
The first day of another week arrived and God declared it good. The chickens have learned to use their new ramp and now vie with the pigs for attention and treats. The pigs are smarter; the chickens are faster and more easily airborne. Relationships always require compromise and tradeoffs. Even God’s and mine.
God is smarter, faster, and more easily airborne. But I’m tenacious.
“So am I,” God declared. “Let’s just enjoy these old lilacs for a bit, shall we? They’re as tenacious as we are.”
We sat on displaced cement steps going nowhere and marveled at the prolific purple blooms, blue sky, apple blossoms, and the speed of dandelion growth. Because I associate lilacs with Memorial Day, I brought to mind dead friends and wondered when I would be joining them. God brought to mind babies and urged me to consider their fat little legs kicking, their loose, drooly mouths smiling.
Thanks to the expansive air and insistent green of spring, I found I could hold the babies and my dead loved ones in the same space, and a profound sense of gratitude arose that surprised God as much as it surprised me.
“Nice,” God said. “That’s some impressive space you’re holding there.”
“I know. Some days, I’m so damn impressive I can hardly stand it.”
“But other days…” God gave me a look. Was it shaming? Understanding? Predictive?
I shot God an equally quizzical look. “What are you getting at?” (If you want to maintain healthy relationships, it’s better to ask than assume. But with God, there will often be too many answers or none at all.
Our newest apple tree has not recovered from the wind-whipped trip home. We should have protected it better. The hours remaining in my life will bring opportunities for despair, kindness, contemplation, meanness, largeness, smallness, giving, and withholding. The pigs will demand more food than is good for them. They’ll squeal and squabble. The chickens will scratch for worms. There will be blooming and going to seed.
God is the pollinator, the fertile idea, the distorted reflection, the broken door. How could I possibly expect a coherent answer?“
“Ah, but you keep asking, and I adore you for that,” God said. “You’re not just tenacious. You’re audacious.”
God’s right. How dare I break my realities into so many pieces, or twist verbatims into poems? But with such a photosynthetic God, how dare I not?
The lilac branches swayed as God summoned a flock of goldfinches, and together they flew toward the glaring, generative sun, leaving me and my audacious tenacity sitting content in a fragrant lavender haze of seedlings and ancestors.
Beautiful! Thank-you.
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Thanks, Teressa. The lilacs were probably planted around the year I was born. I am quite sure they’ll outlive me, and I’m okay with that.
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Audacious and tenacious sounds right to me.
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Thanks Gary. I wish I could include more easily airborne :). But then the vertigo would get me anyway.
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