NATURAL PERSPECTIVES -- Vic Leipzig and Lou Murray
The people of Huntington Beach are blessed with a marvelous local
resource for relaxation and spiritual renewal. I’m not talking about some
health spa or religious retreat. I’m referring to Huntington Central
Park, a place to heal the body and renew the soul.
You may have noticed that our column didn’t appear from October
through December. Normally Vic and I work together on our columns, one of
us writing and the other editing, but Vic has been busy with his new job
as executive director of Orange Coast Watch, a nonprofit group dedicated
to halting the pollution of Orange County’s beaches. He hasn’t had time
to write the column by himself, and I’ve been unable to work because I
injured my back in an auto accident in early October.
We live close to Huntington Central Park, and prior to October I
enjoyed hikes there several times a month. The accident put a halt to
that.
Most of my October was spent in pain. I spent November recovering from
a severe allergic reaction called anaphylactic shock. I was hospitalized
after taking a drug that my doctor prescribed for inflammation.
The pain from my back injury was isolating. It cut me off from work
and hobbies. I hurt too much to go to the movies or out to lunch, and I
didn’t care to see my friends. My world looked limited and bleak.
Then time began to heal my torn ligaments and physical therapy began
to strengthen my ripped muscles. I was able to resume my walks in the
park, which became my main contact with the outside world. At first, I
could only walk a mile or two, a fraction of my normal rambles. The first
time I tried to extend my walk as far as the Shipley Nature Center my
back rebelled. I remember gingerly lowering myself onto one of the many
benches scattered throughout the park. Thoroughly discouraged, I wondered
if I would ever again have a day free of pain.
Then I experienced one of those rare mystical moments when magic seems
to be in the air. The winds picked up and a few huge dry leaves floated
off the sycamores. As I watched the slow dance of leaves twirling toward
the ground, my pain lifted enabling me to continue my walk home.
On my walks, which became part of my regular therapy, I noticed the
many ways in which people enjoy the park. Diners at The Park Bench and
Alice’s Breakfast in the Park allow people to chat over burgers and
cinnamon buns. Families spread picnics on tables and lawns. Couples walk
the pathways hand in hand, and children squeal as they jump and tumble
over playground equipment. Young men shout, “Dude!†to one another as
they play disc golf. People jog, ride bikes and watch birds.
As I extended my hikes to the west side of the park, I stopped to
enjoy the wild abandon of dogs romping in the Bark Park. The whinnies of
horses at the Equestrian Center floated on the breeze as I rested on the
bench by the lake.
Over the weeks, I watched the leaves fall from the trees, the grass
turn brown and sere, and the flocks of winter birds gather.
The rains came. As the lakes filled with water, the skies filled with
the calls of mallards, coots, gulls and geese. Tree frogs croaked an
early chorus to spring. Still I walked. Some days I paused in a grove of
twisted sycamores to practice Tai Chi breathing. Suspend from the sky;
root to the earth. Breathe in healing and peace; breathe out pain and
sorrow. Slowly my back got better.
I now walk a six-mile loop through the park. I’ve resumed many of my
normal activities, but most of my day is still devoted to various forms
of therapeutic exercise followed by a hot bath or an ice pack. Although
my back is knotted and achy most evenings, I’m no longer in constant
pain. Gradually, my body is recovering, and so is my soul. Within our
parks lies the power to heal.
* VIC LEIPZIG and LOU MURRAY are Huntington Beach residents and
environmentalists. They can be reached at o7 [email protected] .
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