Spring
Blooms, Breathes, and Blows Recklessly
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Two weeks ago the neighboring trees
out my east window were naked sticks. Today the same sticks are tricked out in
every shade of leaf, heavy with green.
Most trees here shed their leaves in spring; the old brittle
leaves pushed off the branch willy-nilly by the new sprouts. The Jacarandas are
still naked, just budding into flower. By next week a giant purple umbrella
will fully cover the northwest corner of my yard. The Prima Vera wear great
daubs of primary yellow. And over to the west I see sky-reaching stalks holding
hunter-orange bouquets.
Around the perimeter of my yard, bushes, blue, purple, pink,
yellow, orange, red, white. Flowers in hues un-named, combinations which shout,
“Look at me.”
Perfume: jasmine at my door, roses in back, a
cinnamon-vanilla scent from a purple flower, name unknown. The air is heavy
with scents, ever changing with the heat of the day.
Sounds like paradise, doesn’t it? Don’t you believe it! There
is a snake in every garden.
I’m not prone to allergies. I’m not. A couple morning sneezes
clear the passages and I’m good to go. But every few years . . .
Maybe it started at the Monday night weenie roast around the
open fire-pit. Fire equals smoke equals dry membranes. Wouldn’t have missed it
for anything. Good food and good neighbors.
Tuesday morning Jim and I loaded rocking chairs, water and
snacks and drove to a clearing on the way to Piedras Las Bolas, up the
mountain.
We took my metal rocking chairs because there is something
about a rocker. Once you sit down and lean back, the cares of life simply fall
away. The chairs were his idea.
Poetry was my idea. Jim had said he’d like to hear some of my
poems in my voice. He’d read a few but hadn’t heard me read my own work. The
mountain seemed the perfect setting.
We unloaded the rockers, moved through our morning Qi Gong,
then sat and alternated a poem or two by me with stories by Jim, punctuated
with stretches of silence, rocking, listening to the rustle of the dry oak
leaves.
I read a couple poems. Jim, who is smitten to insensibility
by a mutual friend, told me his latest story in his saga of lovelorn romance.
We ate an apple. I read a couple more poems. Jim told me the story of when he
was kidnapped. His life is much more exciting than mine. And so the day went,
alternating confidences.
When the breeze came up, the oaks rained leaves. These
particular oaks grow only at this higher elevation. The air was golden with
sunlight reflecting through the pollen. Yes, pollen. Exactly.
Back down the mountain, cane fields were burning prior to the
following day’s harvest. Dust clouds rolled across newly plowed fields.
We are surrounded. Our air is filled with particulates from
farming, cane burning, construction dust, pollens high and low.
Whatever the cause, this morning I woke sneezing, coughing,
dripping, swollen-eyed, raspy-throated, and thoroughly miserable.
You may wax rhapsodic about Spring if you wish. I don’t have
the energy. I’m going back to bed.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
March 22,
2018
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