Passions & Pastimes April Eileen Passions & Pastimes April Eileen

Quotes from the Classics: December

Happy Holidays to you and welcome, Winter! ‘Tis the season of cozy so raise a cup of hot cocoa to sweaters, crackling fires, warm blankets, and snuggles with the ones you Love most. Whatever your traditions and celebrations, I hope your season is full of Love and Light and all that is truly important. Check out the quotes below for inspiration as you navigate seasonal endings and the inevitable beginnings they bring.

Happy Holidays to you and welcome, Winter! ‘Tis the season of cozy so raise a cup of hot cocoa to sweaters, crackling fires, warm blankets, and snuggles with the ones you Love most. Whatever your traditions and celebrations, I hope your season is full of Love and Light and all that is truly important. Check out the quotes below for inspiration as you navigate seasonal endings and the inevitable beginnings they bring.

Winter mug, marshmallows, and twinkle lights by Ylanite Koppens

 
Reflect upon your present blessings—of which every man has many—not on your past misfortunes, of which all men have some.
— Charles Dickens, A Christmas Carol
 

 
The rooms were very still while the pages were softly turned and the winter sunshine crept in to touch the bright heads and serious faces with a Christmas greeting.
— Louisa May Alcott, Little Women
 

 
I could leave the world with today in my eyes.
— Truman Capote, A Christmas Memory
 

 
Maybe Christmas,’ he thought, ‘doesn’t come from a store. Maybe Christmas... perhaps... means a little bit more.
— Dr. Seuss, How the Grinch Stole Christmas!
 

 
Kindness is like snow; it beautifies everything it covers.
— Kahlil Gibran
 

 
To appreciate the beauty of a snowflake it is necessary to stand out in the cold.
— Aristotle
 

 
You can tell a lot about a person by the way they handle three things: a rainy day, lost luggage and tangled Christmas tree lights.
— Maya Angelou
 

 
Wisdom comes with winters.
— Oscar Wilde
 

 
In the midst of winter, I found there was, within me, an invincible summer. And that makes me happy. For it says that no matter how hard the world pushes against me, within me, there’s something stronger — something better, pushing right back.
— Albert Camus, The Stranger
 

Love in all things,

April Eileen

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Quotes from the Classics: November

November does not readily lend itself to lines of poetry. Gone are the blue skies and brisk mornings of September and October. There is little hope of one of those unseasonably warm days that surprise and delight everyone. It is not quite…not quite the time of twinkling snow or hot chocolate or fires in the fireplace, not quite the season of holiday cheer (after all, by the time families gather around a turkey and Christmas music is played in earnest, November is all but over), and not quite the coming of new year resolutions. It is even too early to wait for it to be beautiful again. The Light has passed, the skies are grey, and we find ourselves in a strange liminal space of the desolate, the dark, the cold drizzles, the dreariness, with which we must sit. And what is there to say about that? It’s ugly, or so it seems, and most of us have just resigned ourselves to simply wishing it were something else.

November does not readily lend itself to lines of poetry. Gone are the blue skies and brisk mornings of September and October. There is little hope of one of those unseasonably warm days that surprise and delight everyone. It is not quite…not quite the time of twinkling snow or hot chocolate or fires in the fireplace, not quite the season of holiday cheer (after all, by the time families gather around a turkey and Christmas music is played in earnest, November is all but over), and not quite the coming of new year resolutions. It is even too early to wait for it to be beautiful again. The Light has passed, the skies are grey, and we find ourselves in a strange liminal space - of the desolate, the dark, the cold drizzles, the dreariness - with which we must sit. And what is there to say about that? It’s ugly, or so it seems, and most of us have just resigned ourselves to simply wishing it were something else.

Bare trees and Light by Johannes Plenio

So what Love is there to be found in November? I wanted to push myself, as I wrote this post, to feel into this time of year and see what it had to teach me. What happens when I accept that which I do not like? Certainly, I could distract myself with preparing for Black Friday sales, but what happens when I surrender? What happens when I give the worries to the wind, and accept the invitation to rest? What happens when I let go of what I can’t control and trust that what I need, what is mine, will come back to me, a truth the naked trees already seem to possess? Am I so graceful as they?

Definitively no, but I am learning. I am learning that when I accept, space is created where there was only resistance. And when there is space, all kinds of magic can happen. I can see with new eyes, find the Light, and be so very grateful for it precisely because it was hard to find. Inspired now, I can be joyful, I can create, I can be the Light. We surrender because we must, because we will lose ourselves if we don’t. We let go and breathe, dream, slow, pray. And then we offer gratitude for the gift of life, knowing we’ve witnessed magic and more, that we are the magicians. Happy Thanksgiving, everyone. Enjoy these quotes that capture the spirit of November.

A brief but important note: For many years, I’ve been conflicted about our American Thanksgiving tradition. I think it is a beautiful time to elevate gratitude and to spend time with my dear family. AND, I’m not oblivious as to its origins. I have faced this conflict with other traditions and my personal approach is to be honest about it, to work to make beauty of it, and to make it meaningful to me, and in that way, to reclaim it. My daughters and I, with humility and great respect, venture to learn about Native American culture, especially during November. This year, I’m sharing passages from Braiding Sweetgrass - not only a Love letter to the Earth but also a gorgeous glimpse into Native American culture, and possibly my favorite book. I do not claim to know all or even some, and I offer this, not to preach, but maybe to help us both remember all we share. Do with it what you will.

 
The leaves believe such letting go is love, such love is faith, such faith is grace, such grace is God. I agree with the leaves.
— Lucille Clifton, The Lesson of the Falling Leaves
 

 
A wind has blown the rain away and blown the sky away and all the leaves away, and the trees stand. I think I, too, have known autumn too long.
— EE Cummings
 

 
No fruits, no flowers, no leaves, no birds, November!
— Thomas Hood
 

 
The thinnest yellow light of November is more warming and exhilarating than any wine they tell of. The mite which November contributes becomes equal in value to the bounty of July.
— Henry David Thoreau
 

 
But there is always a November space after the leaves have fallen when she felt it was almost indecent to intrude on the woods...for their glory terrestrial had departed and their glory celestial of spirit and purity and whiteness had not yet come upon them.
— L.M. Montgomery
 

 
There is a calmness to a life lived in gratitude, a quiet joy.
— Ralph H. Blum
 

 
In November, the earth is growing quiet. It is making its bed, a winter bed for flowers and small creatures.
— Cynthia Rylant
 

 
In November, the smell of food is different. It is an orange smell. A squash and pumpkin smell. It tastes like cinnamon and can fill up a house in the morning, can pull everyone from bed in a fog.
— Cynthia Rylant
 

 
 
Peering from some high window, at the gold of November sunset and feeling that if day has to become night, this is a beautiful way.
— E. E. Cummings
 

 
Autumn is the season to find contentment at home by paying attention to what we already have.
— Unknown
 

 
There comes a time when people get tired of being pushed out of the glittering sunlight of life’s July and left standing amid the piercing chill of an alpine November.
— Martin Luther King, Jr.
 

Love in all things,

April Eileen

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Quotes from the Classics: October

Ohio is an autumn postcard, a veritable cliché of colored leaves, pumpkin patches, and cinnamon donuts with warm apple cider. There is a chill in the air that makes a hoodie extra special, whether it be worn on a hayride, through a corn maze, or shielding against intermittent snow flurries, depending on the year. Welcome, October!

Ohio is an autumn postcard, a veritable cliché of colored leaves, pumpkin patches, and cinnamon donuts with warm apple cider. There is a chill in the air that makes a hoodie extra special, whether it be worn on a hayride, through a corn maze, or shielding against intermittent snow flurries, depending on the year. Welcome, October!

If you tune in right now, the Earth is unearthing herself. The cooling air has less moisture, less vapor, and fewer clouds, the sun casting its final few warm rays from a seat of brilliant blue. Animals scurry about in pursuit of basic food and shelter, the essential becoming apparent. The leaves remove their cloaks of green and the trees now don their favorite colors. There is enough light, seeming to shine on rather than through things, to reveal all as it is for just a moment before everything pares back to pure essence. The veil is thin, as those now honoring ancestors and remembering they are part of a story much larger than themselves, would share. Everything is honest. Everything is gorgeous. And there is perspective to be had.

Fall trees by Pixabay


Who are we? Who are we really? What is true? So true that it puts what is not in relief? And what is not ours, not us? Sense yourself and hold on devotedly, cut what’s misaligned, and let it fall away in the cool autumn breeze. I believe the season will support it. Now is the time to see we are not our flaws or our failures or the 1,001 iterations of fear we harbor (the psychologically systemic kind, not the running from lions kind). Rather, we are the beautiful humans having them, able to move toward the Light because of them, ever becoming more of who we are meant to be. And isn’t that really the goal? We are colors of Love, the hurts healed by our brilliance, the pain soothed by our beauty, the world painted with more peace. The trees have already revealed their favorite colors? What’s yours?


Check out these quotes from the classics that speak to all things October. Enjoy!

 
Every leaf speaks bliss to me
Fluttering from the autumn tree.
— Emily Bronte, Fall, leaves, fall
 

 
It’s the first day of autumn! A time of hot chocolatey mornings, and toasty marshmallow evenings, and, best of all, leaping into leaves!
— Winnie the Pooh, Pooh's Grand Adventure
 

 
The day becomes more solemn and serene
When noon is past; there is a harmony
In autumn, and a lustre in its sky,
Which through the summer is not heard or seen,
As if it could not be, as if it had not been!
— Percy Shelley, Hymn to Intellectual Beauty
 

 
Is not this a true autumn day? Just the still melancholy that I love - that makes life and nature harmonise... Delicious autumn! My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the Earth seeking the successive autumns.
— George Eliot, Letter to Miss Lewis, October 1, 1841
 

 
Only lovers
see the fall
a signal end to endings
a gruffish gesture alerting
those who will not be alarmed
that we begin to stop
in order to begin
again.
— Maya Angelou, Late October
 

 
There is no season when such pleasant and sunny spots may be lighted on, and produce so pleasant an effect on the feelings, as now in October
— Nathaniel Hawthorne, The American Notebooks: The Centenary Edition
 

 
I just want to live in a world of mountains, coffee, campfires, cabins and golden trees, and run around with a camera and notebook, learning the inner workings go everything real.
— Victoria Erickson, Rhythm and Roads
 

Love in all things,

April Eileen

P.S. Alright, I just really dig Victoria Erickson and her absolutely beautiful writing. Can we say modern classic?

 
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