10 Years Old Lilac

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A friend from grade school posted our 5th grade class picture on Facebook.  In it, I am 9 years old –  a little too young for 5th grade. The explanation is simple:  due to a gross bureaucratic error, the Chicago Public Schools accidentally hired a gifted teacher for our first grade class.  In June of 1972,  22 of her students tested with reading scores too high for 2nd grade.  In September of 1973, nearly our entire class skipped to 3rd grade, and our gifted  teacher was – of course –  laid off, thus restoring the natural order of professional mediocrity to Lincoln School.

Fifth grade was okay.  In Social Studies, we watched a series of perplexing movies about Eskimos.  The boys loved it when the Aleut father carved up raw seal meat and fed it to his children.  Our science teacher – Kasimir Micah – tricked me into inhaling ammonia as an “experiment” in class, leaving me crying and gasping for oxygen.  (He was my first true sadist – I’ve known a few others, two of them teachers.)  We took ballet, and went on sleep-overs, and turned 10 that April.

At the Chicago Park District field house where we went for ballet class, a neglected lilac bush drooped over the landing at the top of the cement stairs.  When Miss Mazur excused her brood of ballerinas for a break, Pammy and Cheryl and I curtsied with the earnest drama of dying swans, and scurried outside to smell The Lilac.  Jostling to reach the closest branches, we scuffed our pink tights and slippers with rust as we leaned against the crumbling painted iron railing, and pulled the curtain of perfume against our noses.   At 10, I conceived The Lilac as belonging completely to me.  I inhaled its scent as if I could become A Lilac, until Miss Mazur would send someone outside to find us.   Dreamy with pleasure, we might spin and leap through the stale dark hallway, back to our barres to turn out our feet and point our toes, trailing gravel and paint chips across the studio floor.

I don’t look that different from the 9 year-old in the 1973-74 Lincoln School class picture.  My face has reclaimed the roundness of a self with little to gain from prettiness, a self who is on the outside of a certain feminine territory where she simply doesn’t belong.  Instead, I crawl beneath branches hanging so low their panicles of flowers tangle in the grass.  I’m sure I look ridiculous, my orthopedic work shoes poking out from under the twigs and leaves, as if a tornado dropped a Lilac Bush on the Witch of Lake Woebegone.  Overhead, birds chatter and swap places between old thick limbs carrying their load of spring treasure as close to the sky as they can.  I pull a cluster of lilacs closer, my whole being permeated with their breath.  I lie there as long as I want, until it is almost too dark to take pictures.  As I walk home, I feel like dancing.

No.  I haven’t really changed that much at all.

Weathering Pinkness

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We went back to the Rosey Tree, whose pinkness is so ample, so sumptuous, so bosomy, she cannot help but be an ancient creature.    “Oh, look how few branches are blooming,” my friend Liz said as we took out our cameras. “She was full last year!”  I knew Liz was right, but I didn’t want to agree.  I want my Rosey Tree to be ok.  “The winter was really hard on her.  Maybe the buds froze,”  I say.

In past years, Rosey Tree overwhelmed me.  Enumerating even the tiniest twigs, bubbles of petals dangled like ripe cherries, unfolding into clustered bouquets like perfect, tiny cabbage roses.  Engulfed in their profuse re-iteration, my emotions would careen between panic and delight. Even as I surrendered my heart to the hope that Rosey Tree herself would somehow transcend my clumsy camera work, my thoughts would rush forward to anticipate the inadequate pictures I was making.  I never even noticed the scent of her blossoms.  Rosey Tree’s flowers have a delicate fragrance, like dainty gift soap, or honeysuckle.

This year seems to me to be Rosey Tree’s finest. Her branches sparsely decorated, her blooms more widely opened than I remember –  she is exuberant, not rampant.  That she had something, anything to give this year – after the brutal cold could have stripped her of every tender node – has only made her lovelier.  At last, I felt I could get close to her – close enough to recognize her scent, to find the form of her branches and to experience her endurance.  I found a sense she welcomed me, and I was happy to find myself in her home, once more.

Unfinished Pinkness

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Turns out – the yellow magnolia were not quite finished being magical.  Honestly, there is just more pinkness surrounding me than my eyes can hold.  Reaching out  for one-at-a-time flowers, single and human in scale, brings the pinkness closer somehow.  Even if, in this case, the pinkness is creamy yellow.

Oh Pinkness

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I don’t like feeling tired and discouraged.  Even the pinkness is overwhelming me.  So many petals, promises in their infinity, calling out to the bees and the breeze, “Pick me, pick me!”

I am the limitation, of course.  The sadness rises inside me because I can’t see even one of these floral clouds completely.  There is only so much pinkness a girl can take.

Pinkness Koan

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Really, Brenna?  How long can it take to post about lilacs filling the air with the scent of honey and vanilla, so that any living creature is bound to surrender, to submit their will and ask, how can I help you pollinate?

Answer:  Eternity, and a lunch hour, give or take.

Heart Set

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I got some disappointing news today about a job I was hoping, very much hoping, to land.  Truthfully, my news kind of spoiled the lunch I was having with a friend at the Oak Crest Tavern, a pine panelled rec-room of a bar that easily seats at least 30 people, and serves hamburgers made from beef ground at Knoche’s butcher shop across the street.   I cried a little bit, and we both shook our heads.  No matter how innocuously phrased the rejection, it doesn’t change the result:  the ones I want don’t want me.  And I am going to have to move on.

“You should go and make some pretty pictures,” my friend told me.  I knew she was right, but I also knew my heart wasn’t in it.  Still, I did what my friend suggested, if only to be able to point out, at some future date, that on rare occasion, I do take her advice.

When I got home, I plodded earnestly around the ornamental pear tree in my parking lot for a while.  It isn’t my favorite subject – too tall, with branches that point straight up, holding its flowers far above my head,  On the other hand, my mopey mood lowered my expectations, so I wasn’t disappointed, either.  After 10 minutes or so, I tore off a few twigs with pom-poms of white blossoms, and went upstairs.

I said my heart wasn’t in it, but as I shoved the stolen clumps of pear blossoms into a spice jar full of water – an indifferent prop if ever there was one – it dawned on me.  My heart actually IS in it – inescapably so.  The connection between my eyes and what I feel is irrepressible.  My heart wants so much to be seen, to feel recognized, to be included, trusted, and most precious of all, challenged to grow.  When I take a picture, some part of my true self is there, whether I want it to be or not.  When I ask for a chance to give my time and my skill to work that needs doing, my heart is there, whether I want it to be or not.

Now that I know how the storyline for this job prospect ends, I will have to set loose the hopes that have hung themselves on its bones, and see where they land.  I suppose that’s it exactly.  I will just have to see what happens.

Waiting Magnolia

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In Spring of 1999, Craig and I discovered Magnolia “Elizabeth, ” densely clustered with yellow blossoms,  planted at the edge of Longenecker Horticultural Garden’s collection of magnolias.  Smelling faintly of “Lemon Joy” dish detergent, her petals gleamed in the pale April sunshine.  An uncommon variety, subtly fragrant, and a reliable bloomer in USDA zone 4a, “Elizabeth” was, in my opinion, a perfect tree.  I knew right where I wanted to plant my yellow magnolia, behind our new house.  I would watch the golden, bird-like buds spread into lotus-shaped cups as I sipped coffee on our back porch.  I would catch a hint of lemony sweetness on the breeze through the kitchen window as I washed our dishes.  I took out the pocket notebook where I was compiling a list of plants we wanted for our landscape, and wrote “Magnolia Elizabeth” at the top of the list.

Before a spadeful of dirt could be turned, however, or a yellow magnolia planted, a Grand Backyard Scheme must be devised.  Craig considered all the factors.  Our plan had to be both simple and sophisticated; it had to demonstrate exacting taste and sensitivity to the site.  A seemingly bottomless reservoir of pent-up imagination poured through his mechanical pencil onto sheets of tracing vellum.  Berms and ground-level decks, benches and perennial beds overwhelmed me with choices.  No matter how much I liked the plan Craig showed me, there was always a little more work to do before we could choose a design and start digging.

“This year, we might not plant anything, honey, ok?  This year, we’ll let the grass grow and I’ll mow some paths to try out, ok?  Your tree will be in there, I promise.”  But that summer the location of the water feature and the proximity of the grilling area to the kitchen could never quite be resolved.  Planting the magnolia had to wait.  The following year, a source for perfect mid-century paving blocks could not be located, so the size of perennial bed had to be reconsidered, including the location of the magnolia.  Grass would grow, leaves would fall, and Craig would return to drawing another, better backyard for next year.  In our unused real-life backyard, there was still literally nowhere to plant my yellow magnolia.

When our 10 year marriage ended, so did the stalemate with our backyard.  We sold the house’s insufficiencies – and the decisions that couldn’t be made about how to correct them – to someone else.  At the final walk through with the new owner, Craig handed the confident young man dozens of tabloid sheets of tracing vellum – all the plans he had drawn for kitchen remodels, entry way relocations, and landscaping features.  “There’s no reason for me to keep these now” he said, “maybe you’ll – there’s a lot of ideas here.”   “Cool, cool,” the new owner replied, taking the drawings, a little confused.  Craig was suddenly embarrassed, realizing for the first time that the house might actually seem good enough to this guy, just the way it was.

I don’t miss the house on the east side of Charles Lane, just south of Tokay, but I wouldn’t have minded leaving a tree full of yellow flowers there for the next person.   If we had planted one the spring we found “Elizabeth,” she  would be about 14 years old today.  I wish I could sneak into my old backyard this year to see how Magnolia Elizabeth is doing.  Did she bloom a little earlier in her open spot, between the kitchen window and the porch, where the sun was brightest in the early spring, before the trees along the fence line leafed in?  Or were her buds still perched along the skeleton of branches, waiting to spread their petals and fly away?

Maybe it’s not too late.