ots-photo/Fotolia |
Grass has begun to grow in Los Angeles
after just two days of steady rain. At the top of our street, tender, green
shoots have sprung up on a brown, dusty hill that’s been hospitable only to the
gophers.
Save for parks and golf courses,
there’s relatively little grass here. Unlike the suburban Midwest, where the
houses around us had verdant lawns nourished by sprinkler systems, most of our
neighbors here have replaced their grass with succulents and rocks. Still,
there are a few holdouts and, three years into Southern California drought
culture, I feel judgy when I see a well-watered patch of grass.
I’m fueled by Curbed LA, which
regularly drought shames municipalities (Beverly Hills) and individuals (Tom
Selleck and the Kardashians) for their disregard of our collective water
conservation efforts.
Our yellow lab mix, Bella, is
magnetically drawn to the smattering of lawns on our hilly, twisty street. She grew
up believing that’s where she’s supposed to do her business, but people who are
growing grass don’t appreciate it when your dog squats on their lawn, even if
you do scoop your poop. So, like the rest of us—or most of the rest of us,
anyway—Bella, too, has adjusted to the drought and become less discerning when
it comes to her daily constitutional. Like me, she noticed the blades of grass
growing these last couple of days on the parched hill we frequent morning, noon
and night and took a few nibbles at it, like a pony in a pasture.
They say even with the torrents
expected with this winter’s El NiƱo, it’s unlikely there’ll be enough rain to end our epic drought. It would take rains of biblical
proportion for us to rise up from the Valley of Dry bones.
Still, I’m moved by the earth’s
response to a 48-hour downpour. As stingy as the skies have been, the ground
holds no grudge. It is thirsty and willing to drink. All it takes is a little
encouragement and nurture and somehow a cracked, dusty hillside springs to life.
Romolo Tavani/Folotia |
I wonder if we can do the same for
each other? Rain down kindness and reassurance… cultivate acceptance… proffer
forbearance.
And what about ourselves?
Can we tend
to the dry, brittle places within? Practicing radical self-care that fills
cracks in the soul and wipes dust from the lonely, dark corners of our hearts?
Can we become a gentle rain? Or even a
mighty deluge of compassion, quenching all that is bitter and scorched?
I need to believe that green blades of
optimism and love can push through stubborn crusts of hatred, intolerance and
suspicion… that there’s still a reservoir of enduring hope… and that when the
floodgates open, whether by faith or conscience or simple human decency, the
waters flow with a drought-ending rush of cool, cleansing promise that renews
the face of the earth.
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Poetic and epic. I will read this again and again, soaking up your wisdom, optimism and grace. And I will say a little prayer that those who need this most, read and internalize it. Sending you tons of love and thanking you for all that you release into our universe today and always.
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