There are times when all it takes is a slowly drawn breath to make the world slow down. Everything seems to float, gently moving along its way at a fraction of its normal pace, and in the process the world gets brighter – at times painfully so.
Those are the moments where I lose myself in the endless beauty of mundane life – the purple flowers nestled in patchy grass by the sidewalk on my walk home from work, the swirled rust patterns on a fence, the iridescent feathers of the birds hanging out by the train tracks.
The train holds so many of those moments for me, especially in the mornings. The day hasn’t had a chance to get all hectic yet, and my mind is still mostly uncluttered. Crossing bridges seems to be a regular trigger, especially when I’m standing by the window. The trees are so close, unreachable through the plexiglass, yet I can sometimes feel the wind on my face and the rustling of the leaves.
There’s a road by the river that’s crumbling because the dirt beneath it is being washed away, and every time I see it I get a jarring pang – part devastation at the painful-looking crack in the cement, part joy and awe at the power of nature in the face of all our technology.
Watching the news and reading the papers can be a intense experience in the wake of a ‘natural disaster’. I feel for those whose entire lives have been uprooted, all belongings destroyed, and for those who have died – yet underneath that empathy is a celebration of the cycle that continues. New life comes from death and destruction, and the beauty and balance of it makes me ache with joy sometimes. When we take too much, Mother Nature will take it back in some form, and we can’t stop her.