Eulogy thanks to Berries
Laura Emerson
Alaskauu1.blogspot.com
Alaskauu1.substack.com
Book: Log Cabin Reflections, Kindle version
Yesterday, my dad died. I spent a few hours processing the news, but all I felt was an emotional maelstrom and a physical need to go outside and DO something.
So I harvested Saskatoon berries.
Berry picking has always been a calming and meditative activity for me. It engenders feelings of gratitude at the reliable plenty of a summer’s harvest.
Today though, my mind was whirling with images of my dad and my siblings as I plucked the fruit. In the process, the berries soothed my knot of grief.
I remembered when I planted these six, spindly little seedlings a decade ago. Every year, I worried when the springy boughs bowed below the snow, wondering how they would fare the following spring. Some branches broke. Of those, I taped and splinted a few. Some benefited. Others didn’t. I pruned low branches girdled beneath our deep snow by hungry voles. I mulched in the fall and fertilized in the spring.
Of the six trees, two are tall and prolific producers. Three are middling, and one is the runt of the group.
Since each tree has grown differently, I have lots of “woulda, coulda, shoulda thoughts” about my interventions. What if I had planted them elsewhere and farther apart? Some trees hog the sun, grow taller and stronger and their boughs whip the narrower branches of an adjacent tree, which becomes stunted. What if I had pruned them better, earlier? Now such intervention on some major limbs might kill the tree. What if I had watered them deeper? What if?
All of us who are children, as well as parents, co-parents, step-parents contemplate such what ifs. It is hard to step out of a family or community and view it from outside.
As I gather the berries this August, I reach for those of the darkest blue hue, heavy and round with juice. Since the berries do not all ripen at the same time, I leave those that are purple or red that need additional time to mature more slowly in the sun.
Some berries grow in ideal locations – plenty of sun, protected from the wind, with room to grow, well separated from other berries.
Others are physically deformed by birds that pecked part of them. A few look fine, but skinny larvae burrowed inside and rot the interior. In thick clusters, a single berry in the middle is always desiccated and surrounded by a gray fluff of mold, which taints the berries surrounding it. It did not have room to grow so it died and infected those surrounding it.
Each tree, each berry, each season, teaches me a different lesson.
Today, different from a decade of other harvesting days, my mind is viewing this line of trees as a community, each tree as a family, and the berries as individual members of that family tree.
My dad has died. The saskatoons console me because I observe among those trees and branches, life experiences that illuminate my own.
I can’t hug my dad. But I can stroke these branches and think about his children and grandchildren and great grandchildren who will grow toward the sun, strong and resilient. He was a strong tree with, like all of us, some weak branches. He has many progeny, who will blow and bend with the winds of the future.
We have a bench along the lake shore with three stone cairns of memory. Tomorrow, we will build a fourth.