The night had laid itself gently over the Northwoods, a blue hush stitched with moonlight. Snow softened every sound, so that even Bear’s great paws moved like whispers as he followed Ethan down the narrow path beside the frozen creek.
Isabel rode her usual perch on Ethan’s shoulder, her orange tail wrapped once around his collar, her eyes bright and attentive. She had learned that winter evenings held surprises.
They reached the clearing just as the moon rose higher, its pale light glazing the snow and turning the ice along the creek into a ribbon of glass. That was when Bear stopped.
Not stiff.
Not alarmed.
Just… attentive.
Across the clearing, near the shadowed edge of the pines, stood the fox.
Its coat was the color of living fire...deep rust and ember-bright...its black legs neat and deliberate, its eyes sharp with a knowing that felt older than the forest itself. It did not flee. It did not approach.
It simply watched.
Isabel’s ears flicked forward. She did not hiss or retreat. Instead, she leaned closer to Ethan’s ear, as if listening for something beneath the night sounds.
The fox stepped once, twice, then paused again...tail low, head cocked slightly, as though asking a question.
Ethan felt it then: not fear, not surprise, but recognition. A quiet sense that this moment had been waiting for them.
Bear lowered himself to the snow, calm and steady. Strength at rest.
The fox turned and began to trot toward the creek, stopping just long enough to glance back...an unmistakable invitation.
Ethan followed.
At the creek’s edge, the fox halted where moonlight and shadow met. The ice reflected the moon, fractured and beautiful, and for a moment Ethan thought of fire hidden inside frozen things...warmth waiting patiently.
The fox lifted its nose, breathed in the night, then looked directly at Ethan.
Use what you have.
See what is already here.
The message arrived not as words but as a knowing, clear and gentle.
Then the fox was gone...vanishing into the trees as if it had never been there at all.
They stood for a long moment afterward. Snow began to fall lightly, blessing the clearing.
When they turned back toward the wee cottage, its windows glowed amber through the trees, a small hearth of light in the vast blue night.
Isabel purred.
Bear rose and shook snow from his coat.
Ethan smiled.
Some guides, he realized, do not walk beside you for long.
They simply remind you of what you already carry.
* * * * * * * * * *
Morning arrives quietly.
The wee cottage holds the night’s warmth like a promise kept. A faithful mug of coffee steams in my hands. Outside, winter waits...still, watchful, generous in its silence.
Eva Cassidy’s haunting rendition of Somewhere Over the Rainbow drifts through the room, and everything pauses just long enough for me to notice the miracle of being here at all.
Yesterday, a red fox crossed my path.
In Anishinaabe tradition, waagosh is not merely an animal but a teacher...one who survives not by force, but by wit, adaptability, and awareness. The fox reminds us that life does not always ask us to push harder.
Sometimes it asks us to see more clearly.
There is infinite goodness in and throughout the universe...and within each of us. When I hold this understanding, I begin to notice it everywhere:
in the hush of snowfall,
in lamplight against snow-dark trees,
in a simple mug of coffee warming cold hands.
As part of the world’s goodness, I live intentionally as the divine being I am. I strive to bring love and light to all my interactions, blessing each encounter...not just today, but all the days of my life.
The fox does not carry fire openly.
It carries it inwardly...
as intelligence,
as awareness,
as grace under winter skies.
So today, I begin again.
I walk gently.
I listen closely.
I trust the quiet guides that appear at the edges of my days.
And when the world feels frozen or uncertain, I remember:
there is always warmth beneath the snow,
always light waiting to be recognized,
always a path home...glowing softly through the trees.
~Wylddane
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