Again I have been on my way somewhere and been distracted by the slag on the path (see previous post).
These man-made rocks are beautifully iridescent like oil spilled in water. It is an unusual dark palette of grays and reds but with surprising splashes of cheerful warmth. I saw something on the rail-bed that I thought was a snail, then slag, no it was a snail; then I saw slag, or was it doogie-do, no, it was indeed slag, once a viscous semi-flowing mass. The color scheme reminds me of a bird I recently saw. I think it was a grackle, an outwardly black bird like a crow, not known for it's beauty, but with eye-catching iridescent greens and violets beneath the black surface.
Again, slag has the appearance of having been through hell, with a beauty and flowing bulbous shape that comes of intense pressures and heat. It is scarred with little volcanic eruptions. And again it surprises me that having lived here so long, having walked this path so many times, I had never noticed before. I think when people lived off the land they must have known their environments so much better.
And finally having gone through a lifestyle change (of being laid-off/retired from a demanding all-enveloping job), I wonder if there is an alternative to living productively other than pushing oneself (and being pushed) as hard and long as possible. As a cast-off byproduct, like the slag, scarred by the pressure to produce more and more, perhaps I have even more to offer then before though in a less material way. Our society needs people who have the time and breath to see the slag in a bed of gravel.