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Showing posts with label timing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label timing. Show all posts

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Ready To Go


Our baby Robins are ready to fly. There are two of them this year. They have been eagerly eating everything their parents bring them so that they can gain strength and become independent.

Yesterday the baby birds were perched on the edge of the nest like this all day long, so that we thought they would leave yesterday, but this morning they are still there. They understand that the process needs to take its time and to rush it would not be in their best interests.

I am endlessly fascinated with the individuation process. To start out strong, competent and independent is not what is expected in the natural order of things.

It's O.K. to be young and hesitant and even fearful. The right time will come with sincere preparation, intention and patience.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Basking in the Glow


Sometimes things go right in my life. Much more often, lately, than they ever did before.

When I look at this pear I see a ripe and contented creation of the universe that is comfortable in her skin.

She is nearing her prime -- when she will become ready to fall from the tree and provide nourishment for another creature -- but for now she is tending to her own needs.

The pear is receiving strength and energy from the sun and she is allowing it to help her grow.

Monday, July 14, 2008

Right Timing


We've been watching a Robin's nest out our front window for a few weeks now. We somehow missed the construction of the nest but we were there to see the fledglings begging for food and the two parent birds tag-teaming as they rotated bringing worms to the chicks.


Now the progeny are getting bigger. One at a time each of the three baby birds perch on top of the nest and practice spreading their never-used-before wings as they watch the devoted process of the parents leaving and returning to the nest over and over to bring them food.


I can sense the anticipation of the one courageous youngster who claims the top-of-the-nest position. As the parents fly away she follows the adult bird's movements with her eyes. Her body even attempts to mimic the behavior but at the very last moment she holds herself back and stays safely ensconced in the nest for a little while longer. She is learning what needs to be done but is not quite ready to do it.


And that need to wait is natural and understandable. The bird trusts herself and her instincts and she understands that she will feel and know when her right time to take action has come. And it is at that right time that she will spread her wings, follow her parents away from the nest and fly...