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Thursday, June 9, 2011

soul garden

It as been so hot here in the mountains. The Summer Solstice has yet to arrive and we have been near 90 degrees. I spend my days making sure the animals are comfortable and have fresh cold water to cool them, shade and frozen water bottles in the hutches.

Yesterday late afternoon into evening, I went out planting again, pushing past my swollen knees, the still sweltering heat, and my mind begging to quit. But I didn't quit. I planted three more rows of tomatoes and weeded the bush beans.

I find that when I do push past the discomfort, It is the predominately the mental I have to overcome. The "I can't do this" tapes, instead turn it into, "I am doing it" album. I get into a new zone in my being. With the body and mind now working together, something quite beautiful happens.

Digging into the earth, loosening the soil with my hands, I ready the tomato's new home. Touching the earth brings me to a grounded place. Literally and figuratively. As the sweat is dripping from my face, slightly stinging my eyes, I work in the heat that I now consider my personal sauna. The earth is still cool, deep under the top soil. Dark organic clay dirt, the kind you might make use for a facial. I run it through my hands playing with the dirt like a child, then placing a precious plant, which I grew from seed. Each plant, is filled with the love and nurturing from the sun, water, soils and my hand. They each have a network of tiny white baby roots reaching for more. I carefully place each in a hole and crumble the cool moist earth around it with both hands, giving myself a dirt manicure.

My higher self watches and I witness an extraordinary earthly creature, along with the others, potato bugs, earth worms, and the robins happily pecking on the far side of the garden.

I have talked about this before, but I stands repeating, mostly for myself.

Who I am is holy.
Where I am is holy.
What I do is holy.

An epiphany in my little farm spa and resort. On my natural mountain high.


hole-y plastic with tomatoes
~crow

3 comments:

  1. It's so hot here too. 98* yesterday. But like you, I am out in the garden regardless. :-) It helps that my veggies are coming in.

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  2. You lucky things...

    ...lately it's been cold here and overcast but without any useful rain which we could really do with.

    Looks like you're gonna have a bumper tom harvest.

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  3. Here in Arizona the ground is rock hard. I have a tiny tiny garden [3'x15'] on the east of the house with tomatoes, jalapenos, chives and basil - just stuff I use everyday. It took hours to break up that little piece of ground and work in enough mulch to make it viable. There will never be enough mulch! I am jealous of the description of your soul. We've been harvesting tomatoes for about 6 weeks now :-)

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