I garden avidly.

When I was a child, my now 98-year old grandmother introduced me to the magic of coaxing food, medicine, scent, and sensation from seeds planted in the earth.

Gram lived a few blocks from my childhood home (in which my mom still lives) and I could walk to her place in minutes.  In my first book, A Desert Gardener’s Companion, I share a few of my happy-memory stories:

~ Gram supervised while I planted bulbs in her front bed to earn my Brownie Girl Scout Handbook.

~ I learned to double-dig alongside her in the vegetable plot of her half-acre garden.

~ All the girls in the family made jams and jellies from home-grown fruit in Gram’s tiny but efficient kitchen.

It was at the dining table in that same kitchen that I first perused stacks of seed catalogs with color-rich covers cradling packet descriptions and hundreds of  varieties possessing distinct and unique qualities. I loved those catalogs then, and I love them now.  But these days my favorite catalogs and companies are online.

I recently ordered seed from Botanical Interests, enticed by their Facebook page , our Twitter connection and their inspirational blog posts.

Botanical Interests is ”a family owned garden seed packet company specializing in dependable herb, flower, and vegetable varieties for the home gardener.” Always pleased with their products, I expect this year’s choices to perform just as well.

Bring Home The Butterflies,  Xeriscape Extreme and Perennial Bloom promise to be great additions to my newly-installed bird and butterfly garden. Just outside the massive bay of windows that define my work space, I’ve planted lots of seed- and berry-producing plants to entice the desert’s insect and avian creatures.

When interplanted with the Guara,  lavender, Loropetalum, Plumbago, Pyracantha, Salvia and others, I’m sure the nectar-producing florals these selections boast, along with the baby’s breath, Nasturtiums, Penstemon, and poppies, will be utterly adored.

And I will adore the creatures they attract.

I just hope the raptors

…and the coyotes

…and wild cats

mind their manners.

Bless the beasts…

 

 

I AM in the minority and I know it. I like Mondays.

Every Monday marks the beginning of a new week when everything seems possible. I reflect on the gifts and good times I’ve just enjoyed, find peace and purpose in the new day, firm up plans for the upcoming week and anticipate the blessings that I know will be mine. But as a child, I absolutely relished Mondays. 

Monday marked the beginning of the school week and I loved school. Monday plopped me into my element; and for the next five days I could learn and read and play, and do my best to please the adults around me and hide my truths from the neighborhood kids. Mondays marked the first day of safety, freedom and relief. Back then, beginning Friday afternoon at three, I kept my inner eye on Monday as the weekend loomed ahead.

While, for most kids, weekends meant parties and movies and happy, family fun, for my siblings and me, that was only an occasional truth. For us, Friday night through Sunday, 7 p.m. was a time to be endured. During those hours my dad, plagued by psychic dragons never slain, tormented his family. A mean alcoholic, he’d start drinking during the drive home from work and wouldn’t stop until he passed out at day’s end. During the week, he got up and went to work in the morning, and the rest of us went about our days with cautious, contained calm. We laughed and played and fulfilled our responsibilities in relative contentedness.

On weekends, our world changed. Friday evenings were tolerable because Dad was celebrating the end of the work week and his attitude was fairly upbeat. Bad things did not usually happen on Friday. But as the weekend rolled on, the firestorm would brew, and it grew.

So long as we were quiet, Saturday mornings were sometimes safe since Dad, nursing a hangover, retreated to his shop or CB radio desk, and kept his distance from four kids and all that they meant. Often, he was still feeling the previous night’s buzz when he drank his morning coffee. Two cups down, he’d switch to Coor’s talls with salt on the rim. (When the Teamster’s banned Coor’s he switched to Bud; and I wonder if he, a rabid homophobic, ever understood that he joined the increasingly influential gay community in “showing those non-union bastards.” Ya gotta smile.)

Come noon, the looming tension felt like a physical threat. By three, name-calling began. If we were lucky, he took a nap in the late afternoon and we got a time out. If not, the day was really long. At five, criticism and demands regarding dinner ensued. By seven we were “stupid, lazy, sons-o’-bitches,” “fat-assed good-for-nothings,” or some equally inadequate sort. As the sun went down, his fiery malevolence rose, fueling an illogical anger that propelled hatred, fists and leather belts.

Sundays, I tried to escape because they were scary and depression enrobed me. This “Sunday Sadness” remained my norm for decades before I figured it out and let it go. Because control was my dad’s favorite tool, getting away was never easy. “No,” was his favorite word. So I chose to go to my grandparents, go to church, study, do a school project or read. Anything to prevent our paths from crossing. Often I heard his ranting, but avoided the inevitable physical end. 

Sunday nights were often blessed because by then he just passed out. We’d nurse our wounds, spiritual, emotional and physical, while we watched “The Wonderful World of Disney”   in relative peace and look forward to the next five days. And then Monday came. As a child, I absolutely relished Mondays.

 

 Following In The Footsteps of The Greats

 

Henry David Thoreau did it.

So did Jack Kerouac. 

Others include Ernest Hemingway, MFK Fisher, Wallace Stegner, Walt Whitman, John Muir, George Orwell and Jack London.

Aside from being famous and accomplished writers, what  connects these illustrious talents?

 A quest.

During their lifetimes they each undertook a journey, a sojourn into the world, to better understand the human stories, to experience for themselves the worlds within worlds. They left the relative comforts of  lives and routines so they could better tell the tales for which they’re known.

While on these odysseys, each relied on the generosity of family and friends, the kinship of other writers and artists, and the kindness of strangers to provide shelter and creature comforts while they focused on the great works that would later make them famous and enrich the lives of generations to come.

And now, a new talent is on the cusp of emergence.

My friend and fellow writer, Jane Devin, frequently published in The Huffington Post, embarked on a year-long, cross-country journey last October and chronicles her adventure online at Finding My America. Jane blogs regularly, Tweets almost non-stop, photojournals, and speaks before community groups interested in new media and writing. All of this, and she still has time to drive across the country and work on a novel.

Jane’s talent is so apparent that GM is providing her with vehicles and Verizon with phone service. The rest is up to us. Jane usually stays in any one place for two or three days; and she’s thus far been sheltered by generous folks willing to give her a bed and a roof for a few nights. But now, she ventures into a part of the country with no acquaintances and few followers. She could use a little help.

If you’ve ever considered yourself a patron of the arts, consider offering that patronage to Jane. Go to her website. Read her content. Discover what she is discovering and join her on her journey.

And if you feel inclined to offer support, do so. She’ll appreciate it. We’ll benefit.

Jan 052010
 

For The Good Husband and me, ’08 and ’09 were years of living large. We traveled and entertained to excess, ate rich and highly lauded food, drank exceptional wines, danced into the wee hours and on and on. We had the kind of fun our age-mates enjoyed nearly thirty years ago while we were busy having and raising babies.

He found this busy life exhilarating. I found it exhausting, and yearned for simplicity.

Now finally, he too, is weary. ( Thank God! I was ready to suggest separate houses and regular rendezvous so that I could get some rest.) Over the holidays we created a new plan based on the realization that we have and appreciate everything we need. We’ve adopted a “paring down” approach to 2010. I am thrilled!

Turning 50 (and the four months it took to understand what that meant for me) undoubtedly contributed to my values clarification. Another key factor: For the first time in a decade, all my children are healthy and well, and I am free from the onus of getting them to this juncture. I’ve reached an amazing place in my life and I relish it.

Now, calm, content and focused, I embrace this new decade with confidence, joy and a surer sense of self. I will write, garden and practice yoga more. I will covet, spend and want less. Most importantly, I will love.  

In the midst of this past decade, a close friend on the threshold of death said, “You have loved me well.” No words impacted me more.  So I rededicate my time better to correspond to my values, and hope all to whom I’m connected can utter the same when I pass that divide. In the spirit of  this desire, beginning now and with myself, I will love. I will love well.

© 2012 Kim Nelson Writes Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha