"Winter is the time for comfort, for good food and warmth,
for the touch of a friendly hand and for a talk beside
the fire: it is the time for home."
EDITH SITWELL
With the mix of grey hazy days alongside sparkly blue-skied ones that darken so early in the afternoons, a person needn't look at the calendar to determine that we're deep into November. The holidays are fast approaching. Already there are houses in the neighbourhood with roof tops and trees all aglimmer with lights, while others, like ours, are easing into the Christmas mood at a slower pace.
I won't say I'm not in the mood because I do get the twinkle in my soul as the sun sets so early now. But life is a little discombobulated around here so I'm holding off before going full tilt into Christmas. Thankfully, twinkle lights are a simple addition to creating a certain coziness to our dark evenings.
I want to say, before anything else, a big heart-felt thank you to everyone who reached out to me, both here on the blog and elsewhere, with your good wishes and prayers for my mom after her recent fall. She is still in hospital. Regaining her strength and now awaiting re-tests to ensure her head injury is indeed on the mend and her medical team can confidently send her home. And where I will stay with her until she's back on her feet.
As you can imagine, with that on our minds, I haven't done much of anything else except the absolute basics these past couple of weeks.
Let me quickly share what I've been reading. Thank goodness for books at times like these. First, I've been quietly dipping into Sarah Clarkson's soul nourishing volume entitled Reclaiming Quiet, Cultivating a Life of Holy Attention. Her words are brushed with grace and beauty—and gentleness—that feels heaven-sent to me right now. Let me share a couple of lines from two prayers she wrote:
"Help us to recall the grace in which we already stand, the love that need never be asked for because it is already given." p. 29"When the darkness looms large, help us to look up, and find the constellations of your love. Be gentle with us as we learn again to listen, as we enter once more the world-making joy of your voice." p. 41
There is one poem she refers to that really touched my heart one morning in the wee hours. Called Psalm Fragments by Denise Levertov, one line especially melted into my heart: "Yet You hold me minute by minute from falling". I felt a deep sigh of release as I cradled into those words (click HERE for the whole piece).
Then, for entertainment and distraction, I have been re-reading the series Her Majesty the Queen Investigates by S.J. Bennett. There are now five books in the series. The latest was delivered the other day and I am now in the middle of The Queen Who Came in from the Cold, a story set in 1961 when a murder is witnessed from the Royal Train.
And for some relaxed nature writing as we head into the winter season, I'm dipping into an old favourite, Winter, An anthology for the changing seasons, edited by Melissa Harrison. I find when I can't get out into nature directly, reading other people's descriptions about the changing seasons helps me imagine what I might see and hear and smell—and it's amazing how restorative that is.
So far, my other seasonal and Christmas books sit in small piles on the floor waiting until I can set them front and centre in our living room, for easy access by our comfy chairs as the nights draw closer. I do look forward to rereading some of my old holiday favourites again.
Otherwise, life is simple and focused on my mom. I will try to post next week - I won't promise. Please take care, and best wishes for a beautiful, grace-filled day.
❦
Heart hugs,
Brenda
Photo credits:
Image by Frauke Riether from Pixabay
My Blogging Schedule:
I post on Fridays

Dear Brenda,
ReplyDeleteHow lovely to see your post today. I had no expectations that you would manage one, so it's a special treat. I will continue to pray for you and your dear mom through these days. Reclaiming Quiet sounds like a gentle and uplifting read that fits your needs at the moment. I have Melissa Harrison's The Stubborn Light of Things, but have not dipped into it quite yet. I'm preparing to focus on the waiting in darkness of Advent knowing the Light of the World has come, by selecting readings and poems. Such a rich season.
May you continue to rest in the grace of God's goodness and strength.
Brenda, how sweet to see your post, especially after all you have to cope with at the moment. What a relief to know that your dear mother can go home. I continue to keep you in prayer. May the gentleness of your books sustain you..
ReplyDelete(((((Brenda))))) I'm sorry to learn of your mother's fall, but what a blessing to have a solid medical team caring for her at the hospital and for a loving, compassionate daughter to care for her once she is back home. God bless you all.
ReplyDeleteReally lovely to read your words today. I had a double take when you mentioned Her Majesty the Queen Investigates, and had to look up the series I started. But that one is a series called Her Majesty Investigates: Death at Windsor Castle, Death at Sandringham House, Death at Buckingham Palace. These are all by C.C.Benison (the nom de plume of Doug Whiteway) who worked as a reporter and feature writer of the Winnipeg Free Press. I'm enjoying his cozy mysteries set in the fictional English village of Thornford Regis, which follow Father Tom Christmas and his parishioners' fates and foibles: Twelve Drummers Drumming, Eleven Pipers Piping, Ten Lords A-Leaping.
ReplyDeleteHow lucky your mom is to have you near and able to spend time with her these days. Continuing to pray for and for you.
What Joy said: Your mom is lucky (and I'm sure thankful!) to have you, and your looking after her is an activity that reveals that the two of you figure in one of the "constellations of His love." O Come, O Come, Emmanuel!
ReplyDeleteBrenda, hope your Mom will be able to come home soon. She will get the best care from you and recover quickly. Sending prayers and good vibes to both of you and all your family. Hugs, Elaine (in Toronto)
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