I Love the Ocean….
I am not certain as to the why of it, but I do know the truth of it…
I love the ocean.
There is something about being near the ocean, waves crashing against the sandy beaches, sun rising all baby-pink, sherbet orange and stirred purple which makes my heart feel close to God. I love visiting the ocean. I would go so far as to say that an annual trek to the sand and foam is vital to my happiness, but would not want to lay that much responsibility at the feet of seascape and sunlight. What I will say is that being in the presence of His majesty while taking in the vastness, the wonderment and the infinite strength of the ocean is a great joy in my life.
In the past year, Ian and I have visited two oceans and the Gulf of Mexico, an ocean basin. We have seen the sandy beaches of Florida and the white sands of Bora Bora. It is the same…this love of things sandy and sunny.
There is something powerful yet tender about the ocean..where deathly depths of infinite un-knowness mates with the laughter and light of children at play on its surface.
Each time I am blessed with a visit, I learn a new lesson. This trip was no exception…
My teacher this time was my husband. Ian is an Agriculture/Biology student of thirty-three years, plus a few. His life has been one in deep appreciation of things God gave us to remind us of Him. He loves to grow things, track things and hunt things. He loves the swiftness of a deer as it runs through the woods and will stop roadside to look at the beauty of a wildflower. His view of “all things great and small” is one I loved as a young girl and now appreciate as a grown woman.
I like knowing that the piece of the shell we were saving as a keepsake is the “heart” of something…not only is it a heart but it is strong and can leap in single bounds!
So, we began a hunt for all things “Cockle”…..and, we were in luck. We found big cockles and little cockles; we found thick, hard-shelled cockles and thin, delicate cockles.
Each shell half equals one sea life
We found a perfectly white, un-blemished, un-tattered shell which was thick and strong and bore ridges of time indicating a long sea life. A survivor if you will and one with good shell genes. If the ocean has tossed and turned this shell to extreme, you cannot tell it by its shell…white, pristine, it is lovely to behold and is a “keeper”.
But, I also love the other Cockles which made it to our sight and into our net and which tell a story of their own…
The “Etched” Shell…similar to the Keeper, this shell is white and strong and lovely but on its surface, life is etched. It is as if someone took a knife during a vulnerable point in this shell’s life and made a permanent indentation on its shellish body. It healed in its own way, but the scars it bears are an evidence of life battles. It is forever bearing the imprint or “etching” of its vulnerability, its struggle evidenced forever in its etching.
We came upon a “Partial Shell”. It appeared to have been growing normally, strong countenance, ridges fine and color a healthy white, then something in its shell life came along which was so significant as to break it almost in half. Beautiful on the one side and broken on the other. Also interesting to me is that while it appeared to be growing in the direction of strength…it has the delicate-ness of suffering. In my hand, you can feel it’s battle….and, its vulnerability.
While none of the shells we picked are currently living, the worthiness of the story of their life is told in the markings of their shell.
Much like us and our lives and our “shells”….
In fact, as we sat down this morning to review and inspect our collection, we were amazed to find we had more imperfect shells than perfect. I liked one for it’s color but it had a hole in it; Ian liked one for its size but it had a spot missing. One shell looked perfect from it’s front but turn it over and it was broken and holey. Out of fifty shells, most had some imperfection…and yet, they were lovely enough to have made it to our shell collection.
And, we are collected up in time, in the net of His love, how much more will our beauty and struggle and courage and survival mean to the one who sent us all of these many reminders laid out like jewels on the beaches for hearts open to consideration and acceptance?
I like to think that God sent us the beaches and the shells, to the snow capped mountains with the snowflakes, to the forest with it’s trees….to our neighborhoods with it’s peoples as a reminder.
That is a gift innately ours from Him and our ability to see that purpose and value and beauty in others, is a gift we give back…
To Him.
Blessings,
Lesa
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