Intention Rock Insights

The Intention Rock on the banks of the West Chickamauga Creek, Spirit Tree Farms: A place to meditate, observe, learn and decide.

While planting and watering grapevines, eating fox grapes, and weekend peach and pawpaw trees during a recent drizzly Saturday morning, I felt “called” to sit on our “Intention Rock” on the banks of the West Chickamauga Creek, at our Spirit Tree Farms property in Northwest Georgia. While there, I had  these three haiku come to mind, one right after the other. 

Called To The Intention Rock

Not knowing why I’m/
called to the intention rock, /
I stay still, listen.

———-

Keep Doing What You Think You Should

Affirmations flood/
my heart, mind, and soul. I’ll keep/
doing what I’m asked.

———–

It’s OK to Question

I’m not faithless when/
I worry, doubt, or question./
I seek more insight.

For a deeper look at the thought process behind these haiku, check out “Insights and Wisdom at the Intention Rock“.

Bring Peace In Nature To Others: Haiku

As we share how we /
find peace in nature, we help*/
others feel peace, too.

OR

*bring/

peace to others, too.

[Context: We were walking through the woods and fields, doing Nature Observation at Spirit Tree Farms with some folks from out-of-town. As I riffed this haiku, I made these notes:

As we set about finding peace in Nature, it’s always a good time (both to do it, and to be had). 

What’s amazing is that, as you share it, others feel it, and thank you for the experience.]

Wildflowers: Subtle Influence of Generations Past

A flock of goldfinches
dances among morning-light-basked
coreopsis, sunflowers, and coneflowers
in our once-sterile and lawned,
now wildflower-laden, front yard.

A bright red cardinal
flutters amongst
a glowing-flowered rose bush,
as if thinking the red petals
were competition.

I muse at how,
years prior,
the landlady had demanded:
“Cut down these weeds!
I just want a well-kept lawn!”

Now, in spring,
as new plants arise,
she carefully takes
lawnmower or weed-wacker,
and carves paths that avoid wildflowers.

As summer beckons,
her cautious paths let us
leisurely stroll through
bright pinks, whites, yellows, purples, blues, reds.
We become surrounded by and absorbed in Nature.

What made the change?
What turned this orderly hostess
demanding sterile, well-manicured lawns,
to one who could see and rejoice
in the colorful riot of wildflowers?

My grandparents,
(who she never met),
and their parents
were known for the flowers
and fruits they kept.

The family joke was
how the Sheboygan matriarch
grew her veggies and flowers
in the bathtub.
Beauty before cleanliness.

The tradition carried on,
as my grandmother taught
her children and grandchildren
to enjoy and relish nature.
“How beautiful!”

Grandmother’s children, too, 
(oft to the chagrin of neighbors),
invited wildflowers and native plants
instead of sterile and invasive species
to grow and thrive and bring beauty and life.

So now their children and grandchildren
leave patches of wild plants,
riotous color for the birds, bees, butterflies;
pollinators who gladly cavort and dance
the way their ancestors did.

As willing witnesses, we get to feel
the swelling in our hearts
and the welling of our eyes,
as we join with them in this
ancient dance in the wildflowers.

Read more about how the landlady of Spirit Tree Farms, Marnie Kuhns, transformed from loving lawns to wooing wildflowers, birds, and pollinators in her book about finding peace in Nature and God’s Creations.