The thing is that I'm not one for hankering after the latest gadget or 'in' thing. Actually things as such don't really impress me. But sometimes I have to admit that I can't do what I would like to with an older piece of equipment and so I invest in something new that will deliver. I am not going to do away with something just because it's old. If it still works then why not go on using it? But there are times that a new way or a new direction is needed. The old isn't enough any more. Sometimes we need to get something different that is more adequate for our present needs.
On a completely different note, one of my favourite wildlife specialists is Simon King. I follow him on Facebook and YouTube. He lives in Somerset and has quite a few acres of land with his home called Wild Meadows where he studies, cares for and photographs the local wildlife. He has, over the past few weeks, had various cameras in a number of different nests. The wren chicks were the first to fledge and then the blue tits. The kestrel is still brooding her three eggs that are about to hatch any day now. This week all interest was on the jackdaw nest. There were two chicks that were fast outgrowing the space that the parents had made for them. The day they finally fledged (Thursday) they kept going near to the entrance of the nest box and chirping, then going back and settling down again. You could hear the parents calling from outside the nest and occasionally they entered the nest and chirped. You could almost hear them telling their children to get up and go outside. They ventured out a little way and then back to the nest. They did this a few times and then finally left for good.Their lives will never be the same again. They no longer have that comfort zone where they can go to and just settle down and wait to be handed their food and be kept warm and out of danger of enemies that would attack them. They now have to use their wings, something they haven't really done before. Their wings would no longer be just to snuggle down in the nest but for flying freely over the countryside. Eventually they will need to learn to get their own food - no more ready meals regurgitated from parents. They will have to learn to trust their own instinct and decisions. It reminded me of Paul (in the Bible) when he complained that some followers of Jesus were just like small children and not willing to grow up. We are part of God's creation and that is how He has ordained creation to be. In our Christian lives we need to fledge the nest, trust our own decisions and the spirit that God has placed in each of us, use our wings to fly by ourselves and look for food and not keep going back to the comfort of dependent spiritual living, waiting for others to feed us and keep us out of danger. When our needs are no longer met by the old system, then we need to look at doing things in a new way, start using our wings and fly freely. Like the rest of creation, you don't know what you're missing til you try it.


2 comments:
Excellent, as usual. On the humorous side, I know how you feel. I have been ET for a while, now.
Thanks Tommy. Glad you enjoyed it.
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