Posts Tagged ‘new beginnings’

What do you do after a disaster?

Thursday, May 17th, 2012

I was walking in the woods this morning to a symphony of birdsong, with the occasional waft of bluebells, and came across this tree, felled by the hurricane in 1987. It was left to its own devices lying in this valley. Did it wither and die, did it lay there and think “My purpose is done… It’s all over!”? Apparently not! It’s roots were still functioning, and it began to grow once more, not just a single trunk but a veritable thicket.

Life deals us rough blows, in much the same way as the weather does, and we have a choice, adapt and grow or wither and die. I am on my way to a funeral today, the church will be filled with many living bodies and one dead one. I can choose where I focus. Two years ago I faced just this choice and despite being buffeted and blown over, I’m glad I chose to move on and am just beginning to see those fresh green leaves bursting forth.

“There are two mistakes one can make along the road to truth…not going all the way, and not starting.”   Buddha

“Every new beginning comes from some other beginning’s end.”  Seneca

A Personal Update: Role and Identity… which comes first?

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

I was writing to a friend today and sharing some thoughts on the difficulty of breaking out of my virtual ‘egg’ and starting over.  What am I meant to be doing with my time and my life these days?  Who am I now that I’m no longer half a partnership.  Like all parents, we had realised that we were entering that phase where our children would soon be flying the nest and we were looking forward to that in many ways, and, hopefully, also to the fruits of their new nests too.  I was ready for that change, but not the one that happened, but that is the the thing about Change, you often don’t choose it, but you have to deal with it none-the-less.  So most of last year was spent dealing with the various after-shocks of Carys’s death and now is the time to begin once more, but saying that is easy.  What is much harder is saying what I should begin. 

I know I am not alone in this dilemma; everyone who has been made redundant or lost a significant other knows this question.  Being well versed in this area does not necessarily help me either.  I know what I want to achieve, but not really how to approach it.  It is a bit like Gandhi saying “I want to free India”, but that doesn’t take you very far on its own.

The thing is we tend to wrap up who we are with what we do so much that it is very hard to disentangle them.  Think about it… I go to the office each day so I’m a businessman; I ride a bike so I’m a biker etc.  But if I stop visiting the office, am I still a businessman, if I sell my bike am I still a biker?  It reminds me of the question we used to be asked when we we were little “What do you want to be when you grow up?”  Mid-fifties feels a little late to be asking this same question! 

I suppose it is a bit like someone like Jonny Wilkinson coming back to the game after a long injury.  Do you play the same game the same way as before, or do you change your strategy?  Maybe you don’t need to place yourself in harms way every Saturday any longer?  I suspect he might have found these questions a little easier to answer than I do.

After yesterdays little debacle, this morning I started working through my list of people to call and was delighted by the results of my first two calls and their reaction at hearing from me after all this time.  One step at a time and follow your nose seems to be the only way forward for me…

The same friend I referred to at the beginning said that the first two weeks of the new year were a kind of no-mans land where we drifted in a nether world between two years and in this foggy uncertain place we should be open to possibilities and allowing the possibilities to unfold.  In the meantime, I’m trying to work out if I am an ex-egg or new chicken…. or indeed a future egg-producer?!

“Man’s role is uncertain, undefined, and perhaps unnecessary.”   Margaret Mead

Out with the Old…

Thursday, January 6th, 2011

I love this picture (sent to me by a friend) as beautifully visual way to think about the way that things can be washed away, and fresh starts made.  As regular readers will know, 2010 was just about as tough a year as anyone could imagine for the Cooke clan.  Xmas, I’m happy to report, passed off a whole lot better than I feared and thanks to a family and friends, some fun was had amidst the obvious shadows. 

I don’t pretend for a second that we will let go of last year with the completeness or ease that this picture suggests but perhaps, grain-by-grain, some of the scars maybe filled in, and a new surface prepared for us to ‘write’ on.

Everyone will have things they would like to let go of, and I think this time of year provides an opportunity for us to chose to take steps in this direction.  It does take energy to hold onto things and if we can just allow our ‘fingers’ to open, then perhaps the slipping away can begin.  We often embrace and hold onto our hurts as they do, in someway, define us.  We have to decide if we are the person who was hurt and damaged or the one who is beginning anew.

I in no way pretend that this is easy; indeed, I am still searching for the way through, but the first step is a willingness to let go.  For all those out there who were hurt in 2010, I hope and pray that we can all allow the tide to give us a fresh start this year and renew ourselves and write a new and happier story.

“All the art of living lies in a fine mingling of letting go and holding on.”   Havelock Ellis

“By letting it go it all gets done. The world is won by those who let it go. But when you try and try. The world is beyond the winning.”    Lao Tzu

The end of an era

Saturday, June 13th, 2009

Tomorrow we leave to collect our eldest from university.  Unbelievably, this is the end of her third year and we are bringing her home.  It is possibly the biggest change she has ever faced, because when she left for Uni she knew what faced her for the next three years, and whilst it was all new and scary, at least that brought some element of certainty.  Now she faces coming home to an uncertain future, and that is much harder.

The reality is that none of us know what tomorrow brings but we tend to operate on the assumption that it will be more of what today delivered, and that gives us a map of sorts.  When you are embarking on Life’s big adventure the future just stretches out before you with few known landmarks.  The infinite possibilities feel more daunting than exciting.

Only acting today delivers us our tomorrows.  I’d love to hear what you are doing to make tomorrow the day you want it to be…

“One small cat changes coming home to an empty house to coming home”   Pam Brown

“What appears to be the end may really be a new beginning.”

 

Easter: a time for new beginnings

Friday, April 10th, 2009

Easter is a Christian celebration of the resurrection of Christ, but it is based on much older pagan celebrations of similar festivals.  One theory links the name to Eastre, an ancient word for spring.  It also coincides with the vernal or spring equinox which is the beginning of the season of new growth.  I have heard various ‘experts’ pronounce that they can see the first green shoots of regrowth in the current global crisis.  Whether they can or not, now is certainly the time to be planting the seeds of Change.

If you want to harvest something better tomorrow, you need to sow something new today… I wonder what that will be?