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Beauty on the Backroads

Stories of grace for life's unexpected turns

dreams

The tending

July 6, 2018

These summer days are both too long and too short.

Day breaks before I’m ready to get out of bed, and yet there is something about the light that calls me to wake.

Some days, I answer, shuffling to the coffee pot, glancing across the lawn to the garden in all its green goodness. As the machine perks the beans, I survey the world. What has changed while I’ve slept? 

Usually, little.

Other days, I ignore, silencing the alarm, pulling the sheets tighter and closer, enjoying the respite the air-conditioned bedroom provides from the blistering heat of summer days. I will close my eyes to grab a few more minutes of sleep or reach for a book to open the day with words. Some days, I reach for my phone and survey the virtual world. What has changed while I’ve slept?

Usually, little.

—

On the hottest of these summer days, I have taken great care with the plants. While the children play their make-believe games all throughout the house, I am carrying water in the teapot-shaped vessel from the sink to the porch and back again. Sometimes this is a morning activity and sometimes a nighttime one. Some days, it has been both.

I am no green thumb, but I am managing to keep seven pots of herbs thriving as well as six potted flowers, one hanging plant and four succulents. This is in addition to the garden in the back yard, the watermelon seeds the kids started at a science open house that have now become vines, and a patch of petunias my husband brought home from work.

A few of the plants on my porch

So much of this is ridiculous to me. I used to joke that I had a black thumb, that I could not keep plants alive because they couldn’t speak to me. Give me a cat that meows when it’s hungry or a baby who cries when she needs something, then I can respond. 

Plants take a special kind of care—a noticing and paying attention that I didn’t have the energy for until recently. And, if I’m honest, they do speak in their own way. Dry soil. Droopy leaves. If I look closely enough I can tell when a plant is healthy and when it is not.

When we decided to start gardening for ourselves a few years ago, I was afraid of failing at it. I didn’t want to waste time or money trying to grow something that I could easily buy from someone else. Mostly, I was afraid of my own inadequacies. What if I didn’t water enough? What if I watered too much? What if these plants died on my watch?

I’m no longer afraid of these questions. There is an element of mystery to tending these plants. My part is so minimal. Not unimportant but only part of something bigger. Knowing my role has given me freedom.

—

A month or so ago, after our garden was planted, my husband brought home a bunch of daisies that were destined for the garbage at work. (He is employed by farmers who run two farm stands in our county.) They were wilted some and a few of the buds were brown, but he was convinced that with a little care, they would perk back up.

The kids and I gave each plant its own pot and surrounded it with soil. Then I watered and watered and watered some more, each day wondering if I was performing an impossible task. The leaves were a healthy green and only an up-close examination revealed some flower potential within. These seemingly dead plants eventually bloomed, adorning our porch with pink and yellow daisies. 

Even now, after weeks of hot temperatures and insufficient watering, they persist. I keep watering and wondering. Will they bloom more or am I watering for nothing?

—

A week or so ago, my husband brought home a flat of petunias that were going to be discarded. Having seen the success with the daisies, he was certain I could bring them back to life. As I prepared a plot for them, I shook my head in disbelief. Me? Bring dead things to life?

The day I transplanted the petunias

It is nothing short of a miracle.

The same petunias three days later

That same night, he brought three more plants for our garden. I made room for them as best I could, but it’s getting a bit crowded back there. We seem to be in a phase of rescuing plants that need a good home, and while it means more work, it also means potentially more beauty, more fruit.

How did I become this kind of person? Maybe I always was but fear got in the way.

These long summer days find me tending plants in the morning and watering the garden at night, preserving herbs, and harvesting vegetables as they come. I hover in the garden, keeping watch daily because the changes happen so quickly. What has changed in the night? A lot.

It is hard, holy work, this tending of plants. My hands bear hard callouses. My feet are constantly covered in dirt. My body reeks of sweat. And I never feel closer to God than when I’m close to the earth. Bare feet on dirt or sand or dipped in the ocean. Hands digging in the soil. The sounds of birds singing or leaves rustling in the wind. The colors of flowers. The green of grass.

Even in the rhythm of the near-nightly ritual of watering the garden, I can feel something of the Divine as I drag the hoses—one across the driveway, the other across the lawn—to meet in the yard so water can flow freely from the faucet by the house to the sprinkler in the garden.

I watch where the water falls, adjusting the sprinkler as necessary, never getting it quite right but hoping that the drops fall where they are needed most. I walk away for 30 minutes or so, leaving it be until puddles form in the dirt.

On the nights it rains, I celebrate the natural soaking our plants receive knowing it is far more thorough than my evening attempts to give the plants what they need.

I cannot keep up with removing the weeds but somehow life emerges. Already, we have eaten okra, eggplant and zucchini from our garden. Our first jar of pickles is in the fridge. (We still have to wait a week before they’re ready.)

The heat, the weeds—they almost made me lose faith that our garden would produce this year.

But the little signs of life help me believe.

—

I give up too easily on the seemingly dead areas of my life—dreams that dry up and plans that face too much heat, the place where I’m planted that seems overrun with weeds.

These wilted flowers and almost-discarded plants remind me that what looks to be dead isn’t always over and done. Maybe my dreams need a little watering. Maybe they need more room to grow. Maybe I can’t keep the heat away, but I can nurture my plans in another way. Maybe I need to get rid of some weeds.

Maybe I can’t give up on things just because of what I see. Maybe I need to trust the natural rhythms, the ordinary work to produce something surprising and unexpected.

And maybe the God who can bring the dead back to life can resurrect something in me.

Filed Under: beauty, dreams, gardening Tagged With: black thumb, bringing the dead to life, gardening, green thumb, potted plants, resurrection, tending

A letter to my future self

June 1, 2018

My last day of work (for the school year) is today. When I started five months ago, I never dreamed I’d love it as much as I do, or be as sad to see it end for summer break as I am. Don’t get me wrong; I’m looking forward to our summer plans, but I will miss the interactions with teachers and students.

Interviewing for the position last winter, I was skeptical about my future if I started working. I felt like I was losing something. I could not imagine that I would find something more valuable than money in it. It started out as something I thought I had to do for financial reasons and has turned in to something I need to do for me.

During the interview, I was asked a question I usually dread: “Where do you see yourself in three to five years?” I’ve always felt like this is a question meant to trick me into saying whether I see myself in this job long-term or not. When I hesitated, the interviewer explained, “I ask this question so I know if you have goals.” I think I may have sighed with relief. I told her what some of my goals were, personally and what we’ve set as a family. We’re not always super intentional about goal-setting, but we definitely have dreams and plans.

A few weeks later, when the calendar year turned over to the year I would celebrate my 40th birthday, I started thinking more about the future. What did I want the next years of my life to look like?

So I made a list. Not a bucket list, exactly, but goals and dreams for the future. I started a notebook, too, where I began collecting quotes that inspire me around the theme I’ve chosen for my 40s, a record of big prayers I’m praying, and a list of gifts for which I’m grateful (not necessarily material things).

In the few months that I’ve been doing this, it’s been an exercise in present- and forward-thinking.

My past has had enough attention.

—

This week, the eighth-graders at our school were given letters they wrote to themselves in seventh grade. And they had the opportunity to add to that envelope a letter to their senior selves to open four years from now when they are finishing high school.

Photo by Joanna Kosinska on Unsplash

I remember this exactly from my middle- and high-school years. We wrote letters in eighth grade to ourselves and opened them our senior years of high school. By the time my high school career was nearing its end, I had forgotten what I had written, and I was shocked at how much of my eighth-grade attention was on other people. My letter was full of jealous, envious words directed at classmates, other girls particularly, because I was not popular and desperately wanted to be.

I wasn’t popular by the time I was a senior, either, but I didn’t care as much. Besides, I was going to a college seven hours from home. I was leaving my hometown behind and couldn’t have been happier. (I feel differently now.) Reading my eighth-grade letter to my future self was eye-opening and a little bit sad.

—

Not too long ago, I re-read a blog post I wrote five or so years ago. I didn’t remember writing anything about my future self, but I had and it made me smile that in the time between I had done the work I aimed to do to improve myself.

Why don’t I do this more often?

Letters to our younger selves are common, and I don’t think it’s wrong to look back at the people we were in the past and want to comfort and assure that part of us that everything’s going to be okay, that we can give ourselves more grace than we think we deserve, that life will go on.

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

But we can’t change the past. 

We can affect the future.

Why don’t we write letters to our future selves?

For me, I think it comes down to fear. If I write a letter to future me full of my hopes and dreams and goals for the next stretch of life, what happens if I don’t accomplish those things? Will I feel worse about myself? I can’t see the future. It’s so unknown. What if something terrible happens between now and then?

Those are extreme fears. If I’m really going to be honest, I’m afraid of the work I’ll have to do to become the person I think I can be years from now. Putting it in writing means I can’t float along and let life happen to me. I can’t stick my head in the sand and pretend everything’s going to be okay without my intervention or attention.

Maybe I’m also afraid nothing will change in that time.

But I’m not sure any of those are good reasons not to write a letter to my future self.

—

Here’s a question I haven’t answered yet: When is a good time to do this?

Should I write one now and open it next year on my birthday? Or wait till I’m 45? Should I write it at the beginning of the year and open it at the end of the year?

I don’t know yet.

But I know I want to do something like this and soon.

Have any of you ever written a letter to your future self? Tell me more.

 

Filed Under: dreams Tagged With: future me, goals, job interview, letter to myself, working to better myself

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Hi. I’m Lisa, and I’m glad you’re here. If we were meeting in real life, I’d offer you something to eat or drink while we sat on the porch letting the conversation wander as it does. That’s a little bit what this space is like. We talk about books and family and travel and food and running, whatever I might encounter in world. I’m looking for the beauty in the midst of it all, even the tough stuff. (You’ll find a lot of that here, too.) Thanks for stopping by. Stay as long as you like.

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