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Another rainy Monday morning.
I don't know when, but the squirrels have successfully tackled the bird feeder to the ground from its dangling hook on the tree branch. On this first day of March the nudges of spring time begin. The muddy season, the rainy season, the dry season -- dependent on where you are. Here, the daffodils soon to be pushing their way up, sharing their bright, yellow splendor. Daffodils and my first born daughter, Eleanor, go hand-in-hand. She was born in this season of the nudges of spring. And even though she lived a short life of two weeks, she was like the daffodils -- with a strength and courage to stay steadfast through pregnancy and ride and push through labor and delivery even though many of her own kind do not make it that far. Her own kind being that of Trisomy 18 - a rare, less than 1% chance of chromosomal abnormalities, not genetic - there is no scientific explanation. It just is. Daffodils not only bring their bright splendor and promise of spring, but also a swelling in my heart, in my chest, that is full of joy and love, and equally grief and loss. A weighted fullness that is difficult to put into words. The nudges of spring enter me and I enter them. Eleanor and the daffodils walk hand-in-hand. And I join hand-in-hand with Eleanor, with the daffodils, and with spring, as we all nudge to emerge.
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AuthorJanet Wepner Archives
July 2022
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