visited in another part of town. As the bright light of the clear October day assaulted us, my eyes came to rest on a familiar figure coming toward us. Here was the same gentleman; there was no mistaking his painfully slow shuffle across the geometric cobbles. With his return came a new perspective. Was this another pilgrim on a journey like our own?

Suddenly, my need to “fix” things for him, was challenged. He was teaching me something. I was the hare, he was the tortoise, but speed and ease of gait didn’t matter on a pilgrimage. As he had just proven, he would see everything we would see or at least everything that was important to him; maybe at different times and in different slants of light, but with the same level of determination.

Helping people is a good thing, a great and selfless thing, but sometimes it is the effort, the doing, that is as important as the goal and we must be careful not to take that away from each other in our haste to help. He was on his journey and I was on mine, but, in that one shared moment, like a bit of molten glass on a blower’s spinning rod, I was forever changed.

Tuesday, March 15, 2011

Happy Birthday, Jennifer!


An eye for the future and hands that bring care,
A mind that solves puzzles with creative flare;
A sensitive spirit, a determined soul,
A willing heart keeping family whole.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Room at the Inn

We’ve extended the idea of K’s Inn to our non-human friends. Although we’ve always been somewhat of a secret safe haven for a few homeless cats and dogs, this winter we have openly begun providing free meals to other members of the neighborhood as well. A couple summers ago we began with a hummingbird program, but the long bouts of freezing temperatures this winter prompted Don to add an igloo shelter, two birdhouses, and a homemade swinging squirrel feeder. Everyone seems quite appreciative and we love watching their antics.

This visitor and a striped one are a bit camera shy, but Molly is quite sociable.

The bird feeder in the backyard was so popular we added one in the front where Mom could see it from her chair. The smaller birds who were often ousted by bigger birds in the backyard claimed it right away.

We have a pair of squirrels in the neighborhood who pay a visit to the bird feeder once in awhile, too. We love their acrobatic antics.

The squirrel family took a whole day to investigate every inch of the swing set and check the coffee can from every angle before they decided it was safe and set out figuring how to get the food out of the can. It swings free, but they soon learned to sit on the slide ladder, reach out and grab the can, swing it around and climb halfway in to help themselves. Then they sit on a crossbar to munch. This character let me get about five feet away to take my pictures. I swear he was posing. (Did you get that? No, THIS is my good side.)

Birds of all sizes flock to this feeder.

A Woodpecker loves to hang on the cage and eat the suet feed inside.

These guys are next in line. Only a couple birds eat at the feeder at a time. They will scrape seeds out onto the ground so that some can eat down there at the same time. The rest patiently wait their turn on a nearby bush. We've spotted the cats sitting below the feeder, looking up at it in deep thought, but they have yet to indulge. Either they are heeding my admonishment to "do no harm" or they are content with their full stomachs. In any case, the birds are cautious and patient about waiting until the coast is clear.