“My heart leaps up when I
behold
A rainbow in the sky;”
That
was about William Wordsworth’s heart, which leapt up in 1807.
Remember the last time your heart leapt on seeing a rainbow? Or for
that matter, even the rain (or the sun, depending on our geography)?
Earlier,
as a child, a rainbow was to me a reincarnated fairy from the glossy
storybooks my father got from faraway places, spreading out her
eastman colour wings. (According to ancient Japanese beliefs,
ancestors use the bridge of rainbows to descend on earth.0 But now,
courtesy science, first to come to mind are terms like spectrum and
vibgyor.
By
giving us an insight into nature, science meant to better cement our
relationship with nature, to make us an integral part of it. Sadly,
though, we repeatedly fail to achieve this, ignoring the many
trinkets nature has on display: a toddler’s hysterical giggle
(unless offered to us via some viral videos network), an impudent
bird on the window sill, a uniquely arched tree . . . We do not have
to be Alices in Wonderland to discover all of this. We do need to
peek out of our cubbyholes, spare a few moments each day to take in
everything beauteous around us that we take for granted in our
pursuit of a happiness that is always receding faster than the pace
with which we gambol towards it.
Even
if the speed of light is slowing down, and even if that might cast an
effect on thermodynamics and quantum physics, isn’t it a relief to
know that despite climate change the morning sun still softly filters
down the hibiscus petals in the lone pot which we forgot to irrigate
yesterday in our morning gallop? That moment of standing and staring
will probably give us an added incentive to fight climate change,
make the battle personal, and so on. Pausing to take in the various
elements of nature around us betters concentration and increases our
patience.
When
life gets infested with the vagaries of this world, I turn to nature
for reassurance. The very feeling that I am a part of something so
enchanting and true leads to supersonic pain relief. That is why I
added this PS when talking to my broker for a new accommodation:
“Please see if there is a tree around.”
I
look at a tree and think: It took years to grow this tall and now it
just stands there, in quiet dignity as so many birds, humans, plants,
insects benefit from its presence. Its years are etched as carvings
in its bark, a proof of all it endured and embraced, of how it made
its own everything that had come to meet it, whether to offer homage
or hostility.
A
Stanford study found that people who took
walks in nature were less likely
to be depressed.
Ecotherapists recommend spending
quality time with
nature to
fight maladies. If someone still does not have reason enough to turn
more animstic, they can turn to Wordsworth again, who believed nature
to be “a teacher whose wisdom we can learn, and without which any
human life is vain and incomplete”.
First published in Deccan Herald, 28 May 2018.
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