The storm has
rolled out,
an ordinary calm
carries in on its coattails.
All looks right in the world
until
a subtle rustle
and
plink-plopping
of the after tears
reveal the traumatic
remnants
of the deluge.
Rain was forecasted to continue in an hour or so. A storm had just rolled through and at the moment it was a calm, gray day. I decided to squeeze in a walk along a trail in one of my favorite parks.
While walking along the trail, I noticed the beaded drops of rain decorating the leaves as well as the tips of pine needles. It was a beauty after the hours of rain that morning. Taking a few more steps down the trail, I heard raindrops hitting leaves and then falling father down to my hat and skin. I stopped and thought -"Is it raining again? That was really quick." But then, I realized no. It was the drops of water resting on the far above leaves being rustled causing the drops to fall. It was like an aftershock of the rainstorm.
Thinking about this aftershock brought to mind the storms in life we walk through as humans. The actual storm may have passed and to everyone else you look fine and normal, but then something (a song, a scent, a text) brings remnants of that storm right back up to the surface. Tears spring from a well within and unexpectedly flow down our faces. It shakes us for a moment and takes us back. These after tears reveal the hidden healing that still needs to take place from the trauma of the storms we have walked through.
I think we need to remember that others around us could be dealing with after tears that we don't know about. So I suggest offering kindness to everyone you encounter because you never what may have been rustled to the surface that day.
Photo Credit: Recap Faith KAYA at Pexels
marvelous, Cath
ReplyDeleteYour post today is both beautiful and true. My sister in law is STILL dealing with the devastation of a fast storm on July 3rd that destroyed all of her roofs (house, garage, barn) and led to a tree removal that destroyed her porch AND her ribs! It's been 6 weeks but with insurance and estimates and more bad weather, it's far from over. Thank you for the reminder to stop and think about others.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful!
ReplyDeleteI love this Cathy
ReplyDelete