Yesterday evening
I ventured out back to check on our small vegetable patch.
As I stood and
surveyed it, I thought, “What have I done to deserve this?”
It’s lush and
full. Tomato plants form a dense jungle
of vines with fruit beginning to form green and fill out under cover of all the
leaves. Pepper plants – jalapenos,
Scotch bonnet and banana, have more than doubled in height and fullness, are strong,
and sport little peppers hanging from the branches. Garlic, still flourishing and growing
strong. Rhubarb, still offering ripening
stalks well into July.
I’ve done so
little. Next to nothing. Last fall, finally heeding years of encouragement
from a friend, I sowed 10 or 12 little garlic bulbs. First thing in the spring I weeded and
cleaned up the rhubarb. In one weekend I
bought and planted tomato and pepper plants.
Gave one dose of fertilizer.
Maybe 3 shots of watering so far all season. And weeded maybe two times.
I don’t deserve
such a full garden. Isn’t it amazing how
indiscriminate is the goodness of life on Earth, how blindly gracious and
freely giving is Life, and how happy I am when I let myself find myself within
it – doing whatever little bit is mine within its seasons and cycles (and
purpose) of indiscriminate goodness?
And I wonder …
when and where – and why, considerations like deserving and worthy and earning come
into the picture? And into my own troubled
self-image?
I wonder if I should spend more time in the garden.
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