I'm happy to hear, I write back to my sister Gwen, that you're enjoying your garden this spring. I hope to hear that from everyone.
Personally,
I have come to love weeding. It's a hands-on way to make a concrete improvement
in my environment. I go away with a sense of accomplishment.
I like
being physically close to the ground, moving into the sun on cool days, staying
in the shade on hot ones. I like smelling the earth and whatever's growing in
it.
Since you
often stay in the same place for a period of time, more wildlife appears --
mostly bees and birds for me -- and your brain can pay more attention to subtle
clues. You listen to the birds when you're out of doors doing something with
your hands. It must be like weaving, crocheting, needlepoint -- things I have
never done -- focusing one part of your mind on a task, leaving another piece of your
mind to roam its own thoughts or take in its surroundings. A garden is a good
'surrounding.' That's what it's for.
I find in
this climate it's only warm enough for two or three months to do something slow
and meditative, to take in the garden -- the home environment -- at this pace,
a pace decided by other living things. Birds have reasons, and even routines,
for darting about. For calling or singing. You become aware of them. If a bird
happens to have a long song to sing, you're there to hear it. If the bees are
busy, you find ways to meld your activities with theirs; you give each other
some space, as needed, but don't cede the territory to them. It's yours as
well.
So the
other day, almost warm enough to be performing this occupation in perfect
comfort -- not quite, but a more beautiful day for being a little cool: that
cool dry air creating a perfect light for admiring spring green and other
colors -- I am removing a collection of intruders from a patch of groundcover
thyme. The thyme (it makes tiny white flowers; a few of them; eventually) had
captured this patch of earth fair and square some years ago. But other plants
attacked it. I pulled out the intruders, a thick viney clover the original
sinner, for several years before I accepted that you couldn't fight change
forever and maybe you shouldn't. Making decisions now, deciding to allow some
of the intruders to stay for aesthetic effect even though they will cause me
more trouble in the future... I'm down on the ground where I smell the thyme.
There's a comparatively gigantic echinacea (cone flower) in the middle of this
patch, and I decide to leave the decision of whether to transplant it to some
indefinite future. It's kind of interesting where it is right now, though
probably bad for the thyme. I'm pulling out violets, clover, some clearly
identifiable weeds, and a few nascent dandelions -- small, though big enough to
take some thyme roots with them when you pry up their own.
I want to
stop time here. Time -- I play, as always, with the verbally inviting paradox:
time, thyme -- is in charge here. Is thyme on my side? Not really; it's on its
own side. Free will doesn't get to say how long I'll do this. External factors
will decide. The weather will change; my legs will get stiff. The phone will
ring. I'll remember what I'm supposed to be doing.
But for a
while I am back in the garden.
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