Sunday, September 25, 2016

A Tree Grows in Beebe








A TREE GROWS IN BEEBE


Devastation. Disbelief. Despair.  These were the emotions I felt as I gazed on the property where I had spent eighteen years of my childhood, followed in the years to come by numerous visits “back home” some of which were with my own children.  Here there had been a house that held memories that were so much a part of my becoming the woman I would grow to be.  Here had been the home that taught me values to build character; a home where joy and laughter were modeled on a daily basis. 

This was the home where I was loved so unconditionally and taught that this was what you were supposed to do with all people no matter what.  Yes, no matter what. This home was always my soft place to fall when I experienced failure, not only, as a child, but also as an adult.  From not making the 10th grade cheerleading squad, which was a really big deal at the time, to years later as a grown-up when I was to tell my daddy that I had to get a divorce.  This home was where my first-born son called my mother, G-Mama, and his little brother took his first steps. Because of my parents’ gift of hospitality, this was the home where people were always stopping by for a late night chat around our kitchen table. If the light was on in the kitchen that was the signal my parents were still awake. They knew that Daddy would put on another pot of coffee and a warm conversation would solve the problems of that day. For you see, this home was their soft place to fall, too.

The tornado that year had pretty much wiped out my little hometown.  On that day, my mother had gone down the street to my cousin’s home where they took shelter underneath a dining room table.  Little did she know that she would never return to her own home again.  It was too dangerous for her to revisit due to all of the debris, downed wires and other destruction.  So, my brother took her to his home while he and I took on the task of saving what we could.  The home had shifted so that it would have to be bull-dozed eventually, but not before we could have the opportunity to go pick up any tangible pieces of our life left behind.  Going through that home, seeing it covered in mud, pieces of broken glass, and soaked in water was an experience I would hope never to have again. 

It took days for us to retrieve what was savable and it was on one of those days that I noticed something that has stayed in the images of my mind even now. I had run an errand in town and was returning home when I saw it; one lone pine tree standing in my backyard reaching high to the heavens as if it were proclaiming, “Hey, look up!”  I am still here!  I survived the storm!  These were clear messages but along with these was the message, “Yes, and I am alone.”

For the sake of background, when I was a child, we would go on a family vacation in the summer to the same place, Hot Springs, Arkansas.  We would rent a cabin and spend a lot of time fishing, swimming in the lake and enjoying family time.  On one of these occasions, my daddy brought back several pine tree seedlings and planted them across our backyard.  I do not recall exactly how many, but there were probably a dozen.  Over the years we watched them grow into tall, majestic trees that brought so much beauty to our property. When the tornado hit, the powerful wind took down all of the trees except this one.  The incredible thing is that I didn’t even notice them gone, at first, because I didn’t look up in the beginning.  My eyes were entirely focused straight ahead at the loss in front of me.  As I stated earlier, I had run an errand that morning up to Main Street and when I actually got back to the house was when I noticed this lone tree. I stood there staring at this tree that had been abandoned by all of the others that had stood beside it all those years.  I kept thinking, “Why this one?”  It took my stepping back and looking up, so to speak, to notice what had been right in front of me. I wound up taking a picture of the tree and am so glad that I did because it symbolizes so many life experiences that I had and would experience:  loss of a marriage, loss of my parents, surviving cancer, children leaving the nest, friends moving away, career changes and thoughts of my own mortality as I am aging. 

When I think about that tree I relate to the times when I have experienced loss yet also when I have experienced strength.  I have wondered why I was a cancer survivor when others were not.  I grieve at the loss of those who had stood by me all of my life, somewhat like the other pines trees that had always been with this lone one. Sometimes I struggle with being a “lone one” in my thoughts and dreams for myself.  But this is coupled by the strength I feel by looking at every day as a new opportunity to learn more, be a better friend, a better teacher, a better mother, a better wife, a better everything.

Remember that I mentioned that I didn’t see that tree until I looked up? Also, that I was a short distance away from it before I saw it?  There are two lessons here for me that I think the tree has given me.  To look up for me is to seek God from where I try to draw clarity, meaning and strength for every day.  The second lesson is that sometimes I need to step away from a situation, breathe, look at where my feet are, and seek clarity that way.

There’s a hymn, “God Who Touches Earth With Beauty”, with words by Mary S. Edgar, written over 90 years ago. These are two of her four stanzas:

Like the dancing waves of sunlight,
Make me glad and free;
Like the straightness of the pine trees,
Let me upright be.

Like the arching of the heavens,
Lift my thoughts above;
Turn my dreams to noble action;
Ministries of love.

I couldn’t have expressed it better myself.