Part One: Flora

A True Story:  

M and I stood in swarms of mosquitoes on the side of a mountain in a slippery pile of ankle breaking talus to photograph wildflowers — she whipped out her wide angle lens and I chose my trusty, rusty 50mm.  We shared our photographic secrets freely, laughed a lot and she swatted a million bugs (they don’t seem to care for me like they do her).   There was so much softness captured: softness of petals, softness of light, softness of the baring bright of souls…
____________________________________________

We don’t need many.
No one does.
A few true is enough.
A few true who allow that softness,
make room for it (as it billows and consumes 
the quiet of spaces)
and beam it brilliantly back
into the palms of open hands,
into the quiet corners.

You can choose to see.
You can choose not to see.
But if you choose to see, 
there is a second choice to make therein:
to see deeper, to see harder, to sometimes strain, 
but always to illuminate.
______________________________________________

On that talus, 
you can let the weight slide off,
down the mountain,
like so many tumbling pieces of granite and fir.
Tumbling.  
Turning.

Turning to sand in the sun.
Disappearing in the hungry mouths of wind and water.

Summer in the West

After a long, hard sleep last night,
I woke up this morning to the gentle plink plonk of rain on the bedroom windows,
the sound of a plum tree scraping twig tips against the living room window
and that sense
and that sense
that everything that has breath was praising the Lord.

Really, summer in the West is 
hymn after hymn of praise for the Creator
and the genius of nature:
the whip of willows in the wind,
the fall of water over smooth stones,
the methodical washing of the rains,
the dry heat that grows the grasses tall,
the slow and lonely beat of my heart
(for I am nature too and when I was made, the Creator proclaimed me good).

Summer in the West is so stuffed and exploding with surprises,
the sort of surprises that can only make a soul gladder by all passing moments,
the sort of surprises that rip at the blinders we place over our hearts and minds.
My gaze is renewed.

I see the summer coming.
The summer arrives.
I take off my shoes.
I cry out:
Here I am, show me!  
All my whispers turn to prayers
and these mountains I tread upon rise up as temples,
as the holiest of holies.
 Out in the gardens,
the things I always trust to fail,
prove once again that my shallows are shallow.
 There’s a rhythm here that is stronger than the muddling tempos of
human invention.  I cannot trust in everything, but I can trust that the raspberries will always turn plump and red in the sun, my favorite rose will always smell as sweet, this unfolding space, in seventh dimension (in honest four part harmony) will always sing me back again…and again, I will return.

The promises of the seasons
(the steady and clean unfolding of nature)
reflect the greatest promises of all:
healing, redemption, growth, death, renewal, 
love…
 What is summer like, where you are?
Are you turning gold like the wheat in the fields?
Are you pressed, over and over, by the textures of the wildflowers (the indian paintbrush sweeping coral onto the canvas of your soul)?

I can feel my pace has slowed.
I’m under restoration.
In a space this quiet, this calm,
I’m allowing myself to be nurtured.
That said, I’m a tad stir crazy here.
I’m desperate to be up the mountain running like a tawny flanked quadruped.
Last week, I jumped in a river and bruised my heel, quite terribly, on a river stone.  I’ve barely been able to walk, let alone gallop.  My injury is breaking my heart.  These summer days in the West are tidily numbered and dwindling fast so I’m taking to the gardens, most vigorously, building arbors with flexible portions of willow I’ve been gathering from the river, guiding vines up and over them so that there seems to be a constant, green banner of love drifting in every direction.

Summer in the West:
These high and dry times.
These burning and bright shining times.
These dust dampening morning raining times.
It’s all so good.


:::EDIT:::
THANK YOU 
so much for the comments you left on this post as well as the emails and Etsy convos you’ve been sending me regarding this life snippet.  
You’re the stars and the moon.
x

The Constant Gardener


Tell me, how do your gardens grow?
I had such a wonderful day.
I had to let you know.
After I mow the lawn and vacuum the house I am going back out to the studio because I am excited about working more on a project of mine (ultra uber top secret…you’ll see soon).
There were pickled scallions for snacking this afternoon
Lilacs placed in vases around the house and studio:
And vegetarian Thai summer rolls for dinner…but no photo of them, I ran ten miles this afternoon and was so hungry that I gobbled them down like a wild thing…snarl hissssssss.

Never mind.  
I made one more.
For dessert.

Hey!  What’s going on?

Tra la la,
The Plume

https://www.thenoisyplume.com/blog/2011/06/01/1006/