spring

When one season gently gives way to the next and the shift becomes more palpable than ever, we joyfully realize that Easter is approaching. This year, as all of Christianity unites in celebrating on the same date, we collectively prepare for one of the most beautiful and uplifting holidays — a time to reflect on the profound symbols of spring: renewal, hope, and peace.


Deeply rooted traditions and rituals mark this season, each carrying its own significance in celebrating rejuvenation, connection, and the promise of life after the dormancy of winter. But we can all agree that among them, the Easter eggs stand out as one of the most cherished. Dating back to pagan times, cultures worldwide have embraced and adapted the practice of decorating eggs — the source of life. 

We have all experimented with various ways of colouring them, but one method that has elevated the tradition to an art form is undoubtedly the Ukrainian pysanky.


Last week, I had the pleasure of witnessing this intricate art firsthand, thanks to a dear friend who introduced me to a remarkable Ukrainian-Canadian artist and writer. Stepping into Maria’s world was nothing short of inspiring. Her warm welcome, her passion for the craft and openness in sharing the meaning behind each carefully drawn line and colour choice made the experience truly special. With my camera in hand, I had the opportunity to capture her home studio, her exquisite egg collection, and the beauty of her work — preserving not only stunning visuals but also the essence of a tradition that speaks of resilience, hope, and the enduring power of culture.


Maria Zdaniw was born in Poland, just 10 kilometres from the Baltic Sea. After World War II, both her father’s and mother’s families were forcibly resettled from the post-war border regions of Ukraine to Poland’s recovered territories during Operation Vistula. Her parents were deeply involved in the Ukrainian community in their town, organizing concerts and the New Year celebration known as Malanka. At home, they spoke Ukrainian, but they were not allowed to use it outside. Determined to preserve her mother tongue, Maria taught herself how to read and write in Ukrainian language.  


“When I was a child,” she shared, “we weren’t allowed to celebrate our holidays. It was only later that I remember us gathering together. One vivid memory comes to mind—celebrating Christmas at my uncle’s house. The entire family would travel to the neighbouring village in the evening. All the windows were covered with blankets because everything had to be done in secret.”



Maria arrived in Canada in 1979, embracing a new beginning. She got married, built a family, and raised two children. One Easter, her son’s godfather gifted her a pysanka. Its interesting patterns and vibrant colours stirred something deep within her. Suddenly, memories of her mother crafting pysanky in the Lemko style for Easter flooded back, filling her heart with nostalgia and warmth. Maria felt an unbreakable connection to her roots and fell in love with the art of pysanky.


She began collecting them, and now possesses some truly magnificent designs that inspire her. When her children started attending Saturday school at St. Volodymyr Church, Maria learned how to create Pysanky herself. She has been writing them ever since. 



The name for Ukrainian Easter eggs comes from the Ukrainian verb pysaty, meaning “to write.” This reflects the fact that the designs are not painted but written onto the raw eggs. The artist, known as the “writer,” uses a wax-resist (batik) method, applying melted beeswax with a special tool, kistka. By layering different colours of dye, complex multicoloured patterns emerge. Once the design is complete, the wax is removed, revealing the colours preserved at each stage. The egg is then sealed with protective coats. Though it may seem simple, the process requires patience, precision, and skill.




Maria generously explained each step of her work, demonstrating the wax application and showcasing the variety of eggs she uses — from white and brown chicken eggs to green-tinted ones, ostrich eggs, turkey, goose and even rhea eggs. Her studio is filled with boxes and baskets of delicate empty eggs, shelves overflowing with dyes and books for pattern inspiration, and meticulously arranged pysanky, displayed as if in a museum.



I couldn’t take my eyes off the birds, flowers, leaves, trees, triangles, poppies, fruits, and serpentines — the quiet magic of the world that Maria wrote with her hands on her pysanky. And I couldn’t help but think how significant they are today, as the war in Ukraine, waged by Russia's unprovoked and brutal invasion continues into its third year this Easter season.


Maria is saddened and hopeful all at once — despite the pain, her faith remains unshaken. She found that, during the war, creating beauty in the face of utmost atrocity added another layer of meaning to her work. The symbolism of pysanky extends well beyond the celebration of Easter. These eggs are more than just decorated objects; they are a deeply symbolic and powerful form of folk art. They tell stories of resilience and national identity, standing in defiance of Russia’s long history of attempting to suppress Ukrainian cultural heritage.  


They are unity. 


They are prayer.


They are hope.


They are faith in victory.



At the end of our visit, Maria sent us off with our treasured Pysanky and a story passed down through generations — a tale of a monster, the embodiment of evil, held in chains deep within the Carpathian Mountains to prevent it from unleashing destruction upon the world. Ukrainians hold a heartfelt belief that the more Pysanky people create around the world, each adorned with ancient symbols and messages, the tighter the chains become around the monster, keeping the darkness at bay.


“You know who the real monster is today?” she asked rhetorically. “I will continue to write Pysanky. As long as we keep writing these eggs, good will triumph over evil. And my soul will be in peace.”






Now, more than ever, the need for support and solidarity with Ukraine is crucial. Let’s educate ourselves and others about the cultural significance of Pysanky and the ongoing challenges Ukraine faces.



To support Maria Zdaniw and the efforts of Ukrainian women fighting against injustice, one Pysanka at a time, you can reach out to her at

  mzdaniw@hotmail.ca 

She sells her pysanky at church bazaars and craft shows in Toronto and nearby western regions.





Disclaimer: Not all patterns show in the images are original designs by Maria. Some are part of her personal Pysanky collection, others are inspired by various Ukrainian artists, and many are her own creations. 

The Art of Pysanky


When one season gently gives way to the next and the shift becomes more palpable than ever, we joyfully realize that Easter is approaching. This year, as all of Christianity unites in celebrating on the same date, we collectively prepare for one of the most beautiful and uplifting holidays — a time to reflect on the profound symbols of spring: renewal, hope, and peace.


Deeply rooted traditions and rituals mark this season, each carrying its own significance in celebrating rejuvenation, connection, and the promise of life after the dormancy of winter. But we can all agree that among them, the Easter eggs stand out as one of the most cherished. Dating back to pagan times, cultures worldwide have embraced and adapted the practice of decorating eggs — the source of life. 

We have all experimented with various ways of colouring them, but one method that has elevated the tradition to an art form is undoubtedly the Ukrainian pysanky.


Last week, I had the pleasure of witnessing this intricate art firsthand, thanks to a dear friend who introduced me to a remarkable Ukrainian-Canadian artist and writer. Stepping into Maria’s world was nothing short of inspiring. Her warm welcome, her passion for the craft and openness in sharing the meaning behind each carefully drawn line and colour choice made the experience truly special. With my camera in hand, I had the opportunity to capture her home studio, her exquisite egg collection, and the beauty of her work — preserving not only stunning visuals but also the essence of a tradition that speaks of resilience, hope, and the enduring power of culture.


Maria Zdaniw was born in Poland, just 10 kilometres from the Baltic Sea. After World War II, both her father’s and mother’s families were forcibly resettled from the post-war border regions of Ukraine to Poland’s recovered territories during Operation Vistula. Her parents were deeply involved in the Ukrainian community in their town, organizing concerts and the New Year celebration known as Malanka. At home, they spoke Ukrainian, but they were not allowed to use it outside. Determined to preserve her mother tongue, Maria taught herself how to read and write in Ukrainian language.  


“When I was a child,” she shared, “we weren’t allowed to celebrate our holidays. It was only later that I remember us gathering together. One vivid memory comes to mind—celebrating Christmas at my uncle’s house. The entire family would travel to the neighbouring village in the evening. All the windows were covered with blankets because everything had to be done in secret.”



Maria arrived in Canada in 1979, embracing a new beginning. She got married, built a family, and raised two children. One Easter, her son’s godfather gifted her a pysanka. Its interesting patterns and vibrant colours stirred something deep within her. Suddenly, memories of her mother crafting pysanky in the Lemko style for Easter flooded back, filling her heart with nostalgia and warmth. Maria felt an unbreakable connection to her roots and fell in love with the art of pysanky.


She began collecting them, and now possesses some truly magnificent designs that inspire her. When her children started attending Saturday school at St. Volodymyr Church, Maria learned how to create Pysanky herself. She has been writing them ever since. 



The name for Ukrainian Easter eggs comes from the Ukrainian verb pysaty, meaning “to write.” This reflects the fact that the designs are not painted but written onto the raw eggs. The artist, known as the “writer,” uses a wax-resist (batik) method, applying melted beeswax with a special tool, kistka. By layering different colours of dye, complex multicoloured patterns emerge. Once the design is complete, the wax is removed, revealing the colours preserved at each stage. The egg is then sealed with protective coats. Though it may seem simple, the process requires patience, precision, and skill.




Maria generously explained each step of her work, demonstrating the wax application and showcasing the variety of eggs she uses — from white and brown chicken eggs to green-tinted ones, ostrich eggs, turkey, goose and even rhea eggs. Her studio is filled with boxes and baskets of delicate empty eggs, shelves overflowing with dyes and books for pattern inspiration, and meticulously arranged pysanky, displayed as if in a museum.



I couldn’t take my eyes off the birds, flowers, leaves, trees, triangles, poppies, fruits, and serpentines — the quiet magic of the world that Maria wrote with her hands on her pysanky. And I couldn’t help but think how significant they are today, as the war in Ukraine, waged by Russia's unprovoked and brutal invasion continues into its third year this Easter season.


Maria is saddened and hopeful all at once — despite the pain, her faith remains unshaken. She found that, during the war, creating beauty in the face of utmost atrocity added another layer of meaning to her work. The symbolism of pysanky extends well beyond the celebration of Easter. These eggs are more than just decorated objects; they are a deeply symbolic and powerful form of folk art. They tell stories of resilience and national identity, standing in defiance of Russia’s long history of attempting to suppress Ukrainian cultural heritage.  


They are unity. 


They are prayer.


They are hope.


They are faith in victory.



At the end of our visit, Maria sent us off with our treasured Pysanky and a story passed down through generations — a tale of a monster, the embodiment of evil, held in chains deep within the Carpathian Mountains to prevent it from unleashing destruction upon the world. Ukrainians hold a heartfelt belief that the more Pysanky people create around the world, each adorned with ancient symbols and messages, the tighter the chains become around the monster, keeping the darkness at bay.


“You know who the real monster is today?” she asked rhetorically. “I will continue to write Pysanky. As long as we keep writing these eggs, good will triumph over evil. And my soul will be in peace.”






Now, more than ever, the need for support and solidarity with Ukraine is crucial. Let’s educate ourselves and others about the cultural significance of Pysanky and the ongoing challenges Ukraine faces.



To support Maria Zdaniw and the efforts of Ukrainian women fighting against injustice, one Pysanka at a time, you can reach out to her at

  mzdaniw@hotmail.ca 

She sells her pysanky at church bazaars and craft shows in Toronto and nearby western regions.





Disclaimer: Not all patterns show in the images are original designs by Maria. Some are part of her personal Pysanky collection, others are inspired by various Ukrainian artists, and many are her own creations. 

As I was marching through the 3rd floor of the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery to the 20th-Century Americans to see the Amy Sherald painting of Michele Obama, a lovely young lady, wearing an embroidered kimono-like costume, slowly approached me with the question, "May I give you the gift of song?". Usually, I don't like stopping at people offering me products or asking me to participate in something, but this time everything seemed different – I was in a gallery, I heard the words gift and song and in my mind they sounded so beautiful and romantic that without much thinking, not knowing what to expect, I replied "Yes! I would love to have the gift of song."
Next, the pretty lady, obviously a singer, invited me with a slow but sure gesture to follow her to the Great Hall of the gallery and sit on the chair positioned in the middle of one side of the space. She moved about 7 feet away from me, turned around to face me, looked straight into my eyes, took a deep breath and following the short piano introduction, began to sing. Her wonderful soprano voice like a sea wave approaching a sandy shore filled the entire hall. She was singing in German, which I don't understand, but it didn't matter to me because the lyrical, slow-moving melody, familiar to me, had quickly reached my sitting body and wrapped it in a warm, long, caring hug.
I have always had this 'strange' relationship with music, when very often classical pieces and few songs, with their melodic, harmonic modulations, play with my body by sending tingles down my spine, bringing a lump to my throat and making my eyes brim with tears. I can't explain this game. I know, it doesn't have anything to do with personal memories and association with events. It is uncontrollable and at times can be very uncomfortable. It just happens and it was going to happen again, I was sure.
However, this time I didn't let it go to that extent. In other words, I somehow managed not to cry despite the sensations. I was fully present and completely aware of my emotions and my surrounding. I didn't think, so I didn't judge, but I FELT. In a matter of the song's first line, the melody, the light, the singer, the energy of the gallery, the air in the hall, the breathing of others, every fibre of my being merged into an unbounded eternity. Every single thing became one with the totality of the experience. I was seeing only the singer but was sensing the whole universe. There was no space or time anymore. I was there, but I was also in another dimension. One that I believe is called ONENESS – known within the heart and felt in the soul. It was special. It was moving. And intimate. And unforgettable. And powerful. And blissful... And so many other wonderful and unexplainable things, all at once.
It was the gift of a song.
It was the gift of Art.
It was Washington in the S P R I N G.






I later learned that in honour of its 50th Anniversary, the National Portrait Gallery during April (from April 5 to 29) is presenting "IDENTITY" series, SONIC BLOSSOM – a critically acclaimed participatory performance artwork by New York- and Paris-based artist Lee Mingwei, in which the audience becomes part of and engages in the creative process. It is about triggering and representing relationships, connections, trust, and willingness to share an experience with strangers at a specific place, a specific time. When Lee was a child, his mother would play lieder by Franz Schubert at a low volume teaching him how to be still and quiet to be able to hear the music. Later, when he took care of her while she was recovering from heart surgery, he played Schubert's lieder for her and they both found great beauty and comfort in his music. This is the first time Lee's work is presented in Washington, DC during the Cherry Blossom season (and without any planning, just with the power of life's everyday magic, I happened to be there).
I am extremely grateful to singer Molly Pinson Simoneau for choosing me on the opening day of the performance and giving me the most beautiful in my opinion Schubert's lied as a precious, unforgettable gift.
You can read more about Sonic Blossom here and here

Washington DC, Pretty In Spring Blossoms


As I was marching through the 3rd floor of the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery to the 20th-Century Americans to see the Amy Sherald painting of Michele Obama, a lovely young lady, wearing an embroidered kimono-like costume, slowly approached me with the question, "May I give you the gift of song?". Usually, I don't like stopping at people offering me products or asking me to participate in something, but this time everything seemed different – I was in a gallery, I heard the words gift and song and in my mind they sounded so beautiful and romantic that without much thinking, not knowing what to expect, I replied "Yes! I would love to have the gift of song."
Next, the pretty lady, obviously a singer, invited me with a slow but sure gesture to follow her to the Great Hall of the gallery and sit on the chair positioned in the middle of one side of the space. She moved about 7 feet away from me, turned around to face me, looked straight into my eyes, took a deep breath and following the short piano introduction, began to sing. Her wonderful soprano voice like a sea wave approaching a sandy shore filled the entire hall. She was singing in German, which I don't understand, but it didn't matter to me because the lyrical, slow-moving melody, familiar to me, had quickly reached my sitting body and wrapped it in a warm, long, caring hug.
I have always had this 'strange' relationship with music, when very often classical pieces and few songs, with their melodic, harmonic modulations, play with my body by sending tingles down my spine, bringing a lump to my throat and making my eyes brim with tears. I can't explain this game. I know, it doesn't have anything to do with personal memories and association with events. It is uncontrollable and at times can be very uncomfortable. It just happens and it was going to happen again, I was sure.
However, this time I didn't let it go to that extent. In other words, I somehow managed not to cry despite the sensations. I was fully present and completely aware of my emotions and my surrounding. I didn't think, so I didn't judge, but I FELT. In a matter of the song's first line, the melody, the light, the singer, the energy of the gallery, the air in the hall, the breathing of others, every fibre of my being merged into an unbounded eternity. Every single thing became one with the totality of the experience. I was seeing only the singer but was sensing the whole universe. There was no space or time anymore. I was there, but I was also in another dimension. One that I believe is called ONENESS – known within the heart and felt in the soul. It was special. It was moving. And intimate. And unforgettable. And powerful. And blissful... And so many other wonderful and unexplainable things, all at once.
It was the gift of a song.
It was the gift of Art.
It was Washington in the S P R I N G.






I later learned that in honour of its 50th Anniversary, the National Portrait Gallery during April (from April 5 to 29) is presenting "IDENTITY" series, SONIC BLOSSOM – a critically acclaimed participatory performance artwork by New York- and Paris-based artist Lee Mingwei, in which the audience becomes part of and engages in the creative process. It is about triggering and representing relationships, connections, trust, and willingness to share an experience with strangers at a specific place, a specific time. When Lee was a child, his mother would play lieder by Franz Schubert at a low volume teaching him how to be still and quiet to be able to hear the music. Later, when he took care of her while she was recovering from heart surgery, he played Schubert's lieder for her and they both found great beauty and comfort in his music. This is the first time Lee's work is presented in Washington, DC during the Cherry Blossom season (and without any planning, just with the power of life's everyday magic, I happened to be there).
I am extremely grateful to singer Molly Pinson Simoneau for choosing me on the opening day of the performance and giving me the most beautiful in my opinion Schubert's lied as a precious, unforgettable gift.
You can read more about Sonic Blossom here and here


"Now in the spring I kneel, I put my face into the packets of violets, the dampness, the freshness, the sense of ever-ness. Something is wrong, I know it if I don't keep my attention on eternity. May I be the tiniest nail in the house of the universe, tiny but useful. May I stay forever in the stream. May I took down upon the windflower and the bull thistle and coreopsis with the greatest respect... 
Teach children. We don't matter so much, but the children do. Show them daisies and the pale hepatica. Teach them the taste of sassafras and wintergreen. The lives of the blue sailors, mallow, sunbursts, the moccasin flowers. And the frisky ones – inkberry, lamb's-quarters, blueberries. And the aromatic ones – rosemary, oregano. Give them peppermint to put in their pockets as they go to school. Give them the fields and the woods and the possibility of the world salvaged from the lords of profit. Stand them in the stream, head them upstream, rejoice as they learn to love this green space they live in, its sticks and leaves and then the silent, beautiful blossoms." 

Attention is the beginning of devotion."
                                                                                                                                                        Mary Oliver, Upstream      


Spring is on its way...
I am happy and ready to cross a threshold from a world of dull brown and stiff grey to the loveliness of soft greens, joyous yellows and deep blues that herald the fresh new season.
Everything smells
like endless hope and anticipation,
like childhood memories,
like morning dew and wet soil,
like awakening...
I finally feel at home in my own skin; at home on the face of the earth...
I feel this pleasant lightness and new clearness that make it easier for me to breathe and actually see.
Like a miniature imperfect blossom, my soul is arising from hibernation, furtively opening itself once again to the universal love of the world. Loving the world requires attention. Because – paying attention is the only thing that guarantees insight; the only thing that can heal the heart; the only thing that makes us see life's simple, yet amazing gifts.




Wishing you a splendid springtime. 




Botanical eggs, my son and I colored for Easter with yellow onion skin, blueberries, turmeric, and blossoms. 
Lemon Blueberry Bundt Cake recipe (with a few changes) from Live Well Bake Often 


Step into Springtime


"Now in the spring I kneel, I put my face into the packets of violets, the dampness, the freshness, the sense of ever-ness. Something is wrong, I know it if I don't keep my attention on eternity. May I be the tiniest nail in the house of the universe, tiny but useful. May I stay forever in the stream. May I took down upon the windflower and the bull thistle and coreopsis with the greatest respect... 
Teach children. We don't matter so much, but the children do. Show them daisies and the pale hepatica. Teach them the taste of sassafras and wintergreen. The lives of the blue sailors, mallow, sunbursts, the moccasin flowers. And the frisky ones – inkberry, lamb's-quarters, blueberries. And the aromatic ones – rosemary, oregano. Give them peppermint to put in their pockets as they go to school. Give them the fields and the woods and the possibility of the world salvaged from the lords of profit. Stand them in the stream, head them upstream, rejoice as they learn to love this green space they live in, its sticks and leaves and then the silent, beautiful blossoms." 

Attention is the beginning of devotion."
                                                                                                                                                        Mary Oliver, Upstream      


Spring is on its way...
I am happy and ready to cross a threshold from a world of dull brown and stiff grey to the loveliness of soft greens, joyous yellows and deep blues that herald the fresh new season.
Everything smells
like endless hope and anticipation,
like childhood memories,
like morning dew and wet soil,
like awakening...
I finally feel at home in my own skin; at home on the face of the earth...
I feel this pleasant lightness and new clearness that make it easier for me to breathe and actually see.
Like a miniature imperfect blossom, my soul is arising from hibernation, furtively opening itself once again to the universal love of the world. Loving the world requires attention. Because – paying attention is the only thing that guarantees insight; the only thing that can heal the heart; the only thing that makes us see life's simple, yet amazing gifts.




Wishing you a splendid springtime. 




Botanical eggs, my son and I colored for Easter with yellow onion skin, blueberries, turmeric, and blossoms. 
Lemon Blueberry Bundt Cake recipe (with a few changes) from Live Well Bake Often 




I blinked... and it was May again, pouring its aliveness over me...
I've been watching the group of yellow and red tulips in the corner of the back yard. And boy, they loooove the sunshine. Every morning when the warm spring sun touches their petals, they bring their bountiful colors to the world, fully open to the light until the evening twilight makes them calm down and relax in peace and fulfillment. I've been watching the white and pink tulips in the pitcher playing with the warmth in the room, making the known-like-the back-of-my-hand space cheer up. Could it really be spring without tulips?
I've been crossing the streets of the city witnessing the awakening of the apple trees, the magnificent display of the magnolia's fragrant blossoms followed by the dancing lilacs in the wind...
And I have been soaking it all up...

Passing through the ordinary dailiness, you think your life is pretty normal, but you can't miss a little spring bulb blooming inside of your body filling it up with unexpected energy. You can't miss the sense of change penetrating the air with hope, promises, and newness. Someone once said that "when the beautiful spring comes and nature resumes her loveliness, the human soul is apt to revive also."
I found this to be true.
But! What I also noticed is that we don't talk about the human soul very much anymore. We spend time writing emails, messages with emojis, posts on social media, and long resumes with our achievements and expertise abilities, but sharing with others our true soul is something more of us has forgotten how to do.
In each person, we meet, dwells an inner life; however, we mostly see their outer flower – the blue eyes and the small nose, the title or perhaps political beliefs, the shyness or the brimming confidence. But by peeling the petals, within that flower resides the human soul. One that is timeless, that is Self, that is "a unique event in the history of the universe", that is what a person is and what he or she will always be. Inside every corolla is an ache to be heard.
But how many of us today show a genuine interest in others? How many of us today have the time to listen to a stranger or even a friend trying to communicate something deep, something coming from his heart, something he believes in, or troubles him or fills him with joy? How many of us are listeners with no attachments to views, absolute knowledge and prejudices avoiding assumptions and judgments?
There is so much noise out there every day – iPhones, iPods, podcasts, newsfeed, headlines, headphones – we can barely hear the voice of our own soul much less to find room for another voice. How many of us are comfortable with taking down the walls, opening up and sharing our souls as vulnerable, strong, appalled or joyous as they might be?

I recently found a new favorite quote "I hate small talk", someone unknown wrote. "I wanna talk about atoms, death, aliens, sex, magic, intellect, the meaning of life, faraway galaxies, the lies you've told, your flaws, your favorite scents, your childhood, what keeps you up at night, your insecurity and fears...
I like people with depth, who speak emotion, a twisted mind. I don't want to know "what's up."  
Today, that is me.
I've had my own share of preoccupation with my thoughts, opinions, and knowledge so that I was ignorant or easily irritated by someone trying to fill my space with unneeded information and emotions. Not any longer. I can see the treasure trove of wisdom, experiences and unique perspective that everyone is longing to express in one way or another. I want to talk about the soul. I am ready to listen. I want your soul to touch my soul... while we talk. I know that your Self will extend a hand to my Self to find my true voice by listening to the voice of my soul. I know this would be the most honest way to craft the most authentic version of myself. I am not taking the human connection for granted; in fact, I believe that sharing our soul with others reveals true humanity and beauty in being connected. Words and actions that emerge from our soul can bring love, compassion, and kindness – the only cure for our broken world. We just have to open ourselves the same way the tulips in the spring open to the sun.


"We live in succession, in division, in parts, in particles. 
Meanwhile within man is the soul of the whole; 
the wise silence; 
the universal beauty, to which every part and particle is equally related; 
the eternal One. 
And this deep power in which we exist, 
and whose beatitude is all accessible to us, 
is not only self-sufficing and perfect in every hour, 
but the act of seeing and the thing seen, 
the seer and the spectacle, the subject and the object, 
are one. 
We see the world piece by piece, 
as the sun, the moon, the animal, the tree; 
but the whole, of which these are the shining parts, 
is the soul." 
                                                                                                                             Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The Over-Soul", 1841




I baked this moist, creamy and rich in flavor Triple-Chocolate Buttermilk Pound Cake from a recipe from Southern Living Magazine – a keeper for every chocolate lover.



Sharing with Feathered Nest Friday / Home Sweet Home / Creative Inspirations


Spring, Tulips & Chocolate Cake



I blinked... and it was May again, pouring its aliveness over me...
I've been watching the group of yellow and red tulips in the corner of the back yard. And boy, they loooove the sunshine. Every morning when the warm spring sun touches their petals, they bring their bountiful colors to the world, fully open to the light until the evening twilight makes them calm down and relax in peace and fulfillment. I've been watching the white and pink tulips in the pitcher playing with the warmth in the room, making the known-like-the back-of-my-hand space cheer up. Could it really be spring without tulips?
I've been crossing the streets of the city witnessing the awakening of the apple trees, the magnificent display of the magnolia's fragrant blossoms followed by the dancing lilacs in the wind...
And I have been soaking it all up...

Passing through the ordinary dailiness, you think your life is pretty normal, but you can't miss a little spring bulb blooming inside of your body filling it up with unexpected energy. You can't miss the sense of change penetrating the air with hope, promises, and newness. Someone once said that "when the beautiful spring comes and nature resumes her loveliness, the human soul is apt to revive also."
I found this to be true.
But! What I also noticed is that we don't talk about the human soul very much anymore. We spend time writing emails, messages with emojis, posts on social media, and long resumes with our achievements and expertise abilities, but sharing with others our true soul is something more of us has forgotten how to do.
In each person, we meet, dwells an inner life; however, we mostly see their outer flower – the blue eyes and the small nose, the title or perhaps political beliefs, the shyness or the brimming confidence. But by peeling the petals, within that flower resides the human soul. One that is timeless, that is Self, that is "a unique event in the history of the universe", that is what a person is and what he or she will always be. Inside every corolla is an ache to be heard.
But how many of us today show a genuine interest in others? How many of us today have the time to listen to a stranger or even a friend trying to communicate something deep, something coming from his heart, something he believes in, or troubles him or fills him with joy? How many of us are listeners with no attachments to views, absolute knowledge and prejudices avoiding assumptions and judgments?
There is so much noise out there every day – iPhones, iPods, podcasts, newsfeed, headlines, headphones – we can barely hear the voice of our own soul much less to find room for another voice. How many of us are comfortable with taking down the walls, opening up and sharing our souls as vulnerable, strong, appalled or joyous as they might be?

I recently found a new favorite quote "I hate small talk", someone unknown wrote. "I wanna talk about atoms, death, aliens, sex, magic, intellect, the meaning of life, faraway galaxies, the lies you've told, your flaws, your favorite scents, your childhood, what keeps you up at night, your insecurity and fears...
I like people with depth, who speak emotion, a twisted mind. I don't want to know "what's up."  
Today, that is me.
I've had my own share of preoccupation with my thoughts, opinions, and knowledge so that I was ignorant or easily irritated by someone trying to fill my space with unneeded information and emotions. Not any longer. I can see the treasure trove of wisdom, experiences and unique perspective that everyone is longing to express in one way or another. I want to talk about the soul. I am ready to listen. I want your soul to touch my soul... while we talk. I know that your Self will extend a hand to my Self to find my true voice by listening to the voice of my soul. I know this would be the most honest way to craft the most authentic version of myself. I am not taking the human connection for granted; in fact, I believe that sharing our soul with others reveals true humanity and beauty in being connected. Words and actions that emerge from our soul can bring love, compassion, and kindness – the only cure for our broken world. We just have to open ourselves the same way the tulips in the spring open to the sun.


"We live in succession, in division, in parts, in particles. 
Meanwhile within man is the soul of the whole; 
the wise silence; 
the universal beauty, to which every part and particle is equally related; 
the eternal One. 
And this deep power in which we exist, 
and whose beatitude is all accessible to us, 
is not only self-sufficing and perfect in every hour, 
but the act of seeing and the thing seen, 
the seer and the spectacle, the subject and the object, 
are one. 
We see the world piece by piece, 
as the sun, the moon, the animal, the tree; 
but the whole, of which these are the shining parts, 
is the soul." 
                                                                                                                             Ralph Waldo Emerson, "The Over-Soul", 1841




I baked this moist, creamy and rich in flavor Triple-Chocolate Buttermilk Pound Cake from a recipe from Southern Living Magazine – a keeper for every chocolate lover.



Sharing with Feathered Nest Friday / Home Sweet Home / Creative Inspirations


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