Waymarks on a Journey
23 March, 2026
A hungry Sunbird !
Presence of purpose !
A spider Lily blessed the garden with its blossom for longer than a week. Even after ten days, some flowers thrive ! As I followed its biological biography during the last ten days, I was surprised by its fragile presence ! Its slender and hollow stem and long petals radiating from the centre withstood heat, humidity and strong winds!
Its presence was a message of resilience!
When the students of Occupational and Physiotherapy led the evening chapel service yesterday at the Christian Medical College, Vellore, the leader said: 'We are a small group of twenty students selected every year to study at CMC. We have a sense of belonging to the community even though we are a small group' !
I heard words of identity and purposefulness in those words. They did not feel subsumed by the large groups of students in different streams of learning. They felt a space for themselves!
To know the purpose of being is an awareness that shall sustain all of us while enduring circumstances! That is resilience!
The spider Lily lived its mission fully before beginning to fade away!
When a group of people came to visit us to campaign for the forthcoming state assembly election, three of them stayed a longer time petting Dulcie. She responded to them warmly! That was a delightful sight to watch as they made efforts to connect with us! They conveyed a sense of presence, which is a fruit of resilient spirit!
M.C.Mathew( text and photo)
A family of Sunbirds !
22 March, 2026
The sunshine of parenting !
21 March, 2026
Meeting two inspiring Men !
During a visit to an eco-tourism project and a bird sanctuary a few days ago with our friends, Anna and I met two people who live pursuing their passion! They walked the less travelled path to bring something useful for others to experience.
The first person was Mr Rajappn, who developed a farm near the Kodanad elephant training centre, to give an experience to the visitors about the way of living close to nature from the produce of the land. It is a farm where agriculture, fishery, poultry, and floriculture co-exist. It has a museum of farm implements that takes us back to the farming practices which existed about seventy five years ago. The children's park created in the natural setting of trees and plants is a pleasant place to be in. A steam meandering in the five acre property feeds the plants and trees. A home stay facility with a swimming pool is an attraction to tourists. Mr. Rajappan developed this facility in memory of his parents who owned the land at the edge of a reserved forest. For him, trained in agricultural science, it is an opportunity to show forth the heritage we have in nature. He views his garden as a place to experience living peacefully and mindfully. He had a beaming look, when he showed us the corner where there is a butterfly farm and a stretch of flowers that feed nectar to honey bees.
20 March, 2026
Flowers, Fruits, and Friends.
Peace is the natural way!
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I found this unusual sight in the jackfruit tree in our garden. Some fruits are resting on the ground. Most of the Frits are hanging in the stems supported by its strong stalk as seen hit photo below !
It is not common for a jackfruit tree to bear fruits at its bottom part of the stem making the fruits rest on the ground!
It is a surprise sight to watch in our garden!
While discussing it with our gardener, he suggested that it is on account of the top portion of the main stem which was pruned last year to arrest its leaning upward growth. Having been denied upward growth, it is adjusting to a different way to bear fruits!
This is a 'responsive behaviour' of a tree to give more fruits although pruned, denying its upward growth! When hurt, a tree responds by giving more!
The history of war in Gaza originates with a 'retaliative behaviour' of Israel to terrorists killing Jews about twenty months ago. Israel dragged the USA to support its retaliative attacks, which spread to Lebanon and Iran. Now it has become a 'third world war', although some nations would like to avoid seeing it as a world war.
Violence begets violence, which I thought is a 'barbaric' habit! I recall how the post second world scene was a season of negotiation, pursuing peace and promoting cross continental engagements for climate control, health promotion and economic collaboration!
The recent behaviour of some nations is an anticlimax to this norm that allowed multilateral co-operation between nations with a few exceptions!
Now retaliatory behaviour is the norm!
The Truth and Reconciliation commission of South Africa which its president late Nelson Mandela appointed with Archbishop Desmond Tutu as its chairman was an eye opener in resolving racial intolerance of several decades. The polarised position of two communities got resolved by a peaceful process of listening, discerning and forgiving ! In fact it, it was a historic way of bringing national integration and reconciliation.
I wish the leaders of the USA and Israel would draw their lessons from this reconciliatory process and withdraw from using violence to pay back violence! That does not align with a humane view of difficult situations!
The jackfruit tree produced more fruits when it was pruned or 'hurt'! It expresses its 'giving' habit even by giving its fruits from the lowest part of the stem!
Let me wish that the nations of the world would awaken to believe that it is in giving, we upbuild and uphold each other!
I wish that the leaders of nations would consider that violence and war are evil responses, but negotiations and consultations are civilised behaviours!
That is the message that I pick up from a pruned Jack fruit tree in our garden which has more fruits in this year !
M.C.Mathew (text and photo)