Friday, March 26, 2010

Root Bound


I have four surviving houseplants, and they are constantly near death. If cats have nine lives, my houseplants must have at least twenty.

My jade plant is a weak, spindly thing with all four of its branches lying on, rather than emerging vertically from, the soil. Half of my spider plant is the color and texture of straw. The third plant, a heretofore nameless codieum (I just looked it up), has't grown two inches in five years. A weeping fig in the living room, which we received as a gift ten years ago when Emily was born, has been revived from death more times than I can count. Yet somehow they hang on. They thrive on neglect, as the saying goes. It's quite an amazing thing.

Most houseplants are probably doomed to die, but as a kid I had a friend whose mother cared for a virtual arboretum in their living room. This same woman was deathly afraid of birds, which made me wonder if she grew plants indoors so that she would not have to go outside. I wish now that I had asked her why she was afraid of birds -- she might have had an interesting reason.

Most of the other private collections of plants I have seen have been less impressive by comparison. I thought it was just the nature of plants indoors to wither up, drop their leaves dramatically, and die.

Then I visited Aunt Billie's condo in Albuquerque. She does not have a background in agriculture. I've known her for 25 years and I've never heard her mention a plant of any kind. On her trips to Utah, she's never fretted about the houseplants she left behind, as far as I could tell. I've even visited her at home and failed to notice the giant potted jade plant and the enormous Christmas cactus, both of which are at least a decade old. She recently donated a third specimen of some kind, the real beauty of the group, she said, to a local gardening club (of which she is not a part) to be auctioned off as a benefit for their fundraiser.

She insisted she didn't have a secret but said her plants appeared to thrive in the southern exposure of the patio door window. I resolved immediately to move my plants closer to the window when I got home.

But first I transplanted them into larger pots and discovered that all of them were 'root bound.' The gnarled roots of one plant had crowded out the dirt so that it was practically hydroponic in its pot with no nutritional source. No wonder they were barely making it!

Which got me thinking today that I may be 'root bound' as well. Having roots is a good thing - I know it is. But I may have taken it too far.

I first realized the symptoms when we were shopping recently for a new van. Our old one had served us well for 185,000 miles. We'd taken it to 46 of the lower 48 states. But first the rack and pinnion steering went out, then a $350 pump. I would have held on (I can be extremely frugal!) but something started burning when it idled and the fumes would sometimes seep into the interior. I started getting headaches and imagining that the fumes were carcenogenic - I decided, reluctantly, that the van needed to be replaced. (Scott had come to this conclusion years earlier.)

When we started shopping, I said that I wanted to find the exact same van - same color, everything. But when we found a similar van, I balked. It seemed toooo familiar -- I needed a change. We'd had that van for seven years and we would likely have this one seven more -- that's 14 years with the same van, basically.

We also have a ten-year-old dog who could live up to 20 years and recently acquired its twin in puppy form -- that's 30 years with the same dog, basically.

I need a little variety! As the poet William Cowper said, Variety is the very spice of life.

I've been worrying about my memory lately. My husband and children laugh at me when I tell them that we can't replace the fake Christmas tree or the lawnmower because we just bought them, when, in fact, we bought them years ago. Back when things changed on a regular basis (children were born, we moved occasionally, we changed cars more frequently...) I could place events sequentially. "That happened when we were in the green Omni, so it must have been before Taylor was born..." - that sort of thing.

For the longest time now, everything has been pretty much the same. Conversations with far-flung friends and family usually begin with 'Not much. How 'bout you?"

I probably feel this way at the end of every winter. Imagine how I'd feel living in a place without seasons! I don't think I could handle the sameness of it all.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Cool Discovery in Vero Beach, Florida


Sometimes a story shows up on the inside pages of my newspaper that strikes me as big news, even though it didn't make the front page or even the television broadcast. In this case it isn't really important news -- just interesting, even fascinating.

A man in Vero Beach, Florida, who is unemployed due to epilepsy, asked a property owner a few years ago if he could look on his land for fossils. The guy agreed, and he found some bones there, which he took home to clean up and study. He threw them under the sink in his mobile home. A few months ago, he pulled out one of the bones, a piece of ivory from a wooly mammoth, and while cleaning it up realized someone had etched a design into it. It was a carving of a mastadon.

He knew that what he had found had some value and considered selling it at a flea market, but decided to take it to a more sophisticated fossil hunting friend, who was extremely enthusiastic about the find. He convinced him to take the bone to the Univesty of Florida to have it authenticated. Scientists there agreed to 'authenticate' the find because they were almost postitive it was a fake. They had long ago decided that humans and mastadons did not co-exist in Florida. All of the elephants had died out before man arrived, they thought.

But they did all of their tests on the bone and concluded it was real and that it had been carved thousands of years ago -- before the pyramids were built in Egypt, before Stonehenge, before the Everglades were the Everglades. It's the oldest artwork anywhere in the world with the possible exception of the cave art in France. They estimate that the carving was made over 13,000 years ago, and they think that the man or woman who carved it must have been looking at a mastadon at the time because it's a very good likeness.



The ivory carving of the mastadon is priceless.

Now scientists are begging the man who found it to donate it to the Smithsonian or some other museum so that it can be put on display. They don't want it to fall into a private collection never to be seen again. But the man can't afford to be philanthropic to this extreme (he's unemployed and barely subsisting), so he is putting it up for auction. He will entertain bids of at least $1 million.

I liked this story because it's about buried treasure, the enduring value of art, and how something of great value might be under the sink.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Some recent thoughts and quotes to change the page...





Two thoughts of my own, which I wrote down for their amazing profundity:

Being home is really something of a sacrifice, yet it’s a blessing at the same time, as sacrifices usually are. – Personal observation

I had to first accept my own voice as a writer, that I am not Pavrotti with a pen, or Gabriel Garcia Marquez, or Alice Munro or Jhumpa Lahiri – but it is my voice. It is how I write. Whether or not others like it, it is my authentic voice. – Personal observation

Regarding international politics:

Weakness is a provocation. – heard quoted from unknown source by Mark Steyn on the Rush Limbaugh Show 11-6-2009

Mind-boggling quotes:

For one must first know one is in prison in order to work intelligently to escape. - Philip Novak

Strength does not come from phsycial capacity – it comes from an indomitable will. – Mohatma Ghandi

I have always imagined Paradise will be a kind of library - Jorge Luis Borges

Some quotes pulled from J.K. Rowling's commencement speech at Harvard in 2008 (discovered on TED.com, a fantastics site for learning just about anything!):

As is a tale, so is life – not how long but how good – that is what matters. – Seneca

Rock bottom became the firm foundation on which I rebuilt my life. – J.K. Rowling

On abortion:

It is a poverty to decide that a child must die so that you may live as you wish.- Mother Teresa

Other quotes from Mother Teresa:

Jesus said love one another. He didn't say love the whole world.

The success of love is in the loving - it is not in the result of loving.