Last winter, while my parents were with us for several
months, my Dad was the primary caretaker of our garden. He pruned the trees and
bushes. He watered and weeded. He did
all the regular garden maintenance and some.
The ‘some’ category encompasses all the things we don’t get around doing
under the burden of ‘just keeping up’ with life. Being retired and unburdened
by the distractions of the life governed by the rhythm and rules utterly foreign to him,
he got to do amazing things like fixing the fence! Or, replacing the leaky
garden hose. Or, re-setting the sagging gate.
Or edging.
The last grabbed my attention today.
Back in February, somewhere between reading Anna Karenina
and Brothers Karamazov, my dad went around the entire circumference of our
garden and dug up a twenty-inch wide ribbon of dirt, an empty space between the
lawn and the garden part. This margin made my garden look as if we pay for
professional lawn and garden service! It made everything look neat, well taken
care of and even peaceful.
Something prompted my dad to go around, dig deep, and with
his own hand, one stab of a trowel at a time, create this boundary. The border that says, “yes” to some things,
and “no” to others. The breathing space
between ‘this’ and ‘that’. The line of delineation
where something ends and something else begins.
We all agree that having margin is of vital importance to
the health and sanity of our lives. Still most of us in greater or lesser
degree struggle both to create and maintain it.
I noticed today how the empty space created by my dad is being filled
with weeds and grass, even rogue seedlings of cilantro, Thai basil and our pink vinkas whose blooms seem
to have gone on steroids. The remnants
of my old ‘brown thumb’ me hesitate to uproot anything that resembles a flower or desirable plant even if its crowding out what I am trying to grow during this season.
Somewhere deep inside, I think it’s a badge of gardening honor to
have more stuff growing in my backyard jungle – as if it gives me a bragging right - Look at all the things I’ve
learned to grow!
But, today I begin to realize that less indeed might more,
and a wide margin with extra space may be as enjoyable and inviting (or perhaps more!) than a crowded
Home and Garden Show.
Knowing my wise and perceptive dad, he was onto something. He saw what I was too busy to see for myself and decided that of all things he could have done for me, I needed his help with creating the margin the most.
Knowing my wise and perceptive dad, he was onto something. He saw what I was too busy to see for myself and decided that of all things he could have done for me, I needed his help with creating the margin the most.
2 comments:
I love this, Gordana! I desperately need margin in my life, and this image of margin around a garden provides the perfect visual reminder. Thank you!
Thank you Taryn! I need daily visual reminder as well :-)
Post a Comment