A wet day in the Lanark Highlands yesterday, and darkling for the most part. Heavy cloud was the order of things, and there was scarcely a ray of sunrise or sunset to be seen, just endless twilight in all directions. A small round lake of blue sky appeared in the west around three in the afternoon as we closed the gate and headed in to make tea, but that was all.
Lacy scraps of frost remained on branches and leaves and in crevices here and there when we arrived, but the white stuff was undergoing a swift transformation, condensing and rising into the air like fine silvery smoke. A light mist rose from the Clyde river at every bend in its winding journey, playing over the trees, fields and old stones. Here and there in the mist were the faint outlines of browsing deer and wild turkeys.
On such days, a pearly gray stillness lies over everything, and perhaps the expression wabi sabi describes it as well as anything can be said to do that. There is a kind of tranquil melancholy; a non-attachment beyond all coming and going which honors tathata or suchness, the turning of the seasons and the perfect spontaneous unfolding of the world around us.
My old bones are not dancing as they consider the coming winter, but the doddering scribe and photographer feels something quite different. She remembers the sound of snow falling among the trees, and she rejoices.

2 comments:
And I rejoice with you... :) I look forward to tagging along vicariously on your winter walks...
most wonderful poetic post and absolutely stunning capture of this autumnal scenery!
thank you so much - feel pretty much the same here, coming back from an extraordinary choral week in Switzerland with mostly lovely Indian Summer weather (some light snowfall at beg. of week apart)...
thank you, thank you!
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