Weeding is Therapy
Despite the grudge I hold against vicious weeds like dandelions and white clover, I don’t mind the occasional therapy borne of happily plucking off their tops and tossing them to the wind.
Mind you it’s a chore and often one I don’t have time for in the first place. But the older I’ve gotten, the more I’ve come to respect the wisdom of weeding as a sort of humble activity that thoughtful minds take up as an occupation of time. When I weed, I think. I think about the plants that surround me, like the spiderworts which have happily colonized a corner of the rock garden. As I untangle chickweed from my pink-flowering prickly pear (Opuntia polyacantha), I dream of what its blossoms will look like in maiden glory in my garden in just a few weeks. As I move on down the limestone wall near a raucous mound of catchflies (Silene), I think beyond the summer through the fall and into next spring, planning for a garden I don’t even know yet. Gardens (weeds and all) are immutable life forms, growing and blooming with a rhythm of the season. The perception of that rhythm qualifies any of us to tend earthly space.
So despite the bucket of fluffy dandelions seed heads and three- and four-parted clover leaves sitting in the yard, my time spent weeding equates to much needed mental therapy, that escape that only happens amid flowers and bees. And when I need a little thinking time again, I’m sure a few weeds will be waiting for me.

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| Published on May 30th, 2009 | Posted by Kelly Norris |


