Luckily I’m an early riser and when I tuned into the Griffith Observatory’s Facebook page, the eclipse had just started. It was barely anything at all. The commentator said it would be seventy-five minutes until the eclipse was complete. So I went to make a cup of tea and there, through the kitchen window, the moon was shining. I went to grab my camera but by the time I got back my view of the moon had been swaddled in cloud.

A path through a frosty field.

Ho-hum – it was still dark and a chilly -1C outside so I took my tea and laptop and went back to bed to watch it in comfort. By now, the moon looked like a black and white drawing, the artist erasing one small part of the edge, as if they weren’t quite happy with the shape. I finished my tea and went back to the kitchen. The sky was lightening but still no sight of the moon.

And then I saw a glow through the trees. Maybe I might catch a glimpse after all. I hurriedly threw on a coat (and one on Molly, too) and we charged into the garden. We were stopped by the gate – the lock had frozen. So back to the kitchen for warm water and then we were out into the fields.

A glimpse into a frosty woodland.

It was magical. The air so fresh and cold and the fields painted with crackling frost. I spotted a couple of dog walkers in the adjacent field and we waved. But otherwise we were alone, in the silence… and the grey-washed sky.

We didn’t hurry our walk. I marvelled at the beauty of the world. Yes, in these flat, Suffolk fields. I know there are spectacular places but beauty’s not a competition, after all. To me, at that moment, the beauty was overwhelming.

At home, I switched my laptop back on and marvelled at the eclipse, at the ‘moon look[ing] orange with a copper hue’ as the commentator said.

Photo of a frosty graveyard glimpsed through trees.

I made a pot of tea and set about making eggs benedict – but without the pot, the hollandaise sauce, ham or muffin. Basically a mug of tea and poached eggs on toast.

But sometimes, it’s the way you look at things that matters. I had a fabulous time searching for the lunar eclipse, and a breakfast fit for a queen.

Published by Jane

Life has its ups and downs but the trick is to try to keep your sunny side up. My writing explores relationships and what makes us tick. I blog a little, write flash fiction, short stories and longer work.

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