When it comes to survival, our cultivated gardens and the wilder nature around us can, if we watch for them, provide many lessons in hanging on. I was reminded of that this week when I passed by this incredibly tenacious tree, seemingly growing out of the bedrock. It stands on the edge of a ridge leading from my backyard to the pond. The primeval seabed of the Flint Hills is exposed by erosion and time on these ridges and, in places, the rock itself becomes porous with holes as the lichens eat them away. Often, those holes become pots for the germination of wind-blown plants who trade the inconveniences of the cramped position for protection from prairie fires. This tree has been growing here for a decade, untouched by fire after fire, until it has now filled the hole that birthed it.
I feel, in this time of quarantine, a kinship with this tree, a bond forged by the urge of life to grow and expand despite the constraints around it. My adherence to stay-at-home edicts from local "authorities" suffers from both my lack of paranoia about catching the virus and my lack of faith in those authorities. I do wear a mask in public, despite knowing the science and all-the-time wondering why I bother. Running "crucial" errands, the number of which expands exponentially with my cabin fever, I often think of the quote on my office refrigerator at work, purportedly from Marilyn Monroe, which reads "Ever notice that 'what the hell' is always the right answer?" Yes, I recognize that subscribing to guidance from a woman who tragically passed away in the fullness of life may not be the wisest choice. It is, however, more satisfying, and soul-serving than listening to nonstop gloom and doom from the news.
Yes, I'm running risks daily, but I, like this tree, know instinctively that every day of life brings risks that we must face in order to flourish. A deep core of fatalism helps me in that regard. I might catch coronavirus today and die next week. I might also get broadsided by a semi-truck on my way home from work. Neither is really that likely. I've watched this tree, an elm, grow for years, steadfast in the face of wind, fire and storm. To have grown this tall, this broad, it must already have once pierced completely through this layer of rock, allowing the roots to reach more fertile soil around it. Now it faces another challenge and I'm intrigued by what happens next for it. Will the tree die, girdled by the constraints of its environment? Will the rock yield, split or dissolved by the irrepressible forces of life?
Time will tell, both for the tree and for us. Will we wither now, paralyzed by fear of the world outside our holes, or will we grow on, breaking the barriers and pushing against the sky? Me, I'm betting on life and the spirit of this tree. Staying in the hole is not an option.
My solution to the non-stop gloom and doom in the news is to just not read/watch most of it. I stick with the valuable uses of media, like gardening channels on Youtube or episodes of Gardeners' World. I usually eventually hear what's really important from my students, when life isn't on lockdown at least!
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