I honestly do not know what to write about this evening. There is much going on in my heart and in my mind that needs studying, pondering, and plain old time. Things I need to do and deal with myself.
Jessie and I were talking the other day and she said, "Things just don't get any easier, do they?"
"No," I said. "They certainly do not."
It's like what an elderly neighbor told Lis once when her son was just a little guy and being a butt as little guys so often are. She asked the neighbor, "Does it get any easier?" The old lady sighed and said, "No, honey. It just gets different."
And I'd very much like to correct anyone who thinks that with age comes wisdom. In my case, I think with age comes the knowledge that I just know a whole lot more about what I do not know. I may have more experience in some things and even some more knowledge about those things but there are uncharted waters which still must be navigated, most of which I feel completely inadequate to the task of doing. What I've learned so far is mostly that life never, ever quits throwing you challenges and the ones that come in the later years are usually complicated in and of themselves and also complicated by the fact that we are older and we are facing our mortality and we are having to accept the fact that our abilities are diminishing in every way. There are those among us, I'm sure, who do not necessarily find this to be true but I think most of us can relate.
And while all of this is going on, the seventy or so years behind us are bringing their own weight and complications which affect everything we do or think or say.
I do believe there are some people who are very pure in the way they think and live. I mean that in a sort of Zen way, being able to accept everything that comes down the road as a new experience instead of a frightening change. And all of us, ALL OF US, have to be able to laugh a lot no matter how we view these changes.
I guess all of this is to say that there is no way to escape the fact that the road has many uncertain dips and turns, that storms will arise, that old burdens will slow our progress as we travel.
But we do not always have to like that fact.
I certainly do not.
I took it all to the garden today. I weeded and I pulled the cabbages which I had so much hope for. Maybe next year...
There were seven or eight of the scallions we planted that got away from me and I pulled those, their green parts grown far too sturdy to use in cooking except in making broth, I guess. One of them had bloomed and I've stuck that in a vase in the kitchen and I find it remarkably beautiful.
Fear not, ye sago-lovers! (Is there such a thing?)
A plant which has remained relatively unchanged since it annoyed the brontosauri will never be destroyed by the puny blades of a lopper employed by an old granny. Soon enough it will look like this.
You cannot kill these motherfuckers.
WEAR GLOVES.
Be strong, be gentle, be truthful, be patient. I think those are the words I need to tell myself. If any of them are useful to you, feel free to use them.
Meanwhile, keep in mind that I really do not know shit.
So true. We don't know so much more than we know. One foot in front of the other.
ReplyDeleteOne of my favorite sayings is, "I've forgotten more than you'll ever know." There are so many ways you can interpret that.
DeleteThank you for putting into words what I feel so much this evening. Barbara in Houston
ReplyDeleteThank you for telling me.
DeleteI'm so tired of "learning lessons" and "what doesn't kill you, makes you stronger". I have a good life for the most part, but I would like some of it to be easy. Is that too much to ask?
ReplyDeleteSending hugs woman.
"Learning lessons." Who among us really, really does learn lessons? I mean, after you've learned that fire will burn you and water can drown you, what do we learn? Oh, I guess we learn a lot but do any of us stick with what we've learned or do we blindly go on, repeating whatever it was that was supposed to teach us a lesson.
DeleteDo you know what I mean?
As to that whole what doesn't kill you thing- that's the biggest piece of horseshit I know.
The scallion flower is beautiful. I know enough to know that I don't know enough but I'm okay with slower progress with learning new things, new challeges. Some tougher than others but I'll get through and help as much as I can with the one who will have it the toughest.
ReplyDeleteThat is a good way to look at it, River.
DeleteFor someone who doesn’t know shit you really seem to be very wise. That scallion flower is amazing!
ReplyDeleteI think it is far easier to appear to be wise than it is to actually be wise.
DeleteIsn't that bloom cool?
I will be 75 this year and that seems like a big number to me. I realize that one of these years I will die and I don't think I mind that idea. I mean I've had a fine life for the most part and when it is my time to go, then I will go. Some weird thoughts maybe but it's all right.
ReplyDeletePeople should grow scallions just for those beautiful flowers!
I've said before that if I got some sort of terminal illness diagnosis, instead of seeking treatment options, I'd just be, "Okay. Sign me up for hospice!" I do not think I am afraid to die but who knows? If faced with that immediate reality, there is no guarantee as to how I'd react.
DeleteFor me, accepting that life is one big adventure with lots of bumps in the road allows me to just take it all in stride and move on. Also doing what gives me joy is most important. Lastly, I also subscribe to: If things can go wrong, they do go wrong. Life is bumpy!
ReplyDeleteYour scallion flower is lovely. In the Northeast we grow Alliums that are very similar. My Alliums grew beautifully until the deer decided to eat them for dinner. Yes...I'm keeping the deer well fed and the garden centers happy. Even plants on the garden center's "deer resistant" list are no challenge for my deer population.
I so wish I was more accepting of the realities of life. I don't think I ever have been. I feel that your outlook is far healthier than mine.
DeleteDeer in the garden. I have no idea why they don't bother mine but they don't. We've seen them in the backyard before but never near the garden.
I think my sister was inherently unhappy. Her life just did not turn out the way she wanted or hoped and she seemed incapable, to me at least, of understanding that life is a journey, not a destination. She complained a lot that things never got easier or settled or or. Well, no. Life is meeting one challenge or change after another. You go with the flow or you fight the current. You're going downstream regardless.
ReplyDeleteI have elephant garlic that I grow for the flowers that look just like that. They are sending up their bloom stalks now.
I don't think I'm focused on any destinations at this point. I do completely understand and accept that it's all about the journey. It's just that some things are harder to accept and deal with than others, I think. For me, at least.
DeleteI have some dried garlic flowers that are beautiful.
I think wisdom basically IS realizing how much we do not know. When we're young we think we know everything, we're in control, etc. and it soon becomes apparent that is not the case. Which is what you're saying.
ReplyDeleteI love the scallion flower!
Dylan's song "My Back Pages" perfectly captures that youthful assurance of how much we know. "Lies that life is black and white..."
DeleteGod, he was an amazing songwriter.
He's a great example of just carrying on with it, though.
I think that there are those who have wisdom and keep it to themselves, there are those who think that they have wisdom and seem to feel they should impart it to everyone, whether they asked or not and there are those who think that they have no wisdom at all who are perhaps the wisest. Gloves are wisdom.
ReplyDeleteGLOVES ARE WISDOM! Around spines or ants. Yes, m'am.
DeleteI think we all know those people who are pretty sure they know a whole damn lot who really, truly do not.
It doesn't get Easier it gets Different was truly some Sage advice. That Scallion Bloom is indeed lovely. And tho' I do Love a Sago Palm, they are very spiky and also dangerous to Pets, they can and will kill a Pet that chews on them so anyone with Dogs or Cats should probably not have them. Yours are Lovely... I actually managed to Kill mine that I had at the McManse, can you Believe it, they aren't immortal after all... and I wasn't even trying to Kill it dammit! *LOL*
ReplyDeleteYou have a great family and grandkids and they are blessings You do lots of exercise in the garden and have lots of home grown veggies which I love looking at when you take pics.I don’t have answers for wisdom but I do know that learning is lifelong and kids help us learn to be patient and kind.. Dogs and cats are good for therapy, they understand when we need their comfort.
ReplyDeleteIf you know you need to get assistance for issues that perturb you then you know you are in charge of your health and are on the right path
I am a panic merchant and so before I take any kind of medication I check for side effects with food and alcohol. It’s amazing what drugs can cause issues with certain foods .Maybe this is worth considering , maybe it isn’t. With love .