Tip-toeing through tulips metaphorical
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Rain fell
all night long. The ground was soggy, spongy. Flowers hung their heads from
weight of water. The morning sky looked like moldy cottage cheese. Around noon,
the sun broke through with promise.
Every
morning I take a small basket out to my mango tree and fill it with what wants
to be picked. Today I put another quart of mango pieces in my wee fridge-freezer.
It is jam-packed, literally, since I made two batches of freezer jam and the
remainder of the space is mango-mania. One more week and no more mangos until
next year. To me, these fruits are treasure
Anything
else that needs to go to the freezer faces rejection. No room at the inn. Not
to worry. Mango pie. Mango drinks. Mango sauce on waffles. Mango with ice
cream. Plain mango pieces in a dish. Mmm, yes.
Last
February I planted spinach in a baby bath tub, three tubs of which supplement five-gallon
buckets which make up my garden. Since April, this tub has fed me and my
neighbors. Really, how much spinach do you want to eat? Today I made the final
harvest for a salad. I could have urged one more cutting, but determined that
enough is enough. I’ll replant in September. Nothing leafy seems to want to be
planted during the heavy rains.
Have you
ever planted tomatillas? Last week I made my first batch of salsa verde, all
with my own produce, except for the jalapeno. There is nothing better.
This is my first
time to grow these little green globes. The plant itself is beautiful, bushy
with branches and leaves to make a picture. Then it magically blows balloons of
fragile green like paper lanterns within which the little green ball of fruit
grows from babyhood until the paper turns brown, filled with the lovely
tomato-like fruit.
I get so
excited that you’d think I made it all happen. I didn’t make any of it happen.
I’m not the creator. I’m a helper. Most of all, I’m just an observer.
I watch. I
see. I ponder.
I’ve come to
believe this is my job for this time of my living. To be an observer. To what
purpose? I’ve not a clue.
All my life
until my health forced retirement, I’ve been a “do-er”. It is harder being a
“be-er”.
As an
observer, yes, I get to appreciate things I used to take for granted. Beauty in
nature was like elevator music, there, noticed but not focused. Now not a day
passes without a “wow!” or several.
I’m also
aware of things I wish I didn’t see, such as traits or behaviors that I know are
not meant to be seen. So I keep duct tape across my lips. But I also look at
myself and search out similar actions, whether lately or historical. I see both,
now, and then, in a different light. My searchlight helps me hope the negative
I observe both “over there” and “in here” get rooted out.
Yes, I’ve
gone from growing garden to highly personal without a hitch. How I see it is
that the gardening and the personal are all one thing. It is all about what
seed I plant and when I plant it and if I feed and water the seed and does it
grow or should it be weeded out.
Did I tell
you about my cotton tree? I tried to make it grow in three different spots
before finding where it wanted to live. After three more years of severe
pruning when the leaves fall, I have the absolutely most beautiful, most
perfect, delight of a cotton tree, full of yellow flowers which turn to orange.
The flowers then form cotton bolls. Flowers and bolls adorn the tree for
months.
See what I
mean? We are just like that cotton tree. We need the right light, the right
amount of shade, judicious pruning, food and water for body and soul. We
flourish.
Certainly a
gardener, a do-er, takes care of the cotton tree. We have to be our own
gardener. It is harder work.
Sondra
Ashton
HDN: Looking
out my back door
End of July,
2022
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