Relative Something

*this* John W. Hays' take on things and experiences

Priceless Friendships!

with 3 comments

The fantastic brilliance of life springs forth in everything! It is in the good and the bad, the easy and the difficult. Our greatest lessons do not come from times of calm and collected, easy living. It is the challenges, the trials and tribulations, which produce the gems of outcome that glimmer with the brilliant beauty of our eventual successes in life.

It has been brought to my attention, by friends who care about me, that some of what I write lately is spawning worry about my state of being. I will admit to taking advantage of some of the angst, (created in me by the departure of my lovely wife to the job in Boston), composing some prose that explores the feelings thus produced. To an artist, such fodder is a rich vein to be mined.

I am grateful for the feedback, though, because I was not aware of the level of impression my words were creating. I am richly blessed by friends. In particular, Ian Rowcliffe, who provides me with insights and inspirations through his comments, and his unfailingly positive focus. Also, my good friend, Gary Larson, a champion in helping me take care of myself. Mike Wilkus has been a (mostly) weekly date for dinners out on the town, or movies, or sometimes both. Many special friends from my circle of bicycling buddies, who came over last Saturday, bringing food and good cheer, to watch a movie I’ve been itchin’ to share for weeks. And my morning soccer comrades, who just yesterday were helping me release endorphins with plenty of laughter and cheerful competition.

I am eating very well, despite my disinterest in cooking, getting in my maintenance exercises for my back, and actually enjoying the opportunity to get a taste of living on my own. Being separated from Cyndie isn’t easy, but it isn’t all that hard, either. It is “both / and.”

Part of me just might have been hesitant to portray my situation in too rosy a light, lest I come across as a heartless cad. I fear there could be some ‘splainin’ to do if my wife thought I was having too much fun here without her.

I was telling Gary last night that I am enjoying having some of the rooms in our house become more a reflection of me, as I remove some things that had been put in place for when two people occupied the space. As referenced in yesterday’s poem, the rooms are losing some of Cyndie’s soul, but I see that as a logical step toward our putting this house on the market. When she moves home again, we are envisioning that we will be in a new place, on property with space for horses. I expect the current situation will end up making it easier for us to part with the house we’ve lived in for over 25 years.

Thank you to all friends, new and old, who read me here! I’m hoping you find my travails relative something… preferably something positive!

 

Written by johnwhays

January 24, 2012 at 7:00 am

Posted in Chronicle

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3 Responses

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  1. Thanks for the mention and the thanks, John. As I know how much you like arranging stones, check out this house:

    http://www.treehugger.com/sustainable-product-design/real-life-flintstones-house-lures-tourists-in-portugal.html

    Something else for you to see when you come back and visit us, isn’t it?

    By the way, Machado is working well at his stone house, too. He has a cellar, ground floor and is working on the upstairs part – and he was diagnosed with a terminal illness a year ago and told to take it easy. What a reaction, he is proving stronger than 20 men and showing flint stone power is here to stay.

    Ian Rowcliffe

    January 24, 2012 at 6:16 pm

    • That house takes it to another level! Have you been to see it?

      I hope I get a chance to say hello again to Machado.

      I am revisiting some of my images of Nepal, and you have inspired me to post some with stone work.

      johnwhays

      January 24, 2012 at 10:22 pm

      • No, I haven’t seen the house yet as it was Stephanie who told me of its existence yesterday, but apparently it is quite well known by the locals who are surprised at its sudden attraction:-)

        Yes, I don’t know why but maybe Machado is counting on seeing you again – he is not married and has no children so what is driving him on? Maybe, some sort of recognition that life here is truly beautiful and merits attention and that together we can overcome all the odds and help create an amazing future for those who come after us.

        Re: stone work – when we say people have a heart of stone, I am beginning to think that they have a sense of immanence. That it is not something primitive and unfeeling but the opposite: a part of an, otherwise, unimagined deep wisdom – I have got really excited time and time again at the incredible sense of time your stone arrangements transmit. Something that is overlooked without your slight changes of hand – suddenly, time is unmasked and marveled at!

        Ian Rowcliffe

        January 25, 2012 at 8:33 am


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