The Solstice is one day away. Today the sun rose at 8:15 AM and will set at 4:52 PM. After tomorrow the days will start getting longer. I see it as the end of one year and the start of a new.
Man's calendar is a description only of what the planet goes through and it won't change no matter how we name or number it.
I celebrate the natural change while borrowing things from what man has done to explain nature. Just like the early Christians borrowed from the pagans, I borrow from Christmas traditions eschewing the buying crazies. We exchange gifts, yes. I hope to find that special something for the special people in my life.
The last quarter of the earth's turning this year has been wonderful. The summer heat was replaced with cool days and the colorful countryside. Instead of long days spent with friends in café's or on our patio, I've come inside and relished the coziness of my home.
Over the years, I've borrow some of the Christmas traditions, making them my own.
I have an Advent calendar. It was bought over a dozen years ago. In late November we go to Auer Chocolate in Geneva's downtown to pick out 24 black chocolates. Confession: Rick and I picked out more so we could sample two or three as I stuffed each date's box.
This year Rick and I cut them in half so neither of us miss out on a single taste sensation.
In my first grownup job, my boss, who also had a syndicated garden column, gave our secretary and me, an ugly bulb, with a tiny green tongue sticking out. Of course we thanked him. I took it home and was amazed over the next couple of weeks to see it grow into long stalks, then it developed pods that burst into red bell-shaped flowers. This year, I bought the bulb, which wasn't planted. The bottom had a tangle of thin gray threads. Rick filled a pot with dirt for it. Each day we monitored its growth until it blossomed fully. It is an analogy for the season.
Rick spotted our solstice bush when he went to buy dog food. Our Geneva studio is tiny, so a small tree is necessary and ever since having Sherlock, we opt for an indoor tree that fits on a tabletop. I know Sherlock would think of it as an indoor toilet at last if it were on the floor.
For the years that I could not have a real tree, I would make sure I brought at least a small branch of an evergreen into my room to remind me of the significance of the turning of the earth and the arrival of spring. The universe is so much bigger than what paltry mankind makes of it.
On the 21st we will decorate the solstice bush. There are wooden Christmas ornaments, my daughter and I painted of sleighs, soldiers, angels, balls, dogs, cats, churches, etc. over 50 years ago. We will put a sampling on the solstice bush. Hers are the work of a three-year old. I was touched when my husband made sure we brought at least one of his step-daughter's work from our French home where they are stores to our Geneva home where we are spending the holiday to make sure it was represented on the tree.
The ornaments are more than wood and paint, but have memories of so many other years. Many of the people whom I spent the holiday with are gone while remaining in my heart and memory. Songs like Little Drummer Boy or Twelve Days of Christmas conjure up images of my father and my friend's father who were part of my life. It reminds me to treasure those who are with me now.
The world will continue to turn, no matter what my species does to it. The days will get longer. Mimosa will act like sunlight in the woods near our French home. Seasonal vegetables will grow. The smell of the frozen earth melting will mix with that of lilacs. Coats will be replaced with sweaters, sweaters with blouses. We can once again sit outdoors after dinner.
And as the earth turns spring summer will give way to summer then another autumn will arrive. The universe continues.