The wind ushers clouds across the sky at dizzying speeds. In
only seconds, the dark grey forms have moved into frame from the right, across
my line of vision, and beyond the peripheral sight of my left eye. Because the
thunder clouds are only a shade darker than the sky that envelopes them, I have
to focus very carefully to track their movement. The pages of my notebook
fwop-fwop-fwop under the wind’s power. I slide my pen into the spiral binding
and pocket the tiny pad to silence its unruly pages.
Still the wind demands to be noticed. It charges my face,
forcing my nose to run and eyes to water. It drives the grass dry split ends of
my hair to snap against the tree. My hands numb in that winter-familiar way that
make jotting down notes painful. The wind brings with it, too, the scent of
mountain fresh dryer sheets. I wrinkle my nose and will the unnatural smell
away.
The wind bullies my tree as well, swirling its branches into
a tornado. Red starburst bursts like scarlet chestnuts peppering the remaining
branches of my tree are tossed about. I scan the trees surrounding my property
and find that no others show signs of growth. My heart swells. I can’t help but
wonder if the premature growth is at least in part from me pouring all of my
energy into this tree. My prayers for regeneration have not been answered, but
a consolation is served in the form of these tiny spiked bulbs. I find myself
wishing that one would fall so I could examine it more closely. Despite the
gusts and gales the starbursts cling to their branches. I decide this is best
for they promise new life.
I watch them flap in the wind: branches reaching left, then
right, and finally swirling in a circle. The movement is in like an inhale. I
watch the bronchial tubes flex as they fill with air from the breeze. Suddenly
I realize that more than a lung, this branch instead looks like a heart: the
thick bough: an artery; the branches: capillaries.
I position myself so that I am sitting more on the small of
my back than my behind and wedge my knee up against this bough. This way I can
arch to watch my tree’s heart pump without my neck aching. Red with the blood
of new life, enriched with the oxygen of the earth, my tree’s heart beats again.
Just like Kole’s heart beats again; his heart valve salvaged six months ago was
recently transplanted to an eleven-month-old girl.
A particularly strong gust of wind grabs hold of my tree.
Against my knee, I feel the trunk flex almost imperceptibly away from me and
back again. The movement must have been less than an inch. Feeling the solidity
of a tree trunk move is like feeling the first movements of a baby through her
mother’s stomach: foreign, almost alien; disturbing, yet the most natural
gesture possible. I feel my pulse and breathing quicken and I shoot into an
upright position. I’m dizzy but cannot stop the smile from blooming on my lips.
I lean into the bough, embrace my tree, and wait for the next breath of life.


Lovely Athena. I love the pictures of the tree; they go with your words very well. And the analogy to the lungs and heart is awesome. Life keeps breathing. I always enjoy your posts, so detailed and descriptive. I feel like I am there.
ReplyDeleteIt is lovely. I fully believe your tree is ahead of the game because of the attention you've shown it. It's bringing hope for life. I loved the connection you drew between the tree and new life.
ReplyDeleteThis was beautiful and painful. I love so many of your descriptions and expressions. "My heart swells. I can’t help but wonder if the premature growth is at least in part from me pouring all of my energy into this tree. My prayers for regeneration have not been answered, but a consolation is served in the form of these tiny spiked bulbs." I love how you were able to compare life and the tree. Let us hope that new life in the tree is a sign of new life and hope in the world.
ReplyDeleteWhat a beautiful post, Athena. You draw such meaningful connections between your tree and what's happening in your life. These connections make your posts really special.
ReplyDelete