To Every Season

My backyard takes me back to San Antonio so often. And never more so than on an overcast autumn day. I’m not sure why that is. First of all, my backyard doesn’t look anything like my childhood backyard in San Antonio. Second of all, why autumn? Maybe only a channeler or re-birther or some other New Age witch could help figure those conundrums out.

Meanwhile, let me tell you about my backyard.

 

We planted fruit trees in a rush of exuberance. Apples, pears, almonds. Wow! Our first home after dozens of rented apartments. Our first declaration of permanence in Israel. Sort of  like having all those kids in a flush of love and as a declaration of our commitment to each other.

Several years we put in a vegetable garden, right in the middle of the yard where there was the most sun. Healthy, organic food to nurture our growing family. No chocolate spread and sweetened chemical juice for our kids.

We hung wind chimes to create a feeling of harmony and serenity.                    

We planted wildflowers one year, domesticated flowers other years, spices yet other years. An infusion of orderly color and practical usefulness.

We set up a composter and three large plastic containers, one for paper, one for glass and one for plastics, to be among the few people in our community to actually recycle. Ever the conscientious, ecologically-inspired good citizens of the Earth.

But backyards, like kids, like marriage, like us, don’t often turn out exactly according to plan.

The fruit trees, now almost 30 years old, quickly became a tangled mess of wayward branches, the fruit mostly feeding birds and worms. There are wooden trellises here and there and gardening tools leaning against a tree as remnants of the vegetable gardens which invariably gave us a few tomatoes before sizzling in the Israeli summer. You can see the wind chimes if you search among the overgrown trees but they’re way too deep to actually be heard. Wildflowers sometimes pop up to surprise us but domesticated flowers and spices have long been replaced with funky green plants which are the only ones hardy enough to survive. Our composter and recycling bins are usually full in anticipation of the next step.

In short, my backyard is a reflection of life…at least mine. It’s comfortable and flexible and accepting of the vagaries of my care. We’ve grown into each other. I love the abandoned trellises and wild trees. I love running into a wind chime unexpectedly and hearing its lovely melody. I love walking out to feed organic waste to my composter.

I love how my kids are each exactly themselves. Quirky. Interesting. Ideas, directions, dreams of their own. I love how my relationship with each of them has grown into something comfortable, flexible and accepting of the vagaries of my attention…and theirs.

    

As for the perpetually almost-overflowing recycling bins, the gardening tools leaning every which way by the gnarled almond tree and crazy green plants of unnameable species lining our porch, that’s what takes me back to San Antonio, especially on autumn days.

I think of it as Southside San Antonio, though I’m no longer at all sure that it was the south side or if that’s one of those unreliable memories. It was where my less genteel friends lived. Not those girls with the big hair who actually had debutante seasons. Not my cheerleader friends or the boys in madras shirts with fruit loops on the back. Nope, these friends had yards full of history. The car up on blocks that someone had thought they’d fix someday, the broken tools or machinery or household appliances laying around haphazardly waiting for repair, the big German Shepherd who always looked fierce but was good for a romp on the grass. These friends wore cowboy boots, drove souped up Mustangs and didn’t figure on a college education.

(You knew this kid, too, right?)

I used to love going to their houses. Ah – the freedom and lack of complication to be found there in their yards.

And now I have a yard like that.

Almost every morning, rain or shine, I toss around bread for birds to come visit my backyard. It’s become a feeding station for them. On nice days we have breakfast out there and watch them fly into the wild, overgrown trees – such a great protected shelter for them – until they start coming down, one-by-one at first until they feel safe, and then whole messes of them pecking and performing for us. On days when the weather forces us inside, I stand by the window over the sink and watch them enjoying my Southside San Antonio backyard as much as I do.

My backyard is a whole world. Is yours, too?

 

 

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