Re: Good Morning
- From: "spiritrising" <spiritrising@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 20 Jan 2006 18:36:08 GMT
well first off you have not learned how to keep a fire all night and have
listened to those who have little knowledge of the original lighting of the
fire and keeping it lit.
you need to go back to the beginning and really learn the ways of building a
fire, as your way does not work and never will, you may acidently fall onto
the path, but have not heeded the words of those who have been before you
and tried to teach you the way. open your mind to those that have done that
before, get rid of those thoughts that you have learned that are wrong, and
have a new beginning with a warm house. spiritrising
"Dia" <fraglthndr@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:1137777917.623729.271570@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Hello everyone, I have an analogy to share.
> See if you can firggure out what it is an analogy for.
> It is a beautiful, frosty, very cold winter day here in the sierra
> foothills.
> My little wood stove does not hold enough wood to burn all night...
> It is cold in this house when I wake up.
> Oh, and it turns out that it condensates in several places...
> I need to take a towel to window sills and walls.
> I has rained for weeks but now it is about to snow.
> Life is ok.
> It's cold though.
> I have to start a fire first thing - it is something one must learn to
> do, fire requires certain things to get going. I can't just
> haphazardly toss a bunch of wood into the stove, throw in a match and
> have fire. I have to understand what fire needs from me, so I can get
> what I need from fire. If I do not approach firemaking with
> thoughtfulness and respect, fire will not come to me nor will it stay
> with me. I need fire, I need warmth, so I learned to work with fire,
> and I am very good at it now. We have a mutually beneficial
> relationship.
> Cold is one of those things I don't mind much, as long as I have a way
> to get warm. 'Course, this way of getting warm takes a while. I start
> by putting on more warmies, socks, sweater, sometimes a coat as
> well...and I wait about 2 hours for the little fire to warm things up
> enough to take off the coat. I wonder if there is a better way? (no
> central heat here)
> Buying a bigger stove would be one better way I guess.
> Brrr...
> I hope everyone else is staying warm out there.
> I am grateful I have a house and a stove and wood to burn.
> But even though those things do not promise me warmth without my own
> work to keep warm.
> I could become disillusioned about the whole idea of getting a house of
> my own and being self sufficient and making a place for myself that
> fits into long held dreams, it is so much work to be warm these
> days...not like the long laughing, pleasant days of summer, when
> everything was easy. It isn't like it was when I came here at first.
> Back then, there was plenty, now there is much less.
> It is winter, the season of scarcity.
> I would be foolish to curse the seasons, for they cycle on, whether I
> respect their purpose or lament their natures. Whether I understand or
> despise, the seasons each have their unique ways to which I must adapt
> or suffer the consequences.
> Cold? Build a fire. Wood wet...dry it by the fire...dry lots, prepare
> for later. Wear a coat in the house.
> Icy roads, be ready to stay home for a while. Do lots of provisioning,
> have a well stocked larder. Too bad the berry season was so poor this
> year...we could not put up any jam this year. Still have lots of
> tomatoes and salsa canned up from the summer garden. If the power goes
> out, we can keep refridgerated items outside...
> There is a way to be here, in this now cold and isolated place, and
> keep my optimism about the future. I sure don't blame anyone else for
> what the weather is like. I sure do not want to spend my winter days
> unhappy because it is winter, though it brings harsh conditions with
> it. I am cold, but I am relatively content.
> I brought that nature with me into the cold. Relative contentment.
> It is my perspective, how I look at it all, that makes the difference
> between misery and peace of mind.
> And even though I am cold, here in this house, I know it is me who
> warms the house, not the house that warms me.
>
> Blessings,
>
> Dia
>
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Good Morning
- From: Razzbar
- Re: Good Morning
- From: Dia
- Re: Good Morning
- References:
- Good Morning
- From: Dia
- Good Morning
- Prev by Date: Re: Dr. Phil's advice for the disillusioned and "walking wounded" of Rainbow
- Next by Date: Re: Good Morning
- Previous by thread: Good Morning
- Next by thread: Re: Good Morning
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|