Choice

20190101_170847As I mentioned before, we here in the EPHFL have experienced an unusually long period of rain and fog — dense fog and heavy, soaking rain. Started around mid-December 2018, and lasted until last Friday (January 4, 2019) when Mr. Sun finally came back — along with the dry, cool air. You don’t know how good that felt.

You have to understand that the EPHFL just doesn’t have long periods of inclement weather. We just don’t. It doesn’t happen.

Just before the weather broke, I had a short window of no rain. This is important because I had a yard of pecan leaves to rake. Those leaves had been sitting in my front yard lying there, taunting me, since the day after Thanksgiving.

Finally, on New Year’s Day, I had a small window of opportunity.

I rake the leaves. I know there must be some vacuum device out there that would allow me to suck all of the pecan leaves off of my lawn and into a big bag — but I don’t have such a device. I have me. Two rakes. And a lawn cart.

20190101_130216

So, on January 1st, I raked up what 2018 left behind. I called it “The Leaving of 2018.”

Unlike the past, the future is there waiting to be made. You can change your future, rearrange it — you are not tied to your past. Rake it up and be done with it.

The older I get, the more I realize just how much we (as individuals) are in charge of our future. It’s all about the choices we make. And not just the choice or choices, but the quality of that choice or those choices. Beyond that, you can also change what particular choices are brought before you. How? By voicing it. By thinking it. By putting that desire “out there.”

Make the choice to be future-focused, positive, and “leaf” (sorry) the past behind…

GEaston-icon-40

Fog

We here in the EPHFL have been experiencing an extended period of rain, fog, rain, and more fog. The fog has been usually thick. At times the homes across the street from our Family Compound appeared to be half-finished sketches. After dark (which is very early this time of year) they disappear completely.

In the EPHFL we are connected by bridges. Most cross miles of open water. Fog adds a layer of mystery to the trek — what lies ahead? Is traffic at a dead stop? Is someone approaching head on? Is the rest of the bridge still there?

here-be-dragons

Tonight, or so the weather gurus say, we will have another inch of rain, heavy at times, with wind and some thunder — but nothing serious. Then, in the morning, Friday morning, the sky will clear, the temperature and humidity will drop, and Mr. Sun will be back. No rain predicted for nearly a week. About time…

Any longer and I was going to ask Florida to refund all of December.

GEaston-icon-40