Lately I've been noticing the loveliness of leaves scattered across lawns, as well as, surprisingly, the
loveliness of the thoughts that strew themselves across my mind. There’s no
orderliness in October’s leaves on lawns, and there’s certainly no neatness or
tidiness in the thoughts that tumble down in my mind moment by moment – and yet
there’s a strange sort of beauty in both. No one (I hope) would look at a lawn
covered with colorful leaves and say it’s a shame the leaves aren’t better
organized, and, similarly, I’m not dismayed that my thoughts aren’t more nicely
systematized and structured. Part of the
beauty of autumn lies precisely in the unplanned, spur-of-the-moment look of
the bright lawns under their temporary layer of leaves, and I find something special in
the crazy haphazardness of my thoughts. They settle inside me by the millions,
these thoughts from nowhere and everywhere, and they spread across my life like
an always-shifting quilt of colors. I could, I suppose, try to shape and
classify them, but that would be as foolish as trying to position leaves in
piles according to size and shape. Like leaves shifting and scattering as
breezes pass by, my thoughts disseminate themselves through my days in
harmless and charming ways. I guess I’d rather admire and be mystified by them
than try to pigeon-hole and compartmentalize them.
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