Who am I? Wow, that’s a
loaded question! I’m…well, I’m me, just me. At this point on most days,
that’s good enough and having it be good enough is such a relief. I spent a
fairly significant portion of my life trying to be someone that other people,
namely my significant others, would want. Of course, significant others often
have a way of finding other people to be significant to them so I found myself 2 or 3 times adrift without any idea of who
to be because my S.O. “significated”
somewhere else.
So, I was born on the Summer Solstice in 1960. You can do
the math. I am a 5’7” blue eyed blonde. The birthday makes me a Gemini. I am,
if the astrologers are to be believed, a creature of dual nature, fickle,
flighty, but fiercely creative especially in the communicative arts. I dunno
what to make of the “fickle and flighty” part but I admit to the dual nature. I
grew up and still live in the deep South of the United States. How far south,
you ask? Think of the deepest South you can imagine. If you hit Louisiana,
you’ve gone too far and Florida doesn’t count as the South. Any fool knows
that. No real Southerners live in Florida anymore. It has become too
cosmopolitan for most of us and has transformed into the place we go on
vacations, to lie on the beach and soak up more UV than is good for anyone. I
love Florida, don’t get me wrong. I go there at every opportunity but it isn’t
really the South to me.
The South is a place of enigma with a checkered past and
an uncertain future—very much like me! Spanish moss is less in evidence in my
South than Wisteria. Both kill the trees but Wisteria does it in purple. There
is something of mystery in anything so beautiful and fragrant that kills while
wearing purple. My ex-S.O. was fond of planting Wisteria on my farm, especially
around the sweet gum trees that are in my yard. It wound itself around my trees
like some flora-constrictor (ha, pun intended). It grew high into the trees and
every spring bloomed in a reckless, beautiful, murderous, purple profusion. I
walked by on my way to the barn every day and noticed but didn’t notice.
Did you ever catch yourself doing that? Noticing but not
noticing? Like you put a bottle of shampoo on the counter where it doesn’t
belong. It sits there every day adding clutter and chaos to your life but after
a few days, even though you see it, you don’t notice it. You might even need to find it and you might look on the
counter but still you don’t notice that it’s there. That’s what it was like for
me to see the Wisteria. When the ex was here there was no point in noticing. He
planted it; he didn’t ask me about it, therefore there was nothing I could do
about it one way or the other. He wanted it, he got it. Who was I to object or
feel anything different about it? That’s just one example of how I lost myself
trying to be in a relationship with him. And while I might call his Bisexual
Married Men of America “foul” it was an equal “foul” on my part to disallow and
sacrifice parts of myself to being in relationship to him. I was trying to be
someone he could want, someone “worthy” of him.
Well, I’m worthy now. I cut that fucking Wisteria this
fall! I don’t have a lot of deep and abiding affection for sweet gum trees.
Their seed pods which we call “sweet gum balls” are covered in a million sharp
and spiny spikes. They roll underfoot and generally act like marbles rolled to
trip up the cop chasing Moe in a Three Stooges cartoon. In short, they’ve
knocked me on my ass more times than I care to remember. So why sever the
Wisteria? It is beautiful. It smells good. It’s part of every spring. Because
it was planted there without any thought given to that planting by me! It
wasn’t my choice to put it there, how can I possibly know if I want to watch it
kill the tree (however long it takes to do it) unless I spend some time
thinking about it? How can I take possession of Elysian unless I spend time
thinking about what I do with her? How to take care of her? How best to love
her and “husband” her? (Now, my friends, the word “husband” is here used as a
verb and it is a somewhat
archaic use but nevertheless valid.)
See what I mean about the South? Florida is easy. Florida
is beaches and sun, surf and cocktails, seafood and sightseeing, mini-golf and
swimming pools. The deep South is Wisteria and sweet gum trees, loss and
discovery, uncertainty and action. There is nothing easy about the South. The
deep South is a study in contradiction. It is beautiful and awful and I am its
daughter.
Peace and Blessings,
An Uncommon Gemini