Archives for category: Roses

The car was already packed when I woke up on Thursday morning. I had planned a new route, unnecessarily long, detouring through autumn forest and along less-traveled state highways to reach the coastal highway (Hwy 101) at a different point, to enjoy a drive I don’t recall ever taking. It more or less doubled the length of the drive, but I was specifically not in any hurry, and I knew my “early check-in” wasn’t going to be available that early, anyway. I took my walk close to home, on a familiar trail, well-maintained, well-traveled, level, familiar and easy. It was a good plan. I hit the road heading to the coast comfortably after daybreak, to enjoy the fall colors.

It was a lovely morning for a drive. Along the way I thought about my Granny, and the many drives we took together, and the detours and side trips she loved so much. I saw so many things and enjoyed so many adventures with my Granny. She raised me through my tumultuous high school years, and I realize now that she surely knew about my brain injury, though she didn’t discuss it with me explicitly. She gave me the love and the safe environment I needed, to learn and grow and – recover. Was she a perfect person? No, of course not. Taking my own Mother and my aunts at their word, she was maybe not even a very good mother to her own daughters, at all. She was raising 4 (and later more) kids, and often as a single mother, in an era when women were still very much viewed as needing to be attached to some man or another. She was strong – to the point of ferocity – and she could be unyielding. I never doubted that she loved me dearly though, and I value her love and guidance to this day.

I pass by the remnants of an old fort. It’s the sort of place she would have stopped. She’d drive an hour on a Sunday morning just to enjoy “the best cinnamon buns in the USA!” in a town rather farther away than most folks would drive for a cinnamon bun, and she’d make a 4 hour detour on a long drive just to see an old schoolhouse. lol She took me to see historic sights all over, everywhere she lived. She would dig in and do more research, and share what she learned, sometimes sneaking a cutting of a rose bush growing there, to plant at her house when we returned. I drove thinking about the drives we shared over the years that I lived with her. So many miles. So many sights. So much wisdom and perspective and shared conversation. Looking back, I know I must have been fucking insufferable. lol Teenagers often are. It’s a feature, not a bug, and trying out new perspectives is one of the ways we become who we will be. She was so patient with me. So willing to talk – and to listen. I pay attention to the sights along my drive, and it becomes a way to honor her memory.

A stop along the way. I feel like I’ve been here before…

I stop at a wayside with a view of the ocean. I take a couple pictures and just stand there enjoying the view, before reading all the signs. It’s not that I had any particular use for the information, I stopped for the view and to stretch my legs. I found some of the information interesting, like the map showing all the nearby other sights and way points, and places to camp. I smile to myself; I think my Granny would have liked the signage. I chuckled to myself as I got back on the road. No traffic – my timing was excellent and the weather was lovely.

I drove on thinking about the contrast in my relationship with my Granny, and my Mother (her daughter, and eldest child). My Mother always seemed, to me, to be intensely practical, but it was finding her college binder of her poetry, written in ink in that familiar handwriting, that inspired me to write long before my Granny’s writing of children’s stories (that never were published) would later inspire me to continue writing. My Mother’s poetry was poignant and romantic, moody and emotional – like the poetry of young women often is. Her poetry revealed a stranger to me. When she caught me reading it, the moment was awkward and filled with quiet tension. She took the notebook from my hand. I never found it again, though I searched the bookcases and the drawers of the secretary for it over and over again.

I don’t think I ever truly understood my Mother, and we were never very close (as I understand closeness, myself). She seemed “cold” to me in my adolescence. Reserved and private, and reluctant to share confidences when I was an adult. We never really “clicked” – or perhaps we were too much alike for her to feel entirely comfortable with me? I never knew. We were in touch on and off throughout my life and to the end of hers, though it was clear from conversations with my sister that my Mother didn’t speak of it. There were even years when she told strangers and new acquaintances that she had “two children” instead of three. I never asked why. She never mentioned it to me. My Mother was, in many ways, a closed book with a fascinating cover. I regret that we weren’t closer, but I learned from her that such things can’t be forced. I learned a lot from her. I learned from her to believe people when they tell you who they are. I learned from her that “family” is a word. Just a word. I learned from her that there’s real lasting value in learning to count on myself, and that no one can take my education from me – though it may not pay off in the way I may have expected it to.

…I learned from my Mother than choices have consequences.

There was a lot to my Mother, and I never knew her well. She remains quite a mystery to me, though she had quite a lot to do with becoming the woman I eventually did become, and the woman I am today. I drove on, thinking about these two women and the woman I am, myself. I think about their expectations, their encouragement – and my choices.

It was an interesting drive. Time well-spent. I’ve continued to think over the life lessons I learned from these women (and others), as I rest and relax and reflect – and grieve. I feel inspired, but… it’s slippery. The paintings I want most to paint feel “just out of reach”. I play in the colors, and let the memories come and go. I’ve needed this quiet time to reflect and consider and sift through the emotions. It’s been an emotional year, and I honestly wasn’t ready for all of it. I needed some time alone with the woman in the mirror.

Sun setting on a headache.

Yesterday, sometime in the early afternoon, I found myself stalled with a terrible headache, and had a panick attack on top of that. It was severe and made me feel sick with dread and overwhelmed with pain and emotion and I ended up “doing all the things” to manage it, with limited success. I finally just went to bed, hoping to wake feeling better (which I did). I spent a restless night of strange dreams, listening to the wind and the rain, waking now and then, and returning to sleep. I woke at daybreak, and watched the soggy sunrise, gray and wet and featureless. The day has been a good one, aside from the blustery stormy weather, which I don’t really mind. The views have been pretty spectacular. I’ve taken some good pictures.

A break between passing storms, a gray day.

Evening has come. I watched the light dwindle and fade away. More rain. More wind. Another night of it. This time no headache, and I’m enjoying that. I listen to the sound of a fire crackling on a hearth – it isn’t “real”, just a video, nonetheless I feel warmed by it, which amuses me. I sit with a cup of tea – finding a couple tea bags of my favorite tucked into my overnight bag, forgotten from my last trip, was a delightful moment. Enjoying it now is pleasantly satisfying and soul nurturing. I write awhile, thinking about these women who loved me and helped me along life’s path at a tender age, and how far I’ve come since then. It’s been a hell of a journey, and it’s not over yet. There’s so much still to see along the way.

Tomorrow I’ll begin again.

This is the sort of morning I would happily spend some time emailing my recently departed Dear Friend…

The sunrise from the trail this morning.

I would certainly share a picture of the sunrise, probably commenting on its beauty.  Recent years found my Dear Friend to have very limited ability to get around without help, and she wouldn’t see such a sight without pictures shared by friends. She often asked for details and anecdotes about my unassuming local travels. (I miss her, greatly.)

Tomorrow being my birthday, and having already received (and opened) gifts from my Traveling Partner, I would share those details with her, too. The context, the sentiment, why each gift delights me so, and the “back story”, if there is one, would all be shared and talked over together. She’d tell me why celebrating this birthday matters more than I think it does, and remind me that I am precious to her. She’d embarrass me a bit with praise, and point out how easily we can lose our abilities through disuse. She would encourage me to do more and go further. She would cheer me on and share my joy. If I were feeling beat down or defeated, she would laugh at my dark angry humor and give me her own wise perspective.

…She would slyly say nothing about some handmade delight she had sent my way, that would surprise me the day of my birthday with something more to open…

…Fuck I do miss you, my very Dear Friend…

Of the roses I planted this Spring with my Dear Friend in mind, one has bloomed. I grinned to see the colorful flower. I took a picture to share with her, forgetting for just an instant…    I shared it, instead, with another friend who was similarly close (closer, for years longer) with my Dear Friend, hoping it might bring her a smile, too.

“Rainbow Happy Trails” blooming in a corner of my garden.

I walked the trail this morning, watching the sun rise and the morning take shape. I breathed in the scents of Spring flowers and meadow grass as I walked along between river and marsh. I’m not really “sad” this morning, and the moment of poignant recollection passes without tears. I honor my Dear Friend through these memories and I am okay with missing her; she meant a lot to me, and our friendship got me through some hard times when I sometimes felt I had no one else to turn to. We could count on each other’s good will and affection, and we were there for each other through joy and hardship. That’s a beautiful thing.

…61, tomorrow… it is a bit weird not sharing it with her…

I walk on down the trail. I’ve got it to myself for now. I walk with my wandering thoughts. The work day will begin soon enough. When it does, I’ll begin again. Soon enough. Soon enough. No reason to rush. In the meantime, I walk with my thoughts and my memories, stopping at my halfway point to meditate, reflect, and write a few words about a very Dear Friend of mine. Time well-spent.

I finish up my writing and sit quietly awhile.   Photographers coming down the trail purposefully remind me that this is a work day. I check the time, happy to see I’ve got time to spare. Lovely morning.

…It’s the last day of being 60…

…I guess I’ll begin again…

As I left the house for my walk this morning, the scent of the Spring garden filled my senses. It was just barely daybreak. I could smell the roses, mostly, and hints of other flowers – the thyme is blooming, and some of the salad greens are bolting. Their wee delicate flowers are not particularly numerous, but they do have a lovely delicate fragrance that mingles with the scent of roses in the wedge where the front of the house meets the side of the garage. I love that spot, and often simply stand or sit there, breathing in the scents of the flowers in my garden. Later, when it is warmer, the sunshine will bring out the savory spicy scent of the curry bush. Delicious.

“Baby Love”, a favorite rose, a gift from my Traveling Partner the year we moved in together (14 years ago).

When I returned home, the scent of roses, fresh mown lawns, and spring breezes greeted me. I smiled at the roses blooming along the walk. The theme of my garden is “love and memory”, and I’ve tried to select the roses based on two criteria; will they do well in my climate, and are they a good fit based on their name (and to a lesser degree I consider their appearance, growth habit, and scent). Each rose in my garden has its own character. Some are related to each other. Some are apparently incredibly tasty (to the deer that wander through), others are less so. Some are quite thorny, though I’ve tended to avoid that painful challenge mostly. Nearly all of them are very fragrant.

“Baltimore Belle” trails lazily in her place by the walk, fragrant and lovely, she was planted just last year – one of my newest roses.

Any time I am in my garden, I find my thoughts wandering to love, and fond memories of friends, loves, and life with my Traveling Partner. It’s a lovely way to step away from the routine, and one of the most delightful advantages of working from home; I can take my break in the garden.

“Alchymist” blooms on the other side of the stepping stones into the garden, along the walk. Lovely and fragrant, bred from a wild-rose cross.

Every visit to the garden is a brief moment of rest, even on the days when I’m in the garden laboring over this or that (usually pulling weeds, of which there often seem many! lol). When I was a kid, gardening seemed to me rather more like “labor” than “rest” pretty reliably, and I faced my share of that work with considerable reluctance and some resentment – I could be playing! Wandering! Reading! Funny how my love of my garden developed in adulthood – and before I even had a “real garden”, still limited to plants in pots on rental balconies or patios. I smile, thinking about my very first roses – they were already in the landscape of the first home I ever owned, and I frankly tried to kill them (unsuccessfully). I was so impressed with their robust resilience, they were ever after a metaphor (for me) of beauty and survival and strength. I have, since then, always owned roses. Some in pots traveled with me over decades of living. When we moved in here, my oldest rose, with me longest, was Nozomi – which I’d had with me since 1993.

“Nozomi”, undisturbed by the neighborhood deer – likely due to her terrifying thorns!

My garden-as-a-metaphor delights my heart as well as my senses. The three roses planted in memory of my recently departed Dear Friend are unlikely to bloom this year. I plant only roses that are on their own roots (no grafted roses), and they are often quite “young” when they are planted. I try to give them a good start on building a strong root system, and I sometimes pinch off buds to prevent flowering the first year. That hasn’t been necessary for these three – they are not yet trying to bloom. I’m eager to see how they do as they mature. So far, “Celestial Night”, “Rainbow Happy Trails”, and “Whimsy” are strong and lush. I selected them with my Dear Friend in mind, to always remind me of her humor, her joy, and how she inspired me to live life eagerly and joyfully. She taught me much, and loved me dearly. I miss her greatly, but in the garden we are together, again, at least in spirit.

“Sweet Chariot”, a favorite bred by Ralph Moore.

When I first moved to California, many years ago and quite early in my relationship with roses, I had the good fortune to meet Ralph Moore in person, at his rose nursery in Visalia. He taught me a lot about miniature roses, and as I was still living in rentals at that time this was useful knowledge; minis fit in pots much more easily than larger climbers, vast sprawling ramblers, or large old garden roses. One of my first minis was “Sweet Chariot”, although the one in my garden now is not the one I originally purchased, which I rather foolishly planted in the ground in a community garden plot. It became so well-grown in that spot I couldn’t repot it at all, and I left it thriving there. It was some years after Ralph Moore’s death before I was able to locate a nursery that had Sweet Chariot for sale – but it was one I sought eagerly for all those years.

…There are metaphors buried in these details…

I sip my coffee and think about the garden, the roses, love, and memory. There are far worse ways to spend my time. In the garden, I’m often able to “let things go” and “catch up with myself” in a way I sometimes find difficult to do otherwise. Other times, the garden is simply the pure joy of being, in an uncomplicated way, surrounded by flowers, herbs, and veggies, listening to the breeze and the chirps of curious robins checking things out and looking for a tasty bite. Sure, I could find these experiences elsewhere – we find or make our own happy places – this just happens to be my way. My path. My garden.

A bee on the flowering top of an allium in the veggie garden.

…Where do you find your joy?..

There’s work to do in the garden (there always is). Weeds to pull. Bolting greens to pinch back. Peas to harvest for supper, later. Roses to deadhead, prune, and train. Tender herbs to pick and dry in the sunshine. Flowers to admire. It’s not a free ride, this sort of joy – it takes care and time and attention to cultivate a beautiful productive garden. There are choices to be made – what varieties? What vegetables to plant, and when? Does this or that spot need some kind of … object? A gazing ball? A wind chime? What will add a moment of wonder? What will feed the bees and butterflies?

I find the garden a useful metaphor. There are verbs involved. There are opportunities to succeed, to fail, and to begin again. It’s not about perfection so much as sufficiency, beauty, and balance. There are aesthetic concerns, and also practical concerns. There is learning what is “enough” and what is more than I can manage on my own. There is learning to ask for help, and becoming more self-sufficient through practice. There is love, and there is memory – and it’s all in my garden.

I breathe, exhale, and relax. It’s a lovely day to be in the garden. It’s a lovely day to begin again.

I got my walk in early. I started just at daybreak on this mild Spring morning. I walked a bit aggressively, lost in my own thoughts, eyes fixed on some point ahead,  but without really seeing. I felt cross about the way my morning started (with my Traveling Partner’s aggravation over being wakened and struggling to breathe, as I finished dressing to leave).

…Took me awhile to let it go…

I had wished him well and expressed my hope that he could get back to sleep. He didn’t seem to think he would and expressed that in a way that kept our exchange on my mind as I walked along, over-thinking it unsatisyingly.

…I seriously could have done a better job of letting it go, and letting small shit stay small…

I didn’t really begin to enjoy my walk or adjust my attitude until after he pinged me a cute sticker of a little cat tucked in for sleep, indicating he was going back to bed. Damn, I love that guy. At that point, I was easily able to settle down and sort myself out, with a sigh and a smile and a feeling of gratitude. Shit could be a lot g’damn worse in life (and love).

…We’re each having our own experience…

When I sat down to write, I took a quick look at the “page stats” for this blog (it’s not about numbers so much as insights into what people choose to read, and I often find new relevance in old writing). I found myself re-reading a post from almost 18 months ago, and reflecting further on perspective, change,  and the importance of self-care. It gave me real clarity on the morning, and restored my sense of perspective generally, and how good things truly are. Reading a relevant older post is another way to “be there for myself”, and practice good self-care, and another way to regain perspective. (I say a silent “thank you” to the reader who read that post yesterday; reading it this morning was helpful.)

…My Traveling Partner is on his own journey, having his own experience, and taking that at all personally isn’t a helpful approach to partnership…

Here. Now. Perspective. Sufficiency.

I breathe, exhale, and relax. It’s a pretty morning. The temperature here is a comfortable 50°F or so. The sunshine lights the blades of grass and the trunks of the oaks in the grove where I sit perched on a picnic table enjoying the sunrise. It’s still quite early and I am not rushing back to the house. I’ve got a cup of coffee and this quiet moment to myself and I am enjoying it.

…Sometimes the best thing I can do to take care of myself is to simply take a few quiet minutes to breathe and reflect…

Later today I will take my Traveling Partner to an appointment with a specialist. I hope there is promising news about what can be done and what the long term prognosis for his recovery from his December injury may be. It’s hard watching him suffer and struggle. I feel so helpless so often. I definitely want to do more to alleviate his pain and discomfort than I seem able to. It’s not about me, though; I just want this human being I love so dearly to be okay.

I sigh out loud and catch myself picking at my cuticles anxiously. Yeah… still human. Still prone to worry and stress. I breathe the fresh Spring air deeply and exhale slowly. I can smell the hedge roses that are on the other side of the parking lot adjacent to this park where I am sitting, and the scent of recently cut meadow grass. I enjoy the smell of Spring, grateful that my seasonal allergies are nothing like as severe as my Mother’s allergies, or my Traveling Partner’s. They’re mostly pretty mild, and seem very specific to certain local flowering trees. That time of year is already beginning to pass.

I am in rather a lot of pain this morning. It’s been an issue all week. I take the medication I have for it. I cope the best I can. I remain unwilling to let my pain call my shots and I try to “just live my life” in spite of it. My results vary. I make a point of not complaining much about it, to the point of generally mentioning it only in passing, if I mention it at all, in conversation. It’s not that I find this to be a helpful strategy, it’s just that there’s nothing to do about it, really, that I’m not already doing, and I am very much aware that my partner is in a great deal more pain than I am. I don’t want to make that about me. I just want to do my best to support and care for him while he’s injured and working on recovering. He knows I am in pain, it’s a chronic condition. No point making that “a thing” – right now it’s just a distraction.

I sit with my coffee and my thoughts awhile longer. Soon enough it will be time to begin again.

Breaking camp was pretty orderly, and time-consuming only because I chose to take my time and care for myself and the gear. The drive home was uneventful and I made pretty good time.

…Damn, I was sooo tired, though…

The afternoon and evening with my Traveling Partner were pleasant. It’s good to be home.

“The Alchemyst” in bloom when I arrive home.

Returning to the routine of day-to-day isn’t particularly strict or uncomfortable. I missed my comfortable bed, running water, my own bathroom (and not having to walk a distance to reach it). I’ve got a long Memorial Day weekend ahead of me, and I’m looking forward to spending it gently.

The weekend begins with accompanying my partner to an appointment. It was part of my plan, and not a surprise. Then we head home. There’s probably some grocery shopping to do… meal planning… put away the camping laundry (already washed and dried)… I’m not feeling overwhelmed by the growing list. My away time was deeply restorative. I needed it.

…Where will the day and weekend take me? I don’t know. I guess I’ll just follow my path and find out. I’d kinda like to go out for brunch… but I don’t think my Traveling Partner is quite up to that yet. Soon, maybe…

…I managed to spend 4 days camping without getting any insect bites… or so I thought. Apparently, I did get a couple my last day, and only noticed this morning. It’s just a couple bites, around where the top of my socks were, yesterday. I even remember a moment in the morning, as I got up, noticing a gap between my socks and the edge of my jeans, before I pulled my socks back up and the hem of my jeans back down,  and thinking “I’m lucky I didn’t get bitten…” lol I did. I  just didn’t feel it.

…What a good trip out. Well done  restful,  satisfying, and nurturing. I’m still smiling. Now it’s time to begin again.