So Many Gifts

“Across the wisdom traditions – from Jung to Erikson, from ancient Hindu sages to modern developmental theorists like Rohr, Plotkin, and Fowler – there emerges a shared understanding of life’s autumn-time that speaks in many tongues but carries a single breath…

These cartographers of the soul’s journey, though separated by centuries and cultures, all gesture toward a mysterious transformation in the later seasons of life. It arrives not like a sudden storm but like the gradual turning of leaves – this elder-wisdom that ancient peoples knew and modern frameworks rediscover.

The common ground these frameworks share is holy ground. They speak of a time when doing softens into being, when achievement yields to presence, when the gathering of things gives way to the gathering of meaning. This is the territory where personal ambition composts into collective wisdom, where the urgent whispers of ego quiet themselves before the deeper songs of soul.

These many maps of human becoming tell us that there comes a time when our task shifts from building to blessing, from acquiring to dispensing, from seeking to seeing. It’s a time when the soul’s gaze begins to extend beyond the horizon of a single lifetime – backward into ancestral waters, forward into futures yet unborn.

Perhaps what all these frameworks are really describing is not an achievement but an invitation – to let our lives be claimed by something larger than our plans, something older than our fears, something truer than our certainties. For in the end, these various mappings of life’s latter seasons all point to a similar truth: that there comes a time when our task is no longer to add to ourselves but to become empty enough to receive and transmit what the world needs next – like hollow bones through which the wind of spirit plays its necessary music….”

David Tensen

Tomorrow, I cross the threshold into my 8th decade. For that is what turning 70 means. Staggering, and I’ve been preparing for months in unobvious ways that remind me, “Yes, sweetheart, you are about to turn 70.” The end of a cycle in a yogic way of thinking.

And despite the mental preparation, I’ve had some ambivalence about how I acknowledge this milestone. A few months ago, I thought I’d host a tea party with girlfriends at a lovely local coffee and pastry shop. But after weighing several factors, I had to abandon the idea. Instead I’ll keep it simple. Brunch next weekend with my long-time yoga friends at their home in the country where our conversation always nourishes. Tomorrow, Sig and I will go for a late lunch at our favourite “happy hour” cafe where great wine is $1 an ounce and the burger and fries are terrific. Later, I’ll go to a poetry workshop. The following night, we’ll dine with two Camino couples at another favourite restaurant, its cuisine evoking our past and their upcoming Portuguese Coastal walks. A video call with my east coast and west coast friends, and who knows what further unfoldings in the weeks and months to come.

For me, this birthday emphasizes what’s embedded in the above lengthy quote: “the empyting to receive and transmit what the world needs next.” And that I’m supported in doing so by trusting in my intuition to keep it simple and attend to the fallow feelings of late, and applying Harrison Owen’s elegant principles for hosting Open Space, aka “living one’s life”:

Whoever comes is the right one.
Whatever happens is the only thing that can happen.
When it starts, it starts.
When it’s over, it’s over.

There’s another “birthday” quote I especially love. Attributed to Hafiz, rendered by Daniel Ladinsky, it always brings me joy and is one I regularly “gift” to friends:

“There are so many gifts
still unopened from your birthday,
there are so many hand-crafted presents
that have been sent to you by God…

O, there are so many hand-crafted
presents that have been sent to your life
from God.” 

a decade ago…a birthday dinner hosted by our friends

Oh, so many gifts…thank you.
Much love and kindest regards, dear friends.

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Author: Katharine Weinmann

writes award-winning poetry, walks long distances, sees beauty in life’s imperfections and photographs its shimmer

16 thoughts on “So Many Gifts”

  1. Welcome to the 70s dear Katharine! Hope you got our snail mail card honoring this passage. It’s a good decade—more aches and pains, but more wisdom about all manner of things. America is beginning to move in the right direction! Incredible energy from the weekend’s protests. These photos are another kind of birthday present for you from your friends on Skewes Land in Freeland! Blessings, Ann 
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  2. Happy birthday tomorrow, Katharine.

    Savour it all.

    Sharon McMullan-Baron

    I am YOGA INSPIRED

    Hatha and Restorative Yoga Instructor since 2009

    Note: This message was not “written” by a bot or AI or other plagiarism software but a living breathing human being.

    Namaste.

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  3. Happy Birthday Dear Katharine

    Thankyou for the beauty and blessing you bring to my life.

    Wishing you a full cup of celebrating you. I agree turning 70 does mark a threshold.

    Love

    Laurel

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      1. Whoops…my comment seems to have been cut off. Just wanted to recommend May Sarton’s journal, At Seventy, if you’re not already aware of it. I received a copy on my 70th last year and savored it. I’ve enjoyed and appreciated and been inspired and uplifted by your posts these last few years. Birthday blessings and much gratitude for the gift of how you are being in this world🎂💐💗 Sarton would say you are not old at all, still on your way!

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  4. Hello Katharine, First of all, happy belated birthday to you. I love celebrating my birthday month just so I can enjoy what arrives with friends, family and self.

    My inbox is slowly being tended, read and relished albeit without the old urgency of those thousands of work emails. I so enjoy the curated blogs, thought leaders and wisdom sharers that now arrive but my goodness, it does require my presence and time to fully enjoy. Thank YOU for showing up in my inbox and sharing your wisdom in your blog; I often write the gems of poetry and perspective to my favorite book of quotes.

    I wanted to quickly reach out and share that the poem you read at the poetry event a few weeks ago is still resonating with me for a multitude of reasons on a multitude of levels. Would you be willing to send it to me? I thoroughly enjoyed the vast array of poetry and the authors who opened up their worlds to the audience. Absolutely delightful and powerful.

    Lovely to see you in person, lovely to hear you. Celebrate your birthday month, year, decade well and heartily.

    Best, Joanne

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