Tag: life

  • ..after the wind blows, the flower is gone…

    ..after the wind blows, the flower is gone…

    Where did they go? The years, the people, my youth?

    The Bible says “Human life is like grass. We grow like the flower in the field. After the wind blows, the flower is gone, and there is no sign of where it was.” Psalm 103:15-16 

    Just like those flowers we are beautiful and even strong at first but that soon fades and withers.  In the field we are open to the elements; the storms of life and the harshness of the seasons.  This body as we know it is already fading and will one day give up the fight. 

    When young and especially when at school, the days, the weeks and the year seems to last forever.  Ironically, when older, those days, weeks and years seem to go in a flash. It is as if the wind has blown and the years, my youth and people that I loved have gone too.  One day I will too. 

    Francis Quarle wrote “And what’s life? A weary pilgrimage, whose glory in one day doth fill the stage with childhood, manhood, and decrepit age.” 

    Some days life does feel like a weary pilgrimage but there has to be more than existing and then dying.  The question is what to do with the life we have in spite of its brevity?  Will we languish or live?    

    I draw comfort that my life, while fleeting is a part of a bigger story; a story whose author is eternal with a redemptive plan for all mankind.   I may be forgotten quickly by others but I will not be forgotten by Him. He who created me, has a purpose and plan for my life made only possible in relationship with Him. A life made possible and redeemed through the life and work of Christ Jesus. And an eternal future with Him beyond this death. 

    And no matter how many years have passed, how harshly the winds have blown and the beauty has faded, the Bible promises that those that are right with God will flourish, be fresh and green and bear fruit in old age.  (Psalm 92)  

  • Bucket list adventures

    Bucket list adventures

    Sometimes I have to pinch myself as a reminder that I live in a part of the world that other people mark on their bucket list.  On my doorstep is one of the world’s seven wonders; the Great Barrier Reef.   And at certain times of the year, one can witness sea turtles hatching and turning to the sea.

    A couple of months earlier their mother, a huge lumbering green turtle would have dragged herself up the beach, dug a hole for her eggs, before lumbering back down again.  After incubation, the nest of around 100 infant turtles or hatchlings, bubble up from under the sand and with almost magical sensitivity scramble to the waters of the ocean.

    My first experience of turtle hatchlings was ten years ago when our family camped on North West Island.  This coral atoll of the Great Barrier Reef is populated mainly by seabirds and visited by no more than one hundred and fifty camping tourists at any one time.  Our first visit was in April when the camping season had just opened.  This amazing island, less than seventy kilometres off the coast of the Queensland city of Gladstone, was an overnight ferry trip for us and our camping gear.     

    I remember relaxing for the evening in a camp chair, with a nightcap cuppa under the shadow of the island’s undergrowth.  I was contemplating bed when something bumped into my foot. The small creature, only about 5cm in length, was attracted to our camp’s light instead of the moonlight and was heading inland and not to sea.  One calls out and everyone in the campsite is up; out of beds and chairs to get up close and see these delightful leathery little reptiles scrambling in confusion.  With buckets and torches, we collected dozens of hatchlings before releasing them into the waters of the lagoon surrounding the island. 

    Of course, not all baby turtles are so fortunate with tides and the advantage of darkness.  Nothing prepared me for the despair I felt as I watched swooping gulls grabbing at another batch of hatchlings emerging in the daylight from the dunes.  For those that made it to the water’s edge, it is then a long paddle across the shallows to the ocean beyond. 

    One little boy in our camping party, was not going to give up on one little hatchling. He followed it down the beach, across the shallow lagoon and to the reef’s edge.  He was determined no gull would eat ‘his’ hatchling and willed the little fellow to survive.  Of course, once in the ocean, any number of predatory fish could have been waiting to eat this little leathery chap for lunch. The odds of any hatchling making it to maturity are one thousand to one. 

    Last camping trip to the island (my fifth time) I didn’t even bother to get up from my chair when someone yelled ‘turtles’!  As I look at this picture, taken on our third trip there, I want to pinch myself for forgetting what a privilege it is to have witnessed multiple sea turtles hatching on the Great Barrier Reef.   If I had a bucket list filled with exotic adventures around the world, I could have marked off two that happened at my back door! 

    Do you have a bucket list?  I first heard of a bucket list from watching the 2007 movie of the same name, starring Morgan Freeman and Jack Nicholson.  Freeman’s and Nicholson’s characters are terminally ill, aging men who set out to mark adventures off a list before they ‘kicked the bucket’.  Facing death, these men decide to live life fully until they died. 

    Death is indeed a sobering thought and one that causes lots of us anxiety.  One thing is for sure, we are all going to die- one day. Worrying about it is not living. 

    I have witnessed people giving up on life, years before their death and then others seem to defy the natural barriers that come with age and are still living a life filled with adventures. 

    What will it be for you in 2018?  What adventures on a bucket list will you mark off?  What will you add on?  Remember: “Life is for living; not worrying about dying.” (Author Unknown). 

  • An Extraordinary Life…

    An Extraordinary Life…

    Is your life ordinary or extraordinary? I suspect that most of us would say our life is rather ordinary. Given the choice I reckon most of us would rather an extraordinary life.

    What if it is possible for all of us to have an extraordinary life? What if it is not out there as a vague dream of riches and fame, but rather right here; in the midst of the ordinary life? After all, the word extraordinary is made of two words: EXTRA and ORDINARY.

    Perhaps the extra is there for us every day; we just have to look for it, listen for it or accept it! And perhaps we can make it for someone else; by creating it, speaking it or giving it! The it being the EXTRA in an otherwise ordinary life!

    One of the pitfalls of an agenda filled busy schedule is that we do not always provide the space or create the opportunity for the EXTRA to be noticed. The extraordinary is there every day!  Perhaps we overlook it as we go about the ordinary!

    Take my roses. I am always amazed that something so beautiful would bud on such a lanky, thorny and ordinary bush. (Well mine are!) Roses are my favourite flowers and it always brings me great joy to pick a new bloom and place it in a vase inside.

    This concept of extra in the ordinary challenges me often. Many years ago, our little family of four used to walk and rollerblade around the bitumen walking track of a nearby public park. I asked my neighbour one day to join me on my regular walk. She declined because she said it was “ordinary”. That irritated me. She had dismissed the park and its walk before even giving it a go. When I set off on my next walk, I looked a bit harder at the park and started to feel that she was right and it was rather ordinary; ordinary people, ordinary dogs, ordinary grass, ordinary trees, ordinary sky, ordinary playground. It was an ordinary park. As I walked past the ordinary pond, with its ordinary ducks I noticed for the first time a rather ordinary nest of twigs and branches floating on the ponds edge. The water was an ordinary brown as were the twigs and the reeds around the pond.  As I paused a little longer, I spotted something contrastingly red and black. A waterfowl with its glistening black plumage and a bright scarlet beak was busy around the ordinary nest of twigs. I watched in fascination as three or four little heads bobbed out of this nest. “Extraordinary!” I thought. I had just witnessed the first of spring’s hatch in this otherwise ordinary park. For several weeks after that ordinary day, I especially looked forward to my ordinary walk in the park, because when I spotted those little chicks, my life became extraordinarily richer.

    Have you paused recently, long enough to listen to a bird’s call, a tune playing, and a child’s laughter?

    Have you paused to take in a sunrise or sunset, the cloud pattern in the sky, a flower as it blooms, the antics of a puppy or kitten?

    Have you paused to accept the smile of a stranger or the genuine compliment of a friend or colleague, the cuddle from a child or a lick from a puppy, the generosity on the road from a fellow driver or thanked a cheery and helpful shop assistant for a job well done?

    Have you offered a kind word today or filled the air with beautiful music?

    Have put flowers on your desk at work or gone the extra mile with whatever you do at work to make it look good ‘just because’?

    Have you ever surprised a stranger or a grumpy shop attendant with a cheery “Good morning!” or stopped to compliment someone with something positive you have thought, but never been game to say?

    Have you stopped at all today to look, to listen and accept the extraordinary in the life you live?

    When I next see you and ask “How’s your life?” Will you be able to say “I have an extraordinary life!”