Let your quiet heart lead you…
~I Ching
The Red Poppy
The great thing
is not having a mind. Feelings:
govern me. I have
a lord in heaven
called the sun, and open
for him, showing him
the fire of my own heart, fire
like his presence.
What could such glory be
if not a heart? Oh, my brothers
and sisters,
were you like me once, long ago,
before you were human? Did you
permit yourselves
to open once, who would never
open again?...
~Louise Gluck, from The
Wild Iris
The Symmetry of Petals Unfurling, 2012 |
3.) The cycle of flowers deeply moves me. How the colors change over the short course of the life of a bloom—the vivid lilac of a newly opened coneflower leaches to cloud gray in a matter of days. Or the expansive ruby geranium sifts petals into oblivion, dropping each one gracefully, like a red snowflake. Or the individual lemon yellow cosmos, almost indistinguishable in a crowd of tangerine and yellow beauties, quietly collapses over the course of a single day, until it is no more than a stem with a few quilled seeds. The restraint and stillness of the singular bloom’s demise strikes me as beautiful and sad. This morning, I noticed the range of a bloom’s cycle within my garden. A single zinnia bloom just started to unpack its folded radius of yellow. If I had a stop-motion camera and the patience, I think I might capture, over the course of the next couple of days, a kind of pop-up origami, so intricate and precisely packed are the individual petals. This zinnia is a miracle in itself, because out of four packets of seeds planted in rows back in May, this is the lone zinnia that grew. Meanwhile, the blue moon lobelia, exhausted from a long summer of unrelenting sun, crisps into nothing, its branch of blue pilot lights extinguishing.
Petunias in Window Box with Sol, 2012 |
Tomato, 2012 |
5.) Paying attention to my garden, as day turns to night and seasons pass, has taught me more about the nature, play and mutability of sunlight than any art class. My stately maroon dahlias (“the color of dried blood,” my friend, Scott wryly commented) with their symmetrical petals, keep counsel with the sunlight. One minute the sun lasers the large face of the dahlia into pure architectural scaffolding—line, crease, and crossbeams— and the next minute, the maroon-color drains from its petals into shadow. Hours later, the sun fills and spills from every crevasse of the dahlia's conical petals. By late afternoon, the sun has transformed this same flower into a sacred bird: translucent red wings surrounding a gold corona.
Sunlight on Dahlias, 2012 |
Ivy Knot, ChainLink Fence, 2012 |
6.) Learning Patience. I have a tangle of morning glory vine and leaves overtaking my chain-link fence. Each morning, as I go outside to drink my tea, I long to see the large trumpets of blue flowers open on the green tangle. But, this particular Celtic knot of ivy has been expanding for two months now and shows not a single bud. And
summer is passing swiftly. The truth is: Flowers do not care if you are
patient. Stamp your feet. Vent your spleen. But, my impatience will do absolutely nothing to bring to the fence the
desired glories. And perhaps by coaxing myself to be more patient, I might just tune
into how beautiful the sun is coming through the twisted layers of green.
7.) Take responsibility and care for what you choose to nurture. And you will witness the palpable shift, when a plant finally gains root in the ground, establishes itself, and begins to flourish. It's so gratifying to be the audience to this small drama.
8.) Bees are invaluable to life as we know it. Do not Kill Them!! Bees are a marvel of work ethic. ( I
also think they’re quite beautiful.) How they stumble, in their feverish
intent, on the upper petals of a cosmo! How
they dive head first into the throats of alstroemeria! When they have visited
enough flowers and their leg-sacks are furred with pollen, they appear almost tipsy. Yet, their intense focus on the pistils and
stamens of flowers, one after another, is powerful to observe. NPR recently
shared an amazing article about how paper wasps and European hornets “may be
the secret to the wonderful complex aroma and flavor of wine.” Duccio
Cavalieri, a professor of microbiology at the University of Florence in Italy,
who, along with his colleagues, made this exciting discovery says, “It is
important because it tells me that it’s crucial to look at conservation and the
study of biodiversity.” And he adds, “Everything is linked.” (All summer, I
have had a hive of wasps that set up shop in the brick wall of my backyard.
They climb from the holes in the mortar out into the heat of the day and mill
in the mud of the watered soil, or they wander the flat leaves of the dahlias, eating
destructive insects. In the mornings and afternoons, they fly very near and are
everywhere around me. Not once, this summer, has a bee or a wasp tried to
attack or sting me. They go about their lives; I go about mine.) We have no right to destroy these incredible, beneficial insects.
7.) Take responsibility and care for what you choose to nurture. And you will witness the palpable shift, when a plant finally gains root in the ground, establishes itself, and begins to flourish. It's so gratifying to be the audience to this small drama.
Blue Lobelia around Dried Flower |
Tangerine Coneflowers, August 2012 |
9.)With grace and humor, my garden reminds me each day that
I am not the center of the universe. I play a small role in the grand design,
as does every single human, animal, insect, plant on this planet. How did I get
so lucky to be a part of this wonderfully interconnected
natural world? Every single life gets to play out a unique life of its own. And
I truly believe ALL of it matters. Though I am happy to be a steward to my
garden, especially during these summer months, I do not delude
myself into thinking that the flowers “need” me. There is integrity to each
plant, each bloom and an inner agency that I will never see or touch. But,
there is so much to learn from watching another life form live out its full
life cycle.
Honeybee Taking a Drink of Water, 2012 |
when I was in my mid-twenties, raising my son
on Northumberland Street. It was a postage-stamp size yard and I planted zinnias, nasturtiums, and cosmos and hoped for the best. By mid-summer that year, the garden was overflowing with color.
11.) After a long, hot day, you will be rewarded if you water
your flowers. Within minutes of the
water soaking into the parched earth, my coneflowers look visibly renewed: they
lose the droop, stand taller, flex the full radius of their petals, and lift their
leaves higher as if waiting to partner me in a dance.
Pale Pink Rose, 2012 |