Inner Beauty:
A cross-section of a nautilus shell shows the spiral of chambers, called camerae, that this cephalopod builds for itself as it grows.
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"One cannot collect all the beautiful seashells on the beach; one can collect only a few, and they are more beautiful if they are few." - Anne Morrow Lindbergh
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Seashell Symbols
Nestled between the blue Listerine and Multivitamin bottles on our bathroom counter is a collection of mystical seashells. I call them mystical because they invoke, for me, a sense of mystery and fascination. Bill picked them up years ago during a visit to the Coast and I have wondered morning after morning just what attracted him to each particular shell. Did its shape intrigue him or its presence draw him? Did it appear to be a symbol of something known only in his subconscious? A mystery. As I write this, Bill is again at the Coast. Will still more shells call to him? 
Anne Morrow Lindbergh, inspired by shapes and substances of sea shells, in her 1955 classic, Gifts From the Sea, contemplated life and the meaning of life. For her, Lindbergh's story is written in the very substance of each shell she considered. The shell gave voice to the shape of her life.
A channeled whelk Lindbergh held in her hand prompted her deep desires: "to be at peace with myself. I want a singleness of eye, a purity of intention, a central core to my life.... I want, in fact-to borrow from the language from the saints-to live "in grace"....By grace, I mean inner harmony, essentially spiritual, which can be translated into outward harmony."
Being open to grace allows one to discover and respond to God in ordinary situations like a walking on the beach or considering a seashell. With this understanding of mysticism, German theologian Karl Rahner predicted that "the devout Christian of the future will either be a 'mystic' . . . or will cease to be anything at all." Modern mystics frequently stroll the Coast and notice ordinary but fascinating seashells. ---by Jan
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Seashells
Scattered like ghostly petals, like
cards dropped by some clumsy shuffler,
deposited by time and drift
and death, seashells lie jumbled,
tumbled, one upon another:
Mussel, clam, and tiny scallop,
intricate carvings of life -
Are any two alike? Or are they,
like snowflakes, individuated -
unique compositions of line and hue -
some polished pearlescent
by waves, some shattered
by the same soft water?
Here, beside the bay
these drifted shells are the beach.
I crunch across
the litter of life,
striding upon death
and beauty
indescribable.
- Bill
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