Tuesday, May 19, 2020

A Field Trip to Frontenac State Park: Tuesday's Reflection

How good it felt to follow a different path.

For most days during the previous two months I drove the same route, a lightly trafficked roadway along Minnehaha Creek, taking me from our home to Dad's apartment. Granted, it was a lovely drive, leading from the end of winter bareness to spring's frilly green, fuchsia, and purple. Some days I detoured down a different side street imagining living in this house or that one, but mainly I was eager to arrive at my destination. 

I no longer make that drive. At least not daily.

It was time for a new view.

A week after my Father died, my husband and I decided we needed a field trip. We packed a picnic lunch and grabbed our masks, our books and some cushions and drove along the Mississippi River to Frontenac State Park. Along the way, we saw eagles in a nest and also soaring above, lifting our spirits. We spotted the white dots of trillium in a wooded area and of course, green, green, green everywhere. Green textured like lace, and green becoming more sure of itself. Flowering trees were showing off as well, just as they have always done in their toddler time, the beginnings of this new season. 

Following posted detour signs we oohed at an old four square brick farmhouse, wondering who had once lived there and who lives there now. The road took us through a valley previously unknown to us, giving us glimpses of everyday life--wash hanging to dry, calves and lambs nestling by their mothers, children playing catch, and everywhere green greening. 

We were hungry by the time we arrived and easily found a picnic table where we could eat and read at a safe distance from other visitors and where we could see the water. The park overlooks Lake Pepin, which is a natural widening of the Mississippi and across the lake is Wisconsin. On top of the bluff there is a natural limestone arch called In-Yan-Teopa, a Dakota name meaning "Rock With Opening."




That's what we were looking for--an opening into the hard places. An opening through our sadness. An opening through the forced isolation caused by the pandemic. An opening into a new way of living, truly living and not just going through the motions. An opening into this next stage of life. 

The sun warmed us. The birds serenaded us. The ground supported us. The trees reminded us of our own creative natures. The water view broadened our limited perspectives. 

And God was everywhere. A rock with opening.

An Invitation
Where do you go now (safely, of course) when you need a lift? An opening? I would love to know. 



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