After decades of spending most of my non-working, non-parenting time in the gardens, I am trying to take the yard surrounding me a bit less seriously. Perhaps it was being given a copy of the movie "Grey Gardens" by my daughter for Mother's Day a couple years back. That was kind of scary. But for whatever reason, I've come to think of needing a different kind of comfort zone in the green space surrounding my house. My time in the garden has always been my self-proclaimed therapy. I love seeing the succession of season and profusion of blooms, however short-lived and temporal. Or perhaps it is living in a place where the big enviromental picture is so incredibly beautiful that is seems a bit of folly to think that you could improve on Mother Nature in this neck of the woods.
Alice: The Mad Hatter? Oh no, no no...
Cheshire Cat: Or you could ask the March Hare. In that direction.
Alice: Oh thank you. I think I'll see him...
Cheshire Cat: Of course he's mad too.
Alice: But I don't want to go among mad people.
Cheshire Cat: Oh you can't help that. Most everyone's mad here.
(laughs maniacally, starts to disappear)
Cheshire Cat: You may have noticed I'm not all there myself.
...............Well, so.......if you enter the Purple Slipper Gallery and Garden..... my hope is that you will smile as you share a glass of wine or cup of tea. Afterall, gardening can't be all tilling and planting and weeding. Flowers are flirting and fleeting and fun. I guess that's the message I see now. They can inspire laughter as well as deep inspiration or profound thoughts. Life needn't be so entirely serious, or the toil of our passions so fully consuming that we forget to indeed stop to smell the roses.
I encourage you to click on the pictures for a closer sniff :)
When I closed on this house three years ago this week, I was delighted to arrive to the surprise of a bed of bright poppies spilling across the front of the house. What a happy flower! Now they are popping up in my driveway or between sidewalk stones. Delightful! Though I have added some lillies, sage, starfish, and such to keep them company, they will, perhaps, always be the landmark expression on the face of my homefront here.
“That we find a crystal or a poppy beautiful means that we are less alone, that we are more deeply inserted into existence than the course of a single life would lead us to believe.”
-John Berger
Mom, you have lost it.
ReplyDeleteAnd I also think the gardening gene is skipping a generation.