Wednesday, August 15, 2012

The Mexican Lime Tree

     

        We have a 36" green glazed planter in the back half of our patio, just past the wooden arbor smothered with flowering Mandevilla. Terra cotta shows through the glaze and creates the lip of the pot, matching the worn bricks on the ground. It was one of those way too heavy purchases that causes delivery men to groan to each other: Let's quit our jobs before she buys anything else! But I loved the thought of putting something unexpectedly enormous in my patio and bought it on the spot.

The day the planter was delivered, I met my gardener at the wholesale nursery and bought a Mexican lime tree. It's the kind with little round yellow fruit that are juicy green inside. The guys loaded the tree into the back of Maximino's truck with five bags of soil holding it in place. When we got back to my house Max placed and planted the newly adopted tree in the patio and there it grew and flourished. And all was well for three years.

Then about a month ago, when it was time for regular fertilizing, my husband helped me drag a big bag of citrus food out of the shed and offered to help dig it in. It was really nice of him, but instead of measuring out two cups of the grainy mix to sprinkle around the trunk, he dumped almost half the bag into the planter and dug it into the soil. To be fair it was half a bag between three potted citrus trees and it could have been a great idea to give the new tree a super boost, but it didn't turn out to be. (Morgan thought the incident was kind of amusing and he's chuckling right now reading this. Chuckling!)

Anyway, four days after the fertilizer mishap all the leaves from the new tree turned crunchy brown and  fell lifeless onto the bricks. Actually there were still a few leaves on the tree but they were fluttering and falling as I stood watching. It was tragic. I tried to flush out the extra fertilizer with long, deep soaks from the hose but the runoff was a terrible deep copper color that dyed the bricks, so I gave up.

I was kind of a brat about the whole thing, but not a total brat. I tried to focus on how funny this would have been as an additional scene in "Father of the Bride". Steve Martin would kill the new tree while trying to be helpful, the girls would roll their eyes in disbelief, and then they'd call Franc to save the day. That made our real life situation seem semi-funny. Semi-funny.

After several weeks of avoiding the back half of the patio altogether, and after Morgan tried repeatedly  to convince me that "The tree still has life in it!", he agreed to cut it down. We were ready to start over with a new tree and forget the trauma of the old one. It was sad because Morgan truly believed in the tree and was willing to nurse it back to health. I wondered aloud if that meant putting more fertilizer on it and rather quickly morphed into a scary version of the Queen of Hearts. Off with its head! Not my best hour.

So Morgan cut down the tree to 28". I only know the height because I went out there to measure it. It looked - I don't know - odd sticking up out of the dirt with no branches or leaves, in a lovely 36" glazed pot. But after congratulating myself for moving on emotionally -- which I don't do well -- I started to dream about a Bearss lime. Nice, juicy variety, no thorns or seeds.

For a long time the planter and the tree continued to sit right there, outside Morgan's study, looking desolate. I wished he had dug it up and put it in the green recycling bin instead of leaving the stump there to haunt me. It looked lifeless and ugly, a dead monument to what had been.

But then this morning something amazing happened. Morgan was at his desk trying to work and I was leaning back on his massage chair trying to chat with him. I saw him look up from his computer and glance outside, and then suddenly he grabbed the window sill and leaned toward the open window. "Hey, look at that!" he said triumphantly. And there they were - beautiful, lush little green leaves popping out all over the stump. I'm pretty sure I saw Morgan and the leaves do a silent high-five, and the story began anew.

There's a saying that God brings beauty out of ashes. The times I've noticed that happening in my life it seemed like the remaking was completely unrelated to my attitudes or judgments or decisions or endless efforts or faith or lack of faith. It was more like a life force that shoved and pushed its way through the hopelessly dead and abandoned parts, insisting on life. And nothing could stop it. Just like you can't stop (and why would you want to?) the green growth that appears out of the ashes of forest fires, and the new leaves that jump out of unwatered stumps of a trees. Life pushes through.


"He has sent me to comfort all who mourn...
To give them beauty for ashes,
The oil of joy for mourning,
The garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness;
That they may be called trees of righteousness,
The planting of the Lord, that He may be glorified."

Isaiah 66:3










7 comments:

  1. This gives me chills! It reminds me, for some reason, of this poem (which I love) by Mary Oliver.


    The Rabbit

    Scatterghost,
    it can’t float away.
    And the rain, everybody’s brother,
    won’t help. And the wind all these days
    flying like ten crazy sisters everywhere
    can’t seem to do a thing. No one but me,
    and my hands like fire,
    to lift him to a last burrow. I wait

    days, while the body opens and begins
    to boil. I remember

    the leaping in the moonlight, and can’t touch it,
    wanting it miraculously to heal
    and spring up
    joyful. But finally

    I do. And the day after I’ve shoveled
    the earth over, in a field nearby

    I find a small bird’s nest lined pale
    and silvery and the chicks –
    are you listening, death? — warm in the rabbit’s fur.

    – Mary Oliver, 1984 Pulitzer Prize Winner for American Primitive [here's a PDF where this poem appears, along with a few others].

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    1. Oooo - that gave me chills! Thanks for sharing and for reading my blog. So much love to all of you!

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  2. We always knew you were a good writer Cathy. I resonate with the story on a personal level. An older woman took me into her backyard and showed me a tree that was struck by lightening through and through.
    There in the middle of the black charcoal were green shoots coming back to life. She was a very spiritual woman and had prayed over the tree. Thanks for sharing. ~ Namaste, Nancy Kaye

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  3. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OR7VOKQ0xJY

    Thank you Diana!

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  4. What a beautiful picture of God's redemptive work!

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  5. Oh Cathy, I love this story! I am currently going through a death of sorts, and the Lord has been reminding me that there can't be new life, growth and fruit without death. Waiting in the hidden place for the new life, growth and fruit. Thank you for writing this and encouraging me.

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