For most of us, gardening is not the daily work we do that puts money in our pockets. We work for a living and garden before or after. It’s interesting that during the time we spend working in the garden, the word “work” takes on a different meaning. In this sense, we lose any feeling of drudgery. We put our heart into the effort.
Two transformations occur when a person becomes a gardener. First, the look of the land itself. A yard begins to take on a new shape. A patio becomes a room. An order and an aesthetic that somehow mimics the personality of the gardener emerges. While one friend’s garden exudes an aura of class, another is glitzy from the get-go. Fellow gardeners relish a garden with personal flavor.
Then, there is the change of the gardener. In the process of planting a rose or choosing a garden ornament, moving rocks or sitting for a five-minute coffee break, you, the gardener, come to know yourself. No one knows better what they like and dislike, what gives them pleasure than a person in the act of creating something. I never knew I was partial to a certain shade of yellow, until I chose the subtle Moonbeam coreopsis for my garden.
Gardeners often spend hours alone, working on a chore like weeding or watering new plants. This type of work allows them to do little more than think. Ideas come to them, and they have time to muse and ponder. They learn to grieve wholeheartedly and plan ahead for a child’s birthday present. They hear the melodic rustling of the breeze through aspen leaves, and hum a once-forgotten song an old friend used to sing.