A Raw Sense Of Happiness

October 7, 2024
Nogal House
A Raw Sense Of Happiness
Suddenly it strikes me, this raw sense of happiness. A crude title? Perhaps, but it is the abrupt realization that I have, at least for the moment, achieved an elusive goal. Not that it hasn’t been present, this sense of serenity and stillness, but it is front and center this morning. In the absence of crisis, with no sense of or requirement for urgency, comes this moment. The air is still, the fire a gentle bed of coals, it’s purpose for the morning already served. Having so recently rebuilt my hearth I now have a place to build my morning fire, even as I am warmed by the rising sun. With but a handful of scrap lumber, such as there is a plentiful supply of, I can boil my tea, heat my wash water and my oatmeal. The joy of the ritual is a gift in itself, and the crackle of the flame a blessing. The waft of smoke from the stovepipe tells me the direction of the wind and even the temper of the day, a barometer without a gage. There are days the smoke falls to the ground and times when the fire won’t even heat. I am mindful of it all.
At present all that there is to break the silence is the chirp of birdsong, drifting in through the porch window from the sparrows clustered in the bushes to the north. There is a gentle and cooling breeze, and an occasional hum off the rafters. It should be cold this morning, but it is not, and the trees have barely begun to turn, even in the absence of a frost, as if they know it is time to drop their leaves even if it isn’t yet fall by the feel of things. Perhaps this is part of the calmness I feel, for there isn’t even the urge to cut wood, though my saws are loaded in my truck. I will cut wood, because it is October, and there will be winter, and I can never have enough wood for the years to come. But I am unhurried also, because I have been cutting wood for years and there is now plenty of it to meet my needs, for now. Even my garden sits at ready today, well watered and fed, carrots waiting to be pulled, swiss chard well established and the covers at ready for the cold. Even my water tanks are full and I could go for weeks before they ran low, if I waited that long, which I won’t. All of the above is as much the reason for this happiness as anything else as for the moment I want for nothing. My bills, few that they are, are paid, and my debts are being reduced, gradually but routinely as well. After all of the years of struggle I am finally realizing the reward of those efforts, as well as of the lessons.
What lessons? First and foremost, that the serenity I feel at this very moment has always been a constant, it is I who have been absent. This quiet, this stillness, this absence of crisis has existed since time began, I just had to get here. I have awakened in this very spot, on and off, for the past twenty-one years. I have returned to this place after lengthy days and lengthy absences to restore my mind, my body and my spirit. I have watched the morning sun touch the high peaks and make her morning walk across the grassy slopes more times than I can count, and seen the sunset to the west in the same number. I know the feel of the quiet and the stillness here and the arrangement of the stars as well as I do each and every line on my face, and perhaps even better, for again, these elements of nature and beauty are a constant. The lines on my face and the gray hair on my head have evolved over time, in the same fashion this inherent wisdom has developed. I say inherent for it is omnipresent, and again, it is I who has been absent.
All of this came to focus in a flash this morning. The Forest Service is reseeding the burn scars to the south of me, wounds which were so far reaching this summer and which brought a looming sense of crisis into all of our lives with fire and flood for weeks at a time. We all spent half of our summer in flight, from flames, and smoke, and floods, let alone the shared angst of such events. Only now have things calmed and restored the quietude to our lives, or at least to some of them, as it has with mine. An hour ago, I heard the hum off a helicopter and as he flew north, he came low and close over my house, certainly to take a better look. I waved, I laughed, and I smiled. Such a sight I must have been there on the porch by the hearth, my wares laid out on the table, my hair as yet uncombed but wet from the water in the basin. He would have seen the well-worn roof of the house, the stovepipes for the fires, the garden and the woodpiles. He must have smiled to himself and considered the simplicity that surrounds my life. He reminded me of the same.
A raw sense of happiness. There is no urgency in my life today, no pressing need, no crisis to be faced with. Neither is there a sense of loneliness or the absence of something I cannot live without. Funds are slim, as always, but my needs have all been met, few that they are. The years of pressing forward to some unattainable goal are behind me and I have almost everything I have ever wished for, with very few exceptions. Of course, those things are far less than most of us could live with, but far more than others will ever attain. I need but food, shelter and mobility to be content, but it is the things of spirit which hold the greatest value, and perhaps that is the example I wish to make. We can surround ourselves with wealth and riches and still never find this happiness I speak to. Sometimes it is the very absence of things which hold the greatest value. The serenity I feel at this very moment has been right here all along and has again been restored by the simple, raw, sense of happiness. I can ask for nothing more.
Spontaneity

September 30, 2018
Bohemian Grace II
Coyote Road
Fort Sumner, New Mexico
Spontaneity
It is the spontaneity which wears thin with the years. I am not the same person I was eleven years ago, though I certainly aspire to be her. I am the same in so many ways but the joyful flow of words is altered, strained by the struggles I have allowed into my life.
Might I have taken a different path? Perhaps, I sought it for certain. If I have never looked for the easy way around I have always tried to keep my feet on the best road I could. In so many ways I have succeeded at that but the effort to maintain my balance has still taken its toll.
I remember a moment, many years ago, kneeling in front of the stone hearth on my front porch and questioning my logic. I was building a fire to heat my morning tea and asked myself a question. Would I take another step towards work and worry if I knew the world as it is would soon be altered? If the conventional structure of our lives was to be shattered what good would it be to try to stay abreast of it, at the cost of my very happiness? Why make such a sacrifice as that if in the end it would not matter in the least?
I chose to stay the course, just in case it did matter. I see now where it has, and it does, but the cost has been exorbitant! The gentle flow of my voice from that time, some eleven years ago, is now strained by concern. If I can still attain that same peace of mind I had then, it is fleeting. Rather than being in such a moment I am yearning to return to it. Am I close to meeting the goals I have chosen? Yes. Has it been worth what I sacrificed to get there? I am not yet sure.
What that the alternatives would have come at a cost also. I might have followed a gentler path but it would have been a spare one. If I now have the shelter of my camper to rely on, and a fleet of reasonably trustworthy vehicles, I may not have. There was no assurance at that time that I would still have my Nogal House, but I do. I might have remained there and kept the windmill in repair and the garden would have flourished. My immediate needs would have been met but with far less opportunity for experience and adventure. It would have been a very simple life. I would have recorded every moment.
There is no changing the past. I cannot go backwards and see where I might have gone, or alter those choices. What I can do is to reaffirm the ones I made and to fill in the gaps where they seem to have gaped. I cannot remove the scars or callouses, but I can try to avoid causing more. I can still practice the methods of life which I know to be the best and avoid the negative ones. I can, as I did yesterday, take the road deep into the lush green beauty of the river valley and then walk the parameter of the lake. I can breathe the cool freshness of the fresh fall air, and savor the moment to its fullest. So I can also remind myself of the things I hold most precious and reaffirm them in every way possible.
There is no room or reason for regrets. The simple practices of reverence, my morning prayer, kneeling before the fire, walking my water to my door, are all a constant part of my existence. I have not forgotten those promises I made to myself some forty years ago, nor those from much more recent times. I am still that same woman, just a little wiser for the wear. I am not sorry for choosing to follow this path but I am more cautious and mindful of the things I might sacrifice to stay on it. Wisdom puts spontaneity in balance, but neither choice requires relinquishing ones happiness.
Footnote: September 30, 2024: I have lived my entire life wondering when and if the world as we know it would come to an end. The fact is that in so many ways it has. The simplicity that defined my youth, complicated of course by war and threat of annihilation from a nuclear bomb, no longer exists as it was then. We have ‘progressed’ in ways that I saw coming even as a child and had so much fear of. I fled even then, going west in hopes of finding some vestige of the simple life that I read about in books written in the early 1900’s, those written over one hundred years ago now. I dreamt of the cabin in the woods and the simple homestead life, even if it had its challenges. I replicated that image in so many ways. I need but ownership of my land and a functional water well and I can provide for everything else. I am as close, and as far from having that as I was when I formulated that dream. What I am doing is living my life as I envisioned it would be, all those years ago. I am home to stay. What else is there I could even ask for?
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