Please Welcome Today's Geezer/ Marilyn Fowler
The Rainbow
Walk on a rainbow trail; walk
on a trail of song, and all about you will be beauty. There is a way out of
every dark mist, over a rainbow trail. Robert Motherwell
I’m a child. 10 years old on a school trip, mesmerized by a
sight so beautiful my breath escapes me. Thousands of tulips. Michigan tulips.
As far as I can see they stretch across a field before me, and fill my eyes
with brilliant color beneath a soft blue sky above. Their colors form a rainbow
in my mind. Yellow, red, purple, pink, orange, white, all swaying in the warm
breeze while the springtime sun sparkles on their petals. I hold my chest and
sway with them, overcome with awe at a sight I only dreamed of in my
storybooks. For a while, this incredible sight replaces the loneliness I feel
at home. It’s nobody’s fault at home. That’s just the way it is.
This beautiful panorama of color taught me something I’ve
carried with me my whole life. No matter what pain we encounter on our journey,
there is always a rainbow somewhere. There have been times when I looked
around at my life and saw nothing but dregs of what might have been. Boulders
that looked too big to overcome. Doors closed to me forever. Hills too steep to
climb. But my mind held the picture of the tulips, and I picked myself up and
moved on.
When life throws you a curve, and you think you can’t get
up, you may not see a rainbow. But the
rainbow is always there. Maybe it’s just behind the clouds you see in
your life, or between rain stops when they fall, or in birds talking to each
other early in the morning, or in a child’s smile. You may have to get on a bus
and take a field trip in your mind to find it. But it’s there.
When it looked like the sun wasn’t going to shine
anymore, there’s a rainbow in the clouds. Maya Angelou
Life has a way of putting the difficult stuff right in our
face, while the good stuff remains illusive. Maybe that’s what teaches us how
to be more alert and careful where we apply our attention. Rainbows are all
around you. You have to know that. You have to believe that. And open your eyes
and your heart to look past the darkness and find them.
I wish you clear vision along your path.
Marilyn Fowler is a retired Licensed Clinical Social
Worker/Psychotherapist. She was Mental Health Team Leader, then Director of
Mental Health Services in the Duval County Jail in Jacksonville, Florida. She
later coordinated mental health services in five nursing homes, worked on
in-patient units, and was in private practice for a number of years. Her
stories have appeared in the Salvation Army magazine and in a book entitled, When
God Spoke To Me, by DavidPaul Doyle. She stays active in her church and
writing group, and teaches a class at a local college. Her memoir, Silent
Echoes, was published two years ago. Marilyn believes that a sense of humor is
a blessing to be used often.
4 comments:
Oh, Marilyn, thank you so much for this lovely story and tremendous encouragement! I bless you for helping us believe in better days,
Jen
Marilyn,
Lovely thoughts. I always try to find the bright spot in everything as well and there always is one there somewhere.
Sunni
Thank you for your comment, Jeanette. Yes, you have rainbows in your life. Watch for them and hang on.
Blessings to you,
Marilyn
Thank you, Sunni. Seeing the bright spots is a way to a more peaceful heart and so the world.
Blessings to you.
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