You don’t have to be around me very long to know that there are two things I love. The happiest Serena is by the sea, when she is by the sea she likes to find pieces of discarded glass. The kind of piece that has been shattered and then softened by the salty sea waters. A sunny day by the seaside, and beach glass, happy Serena!
Recently, Serena had an opportunity to play on a beach by the sea in Norfolk. The game we played was to try and get caught in every single rain shower that occurred between 11:30 and 2:00. Serena was successful. Including a drenching shower that managed to soak her in the fifty metres across the car park to the toilet.
The coastline was an incredible example of the power of the sea. I had been on that beach, some eight years earlier and sat in a cafe that was now eroded. You could see at the top of the cliff, imperceptibly at first the persistence of water made its unique mark on the landscape.
In between showers, I searched for beach glass. I found none, instead, I discovered a rock. There was a hole in the centre of the rock running all the way through from top to bottom.
And this is another reason to love the seaside. If the nature of light is soft and effuse, then the way of water has a rhythmic tenacity, a metronomic consistency, that claws at concepts. It pours itself into long-held, solid ideas. Imperceptibly at first, drop by drop, the way of water imprints itself into the rock as a source of refreshment. The rock above is on my windowsill, near where I sit to write. I have placed it there to remind myself that anything can change with time and consistency. Water is never hurried, it has its way. Persistent tenacity, gentle and soothing, is the way of water and the way of love.