Claire Reutter

In third grade, we were given the assignment to write about what we  wanted to be when we grew up. I had no idea, but I liked seeing my mom  plant flowers.

I approached my teacher. “Um, Mrs. Walsh, What are those people  called who take care of flowers?”

“Florists?”

Sounded good to me. I wrote down that I want to be an f-l-o-r-i-s-t.  Well, I didn’t become that. In fact, I never did appreciate cut flowers. I  mean, come on. They are separated from the soil, and then they die. But,  in a sense, l did become a gardener, a miniature of my mom.

She planted more than zinnias and nasturtiums. In fact, she carried and  nurtured 13 seeds that became her children. I was Number 7 of the  Baker’s Dozen.

A late bloomer, I finally decided in my mid-30s that I wanted to grow my  own garden. Well, sometimes the gardener gives it all She can but still  things don’t go as planned. My husband and I struggled for a couple years  with infertility, and then…I finally became pregnant! But three months in, a  heart-breaking miscarriage followed.

After consulting with a renowned specialist, we decided on a drug  called clomid. That didn’t work. What did help is a Shaman Woman who  appeared to me in a dream at 3 a.m. in the Spring of 2001. She told me  that “Now is the time.” I woke up my partner, and—well—he didn’t need  any convincing.

Hooray! Another seed was planted. And nearly nine months later, it was  ripe and ready to push through the crack to become a seedling.

The plan was to labor at home as long as possible, then transport  ourselves to the hospital where the smiling midwife would assist me with  the rest of the labor. The doctor would perfunctorily appear at the last  minute and sign off on the birth. Yea-no, that didn’t happen.

What did happen is that my husband ended up delivering the baby in  the relative comfort of our little log cabin in the Midwestern woods. He caught the Sprout, immediately brought it up to my chest, and then called  9-1-1.

When the EMTs finally arrived (after getting lost), they asked if we had a  boy or girl. “Uh, we don’t know.” (We had other things on our mind.)  Husband cut the cord. (It was a boy.) We went to the hospital, where they  delivered the placenta.

We moved five months later, leaving behind trout lily, trillium, and  waterleaf in the woods we called home. We replaced it with renewing and  refreshing bird of paradise, bamboo, and ginger along with mouth watering mango, avocado, and guava.

Like that 8-year-old girl I once was, I still didn’t know what I wanted to  be. Or at least I still didn’t know how to do it. But what I did know is that I  would figure things out as I went along—how to grow this new garden of  mine.

And I did.

 


Claire Reutter has lived in four corners of the U.S., and finds beauty in every location. Her life’s work is to be a helper, especially for the marginalized. cdsittinginatree@yahoo.com