Sunday, April 28, 2013

Hardy Like Hosta

The great hosta harvest was almost complete.  I had successfully uprooted a few from the overgrown section of our yard and re-purposed them in the newly mulched beds on the shady side of the house.  Instead of being lost in a breezy, sea of ivy, these hardy plants now firmly flanked my precious bleeding heart.

After surveying my work with pride, I clapped my leather garden gloves together to remove the remaining, sweet-smelling soil and headed off to fill the watering can.  As I made my way across the backyard, I recognized the muffled cries of my 4-year-old inside.  By assessing her tone and location, my "momdar" understood in an instant.  I tossed the plastic jug aside and scaled the deck steps in a flash.

Kicking off my dirt laden sneakers with nary a pause, I caught a glimpse of the oven clock as I ran by.  It glared at me in green: 2:14.  My heart sank.  My husband had left for the store after putting the girls in their rooms for quiet time.  Our 2-year-old, no doubt, had long been asleep in her crib.  But, our big girl may very well have been trapped on the toilet wailing for a wipe for more than a half hour.

As I turned the corner to enter our upstairs bathroom, her spritely body came into view.  Her frightened face was red and plastered with tears.  Her little, pale knees were raw from leaning and her tiny tush hovered helpless over the bowl.

"Oh baby, baby, I'm so sorry!" I enveloped her right then from my seat on the side of the tub.  She sobbed a bit more, but reassured me she was alright.  My nose soon reminded me of my duty and in just a few minutes we had flushed and washed and parted ways, poor girl.

While watering my hosta, I reflected on this most recent, crazy occurrence and realized something:  she recovered.  She recovered quickly.  She, no doubt, had felt stranded, alone, vulnerable, and unsure of what to do with no one coming to her aid.  And for a long time.  Her plight was genuine and yet, she was just fine.

Children are resilient and I say thank goodness for that.  But, we parents can bounce back after a phase of weakness as well.

Over the long winter months, cooped up in the house, I got lazy.  I tolerated fussing and whining over almost anything.  And, the girls rarely recovered in just a few minutes because they were rarely actually upset.    Looks like I know now, for sure, when my 4-year-old is faking a fit.  It is time to get back to being hardy like hosta.

________________________________________________________________________________

Hanging back at Yeah Write this week, the best place on the interwebs for writers who blog and bloggers who write.  Click on the button below and read someone new.

12 comments:

  1. Kids are so much more resilient than adults for sure. After reading this, I'm pretty sure some spring gardening is in order at my house in May...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Ugh - I few more days left of gardening...I hate it!!!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I dying to become a gardener, but I don't have a yard. I loved the metaphor (simile? analogy?) of your daughter and hostas. It's scary when I see my kids' vulnerability, but they are so resilient. And yes, thank god for that!

    ReplyDelete
  4. I'd like to grow some vegetables, but Kellie won't let me upset the feng shui of her succulents.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Yes kids are indeed resilient. and thankfully so!

    ReplyDelete
  6. Love the descriptions and the comparison between the kids' resilience and the hosta. :)

    ReplyDelete
  7. Poor baby!! Kids really do get over things much more quickly than we give them credit for!

    ReplyDelete
  8. You couldnt take a hosta down if you tried....a lot like little girls.

    ReplyDelete
  9. I love the way you've combined the resilience of Hosta with the resilience of children. They really are tough little nuts - both of them.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Ah...this is true. Kids are resilient and so are we. It's an easy thing to forget until we get little reminders like these.

    ReplyDelete
  11. I'm glad your daughter was fine -- it's important to be able to recover and it sounds like she's doing a great job of learning that!

    ReplyDelete