Cupping in hand this firm red potato, I thoughtfully run a
thumb across eye tops. It’s alive, yet dying. White spikes reach boldly upward,
unafraid.
We press potato pieces into narrow graves. Her tiny fingers
carefully placing each one, eyes-up. I clutch the garden hoe; a line of potato
pieces stretching out before me. The metal blade scrapes and dirt tumbles over
each piece. I wonder what it looks like in there. What does it look like when life
and death meet? Who wins?
Maybe it looks a lot like here. Dying and alive, we’re put in this place where pain and sorrow and struggles somehow help transform death to life…
We walk across the yard to return tools to shed. I turn back
to glance the garden.
It’s full of manure.
The cat crouches to add more.
And all the transformation (that apparently needs heaps of
manure and stink and bugs and dirt) – all that magic of change happens where we
can’t see it.
And after that one clump of eye tops dies to live,
the grave will be opened and the fruit counted
and we will celebrate
the fruit
the process
and the One who makes the magic happen
-and in the grave of all places
It’s all so … God. He’s brilliant like that.
3 comments:
Beautiful write Kim, so much to praise. This is, for me, by far one of your best pieces, perhaps because I love God, perhaps because I love potatos.
Here's looking at you kid,
Mr. Potato Head ;)
This is simply brilliant! sharing...
@ Mr. Potato Head (hee hee...)
Thank you for your kind words; they encourage me always :)
@ KD Sullivan - thanks for reading, and sharing, blogging twin :)
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