I had used my writing ability to reach out and say something that mattered, that had been residing in my heart for years. I entertained, I consoled, I celebrated and commemorated, all at one time.
But what do I write after that?
I have many other photos to use in my blog, that of my family, of me, of my life in its many aspects. But now I want to hit each blog "out of the park".
And I know that's impossible.
It's like having that first sip of cold beer on a hot day, that first spoonful of your favorite ice cream, that first kiss from a new love, that first laugh from your baby grandchild, that wedding, or graduation, or vacation, or any other joyful moment, but just THAT FIRST INTENSE MOMENT.
Only over and over again.....a home run all the time.
I can see a pattern over the years of my life---that of chasing down such moments, and trying desperately to repeat them, to extend them, to hold on to them.....but that's impossible.
Even as my babies grew into adorable toddlers, I was already wanting to hold on to each moment with them, to freeze time, to keep the hours and years from whooshing away.
So I took endless photos. (Oh what I could have done with digital technology and camera phones back then!) I bought a clunky video camera when they first expensively came out---and then realized that I was being a camera-woman, and not a Mom, at the events I was filming.
If I strained to record, or started to feel melancholy about the passing of these moments, then these moments passed out of my grip anyway, and I hadn't been present. I was not showing up for my own life.
It's been stated frequently that the happiest time in a person's life is the later years. By then we know that the moments fly by with such speed, and that all we can do is BE PRESENT, in our present.
For it becomes the past just that quickly.
So I write my blog, I hope at least weekly, with all the variety that is my life and my minutes. It would be a great pleasure to share some of my thoughts with other readers, and to resonate with my readers at times.
But then I am blessed with a certain resonating every day in my life, every dawn as the first bird chirps at four a.m., and every sunset as the sky presents its sunset mural. It is up to me to make those moments special to myself.
(One of my favorite poems, adopted by me when I DID have fifty years or more to see the blossoms):
A Shropshire Lad 2: Loveliest of Trees, The Cherry Now ( by A. E. Housman)
Loveliest of trees, the cherry now
Is hung with bloom along the bough,
And stands about the woodland ride
Wearing white for Eastertide.
Now, of my threescore years and ten,
Twenty will not come again,
And take from seventy springs a score,
It only leaves me fifty more.
And since to look at things in bloom
Fifty springs are little room,
About the woodlands I will go
To see the cherry hung with snow.

With so much less time "to see the cherry hung with snow", I intend to savor even those moments after the cherry blossoms have fallen, when the ball just is a tiny infield single.
For it is a great privilege to be IN my life, in my NOW.