Published by: Digital Schools
Nature Gazing – Part 1
I lay motionless, gazing out the window at the outlines of trees I have known my whole life.
The silhouette of the old shaggy pine tree, a huge weeping giant that shadows the edge of the neighbours backyard, dissolves into black, and night has come.
I can’t believe I am here, is what I think and I roll over in a sort of dream state. I feel totally cocooned in a room that has been mine since the age of 7. It is not the little girls room it once was; exploded with too many hair ribbons and scrunchies. It has been “adulted” by my mother, simplified, and there is nothing pink in sight. But it still is my space, and the huge window that overlooks both ours and the neighbours backyards, still frames, almost exactly the same picture for the past 34 years.
Darkness here, is a real thing.
Only one streetlight interferes with the otherworldly dimension of stars and planets that are splattered as diamond dust in the night sky.
You have a complete view of the milky way on the balcony, and stars beam superbly bright, nothing like the city.
The sound of the night is so pristine that it would be rude to make noise and disturb it with TV and loud conversations, so I sit in my room, with a dull sidelight on next to my bed, and listen.
There is a symphony of insects creating all sorts of rhythms – some hum, others click and strum, while a parade of wildlife starts their show that lasts until the night’s end.
At 1am a Koala makes an introduction to the valley. Grunting and rumbling its way through the grasses of the paddock out back, it takes residence over night in mums big gum tree.
By the morning, he is gone, and I later find him in another gum tree where his mates are, one leg hung up over a small branch, he looks hot and satisfied.
The next day it would rain – my mother would get sick. I would become her nurse and manage the family of green tree frogs breeding in the swimming pool.
Two weeks alone in my mother’s home and the entire run of the kitchen created an experience never once shared with her or the house.
I didn’t get sick with COVID-19, and I wondered if luck, immunity, or my deep focus on nature, my obsessive ‘Nature Gazing’ buffered me?.
There is a lot to be learned on the benefits to our health and mental wellbeing that only nature can provide – and why some of us gravitate to the wild, much more than the average joe.
Next week – we lift the lid on ‘Biophilia’.
Guest Contributor: Emily Rack
Business Name: Horatio’s Jar
Publisher: Digital Schools
Emily Rack is a freelance creative writer and researcher, visual content creator and designer. She is the head of the content production, publication and editing for Upschool+ Guest Contributors. She designs and produces her own graphics and illustrations and is a seasoned photographer and digital content creator.
Emily is schooled in traditional yoga, ancient cultural dance from the east, and mindfulness practices from the ancient and new world. She has dedicated her life to researching and understanding matters of the mind, body and the human experience and cultivating ways to educate and communicate how to live well here on earth.
Communicating the urgent need for the human community to pay attention to the decline of native and endangered species is the primary focus of her recent content. Her research and dialogue also include how to self regulate and manage one’s emotions in times of trauma and stress. Gratitude, forgiveness, compassion and awareness are the keystones to all that she does.
Namaste.
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