We have this plum tree in the backyard. Or maybe it's a cherry. Its fruit are inedible, whatever they are. It sits at the bottom of an unstable slope covered in weeds and blackberry brambles. It doesn't have a symmetrical and graceful crown. It suffered imprudent pruning in its youth. It has thick truncated branches that sprouted new branches at awkward angles.
My neighbor would like to take it out. My brother who is designing a deck for us would like to take it out. But every year for a few days when it blossoms--when springtime has brought it the right combination of water and warmth--I find it so agonizingly beautiful, so heartrendingly ephemeral, its white blossoms on black branches ready to fall or be swept away like snow on eyelashes, that it is worth all the other days when it frankly borders on being an eyesore. We returned from Texas to find it blossoming and I was sorry to have missed even a day of its brief grace.
Clementine, who in no way resembles this tree, has been bursting forth with creativity. While nature has been bedecking our yard with white blossoms and yellow daffodils and green poppy plants promising a profusion of orange, Clementine has been at work on the inside. I set out a stack of card stock and some scissors and suggested Valentines.

Instead we got Clementine's menagerie. My neighbor would like to take it out. My brother who is designing a deck for us would like to take it out. But every year for a few days when it blossoms--when springtime has brought it the right combination of water and warmth--I find it so agonizingly beautiful, so heartrendingly ephemeral, its white blossoms on black branches ready to fall or be swept away like snow on eyelashes, that it is worth all the other days when it frankly borders on being an eyesore. We returned from Texas to find it blossoming and I was sorry to have missed even a day of its brief grace.
Clementine, who in no way resembles this tree, has been bursting forth with creativity. While nature has been bedecking our yard with white blossoms and yellow daffodils and green poppy plants promising a profusion of orange, Clementine has been at work on the inside. I set out a stack of card stock and some scissors and suggested Valentines.



Though not inexpertly pruned or an eyesore, maybe she does resemble the tree after all.
Don't we all stand ungraceful at times, withdrawn, fallow? Clementine can be found often in her pajamas, hair knotty, staring out a window, listening to her book on tape. Or on "the warm" (the heater vent) with Calvin and Hobbes open. Soaking up the water and heat of creativity. And then, unexpectedly, she bursts forth with inspiration.
What's blossoming at your house?