A handful of days ago, I set out for home early from
office. I walk office on foot, everyday.
Honestly. I don’t own car, I don’t hire taxi. Winter is already here: the day
turns into hateful cold, the wind adds frosty to it and the sun going down
early. But I walk. And only a few Thimphuiets do walk on foot like me in this
most barren time of the year.
Midway to home, my eyes feasted upon a tree, just a few
yards down the road. The tree sat abandoned, eerily. I inched my way towards
it. And I looked so uninterruptedly, so absorbedly. Only a flock of birds were
wheeling around it. Once plentiful of leaves and colours, now it stood bare and
dispirited. Its leaves and seeds have stripped down, decaying on the ground. Alas, this
tree was exhausted by hardest of wintry weather.
I couldn’t help thinking about this metaphor in my life,
too. I’ve loads of memories from when I was a high school boy. However, this
past is mostly remorseful and something useless that only hampered me. Like this tree shed its leaves, I also let go
of my memories one by one.
But suddenly, I felt a great emptiness within me. A sense of
nothingness seized me which turned out to be as scary as blackness. Worse, my mind
filled with doubt and anxiety. I had trashed my past, but I didn’t
know how to live without it. I didn’t know how to stand firm in my own
emptiness. And I became as lonely as this tree.
Again I looked closer at this tree. Contemplated more seriously.
An understanding dawned upon me, ah. Though the hardest of season had beaten it,
the tree was stunningly alive and still fighting with unparalleled ferocity
will to live. It let go off its leaves, yet it stood firm in its own cruel
weather, emptiness. It best taught me: it shed all the leaves, standing bare
all winter and it always trusts that spring will come.
This internal understanding filled me with a surprising
sense of comfort. No matter how cold, how dark, how cruel, how
empty it can get, winter always holds a promise-that spring is no far. It’s this hopeful light of my own belief that radiates
these days in my desertedness. Here, now, I embrace the
darkness, emptiness and earnestly waiting to be embraced again with comfort,
warmth, laughter, love and fruition.
This is absolutely lovely. I am constantly awed and moved by the winter trees, and your words here help me understand why. Thank you. xox
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