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Angela Jeffcott

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Blog

Slowing Down for Beauty

January 27, 2025 Angela Jeffcott

When you think of beauty, what pops in your mind?

Maybe a flawless face, a certain piece of music, a rose. Beauty can be seen in many different ways and different people appreciate different applications of beauty. But all beauty is appreciated more with time and attention.

When we see something beautiful we want to stop and consider it, look closer. It’s sometimes difficult to put into words why something strikes us. Other times we immediately put our finger on why we call it beautiful. But to fully savor the thing or moment or experience, we have to slow down and give our attention.

The reality of this fully took form when Tommy and I went to Paris last year. We were able to experience amazing food, incredible historical sites, and surround ourselves in completely new things at every turn. One of the top things on my list of “want to dos” when we were planning our trip was to visit Musee de l’Orangerie {Orangery Museum} where the famous Waterlily paintings by Monet are.

I don’t know exactly when I started loving them, but Impressionist paintings are my favorite style and Paris museums are filled with Monet, Degas, Renoir, and a host of others. But l’Orangerie is especially magnificent because Monet himself worked on the plan to renovate the building, planning how his studies of the waterlilies from his garden pond would look on display. The panels are over two yards tall and when put together are almost 100 yards wide. Stretching in ovals around two rooms, there really is nothing like it.

The immensity of the paintings hits you, especially when you’ve only seen them in books. While the paintings weren’t the tallest or the most detailed paintings we saw, the scale of them arching around the room, the calming colors set off by stark white walls, and the quiet as visitors took them in was beautiful.

But while Tommy and I stood in the middle of the room and I attempted to etch every color and detail into my memory, other tourists were there for an entirely different reason. They stood at the painting, back toward the masterpiece, and smiled for a friend to capture the moment on camera. Picture secure, they headed to the next room, some of them spending less than a minute before Monet’s 30 years of work.

Can you appreciate the beauty of the thing and the experience in such a blink? You certainly can’t capture the whole painting or the feeling in a snapshot. These were not beauty seekers. They were focused on the adage, “If I have a picture of it, it happened.” Or maybe, “If I post it on social media, it happened.” We saw similar tourists at Versailles, the Louvre, even restaurants. So absorbed in their phones, their pictures, their posts that they didn’t care about what surrounded them.

What a waste of beauty! Maybe you believe they took those photos and look at them and reflect on what they saw now, months after the trip. But I doubt it. If you can’t appreciate beauty when you are in the moment, will you ever have time to look back? And it won’t be the same.

Sunsets are my favorite. I love the splash of color that is ever changing. No two sunsets are the same; the temperature, the air quality, the position of the sun makes each one a unique painting from God. And try as I might, a picture of a spectacular sunset is never the same as watching it happen in real time. Same with rainbows. Pictures never seem to capture the colors, the expanse, the shimmer of a rainbow. To fully enjoy them, we must slow down and look right then! So it is with all beauty.

Our society seems to be based on a breakneck pace. Do more, faster! Be more productive in less time! These types of attitudes don’t go well with savoring experiences, looking for beauty, and enjoying what’s in front of you. The thought something better is just after this moment keeps us from finding contentment where we are and slowing down. We think if we slow down we’ll miss something but the truth is, in our race to the next thing, we’re missing hundreds of beautiful things and moments.

Don’t stand with your back to the masterpiece and rush to the next photo op. Look around, enjoy the moment now, while it’s here, and you might be surprised that you can find beauty in so many things.

Photo by Richard Hedrick on Unsplash

In beauty, rest Tags beauty, Daily life, nature, art, rest, restful living
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The Value of Beauty

December 31, 2024 Angela Jeffcott

As the year comes to a close, I like to look back and consider things I learned, what stood out as important, and use it as a framework for the coming year. Two things stood out to me in 2024; I’ll address one here and one in this post.

I am somewhere between minimalist and hoarder.

While I don’t love little trinkets and figures displayed on shelves that will need to be dusted on rotation, I also don’t love the sparceness of nothing. The empty walls and shelves half filled with books, spine facing in {seriously, who started that trend and can we please stop?!}.

I am also sentimental so keeping things is important to me too. The few things I have on display are from special people or certain times in my life. The minimal clutter they cause is worth it to me because of the memory associated with it.

And in those simple things — memories, experiences, creation — we can find beauty. There’s many different definitions of what is beautiful or what makes something beautiful. And we pair that adjective with many different things: nature, architecture, music, people, food. When we use “beautiful” to describe something we are, in a way, assigning value to it. That walk at sunset was worth it or is worth remembering because of it’s beauty.

I’m afraid sometimes in our modern desire for minimalism, we leave beauty in the dust. Our buildings are built to be efficient, not to inspire wonder. Our furnishings and fashions are designed according to trends, not for beauty.

On our trip to France, I was astounded at the beauty everywhere we looked. The gardens were designed with precision, the stained glass in the churches told stories, the columns of buildings were perfect down to the smallest detail. Even something like a staircase, practical and needed, was carved with intricate designs. I appreciated many things about that trip but the need to slow down to really see everything taught me a lesson about beauty. It’s not something to be rushed by or glanced at. Beauty is to be savored.

Our drive to minimalism and the rush to do everything has kept us from the joy of beauty. We are in too big a hurry to slow down and appreciate what we see and experience. We discard the old for the sleek minimalism of new. Sure, we still use “beautiful” to describe things but is it a hasty use of the word because we can’t stop to think of anything else to say? When did we last pause to consider the true beauty of something?

Whether in God’s creation or something man has made with the talents God gave, beauty in its many forms should make us delay in our rush. We should linger in front of that painting and consider the brushstrokes, we should reread that sentence of perfectly melded words, we should put our fork down between bites and savor our meal.

God could have given us a world in gray tones and beige. Yet he filled it with beauty; he gave us the ability to design and appreciate it. The senses to experience beauty in multiple ways. What a gift!

Photo by JOHN TOWNER on Unsplash

In home & family Tags beauty, everyday grace

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