I am
thinking about the woolly worm because I have seen so many lately. My husband, Paul, and I like to ride
bikes. We have a certain route we take
when our time is limited and on that route I notice things as I ride. I notice crickets and grasshoppers, drying
corn in the fields, the color of the leaves on the trees on the mountainside,
the traffic (or lack thereof) on the route, the eggplant field and so much
more. But what has amazed me of late are
the woolly worms that have crossed my
path on that route.
Now,
as a kid, when encountering a woolly worm, I would hold it and pet the spiky
"fur" (or whatever it is called) and especially take notice of the
color of the worm. I have been told that
a total black woolly worm means a cold harsh winter with lots of snow. Brown woolly worms forecast a warmer, mild
winter. Woolly worms that are brown and
black forecast an early cold or a mid-season warm and then a cool down again --
or the opposite depending upon where the black and brown are on the worm.
I
must say, that the worms I have seen on the last few bike rides have blown my
childhood weather forecasting basis right out of the water! I have seen on the same ride one black woolly
worm, one brown woolly worm and at least one brown/black combo woolly
worm. HOW CAN THAT BE????
As I
was riding along today thinking about this, I decided that there was
a message for me in the woolly worms I had seen. That message was that no one can forecast the
future. We might have indicators from
nature about the weather (red sky at night sailor's delight/ red sky in the
morning, sailor's warning), feel a cold coming on, but when you look into the future -- each day brings
what it will bring and no one really knows what is coming next.
What
does that mean to me? Live today in the
moment. Enjoy each moment. Don't look for forecasts for this or that in
life -- signs or woolly worms to tell me what is coming; but get up, look at the sky and enjoy the
sun/rain/clouds/fog/snow -- or whatever it might bring. Get up in the morning and hug my husband and
kids, tell them I love them -- and look forward to the adventure each day
brings - come what may.
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