Friday, April 17, 2015

Entry Eight: Thursday April 16, 2015 6:00 pm

I pause before entering my tree. Partly because I know that this is the official conclusion - that this may be the last time I step foot inside my tree and feel its boughs embrace me. And partly because of the bright red pellets littering the ground. I crouch down and retrieve a handful. The soppy bundle resembles cranberry relish at Thanksgiving, except it doesn’t stain my fingers crimson when I grind it up in my palm. Each pod peels away in layers, almost like the bud of a not-quite-ready flower. I glance directly above me, and realize that these red pellets just a week or so ago were starbursts cocooning fetal leaves. I thank them for their service, dust off my palms on my sweat pants, and creak to my feet.


Despite the soaked and slippery bark, I mount my tree easily. Right foot, left foot, swing over stump. I nestle into this place, ten to twelve feet high. My chest swells with pride when I think back to the instant when I was frozen with fear at the thought of spending my twenty minutes at such a height. Now I sit a queen on my tree-throne. I throw a hand around the supporting trunk and nuzzle it. I breathe in deeply. Scents of moist, just-turned earth fill my nose. They come from the neighbor’s, where they have uprooted every. single. plant. surrounding their house. I know the next time I smell this scent, it will be because we are growing new life rather than destroying it.

The tree and I withdraw from our embrace. Now I examine the newly sprouted, naked leaves. They droop towards the ground almost like a willow. I imagine each as a sopping creature, like a cat caught in the rain. The gray of the post-storm sky mutes the green color so it is almost indistinguishable from branches. The trees surrounding our property boast clusters of leaves like neon broccoli. Despite the unnatural appearance, I find myself wishing my tree’s leaves were more like theirs. I know they will be. It’s just that I can’t help but wish this awkward, teenage-like phase of my tree’s existence would hurry itself along so I can enjoy its shade and somewhat restored magnificence.


The steep pitch of the stump has finally beaten me, and I decide to dismount. Just as I turn myself around and begin to lower myself from my perch, my phone shrieks its deafening ringtone. My heart skips. My grip slips. I slide.

Within the first millisecond, the tree clings to my shirt, ripping it upwards and exposing my abdomen and chest. The fresh skin beneath from three inches below my right breast to three inches above grates against the bark. In the crux of the tree, my foot catches and twists before sending me tumbling backwards in an avalanche of river rock.

I blink. I am on my feet still standing on the concrete driveway. I don’t know how I am not in a heap on the ground. I also don’t know how my cell phone ended up in my hand. It is still screaming. I answer.

“Hey, can you move your car out of the driveway?” It is Nikki.

I turn back up the empty drive. “It isn’t in the driveway.”

“Oh, sorry.”

Click.

I stare from the phone screen back to the tree. I feel betrayed that my tree would not catch me. I feel idiotic that I could not catch myself. I feel pain radiating from the raw skin on my chest and the over-extended muscle in my ankle.

How did that happen? How could this happen during my last time in my tree?

I twirl my ankle gingerly, and cup my hand around my breast. I stare up at the height I’ve fallen and think of the other possible outcomes. I couldn’t been stranded in the tree for hours. I could’ve broken my foot on the tumble down. I could have fallen directly back and impaled myself on the fence. Whatever greater being wants me still around and wanted to teach me something during my last time in the tree.


Sometimes, I realize, “last times” aren’t what you expect. They aren’t beautiful sun sets and fully unfolded leaves. Sometimes they are gray skies, wounded pride and wounded parts. I decide it’s fitting that this would happen for my last week of the nature writing blog. We are all humans. We are part of nature yet outside it. Because we are lovers of nature or because we have spent enough time in nature to feel possessive over it, none of us is invincible. Kole wasn’t, Annie wasn’t, Wesley wasn’t. I’m not. And that vulnerability and fragility means pain, but it also means rarity and uniqueness. Life and nature are things that I’ve come to appreciate. Through the pain and heartache, I know there is a place that I can go to nurse wounds of all kinds: my tree.

6 comments:

  1. What a poignant final entry, Athena. Your conclusion wasn't what I was expecting - and I'm glad you didn't get badly hurt - but that's fitting, as you say. A good lesson, if an unexpected and unpleasant one. I hope your time in the tree has helped you find some sense in all of the hardship of late, and that your upcoming months hold joy that you can hang on to!

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  2. Lovely post, Athena. I have thoroughly enjoyed your writing this semester. It seems like the time in your tree has served you well. I hope you can go on to plant lots of new trees and keep climbing them!

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  3. What a nice thought to wrap up your blog, Athena. I've enjoyed your writing so much this semester and am glad you were able to share so openly with us :)

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  4. Your writing is so beautiful and poignant. This final entry especially really moved me. "Sometimes, I realize, “last times” aren’t what you expect. They aren’t beautiful sun sets and fully unfolded leaves. " I think this is such an important and hard lesson. Firsts and lasts I feel we put so much emphasis on, but in the end, it is our emphasis that separates them from others, not the actual events.

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  5. Thank you so much for sharing your journey this semester through this beautifully written blog. I know it has been difficult, and full of loss; I hope there is more renewal and happier reflections in the future for you!

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  6. This is such a lovely and fitting final reflection on your time with your tree. It's been a conflicted relationship, seen even now in these final encounters. But the result has been a stunning journey of nature, life, loss, and hope. Thank you for embracing that journey fully and for sharing it with us this semester.

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