When Spring Freezes

When Spring Freezes

PHOTO: Mary van Balen

PHOTO: Mary van Balen

I couldn’t believe my eyes. Not only were the crocuses in my neighbor’s lawn blooming in early March, they were covered with bees! After months of sub-freezing temperatures, inches of ice, and more inches of snow, the earth had warmed enough to coax beautiful purple flowers out of their dark waiting place. Spring, it seemed, had arrived.

Passersby stopped to see what enticed me to stoop low and look closely. “Bees,” I said. “Bees are all over these flowers.”

Some stopped long enough to look themselves. After a frigid winter, we were ready for a change.

Spiritual life can be like that. Sometimes winters of the soul seem to last forever. Then, just when we’ve come to terms with the possibility of unending cold and emptiness, everything changes: Hope wakes up and shakes her feathers. Life erupts like the crocuses. Intoxicated, we nuzzle down into the golden centers and rise up heavy with life-giving pollen sticking all over. Unable to contain our joy, we move from hope to hope, from beauty to beauty. Like bees, we’re called by Mystery to an ancient dance, and we join in, spreading the sticky grace and picking up more everywhere we go.

PHOTO: Mary van Balen

PHOTO: Mary van Balen

Then, as quickly as it left, the cold returns. The crocuses across the street are suddenly bowed under a fresh fall of snow. Bees have disappeared to wherever it is they go to escape the freeze. A collective sigh rises from the earth. People bundle up in winter coats again. The few days of warmth make the cold bite deeper, and we shiver in temperatures we would have welcomed a month ago.

Spiritual spring can be just as fickle. Fear or worry blow in from somewhere and hope retreats. Sticky grace feels more like goo. We’re not flitting from  hope to hope. We’re not moving at all. A groan rises from deep inside. The emptiness seems larger after having danced with Joy.

“It won’t last,” we tell ourselves but struggle to believe it.

It’s a good time to listen to music or to sit in the dark and gaze at stars, or a candle, or nothing.  We might curl up with a good book of poetry, or linger with scripture. Story reminds us that this dance with winter and spring is nothing new. If we can settle in with the cold and dark, we discover they  have gifts of their own. And it doesn’t last forever.

Eventually, sun will melt the snow. Flowers will straighten their stems and lift their heads. The bees will come back, and we’ll feast on sticky Grace.

PHOTO: Mary van Balen

PHOTO: Mary van Balen

Comments

  1. Pat the Elder says

    Two days ago, there were five crocuses near the chimney. I was so excited. I took one picture and then wanted to get closer and it was blurry so the camera wanted to know if I really wanted it. I didn’t. Took another shot. Too blurry, too. When I came inside with the second kept shot, I realized that Crocus Two had opened wider. It was just a matter of patience and I didn’t even notice the change — in the moment.

    It has been a long, long period, without much Hope, I guess, and like on the PBS Cancer series, Hope is so important. I plan to write three doctors who treated me 14 years ago, to thank them again. And, Mary, thank you for this thoughtful expression of Hope and Grace. They do hide but ARE sticky so can be noticed again and again, when we need them. I should have looked for feathers!

    • mary van balen says

      Thank you for sharing your thoughts and experiences, Pat. Amazing how quickly something can change and we don’t notice in the moment…only in looking back. God is always ‘in-breaking’ into this world, into our lives. We can never know all the whens and hows, but somehow muster faith to trust God does. Hope is elusive for me, too. For many. I agree: Let’s look for feathers!

      How good to write your doctors. I wonder how many patients take the time. Your thoughtfulness makes me think of thanking those who bring hope and grace into our lives. Most not in the dramatic way of doctors helping patients with cancer. Still, there are many who go unthanked who are unrecognized channels of Divine Love and Compassion. Thanks for the reminder.

  2. I really like it. Thank you, Mary.

  3. kathy snider says

    love this reflection. brings to mind ‘ this too will pass’… All things change, God never changes… thanks for the lovely photos and reflection.

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