Commuters often drive the same roads twice a day for the
length of their careers. Bus drivers, truckers and delivery people do too. What do they see?
As a school bus driver with the same route for at least ten
years, I often marveled at the things I saw along the way. Several years, a snowy owl hung out in a
two-block area for the winters. It never
ceased to fill me with awe. I watched a
Great Blue Heron build its nest in a tree beside a small creek. I observed one woman faithfully taking her
dogs for a walk around the perimeter of the farm. With interest I watched one house take years
to become habitable, several homes receiving face lifts and many landscaping
projects beautifying their owner’s habitation. I noticed changes, but sometimes
too, noted things I had missed even though I drove the same route so often.
For the seven years
I’ve been married to my Wise One, we have travelled the hour between our two
homes, much of the time, weekly. Some
wonder that we don’t get tired of it.
That hour, though, most often, is a time of relaxation and
enjoyment. We travel through farming
country and several small towns and villages, through all kinds of weather and
four seasons of the year. The weather
and seasons alone bring a never-ending progression of scenery that brings delight
to the eye. The snow covered landscape, the frost on trees after a winter’s
fog, the sparkle of the branches in the sun after they have been covered with a
freezing rain. In the spring we follow
the receding of the snow, the drying of the land and the new growth greening
the landscape and dressing the trees. Summer brings a plethora of flowers, both
wild and domesticated, the harvesting of crops, the smell of freshly mown
hay. Then comes fall with its blue, blue
skies and purple lined clouds, the trees in their autumn splendor—my favorite
season. Sometimes I keep my camera handy
to record some of those sights. Again, we have witnessed building projects,
landscaping improvements, the tragedy of a house fire and the subsequent
building of a new home. We see farmers
and gardeners sharing the wealth of their gardens at roadside stands along the
way. In one small town we enjoy the wood carving done on the trunk of a tree
that had to be removed—artistry borne out of death.
As with the commuters, and my bus run, I am amazed at how
often I still see something I hadn’t noticed before and I marvel at how often
you can drive the same route and still miss a vital part of the scenery. It made me think of my reading habits. As a youngster, I read books over and over
again. Some of my favorites were
probably read dozens of times. I
couldn’t understand people who would read a book once then give it away. Now maybe part of the reason was that there
wasn’t a lot of money around to buy books; there were only five eight-foot
shelves of books in our school library and I didn’t have access to the town
library for many years. I had to read—to me it was as necessary as
eating. So my only alternative was to
read the same books again and again. I
read my school readers many times and I even read the dictionary from cover to
cover. Those books became old friends I
still treasure. That is why I keep as many books as I do,
although I have begun to donate them to the church library so others can
benefit, and I still have access to them.
I’ve prayed that my writing may
also merit multiple readings, so I was pleased when again last Sunday, a woman
told me she just read my two novels again and enjoyed them as much as the first
time.
As I read books multiple times, I always discover parts to
which I hadn’t paid much attention on my previous perusals. It seems to depend on what I am experiencing
in life as to which parts stand out. I
guess that is why the Word of God is always fresh and new to me. That Book has spoken to me throughout my life
journey. Someone has said that as we
reach each new stage of life, we face it inexperienced. So even portions we
have read many times, suddenly become new and relevant because of what we are
facing or what we need to learn at the present.
So yes, keep reading new books, but don’t shy away from
returning to an old friend!
No comments:
Post a Comment