• Baby bluebells

    Quote of the day

    “Gardening is easy. Whenever your plants have a problem, you simply have to figure out if it’s too little sun, too much sun, a virus, bacteria, a pest, too much water, too little water, the wrong soil, the wrong bedtime story, ancient witchcraft or the wrong pH level.” –Jelena Woehr

  • Broken windshield

    The day I realized I was not immortal

    Thirty years ago, I almost died.

    I was 17, newly graduated from high school and back in the Midwest for a wedding. It was the beginning of July and oh so very hot. Friends from high school — my first high school — wanted to cool off a bit so we hopped inside an old Ford Bronco and drove to the city to attend the Taste of Chicago.

    If you’ve never been, the Taste is a massive food and music festival held right on Lake Michigan. For three days, vendors sell all sorts of delicious treats, from grilled burgers and polish sausage to funnel cakes and ice cream, while a wide variety of musical acts rock out from numerous stages. Although it’s often very crowded, the breeze off the lake provides a cooling respite. Once darkness falls, the city puts on a huge fireworks display. I’ve been many times and I can still hear the sound of the pyrotechnic booms echoing between the buildings. The noise rings in your ears even as the vibration shudders inside your chest.

    My friends and I spent several hours at the Taste, eating and making merry. As the sun started to set, however, we decided to skip the fireworks and head home, thus avoiding the sprawling lines of traffic that transformed the process of leaving the city into an hours-long process.

    It was on the way back to the suburbs that the accident occurred. Even now, decades later, I can still remember everything as if it happened in slow motion. Climbing into the front passenger seat of an older model Ford Bronco, one friend in the driver’s seat and three others crammed in the back. Listening to them rib me for being a Girl Scout because I always donned a seatbelt when none of them did. Loud music playing on the radio as we cruised on home. The sky turning from blue to orange to red before fading to black.

    Suddenly, a small car in front of us hit the brakes, its rear lights glaring at us, demanding that we, too, stop. There wasn’t enough room to do so and my friend instinctively reacted by swerving into the right lane. Unfortunately, at that very moment, another car was pulling out of forest preserve parking lot and into traffic. Its grill crunched against my door and sprained my right thumb. My friend couldn’t see the car that plowed into us but he felt the impact and immediately responded by turning the steering wheel back to the left, only this time he overcompensated, crossing two lanes of road at 45 mph and into oncoming traffic.

    The headlights of an older model car, one of those solidly built boats from the 1970s, blinded us seconds before impact. That driver was going 50 mph when she smashed into us, head on. The physics of two fast-moving objects crashing into each other at high rates of speed soon became evident.

    We hit that car so hard, the long front end crumpled all the way to the windshield and crushed the driver’s foot. My friend who was driving crushed the steering wheel with his chest, bending the strong metal like it was aluminum foil. The two friends who sat behind us slammed into our seats but the one who was perched in the middle flew forward into the front and into windshield. Then he fell, half-conscious, in my lap.

    Thanks to the seatbelt, I was fine.

    First responders soon arrived and removed our driver from the wreckage. As they began treating him, I managed to climb out and give my statement to the police. In the end, I was the only person in the three cars who was coherent enough to explain what had happened.

    Everyone was then separated into different ambulances, based on the severity of injuries, and sent to area hospitals. I ended up watching the fireworks through the window of the ambulance with the friend who had broken the windshield with his head.

    The emergency room doctors treated my friend for a concussion. I received some meds and ointment for the 2nd degree seatbelt burn across my chest. While the admins finished processing my paperwork, I heard the doctors tell my parents that the seatbelt had saved my life. If I hadn’t been wearing it, they said, I would’ve surely gone through the windshield and died.

    The physical pains from the accident were rough but tolerable, particularly in light of the alternative. I did suffer some mental distress afterwards when my mother insisted on driving past the scene of the accident. I also nearly had a panic attack a year later when the film “Patriot Games” came out. There’s a scene in it where a woman and her child are being chased by bad guys and they crash into a highway divider. The accident was filmed from within their car and it was so well done that I instantly experienced a flashback to my own crash.

    Two weeks after I returned home to Florida, in that limbo time between leaving high school and entering college, I spent an evening hanging out at my friend Steve’s house. Another pal stopped by and asked us if we’d heard about a classmate’s car accident. She was a real sweet girl with wild hair and a wide smile. I asked how she was doing, assuming that like me, she was banged up but fine.

    “Her funeral was tonight,” he said.

    I was, of course, horrified. But it was only in that moment that I truly realized I was not immortal. None of us are. Death could come at any time and its arrival is rarely fair or understandable.

  • Red tulips front garden

    A place to keep my future garden dreams

    Nikki, the most prolific reader in my book group, sent me a care package last year. It was a box full of goodies (card, books, etc.), and it arrived at a moment when I was feeling particularly low. Everything inside was carefully chosen, which I appreciated, but I also fell in love with the box itself.

    It looked like an old-fashioned recipe box, the kind that holds family treasures and the secrets to favorite dishes. On the outside was a winter scene, illustrated by artist Susan Winget, who is known for her depictions of rural life. There was a small cabin in the background, complete with a stone fireplace. Trees, holly leaves and berries framed the edges. A doe and her two foals filled the foreground. Overlaid upon the image were written words, the ink soft and faded, as if remembered from an old letter.

    As soon as I saw the box’s illustration, I wanted to create a path of footprints in the snow, one that would lead me straight to the front door of that cabin. Once inside, I’d light a fire, make something hot to drink and sit in a comfy chair with a good book and a furry kitty.

    I knew I had to figure out a way to reuse the box in a meaningful way and it took me a whole year to do so. During that time, it sat empty on a desk in the kitchen, just waiting for inspiration to strike. Once the Muse was ready, she sent seed catalogs my way.

    Any gardener will tell you that you plant a garden in the spring, tend it in the summer and break it down in the fall. But in the winter, when the earth is cold and hibernating like a bear, the gardener uses that in-between time to rest and dream. The best gardening dreams begin when those catalogs arrive, filled to the brim with colorful illustrations and tempting descriptions.

    What form will my garden take this year? There are so many options! Will it be useful, colorful, edible? Will it be corralled in containers or planted with abandon in the soil? Will it be wild and bee-friendly or tamed and fruitful?

    Since seeds are generally much cheaper than plants, I buy packets with abandon. A few varieties were sown in coir pots over winter and baked under LED lights with the aim of getting a jump start on the growing season. The rest of the packets I alphabetized and stacked in order of planting so that I could sow them in proper succession. Then, I filled the winter box with my treasures and made myself forget what was inside.

    On May 4th, when the final frost has come and gone, I shall open the box and start planting my garden. I can’t wait to see what will fill my many pots this year.

  • Daisies from my garden

    Here we go again

    It’s still March, barely. But I managed to start my first plantings today.

    M quit his job in February when his employer decided to end the staff’s ability to work remotely. Like many Americans, his bosses were tired of dealing with the coronavirus pandemic and had decided it was over, goddamn it.

    Thing is, viruses don’t disappear with wishful thinking.

    At the time his bosses made the return announcement, the efficacy of the booster shot we received in 2021 had already started to wane. A friend of ours had just died from likely complications of COVID-19. We knew that mask and vaccine mandates were the next to go. Which is why, after much discussion, we agreed it was just too dangerous for him to continue working with people who were recklessly throwing caution to the wind.

    Sure enough, another wave of coronavirus is heading our way, this time a subvariant of omicron known as BA2. It’s 30 times more contagious than the original — and that one pretty much ruined everyone’s Christmases. BA2 is already hitting Europe and Asia and has become the dominant strain in the U.S.

    At least two of my colleagues have contracted coronavirus in the past month. So has former President Barack Obama, former secretary of state Hillary Clinton, secretary of state Antony Blinken, White House press secretary Jen Psaki and her deputy, second gentleman Doug Emhoff, New Hampshire Sen. Jeanne Shaheen, “Bridgerton” actress Nicola Coughlan, “Rocketman” star Taron Egerton and actor/director Kenneth Branagh. South Korea has reported more than 9 million cases of COVID-19 during the course of the pandemic — 7.7 million of them have occurred in the past month. Today, China began its most extensive lockdown in two years to control a growing outbreak in Shanghai.

    Knowing all of this, M and I continue to take all the necessary precautions. We simply cannot afford to get sick, suffer from long covid or worse.

    Since the start of the year, I’ve also been beyond stressed by my own job. Adding the pandemic, the Olympics and the war in Ukraine to the grind of daily news has worn me emotionally thin. In January, I even fainted. For the second time in two years, M found me unconscious on the floor.

    Thankfully, M’s unemployment has allowed us to spend more time together. When he’s not job hunting, he’s helping me to decompress, rubbing the kinks out of my shoulders/neck or just listening as I vent. His support is a major reason I haven’t imploded. It’s also why my sowings have been delayed. How could I spend hours preparing for the future when I was just trying to deal with the present?

    M landed a new job last week and today was his first day working from home. While he was upstairs in his office undergoing the onboarding process, I trekked down to the basement to begin my new garden. I missed spending our morning together, of course, but it felt good to start putting seeds in soil in the hopes that flowers and herbs and vegetables will someday grow.

  • Haunted house

    Real estate revelations between spouses

    M and I are looking to buy some property, preferably in New England. We want a detached house in good working order, 3 or 4 bedrooms, minimum 2 bathrooms, a large kitchen/pantry, at least one fireplace, wood floors and a good bit of land for beauty and privacy. It can’t be located in a flood zone or somewhere that has a high risk of drought or fire.

    Oh, and it can’t cost an arm and a leg.

    We’ve been looking for two years now and while we’ve found some wonderful properties, none of them have worked out. So, our search continues — mostly on Redfin and Zillow. We favorite the places that most appeal to us and discuss them in great detail during the times when we’re both awake. If one of us is sleeping, the other will leave short notes to describe why a place will or will not work.

    Here are some typical notes we’ve exchanged:

    “Nope, nope, nope. Flooding.”

    “Has some nice features (back from the road, overall design, greenhouse). However, the kitchen is small and the laundry is in the basement. Zestimate says it’s worth about half of what they’re asking though Redfin agrees with their price.”

    “Not as much land as we’d hoped but it’s on a dead end and the views are gorgeous.”

    “Lovely home but oh my god, that kitchen is bloody awful. So small!”

    “The kitchen looks decent. I really like the look of some of these rooms. Looks too expensive and probably too big for us but nice!”

    And then there’s the tidbit I wrote last week:

    “I can’t believe I’m going to say this, but I want to move to Detroit. This place is amazing. And also, I believe haunted.”