Sometimes, even when sunny skies beckon, we still have to stay indoors. Sometimes it’s because there’s house or office work to be done. Other times, it’s because we’re sick. Such is the case with me this week with a diagnosis of pneumonia.
From behind glass, there’s still much to see of nature outside. Trees continue to change colour and some of the vines on the house have turned red and pink. They adorn the edges of the living room window. There’s no time like the present to appreciate them as the wind will soon blow them all away. In the summer months, they make drapes in the window unnecessary and bring nature’s colours up close.
Vines can also be seen from one of the second storey windows. Although their colours are still bright through the screen, they’re even prettier seen from the outdoors, as in the photo taken on the weekend.
Silhouettes of leaves can be seen trembling in the wind through the glass of the front door’s window as well. By the time witches and goblins show up at the door in a couple of weeks, they’ll be all gone.
I’ve been so accustomed to stepping outdoors several times a day. There is something about fresh air and sunshine that makes us feel better just by being outdoors.
So why do we tend to stay in when we’re sick? I wonder if perhaps we would recover more quickly outdoors. The challenge would be to not engage in too much tiring activity.
From the kitchen window I can see a large snowshoe hare that’s decided to come close. Its ears are perked and it’s sitting just below the window, posed perfectly still for a photograph. Sometimes, when you can’t go out into nature, nature knows, and comes to you.
Get well soon!
The picture with silhouettes of leaves through the window is great!
Awww, Amy….I’m sorry you’re sick. Please take care and REST! I had ‘walking pneumonia’ once and it seemed to say all the energy I had. Me thinks perhaps your body is telling you to slow down a bit….get well soon, sweetie!
Yikes, pneumonia is harsh. Takes away all your energy and that is what you have to conserve to get well.At least you have lovely things to look at outside your windows. I hope you have a good book and some yummy soup to sip. Get well soon!
I love the thought of drop-in visitors from the Woods and the Marsh! I used to have a cardinal neighbor who would come tap on the window if there were no sunflower seeds for him. They do pay as much attention to us as we do to them. More, maybe. Restful healing, Amy.
How sweet of the hare to bring you get-well wishes! I love, too, the shot of the leaves through the leaded glass–very subtle, very Zen. Might this chance to rest be a gift?
Great thoughts about nature and being outdoors when we are sick. Hope you are feeling better soon.
Get well. Take care of you. What a magical place that Flandrum Hill must be … or is that magic everywhere but we fail to see it. Sending a virtual HUG your way. Sybil
Amy — your link to the glass building made be think of an amazing building up on Stoney Lake (near Peterborough, ON)
Boldly positioned on a dramatic rocky peninsula, this residence originally built for the Wandich family is a minimalist composition of glass boxes on a 172 foot cantilevered bridge. Begun in 1977 and completed three years later, it has been widely acclaimed as “a strong, elegant solution to the problem of a manmade object in a natural landscape”.
You can find a couple of meagre images half way down this page:
http://images.google.ca/imgres?imgurl=http://www.peterboroughheritage.ca/images/venue/glash_house1.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www.peterboroughheritage.ca/About_Peterborough/index.php&usg=__NpwTGjn72TPlrmCIFGUMdTJ7xzQ=&h=148&w=163&sz=25&hl=en&start=55&um=1&tbnid=QDpQCDuUUm14yM:&tbnh=89&tbnw=98&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dglass%2Bhouse%2Bstoney%2Blake%26ndsp%3D18%26hl%3Den%26sa%3DN%26start%3D54%26um%3D1
Thanks for the link Sybil, I’ll check it out. The link to the glass building below my post is one that is automatically generated by WordPress. Sometimes their links make sense, sometimes they don’t.
So it’s time for the green leafy curtains to turn red, eh? So sweet of the hare to come by and say, “Hello” when you couldn’t come out to play! I think we stay inside when we are sick because we are supposed to stay warm and r-e-s-t. Both might be difficult to accomplish outside at this time of year. 🙂 I love the picture of the leaves through the leaded window.
Sorry to hear that you have pneumonia, Amy. Take good care of yourself, and get well soon!
Thank you for the get well wishes everyone 🙂 Being ‘sick’ can be a gift if the time is used to its best advantage to recuperate and re-focus one’s energies on the essential. I hope to continue doing just that.
Oh poor Amy! You’ve over-done it with all your activity, maybe? Or maybe your soul just wanted to be outside and free again…well, no, that obviously wouldn’t be the answer because why would you be stuck inside now? Sending you waves of healing energy and deep recuperation thoughts and prayers. Love the pics through the windows and that lovely hare. Take care…
Thank you for your waves Kathy 🙂 They must have helped because I am feeling much better.