I live along
a river, next to woods, with trees of all types; some planted, but most there
by natures design. When I first moved to this location in the country – after the
deaths of my parents and both siblings - I chose a favorite; a large solitary
tree in a grassy area, which from old photographs, appears to have been there
prior to the building of any structures in the 1930’s. It is huge, with branches reaching out and
upward. It too, is dead. I have watched the tree now for four years, as the
last small branches have finished trying to cling to life. Each storm takes a
little more of it, as branches break and fall to the ground.
In the spring
of this year, a local electrician working on my house, who heats his home with
wood, asked to cut the tree down. I could not let it go. I told him that I take
photos of it, and that it somehow belongs where it is. He suggested that he would be doing me a favor
by clearing the land. I declined again, politely telling him that I would call
him, should I change my mind. He looked slightly bewildered upon hearing this, and looked at me as if I
was an eccentric outsider. He shook his
head, smiling slightly, got into his truck and left. I let his judgment fall upon me, and
acknowledged, if only to myself, that tree or not, I would not be living alone,
an artist, with a penchant for deep thinking, living in the present, and
appreciating the solitude and beauty of the land, if I were not, to some extent,
eccentric.
So summer
has now passed into fall, and the tree remains where it has been for decades. I
watch while the solitary eagle lands on its bare branches, as it rests before
circling on its route for food. Branches continue to fall. I continue to take
photographs of the tree in the rain, in the sunlight, as sand cranes fly beside
it, and in the light of the setting sun. I am reminded on a daily basis, that the
tree, perhaps all living things, continue to provide for the living, long after
their own life ceases.
No comments:
Post a Comment