Showers

There are no rules
of architecture for
a castle in the
clouds.”
-Gilbert K. Chesterton

Do you remember ever jumping into puddles and counting the raindrops in them?

I do. But somewhere along the way I grew up out of my red rubber boots and puddles became less fun.

Now I enjoy those puddles more from afar. So here I sit nestled in a soft blanket with a cup of hot tea watching the April clouds roll in. Magnificent, ominous, as they slowly move across the sky. Comforting in their currents yet knowing at any moment they could burst into a torrential downpour.

Of course there’s a big difference between torrents and showers. One’s exciting, the other comforting. And it’s those comforting April Showers I’m hoping for now. The kind of shower that sprinkles our flowers, our plants, our lands like a needed watering can from above.

Suggestion:
Next time an April shower rolls in, boil up a nice cup of hot tea.
Then sit under a canopy holding the warmth of the cup in your hands.
Sip and watch.

Watch the shift and change of the kaleidoscope of clouds. What an amazing artistic process! One minute they may be in the shape of a horse, then a flower, then… is that a Ferrari?

It’s the ultimate psychology test!

Continually changing cloud formations until they eventually all come together into the expression of a shower.

These dauntingly beautiful aspects of nature hold the ability to remind us on a regular basis that there’s a bigger moving picture involved out there. One that offers each one of us a glimpse into our own uniquely transformative nature within.

May I kindly offer you a cup of tea?

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Dr. Joan A. Budilovsky

Writer/Harpist/Friend

Joan is also a long-standing Chicago-Area Newspaper Columnist (Yo Joan!).  Her columns are on meditation, yoga and stress reduction – subjects she has studied, taught and practiced for decades.  A former professional musician, she continues to carry music in her heart and harps.  Her Doctorate is in Education from the University of Illinois at Chicago. 

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