On Rabindranath
Tagore’s birthday, an ardent nature lover, sharing my thoughts on nature……
NOURISHING
NATURE
I was always enchanted with nature as
a kid thanks to growing up in a house with a garden full of flowers and fruits
and of course the annual summer trip to the hills. My love for nature was nurtured, seeing my dad
grow mangoes, grapes, guavas, figs, rows
of fragrant roses, geraniums, plumerias and my favorite night blooming jasmine,
so much that I preferred tending to my garden in the evenings than going out
with my friends. My friends had to visit me in my nature’s haven to have any
conversations with me. Tending to the garden relaxed and energized me and I
went back to my studies refreshed. During exams I used to wake up early to
water my garden to rejuvenate myself. Seeing the garden bloom especially with
the winter annuals was an exhilarating experience. The result was that there
was no sign of teenaged tantrums. “Working in the garden gives me something
beyond the enjoyment of the senses. It gives me a profound feeling of inner
peace.” rightly says Ruth Stout, an American author known for her books on gardening.
When I am amongst nature, I feel in a
different world which is beautifully expressed by Rabindranath Tagore and it
seems as if he is expressing my own feelings. He says, “The sort of feelings
that arise in my mind when I am in the midst of nature seemed to be beyond my
own powers, my own character. All my feelings have that ingredient of something
that is more than me.”
Being in the nature especially in the time of
lockdown and social distancing has a therapeutic effect. We are enjoying our
share of nature and nourishing it with love and care. It is the perfect time to
be in the nature and enjoy its abundance and bountiful joy. This atmosphere
drowns away all the worries and renews the spirit. Close your eyes and hear the
sweet song of the red whiskered bulbul interspersed with the constant tittering
of dove and long calls of the cuckoo and see your problems wither away and
frayed nerves are soothed.
In Amritsar, the mornings are refreshed from
the cool air from the north. New leaves are dancing to the chorus of the wind
and the bird songs. The breathtaking sweet fragrance of malti, manokamini,
champa and chameli along with the fragrance of mango flowers is cooling, to say
the least. Stillness in the morning with only the bird songs for company is
meditative. The first rays of the sun wake up the Portulica flowers with a
sweet lullaby and it wakes up like a smiling child.
Ruskin Bond rightly says in The Book of
Nature, ‘I wouldn’t go so far to say that a garden is the answer to all
problems, but it’s amazing how a little digging and friendly dialogue with the
good earth can help reactivate us when we grow sluggish.’ He got lot of
inspiration from nature and further says that, ‘Not all gardeners are writers,
but you don’t have to be a writer to benefit from the goodness of your garden.’
Anyone can enjoy and benefit from nature. Being in nature is not exhausting but
is gratifying. It fills our hearts with love so fulfilling. Nature has
voluminous archive that reveals itself to only those who preserve. Nature does
not promise anything or gives rewards as nature is reward itself. It is there
to be appreciated, lived and loved. In a way it gives us everything from air,
water and food………..things we take for granted.
“There is always music amongst the
trees in the garden but our heart must be very quiet to hear it.” wrote Minnie
Aumbnier, 19 century poet.
Being
in the nature and tending to it is both my meditation and medicine.
Loved your article, Sonia. Reminded me of the lovely blooms in your garden. Nature has a power to rejuvenate and rightly said gardening is the best form of meditation.
ReplyDeleteThank you so much
ReplyDelete