The
Rhythm of Naturestrides
as the turtlewho
wins a racehe
doesn’t know he’s in Ever
evolving,neither
static, nor constant yet slowly progressingbeats
the rhythm of Nature Even
when we see not the
burbling beneath the volcanothe
plates shifting into an earthquakethe
atmosphere transforming into a tornadothe
waves building to a tsunami Even
then, even when we see not the signs,the
Rhythm of Nature is ever evolvingneither
static, nor constant yet slowly progressing
In time, I gained the endurance to quit whining and eventually grew into an Energizer Bunny myself. Early in our marriage, my then husband teased me for my to do lists that also kept going and going and going. I had a love-hate relationship with these lists; part of me longed for days with short lists, but the other part reveled in those days when I crossed out a multitude of items on a long one.
By the time little ones arrived, my love-hate relationship with the lists turned to a hate-only relationship. One sheet was no longer enough for all that I had to do; multiple sheets were filled, and included only what needed to be done at home; at work, I had another list. My anxiety grew with the lists. My chest, neck, and face flushed with a pinkish glow; my heart rate beat fast; my nights were endlessly sleepless, with a cherished hour or two of sleep. My doctor prescribed me with Prozac.
The lists had
to go, and so too did the Energizer Bunny still in me. In 2005, while juggling a toddler, a
preschooler, and a teaching position, I decided to pray every day of the year
for a quiet and gentle spirit, and miracles came that began the process to
loosen, layer by layer, that Bunny that didn’t belong in me. Still, for years, vestiges of this battery
remained, insisting that I keep going and going and going.
Then came the
wildfires, 1800 of them raging throughout the western states. Our masks returned, we once again retreated indoors,
and even more of the Bunny in me was called upon to let go.
Meanwhile, the university where I taught as a non-tenured track (second-class) faculty member was grappling with a severe budget crisis and turned my employment ladder upside down. Instead of downsizing and laying off those on the bottom rungs of my ladder, they transferred assignments from many of us like me who had earned the highest promotions to our lower paid colleagues at the bottom of the ladder. I was eventually downsized all the way, and given with notice, citing a loophole, that I was to be laid off. But I found a loophole of my own: Emeritus, the university’s honored form of retirement. My promotions and 23 years of service qualified me to apply. I did, and I got it, but I was also too young to actually retire.
The anxiety, tight chest, rapid heart beat, and insomnia returned. It was the summer of 2021, and I was now both separated from my husband and without work, a financial double-whammy. I had put out applications, had interviews, and even had completed new hire paperwork, a month earlier, but still had not yet been called with a start date. The Bunny in me begged to make phone calls and put out more applications. But the whispers and synchronicities encouraged me to wait. It will come in its own time. And it did.
But first, I had to wait and learn the rhythm of nature. It was then that I decided to hire myself for the landscaping project to the side of our house that had been itching at me for four years. Roughly 40 feet long by 14 feet wide, this plot had previously housed two vegetable gardens and a play sand pit, each bordered with bricks and stones. But our kids had grown; the gardens had been left to waste; the bricks and patio stones were broken, scattered, and buried; what amounted to seven 20 gallon tubs of stones to be collected that were then also mostly buried; and weeds, many thigh high, had taken over the entire plot.
Since the plot is right outside my bedroom window, every morning when I opened the shades, this disaster welcomed my day, and then it presented itself to me again in the evening at my favorite outdoor spot, also immediately adjacent to it, our hammock.
For the plot’s neglect, I mostly blame the wildfires, of which we had already had three since 2012 even before the 2020 fires. While one came as close as three miles, most were further away, but we live in a valley, where the smoke from all of the neighboring fires comes to settle itself as an unwelcome guest for weeks of choking, hazardous air. How does one care for vegetable gardens in the likelihood of such toxic air? To those who do, bless you. By 2018, after the third set of fires, I was done. With some help from my then husband, I began to clear out the plot of weeds, bricks, and stones and hoped to clear enough to hire a professional landscaper to build a stone patio, for which I was also saving money.
In the summer of 2021, I needed peace at my window and on my hammock. And between jobs, I needed that savings for the landscaping. Why not use the stones and bricks I was collecting and hire myself?
© 2023 by Karina Jacobson. All rights reserved. Please use only with permission from the author.
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