The care and feeding of Wild Roses

I suspect that doing the right thing is, in the end, simply cultivating an appropriate and deliberate respect for all the beautiful variations and possibilities of one another.

I always thought they were a gift from my mother.

The wild and brilliant red rose vines burst into my yard, along the front of the house, just beneath my bedroom windows, the very first spring following my mother’s death. They have been bringing me delight and insight rather consistently ever since.

It’s been almost a decade now. And I’ve always refrained from interfering with their spontaneity, their free-form loveliness, even their integration with the window shutters and roof line and other architectural aspects of the house itself, as well as their fellow plants that grow and coexist among them.

But this spring, they seemed to be struggling a bit. And so I had an arbor built just for them — to give them a place of respite, a chance to sit down at the dance. I had to coax them to it, with soft brown string and gentle tucking in around their edges, showing them where I thought they should go, how they should grow. They promptly rebelled at my efforts, rather blatantly. They even went so far as to stop blooming altogether, breaking off their own limbs in protest, rejecting the shade that resulted from the arbor, pulling free from the brown string and well-intentioned urgings.

My subsequent research suggested that I should perhaps be fertilizing them — nurturing them in a more root-based way — feeding them with rich nutrients and supplements that I thought they might be missing on their own. Ever the hopeful (if not always effective) environmentalist, I gathered the most eco-friendly natural substances that I had read or heard they would enjoy. I saved teabags and coffee grounds and egg shells. Friends brought me banana peels and molasses. I added small amounts of vinegar and epsom salts. And, according to instructions, I spread them like offerings at the base of the wild things (hoping not to attract other wandering “wild things” to sample the buffet).

The first night after I had applied the feeding, I went to bed with windows wide open to the night air and evening breezes. And it became woefully evident that I was sleeping rather in the center of a garbage dump, a literal compost heap. The overripe stench filled the room with all its pungent properties. Especially the bananas and vinegar.

The next morning I put on my thick serious shoes and stepped into the middle of it all and I tried covering everything over with a layer of earth, which did help. And the dogs and cats and other neighborhood animals were greatly entertained.

But while I was working through the resistant and rocky soil, and bleeding through the insistent and ever-present thorns, I began to suspect that this could be viewed as a rather literal nature-based micro-lesson about humanity — about our human relationships, our global society.

Suppose we could imagine life in the simple terms of a rose — with all its beauty as well as its thorns. And suppose we are personally responsible for growing that rose — for caring and nurturing it into being the very best version of itself — the very best version of ourselves. How many of us really know what that means?

Just as with my own roses experience, I suspect that doing the right thing for each other is often not what we think it should be. Sometimes our show of support can be like an arbor built for wild roses: it simply results in manipulation. No matter how gently or well-intentioned the soft brown strings are tied, they are restrictive and disrespectful, keeping us from knowing the naturally diverse existence and unique blossoming that was meant to be there.

Like with my roses, doing the right thing for each other may at times be messy and unpleasant and opening ourselves up to unwanted things. Sometimes it means getting our hands dirty and scratched to bits. And sometimes it can cause an awful stink, right in our own front yards.

I suspect that doing the right thing is, in the end, simply cultivating an appropriate and deliberate respect for all the beautiful variations and possibilities of one another. Seeking each other’s perspective. Accepting each other’s reality. Truth over supposition.

And perhaps, in the end, we will put on our thick serious shoes, and step into the middle of it all, and do the right thing for each other. Perhaps we will learn to care for one another like wild roses … like gifts from our mothers.

© Marti Healy 2020

Picture of Marti Healy

Marti Healy

Marti Healy is a writer living in Aiken with dog Quincy and cat Tuppence.  She was a professional copywriter for longer than 35 years, and is a columnist, book author, and popular speaker, whose work has received national recognition and awards.
Picture of Marti Healy

Marti Healy

Marti Healy is a writer living in Aiken with dog Quincy and cat Tuppence.  She was a professional copywriter for longer than 35 years, and is a columnist, book author, and popular speaker, whose work has received national recognition and awards.

In the know

Related Stories

Be Humbled | Palmetto Bella

Be Humbled

Do you wish to rise? Begin by descending. You plan a tower that will pierce the clouds? Lay first the foundation of humility. ~ Saint Augustine Happy New Year! Never been one for resolutions. It always felt like I was setting myself up for disappointment by trying to find something worthy enough to make a definitive claim on this great big thing I was going to change or do differently in the coming year. Something impressive enough that I would tell everyone to ensure accountability. Romantic enough that others would be wowed and inspired to make mesmerizing resolutions as well. I would stand on this victorious mountain of ideals, shout

Read More »
celebration

Be Present

How far you go in life depends on your being tender with the young, compassionate with the aged, sympathetic with the striving and tolerant of the weak and strong. Because someday in your life you will have been all of these. – George Washington Carver The Celebration Issue! To tell you the truth, the final issue of 2020 is quite the celebration here at Bella. We made it through the year with innovation, collaboration, expansion, and a positive outlook on the horizon. We were blessed with the continuing support of advertisers and contributors who not only kept our Bella in print but allowed us to spread our mission wider and

Read More »
pathway

Be Challenged

Publisher’s Letter From Your Fearless Leader “Change does not change tradition. It strengthens it. Change is a challenge and an opportunity, not a threat.” Prince Philip of England What a wild ride we have taken on the rollercoaster of life in the last few months. In August, we were getting “Back To” life. September was our “Change” issue, which rolled into October with our “Creativity” issue. We decided to get creative with our branding and we revamped our focus to #bebetterbebella, to start where we are and to find our voices. We are telling our truth. We are honoring the process by accepting where we are at and identifying what

Read More »
Creating Resilience in Time of Chaos | Palmetto Bella

Creating Resilience in Time of Chaos

It’s no secret that nine months of a world-wide pandemic has changed our lives in many ways. Perhaps, for the first time, we are working from home, limiting our social contact, eating out less or not at all, watching church services on TV, and canceling theater or art outings. And, in the silence, how have we personally changed? Perhaps some of us have embraced the downtime to rethink our priorities and negotiate what is really important to us. But could it be that we each have a creative gear that we have not used before? Perhaps unaware, during the past few months, have we been building more emotional strength than

Read More »