Many people dread November with its
dreary, damp, bone-chilling weather. In
fact I just recently read a blog by my very dear friend decrying those very
things and expressing her dislike of the month. She had the grace to apologize
to those whose birthdays fall in this month.
I happen to be one of those, so perhaps because of that I try to find
the good that must also be there.
To me,
the world seems to wait in hushed and contemplative ambience during November—almost
like a lady stripped of her clothes, standing in front of her closet,
envisaging herself in the gown she wants to wear for the upcoming gala. Of course I’m one of those odd-balls who love
winter too, so even in November, I like that lady, anticipate the beauty of snow-laden branches, silvery
tree branches surrounded by pristine whiteness highlighted by either sunlight
and blue skies or a full moon, and I look forward to the beauty and more relaxed
winter months.
Somehow,
November reveals to us the “bare bones” of our world—what is underneath, holds
up or provides the basis for all the growing things of summer and beauty of fall—the
source that provides the bountiful harvest and the beauty we enjoy in the
warmer months. It’s a good exercise to
take a look at those basics now and then—in our world and in our lives.
While
thinking about November, I saw that our esteemed co-founder of The Word Guild
mentioned on facebook that she, in
her haste to get going on her novel-writing month of November, realized she was
madly writing—without a plot! I smiled.
Immediately I imagined a bunch of
leaves without a trunk and branches to hold them up in some semblance of order
to make a tree—I realized it can’t be done—neither can seeds, trees or shrubs be
planted without rich soil in which to send their roots deep for
nourishment. We need those basics from
which we can sustain ourselves and our world and from which we can cultivate
and develop life and beauty. We also
need the “bare bones” of our faith on which we can rely in cold and
bone-chilling times, and on which can grow leaves and blossoms of beauty. And in our writing we need the “bare bones”
of a plot and a reason to tell our story.
Recently I heard a minister deliver
his sermon the same way Nancy was writing her novel—without a plot or even a
sense of direction. (Although Nancy
probably had more sense of direction) It
was a jumble of thoughts and ideas, some of them very good, but nothing fit
together or flowed from one to the other.
At the end it left the listener wondering, “Now just what was he trying
to tell us? Did even he know, or was he
just trying to fill his allotted time?”
So as in all of life, all of us,
including writers and speakers need basic plots and reasons for our writing,
speaking and indeed our living. It is
only then that our readers and listeners and fellow sojourners can grasp how to
use what they learn to dress up or enhance the basic structures in their own lives.
Yes, we need to sit up and pay
attention to the Novembers in our lives.
www.ruthsmithmeyer.com Author of Not Far from the Tree, Not Easily Broken, Tyson's Sad Bad Day. Finalist for story in Second Cup of Hot Apple Cider.
1 comment:
Ruth, thank you for your lovely November reflections and practical applications for those of us who write for the eyes, hearts, and minds of others. You didn't omit the speaking part, either.
Hmmm. How many amorphous 'dog's dinner hash' sermons have I served up over the years? Too many, no doubt. :( )
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