Sue Knight's Blog
Wednesday, 6 May 2026
There was a young lady
Sunday, 3 May 2026
The Fly Orchid
We picked a rather scary orchid for May in our 2026 calendar. And I note from previous blogs that I have sometimes posted Karen Volkman's poem about May this time of year. It is a poem that is both beautiful and scary, rather like the orchid. It begins:
In May’s gaud gown and ruby reckoning
the old saw wind repeats a colder thing...
But this May I thought I would post a poem from Ogden Nash:by Ogden NashConsider the auk;
Becoming extinct because he forgot how to fly, and could only walk.
Consider man, who may well become extinct
Because he forgot how to walk and learned how to fly before he thinked.
https://www.poetrysoup.com/famous/poems/short/may
May - with its blossom, its "gaud gown" - should be such a paradise month. But we are still living in the tragedy of the loss of Eden. However we have this promise from Jehovah - whose every purpose is fulfilled - that he will "bring to ruin those ruining the earth". (Revelation 11:18)
So the current state of things should tell us how close the end of the current wicked system of things on the earth is, as it hardly seems like an exaggeration to say that we are in the process of ruining the very planet we are living on.
I am still full of this beastly cold and had to pixel it to the meeting on Thursday. And I had sad vivid dreams - not bad dreams and not sad at the time, but ones that left me with a feeling of sadness when I woke up. But maybe that is because of my age, not because of the cold.
I dreamt I was visiting Lilac Tree Farm only they had moved. Their house was down a winding country lane, lots of tall trees, so just as rural. And in my dream I said how lovely their new garden was, even though it was all straight ahead, long and running down to trees, rather than the interesting ramble of the Lilac Tree garden. There were big lilies growing in the garden and a storm blowing everything about. It looked beautiful, but with an Autumnal sadness. I knew I had to put off leaving until the weather improved. It looked like they had just moved in - there was a bed in the lounge, with someone asleep and children running about. I remember thinking now which one is Pen's - and picking out a small blonde lad who looked rather like my cousin Peter when he was a child.
I don't know why it left such a feeling of sadness. Part of it might be that my body and my brain know I will not be here much longer to see all this beauty, and so it showed me this beautiful garden in an Autumn gale. Who knows?
We are supposed to be in for some rain this weekend. Badly needed - our Green is starting to turn into a Brown. And indeed it did rain on Saturday afternoon, and there may be more today.
Col left very early to join The Lads in The Field, with his sandwich lunch and his metal detectors. The homemade cake this month is marmalade muffins. He also took with him a long mysterious piece of plastic that has been lying in the hall for a couple of days. Something to do with the garage door apparently. And I am about to harness up my pixel pony and make it to the virtual Kingdom Hall for the morning meeting.
It will be an antidote for sadness.
Thursday, 30 April 2026
The Holly Blue
it pupated, it hatched, and it flew
Monday, 27 April 2026
A Longhorn of Green
And at Kithurst Hill it was seen
But Colin was there
with his camera set fair
So now it appears on your screen.
Friday, 24 April 2026
Three Limericks
Three Limericks
Who went for a ride on a gull
Tuesday, 21 April 2026
Eye Eye
I decided on the heading for this blog with much apprehension on the Saturday morning before we left for Brighton and before my afternoon appointment with the Optician. I have no idea how this will continue - or indeed if it will.
Well, it has continued and there is a glad thing and a sad thing. Glad, very, that after an exhaustive eye examination, at Specsavers, Saturday afternoon, the kind young Optician assured me that my eyes were fine. It is perhaps rather horrid, but the manifestations are caused by the jelly in one of my eyes moving, as the artificial whatsit inserted when I had my Cataract operation is not as finely honed as the original one - as made by Jehovah! - and there is a bit more room. So this can happen. And it may well settle down and wear off. Though it also might not...
Very relieved, and very grateful, as I did pray about this. And I will have to get used to looking through a sort of misty veil and having some odd and alarming black threads rush across my eyes every so often. This is yet another reason why my driving days are over.
I chose an Ox-eye Daisy from Col's photo gallery to head this blog. They are out too, I noted as we drove along through blossom-lined roads.
The sad thing was that maybe Saturday was another of the "lasts" of old age. We went to the AGM of SOS - Sussex Ornithologists - a day of talks from people working in the field of Bird. We used to go to lots of these Conservation Meeting days in our years with Butterfly Conservation. It is always good to see how many people are volunteering their time, energy and money to try to care for the creation.
We were only there for the morning sadly, but it was interesting. However, whether I will be able to make another of these days is the problem - the sad thing. Was that my last? It is getting increasingly difficult. All being well, and if the venue is the same - Brighton University - I might try again next year.
But what a bleak place Brighton Uni is, building wise. Such a bleak campus. And I wonder why. Why not have made it beautiful?
The early Spring day was beautiful though - the creation still shines in spite of all the violence and the sadness in the world. I hope it can reassure us of the truth - that Jehovah, the Creator of this loveliness has not abandoned us and will not abandon us.
And I thought I would post Emily Dickinson's poem again - as it is just right for this time of year, as the trees begin to put on the green bonnets of Spring. I would love to have written it.
Saturday, 18 April 2026
Blossom
Captain B took this for me on a recent outing to The Field. It is a reminder that the whole earth was intended to be paradise - a beautiful garden. The Bible study on Wednesday morning went well. It does seem as if the power of Jehovah's word may be getting through to our lovely student.
Thursday morning I made the now routine crumble, though I did vary it with rhubarb last week as rhubard suddenly appeared Abel&Cole-wise. I got some more Not Home letters done, did my studies, a load of washing, and made a mushroom curry. Oh and a fair amount of sofa-surfing - which is depressingly necessary these days as I get so tired and my back hurts so much.
The gallant Captain chauffered me to the Kingdom Hall on Thursday night - a great meeting as always. There is no teaching like it.
I have been watching some episodes of a programme called MAFSAUS - attracted by it being set in Sydney - a place of many happy memories from our expat years. But, oh dear - what a cruel thing reality TV is, and why does anyone ever agree to take part in it?
And has the relationship between men and women, so horribly damaged in Eden, ever been worse? The malicious glee some of the women show - openly on camera - when they are attacking and hurting others is distressing. They must, I assume, believe that to achieve such nastiness is a credit to them.
It was never easy to be young, but now! All the girls for example, are glamorous, tanned, depilated, tattooed, and in some cases plastically-enhanced. Yet seemingly it is even harder for them to find a life partner than it was in my day.
But what incredible beauty standards they have to live up to - apparently all fuelled by the media, especially some of its darker areas.
And the programme, for what I have seen of it, is gladiatorial, pitching man against woman, and woman against woman. On the whole the guys seem to get along with each other a lot better.
In some ways are the current horrors in The Gulf simply this programme writ large, all stemming from how easily we allow "the world", the present wicked system of things on the earth, to turn us against each other?
We can resist the spirit of the world. But we cannot do so successfully without our Creator's help, and the power of his holy spirit.
Here is the contrast, set out in Galatians:
Now the works of the flesh are plainly seen, and they are sexual immorality, uncleanness, brazen conduct, idolatry, spiritism, hostility, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, dissensions, divisions, sects, envy, drunkenness, wild parties, and things like these. I am forewarning you about these things, the same way I already warned you, that those who practice such things will not inherit God’s Kingdom. On the other hand, the fruitage of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faith, mildness, self-control. Against such things there is no law.
Galatians 5:19-23
I have been having some strange phenomenon in my right eye since the cataract operations, but it was so spectacularly bad Friday morning that I have had to call the Optician and have an appointment for this afternoon. It is so hard to know what is to be expected as the unavoidable deterioration of old age, and what can be fixed.
And this morning I am seeing everything through a veil of black spots, so it is not good - it is my right eye, the one that was treated with the new Cataract procedure, which may be what has caused the problem.
Unfortunately we have one of our rare (these days) outings, to the Sussex Ornithological Society special day at Brighton Uni. We will have to leave at the lunch break, taking our sandwiches with us, to get to my appointment. After that, I do not know. I hope I am not rushed straight off to A & E - on a Saturday night! The horror - and the hours of waiting.
I am trying to tell myself that I do have another eye - and that I am in my eightieth year... so everything in me is failing. It is to be expected. And above all I am trying to fix my mind on the healing that Jesus did when he was on the earth, showing us what he will do for us when he is ruling over the whole earth as the King of Jehovah's Kingdom.
And, to end on a positive note, Captain B is being a tower of strength, poor guy - and I have just got my 15 hours witnessing in for this month. I had hoped to do more, obviously, but at least I have got the amount in I had aimed at. And I still may be able to do more.
Though I am not, alas, one of these wonderful brothers and sisters who can give such an excellent witness while going through medical horrors. I am very far from that. And if you ever find me doing so, you will know a miracle has occurred, so please credit it to Jehovah. And I am sure those brothers and sisters would tell you the same.
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