Tag Archives: temporary

The Flowers on the Pawpaw Tree

            The Pawpaw tree has flowered again. Actually, some of the flowers have already bloomed and fallen away, exposing the tiny fruit getting ready to grow. There’s endless inspiration in watching this pawpaw tree go through its cycle of life and death and renewal each year. In the winter, when all I can see is the bare tree with no leaves or buds or fruit or flowers, it would be easy to imagine that there is no life left, but I know better. I know that spring always comes again.

The reddish brown pawpaw flowers
Can you see the three little fruits in a clump?

            When Cricket died in October, I put her collar around the trunk of the pawpaw tree, not because I thought she might come back to life herself in the spring, but because I hoped her life would be an inspiration to the tree, to keep growing. Ellie’s collar was added in December and in a way it made the tree seem more whole, because now it had both the quiet joy of Ellie and the loud vibrancy of Cricket to help it along.

This picture was taken in December, when the Pawpaw tree was still sleeping.

            I don’t know why this small gesture has been so meaningful to me, but every time I see their collars there on the pawpaw tree I feel a sense of comfort and reassurance. I still hear the dogs in the apartment all the time, and I see shadows and imagine that one of them is running past my door. It still surprises me how solid these memories feel, of all of the dogs and people I’ve loved and lost. It’s not that “I see dead people,” but I feel their presence in my mind and in my heart in a way that is so much more substantial than the words “ghost” or “spirit” would suggest.

            My grandfather, who died when I was eight years old, is still a daily presence in my life: his smile and his laugh and the strength of his attention bolster me through so many difficult days. The same is true of some of the less positive characters from my past too, unfortunately, but there’s at least reassurance in knowing that my memories remain a part of me, and none of that time was wasted.

Grandpa

            However temporary nature may be, with flowers blooming and wilting, and dogs coming into my life and passing away, I know that I will never really lose them. It all remains. And I think that’s a gift, even if at times a bittersweet one.

We’ll always be here, Mommy.”

If you haven’t had a chance yet, please check out my Young Adult novel, Yeshiva Girl, on Amazon. And if you feel called to write a review of the book, on Amazon, or anywhere else, I’d be honored.

            Yeshiva Girl is about a Jewish teenager on Long Island, named Isabel, though her father calls her Jezebel. Her father has been accused of inappropriate sexual behavior with one of his students, which he denies, but Izzy implicitly believes it’s true. As a result of his problems, her father sends her to a co-ed Orthodox yeshiva for tenth grade, out of the blue, and Izzy and her mother can’t figure out how to prevent it. At Yeshiva, though, Izzy finds that religious people are much more complicated than she had expected. Some, like her father, may use religion as a place to hide, but others search for and find comfort, and community, and even enlightenment. The question is, what will Izzy find?