Gerbera photo by Kelley

Gerbera photo by Kelley

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Spring Has Sprung

Our last freeze date here is supposed to be April 17 and the last several years it's been around the 21st of April. I've got celosia, geraniums, zinnias and tomato plants ready to plant. The daffydills are almost done blooming. I planted hyacinths and daffydills in the long bed between Science and Admin. The fragrance was wonderful. You could smell the hyacinths before you could see them. I love it. I thought the Lorapetalum chinensis bit the big one because it got so cold for so long this winter but they have new growth popping out. The lilac should be blooming in the next week or so.I am so glad spring is finally here.

Friday, March 26, 2010

The greenhouse

It's almost spring and I can't wait for it to get here. I've been transplanting tomato and flower plants the last 2 days and will be back at it tomorrow. I love heirloom tomatoes. I know they don't produce or perform as well as the hybrids but the flavor is amazing. I've misplaced a bunch of seeds and can't find them anywhere. I'm really kind of annoyed because Cherokee Purple is with that bunch. I've got to go find Celebrity or order it. This is mhy favorite time of the year. The daffodils and hyacinths are blooming and they are beautiful, in spite of the snow last weekend. The redbuds will be blooming before long. The forsythia is trying to bust out. I love it.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

The fine art of giving

Giving was something totally new to me. I''d been a taker and user of people for years and years.The fact that I never wanted to give anyting back didn't matter. Or maybe it did but it hurt to really look at what I'd become. I certainly had guilt wich meant I had something of a conscience. When I first started going to meetings, it was suggested to me that I re-fill the sugar and creamer packets and make some coffee before the meeting started. I enjoyed it and it felt good to give something back. I was pretty sick and it took a long time to really enjoy giving. Everyone can do it, just find something you're passionate about and share it with others. We can't keep it unless we give it away. What a concept!!! Anyway, I guess it took about 5 or 6 years for the fog to clear and I actually looked around our small community. It looked like no one loved it. So when the city built three corner planters downtown, I volunteered to plant flowers in them and water them thru the summer months. it was good. Then the city bought some large containers and I again volunteered. By this time I had a group of junior master gardeners who helped plant the planters for several years. We also added hanging baskets to some of the poles and it really looked pretty. I've never know moderation in my life. After 10 years of doing the watering (9 of those years for free) I resigned. I also went through withdrawls and had to laugh because the pride committee has three people doing what I did alone for all those years.
In 2005, I kicked the city out of one of our oldest parks, Ray See Park.( named after a WW I vet and wpa promoter in the 30's) They were destroying it with neglect and I felt I could make an improvement. Wow!! What a blessing that turned out to be. The JMG kids and I adopted the park in March of 2005, the pool broke down in June of 2005. Then the fight was on to keep our beautiful WPA pool. We set about raising money to purchase new playground equipment and to replace the overgrown arborvitae we removed. It was great!!! This passion I found for the project was overwhelming sometimes. I wanted to get eveything done right now. We did wind up raising about $18K for the park and bought some really cool playground equipment, like the Dragon Challenge, Infinity Climb and Tykes of Steel. We planted about 12 trees and it looks good. We've also purchased some Christmas displays and have had good public response especially from the folks who live south of town. The fight to save the pool taught me a lot about myself. I can git 'er done with God's help and lots of hands here on Earth. There were people I thought were my friends who really weren't and don't talk to me to this day. The real friends who didn't agree with me are still my friends because we respect each others right to an opinion without getting angry (trying to control). Passion is contageous. The south end of town looks so much better and some of the other businesses have cleaned up a little. The ditch got cleaned out and you can actually see the bath house and pool from the highway. I still mow the park with the mower I bought just for that purpose and picked up some extra work to pay for the gas used to mow and weedeat the park. I also collect aluminum cans to help with the cost. The blades for my mower are $100 and I go thru about 4 sets every summer. (I love my Bad Boy mower. I suggested to Charlie that we slow down, sell his tractor and my mower and his response was that if we do anything with the mower, it will be to upgrade. LOL) The giving has brought about opportunities to be humbled. The chamber of commerce citizen of the year award was very unexpected and humbling because it is an award from my peers in the community.  My grandmother got to be there and it was great for her to see her oldest granddaughter do good instead of behaving like a jerk. She died a couple of years later and I miss her so very much. I applied to Keep Oklahoma Beautiful for an award in environmental excellance through teaching people about gardening and won. As a result of that, I was given the pride of Tonkawa award. Another one from my peers. The fight for the pool garnered me an award from Preservation Oklahoma Inc. What an honor!!!! All I did was pray, work hard for what I believed in, and stand for something I felt would be positive for the community. What a sweet deal.....all because I don't drink, one day at a time. God is good all the time. Each time I've put out an effort with no thought of compensation, the rewards have been phenomenal. This is what life is about. Not what we can get from life but what it gives us when we live the way God wants us too.
We have a meeting place here in town. It's great to have one so close again. We meet every morning at 630 am so I get there about 545 to make sure things are good to go. Sometimes people show up sometimnes they don't. I've read a lot of the history of AA because people didn't show up so I benefitted anyway. It's service. I am responsible when anyone anywhere needs help.....I want the hand of AA to be there. Who would have thought such a selfish, self centered ball of anger and hate could think of others first. A miracle each and every day.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Scars

I found a wonderful Christ centered book a couple of weeks ago and finally had time to sit down and read it even though I have a couple of orders for earrings. It is entitled 'Your Scars are Beautiful to God'.  It starts off going through the physical scars  each of us have, like the scars from a rotator cuff repair, a hysterectomy, and repair of two bulging discs.  The most obvious one is the rotator cuff repair. Before I had the hystectomy, I tanned so my Dr. would know where my bikini line is. He did a good job.....no suture scars thanks to super glue and butterfly tape. The neck scar is not really noticable, it looks like another wrinkle.  I have other scars in various places from scrapes and such. I was something of a tomboy so it is to be expected. The one on my shin bone is the one I remember the most, it hurt like a big dog. I was stepping up into one of my flowerbeds and skinned my shin, hitting the edge of the brick wall. It took out a chunk of flesh through my jeans and a sock. But none of these compares to the scars inside of us which no human can see. So far the book has hit home on a couple of different points. Until I saw the title of this book, I didn't think of the scars as being helpful to anyone else. I have tried to learn from them and think some of it has soaked in. Some of the scars are still raw and some are completely healed. The meetings I go to have probably helped as much as anything. I haven't had to drink over anything in a very long time.

I have had to look at my family history to see that the scars were hold-overs from previous generations. My grandpa was a raging alcoholic and my grandma stayed in bed with extreme depression issues. Mom has related the story of how she had to do the dishes in third grade and how she had to get herself and her sisters ready for school because grandma was too lazy to get out of bed. Depresssion is ugly and I believe my grandma truly suffered with it. Grandpa hated everyone and was an athiest. He had a very unahppy life from the beginning although I don't know much aobut it. He started smoking at the age of 8 and talked about fighting a lot. When a pack of dogs killed the milk cow he shot every one of them. He made the lives of his family unhappy and truly a living hell for all of them especially my youngest aunt and my grandma. I think that's why she took up gardening. The beauty of the gardens were a stark contrast to the ugliness of her life. The one thing they had in common was the love of antiques. They had so much cool stuff, it was an explorers heaven when you're 6. She made jewelry and knew how to knit and crochet. I still have the blanket she made for me so many years ago. I loved her so much and didn't know anything about the life they had until I was in my late teens and early 20's. She died in 1993 of systemic cancer. She looked about 90 and was only 73. She never understood that she had choices about her life. She died of sprititual cancer as much as physical cancer. My own mother is the same way though not to that degree. I was that way until I started working those steps and realized that I have choices every day of my life. I still struggle with depression from time to time but, thanks to meds and meetings, it's not as bad as it was a few years ago. There was a time I missed work due to depression, even sober.  I don't want to continue to perpetuate the disease through my kids. Some of the issues I have experienced will never happen to Brit and Cale because I chose to change my behavior from a monster to a mother. I am so not perfect even still I am a good mom to Brit and Cale.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Today's Each day a New Beginning

Within our dreams and aspirations we find our opportunities. Sue Atchley Ebaugh

We all have dreams and aspirations. I call them hope. When I was out there drinking and such, I had no real dreams. I was afraid to try anything for fear of failure. Somewhere in my youth I learned that if you made a mistake, you were a mistake and don't do anything halfassed. If you can't do something right, don't do it at all. Where would we be if everyone believed like that? Edison would never have done anything to make our world better. The Wright brothers certainly never would have gotten their plane off the ground. Abe Lincoln would never have been our president. I finally finished school here at NOC. It only took 30 years for me to get where I am academically. OSU has admitted me as a student. If I still believed as I did when I was young I never would have gone back to college and certainly never even applied to OSU. My dreams may be realized yet. I love gardening......everything about it.  My body, however, is falling apart a joint at a time. The abuse I heaped on myself is finally catching up with me. So, with that in mind, I decided to pursue ag communications. Less math and science and not so hard on the body. And, the best part, I can share my love of gardening through the written word (I love to write).  I am blessed to have a husband who is very supportive of my academic endeavors and not threatened by them like the last one was. One of my dreams has been realized and the others are waiting for me to catch them.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

R. I. P. my friend

My very dear friend Don Corey passed away this afternoon. When he worked for the city, he was my biggest supporter and was always ready to help with whatever project I had going on. He was a huge help with the Ray See Park project even when he thought I was nuts. He was a Viet Nam veteran on the Navy side. He asked me about the POW/MIA flag for the park a couple of weeks ago. I'm sure glad we got it up before he died.  He tried to talk to me about his war experience once but still couldn't without getting very emotional. Freedom is never free and he served our country with pride. He was also a friend of Bill for over 20 years. I love him and will miss him sorely. Rest in peace, my friend. I'll see you on the other side baby.

Monday, February 1, 2010

The gift of sobriety

I'm sitting on the sidelines watching one of my friends try to deal with Bob. Bob was sober for 14 months then last July he got drunk and has stayed that way since. He's been hauled to two detox centers and one treatment center. The Ponca and Blackwell hospitals refuse to treat his drunk ass because he is so beligerant. But for the grace of God there go I. Why have I been able to stay away from the booze and so many others die from this disease? I do not know and probably never will. I was so ready for my life to be different. I was sick and tired of being sick and tired. I wanted to die but then that would have left Brit and Cale to be raised by their dad and I didn't want that for sure. Why can't Bob see what alcohol is doing to his life? I don't know that either. He's 68 years old, Apache and has hep C. He's been drinking and doing drugs most of his adult life. I imagine at one time he was a good mechanic and a good truck driver. What a waste. My sponsor shared with me that some of us have to die so others can stay sober. Survival of the fittest or the most willing? It's been so long since I've had a drink that I can't imagine taking a drink and going back to that hell I called my life. My worst day sober is way better than my best day drunk. One of my other sponsors siad if we want to take a drink then we might as well drive our vehicle into the Salt Fork, toss in all the clothes and things that we treasure because they will be gone anyway. What a price to pay for the first drink, the one that starts the obsession I can't stop. What a gift I have been given!!! The gift of  sobriety (life) through my friends of Bill is a debt I can never repay. I no longer have to deal with the feelings of inadequacy, inferiority and the negative feelings I allowed myself to wallow in for so many years. Life is good one day at a time.

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

growing up me

In 1993, I made the decision to stop drinking. I remember wondering, 'what in the world am I going to do without my numbzit'. I had all these feelings I had no clue how to deal with. I thought I was born angry and that it was normal for me. So, to get to the root of the problem, me, I had to take a hard look at my life. It was ugly. I had problems with my parents, my mother specifically. We had never been able to get along. (Today I am cautiously optomistic about the relationship we have. We've been through a rougher than normal patch this last 6 months.) I felt like she hated me for being born. I had colic when I was a baby. I can't count the number of times I heard about how they walked the floor with me and the car rides hoping I would stop screaming. When mom  talks about it, even today, her nostrils flare and she gets that look on her face. Throughout the rest of my life, she and I butted heads regularly. I still don't understand why she was so harteful. My poor dad had to feel like an embattled referee. To me, it was absolute hell.Of course, I did my share of, I'll call it major rebellion. I remember being rebellious way before I ever took a drink or a drug.  When I was in the 6th grade I was told not to wear a certain gold skirt because it was so short. I did it anyway and got in trouble. I snuck around with boys at about the age of 15. Everything had to be on the sly because I was probably disobeying a direct order. My grades all through school were poor at best.   I recall being tested and tested and tested to see why I had bad grades. The tests showed that I was really very smart. I am sure I was ADHD back then and probably still am. I did manage to make the honor roll one time my freshman year. I got pregnant at 17 and had Amber before I graduated from high school.

I was the apple of my dad's eye. I tell people that I was the only son he ever had. He had a little 350 Honda and would take me riding with him and his friends. It was fun. He worked in the oil patch and would take all of us with him sometimes. I rolled, head over heels, down Glass Mountain out by Cherokee. The smell of the oilfield still makes me think of those days. (That's probably one of the things I love about my wonderful husband who works in the oilfield.) Dad took me and my sister with him when he would pump wells. I love the sound of those diesel engines. The chugging sound they make is like a lullaby. Call me crazy. I love football because of him. He started taking me to OU football games when I was about 11. I recently found of picture of me with Jack Mildren. I kept a scrapbook back then of OU and our Tonkawa Buccaneer football. Dad recently met Joe Washington and was thrilled. We were at the game where little Joe, as they called him then, was engulfed by the OSU defense and came out somehow and scored a TD. When OU won the Orange Bowl back in 99 or 00, dad called me. He is still a major fan.

School was awful. I was so emotionally unstabel that I was a perfect target for some of the popular girls in my class. I was pretty much singled out to make fun of. Jr. high and high school were just as bad. One girl shoved me in the hallway between classes, causing my head to jerk forward, jamming my chin into a pencil sticking up out of my notebook. I still have the lead in my chin to this day. I told my kids if I ever heard them making fun of someone, I would tan their hide. One of those mean girls did apologize to me in front of a church congregation on Sr. day in 2005. My daughter, Brittany, was sitting next to me, crying with me. My classmates still don't have much contact with me and who could blame them....I was one sick teenager.  One of my teachers took a disliking to me also. She stood me up in front of the class and yelled at me for an incident in the cafeteria the day before. It seemed like I stood up there for an hour though I am sure it was about 15 minutes. She paced back and forth in front of me, pointing her finger in my face and yelling at me in front of the entire class. I went home sick at lunch, crying uncontrolably, and didn't return for a couple of days.I didn't trust my parents with my feelings I guess so, I didn't tell my parents about it til I was questioned by my mother a few days later. It seems that one of my classmates was at the bowling alley and told her about it. I didn't want to go back to school at all. I see now that the shame from that incident stayed with me for a long time. Ironically, she worked here at the college and I got to where I liked  her very much. 

Thank goodness that I don't have to take things so personally today. My oldest blew up at me, for no apparent reason, a few weeks ago. She made herself my judge, jury and executioner. I didn't leave mad, I just left. I was really kind of confused because it seemingly came out of nowhere. But then, most things like that don't just come out of the blue. She feels about me pretty much like I felt about my own mother. Fortunately, I was able to break the chain with my two younger kids.  I have terminated my relationship with the oldest daughter. I have apologized more times than I can count to no avail. She will have to deal with her demons in her own way. In the mean time, I don't have to have verbal abuse heaped on my head for things that happened over 16 years ago. I didn't have to get drunk over it either. Look for the little miracles that happen every day and every day that I don't take a drink is a little miracle. The Grace and Mercy of a loving God is all I need. He loves me no matter what as long as I am seeking His will for me. Thank God for the meetings I go to at least 5 times a week. The spiritual part of my life is what keeps my head above water when I'm sure I'm about to drown. Thank God for my friends who help me so much just by being there and reminding me that I  am loved.

Monday, January 25, 2010

Lessons I've Learned From Flowers

An aquaintance of mine shared the story of a plant from her grandmothers funeral. It was all shriveled up such that she thought it was dead. She pulled off the dead leaves,watered it and put it in her kitchen window. Before long the plant started showing new growth. I was kind of like that at one time. My leaves were certainly withered and  I was praying for death because I was at a place where I couldn't drink and I couldn't stop. I prayed for God to release me from the bondage of alcoholism. Soon after my leaves started growing again and I learned to flower. I never give up on a plant til I'm positive it's dead. Every once in a while a plant I swore was dead would ocme back like the native hibiscus I threw in the compost heap because they were infested with red spiders. Imagine my surprise when I opened the heap to stir it sometime later and the things were still alive and growing.....minus the red spiders.  Fortunately God didn't give up on me. There were a lot of people who didn't give up on me either. I had lots of prayer warriors keeping me lifted up.  I am living proof that prayer works.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Opportunities from the garden

When I look back at the last 20 years of my life, I have to look at all of the blessings that have come to me directly because of the gardens. I've helped with Boy Scout University for the last 10 years, every other year. I've been on Oklahoma Gardening three times. People from the KAABG (a Kansas group of gardeners) came to visit our campus a few years ago. The people I've met through gardening are the real blessings. My PhD friends at OSU are awesome and they I became a master gardener in 1999 and get to teach other master gardeners the things I have learned. What fun is that!!!!!!!!The pres of the hort/landscape dept loves me.According to him I have the most comprhensive reports on the woody ornamentals we have been given by OSU. I've been invited to be guest speaker at several OHIC and OBGA events. These are the gravy of my job. I love sharing my love of gardening with anyone who will listen.

Then there is the Ray See Park project. Talk about a lobor of love. Ray See was a WW I veteran who was very instrumental in getting WPA projects to Tonkawa.  There were several and the ones I know of are: The Tonkawa Public Library, the National Guard Armory, the Tonkawa Municiple Swimming Pool and Bath House, and the 5th street drainage project. Ray See Park has had a couple of names throught the history of Tonkawa. It was touted as the park on the banks fo the Salt Fork River in some old newspapers from the 1920's. It was the park I played in when I was growing up. It has a shelter house and a bathroom facility. About 5 years ago, I noticed the park was looking neglected. I asked the city fathers if I could take over the care and general maintenance of the grounds. That set the ball rolling toward improving the park. About $18,000. was raised to buy trees and new equipment. I asked a local business man if he could use his track-hoe to clean out the ditch which was full of trash, debris and scrub trees. He worked for three days cleaning that ditchout and it is beautiful. You can see the bath house from the highway for the first time in over 30 years. This bit of community service has given me way more than I could ever return.

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Continued How it all Began

In August of 1992 I had an emotional breakdown. I was still drinking and I really didn't want to.  Alcoholism is a horrible disease. It leaves a person bankrupt in every way, physically (I weighed about 100 lbs because I didn't eat), mentally and emotionally I was exhausted, I was financially in dire straits, and the most important and debilitating bankruptcy was the spiritual bankruptcy. I will never forget how I felt the day I checked myself into the psychiatric unit in the Ponca hospital. My timing was awful as school had just started that day. It was a Monday and I had been crying non-stop since Sunday morning, even in my sleep. I had been kneeling in one of my gardens and really wanting to just check out of life. I had one daughter who was living with her father and two little ones with me. I think Cale was about 18 months old and Brittany was 5. I wish I could say that I put the plug in the jug then but it took almost another year of steading drinking before I threw the pick/axe away. I'm one of those hard-headed people who threw away the shovel when I hit rock bottom and picked up the pick/axe so I could get a little further down. June 9, 1993 I took my last drink. I was sitting on the edge of my bed, very drunk and crying again. This time I asked God for help and the compuslion to drink was gone and hasn't returned since. I was still a mess in every other sense of the word, I just wasn't drinking.

I had so many things to overcome. I had no clue how to be a mother to my kids. I was a screaming, abusive person. The last time one of my kids looked at me with raw fear was when Cale spilled something, milk or water, whatever it was. He looked at me with those huge eyes, he was so little. He was terrified of me and how I would react. I promised myself that it would never happen again and it hasn't. Over the years I learned how to be a good mom. Today, Cale is 19 and Brit is 22. They don't remember ever seeing their mother drunk. They feel comfortable coming to me with problems because they know I won't judge them. We have a good relationship because they know they can count on me to be there for them.

How did the gardens help? I spend a lot of time on my knees planting annuals. I work alone and don't have another person there to talk to every day. My favorite flower is the rose....Mr. Lincoln to be exact. The color is a deep red and the fragrance is powerful. I can spot a Mr. Lincoln blindfolded. I have used my job to find God. I know every plant and flower on that campus intimately and by name, scientific and common names. I can tell you about when I planted a certain flower and how it performed for me. I know where the ladybugs hide in the winter months. The robins follow me around in the spring to grab the worms and other insects as I dig up the ground for new plants. I know why ants take aphids down into their dens in the fall. I understand the balance that is needed for the ecosystems of the campus to work properly. I am positively awestruck by all of it, even after 20 years. Spring is magical to me. I can't wait for spring and the wonder of the daffodils and the redbuds in bloom. The white lilac on the north side of the Vinyard Library is one of my favorites. You can smell it before you see it when you are coming around the corner of the building. The oakleaf hydrangea has started leafing out hiding the beautiful exfoliating orange bark. Some of the viburnums bloom early while others are just leafing out. The 'Home Run" roses at the front edge of the campus start busting out of their winter rest. The new foliage has a reddish tone to it. The dogwood tree we planted in memory of our Jared Weiberg has bloomed in spectacular fashion every year since it was planted. Vina sent me a note this last spring that made me cry. Jared was such a sweet young man who died entirely too young. I miss him still.

All of these things have played an important role in my sobriety. It was 10 years before I felt comfortable sitting in a church. I argued with myself about going. It was an every Sunday ordeal. I just knew God was going to pluck me from the pew and smite me in the parking lot. I also felt like the 'dirtiest' person in the church. I felt like I didn't deserve to sit with all of those 'perfect' Christians. I know today that we all need God and none of us are anywhere close to perfect. We are all fatally human. I enjoy my church and my pastor. I love those wonderful old hymns I remembered from my youth ( I was amazed that I still remembered most of the words) and I like the new stuff too. The new stuff just isn't as comforting as the hymns. I can't even finish 'Amazing Grace' without crying because it is my life story the song is telling.

Claude Monet once said, "Were it not for the gardens, I should not have become a painter." I can say that, were it not for the gardens, I should not have become the person I am today. The gardens led me on a path straight to God and helped me to find His love and strength. The strength I needed to make the amends to the people I hurt and the strength to not take a drink one day at a time. Some people may never forgive me and that's ok. I can't control how people, other than myself, behave or how they feel.  I am good with myself and God. Some amends can't be made any other way except to continue to live a sober life and try not to cause any more pain than I already have. I do not regret the past nor do I wish to close the door on it. It has been the best learning tool I've had.

I have a good life today. My husband loves me and spoils me rotten. Brittany has a position at the college and Cale has a full time job he enjoys. I've had a job I love for almsot 20 years and just graduated with my associates degree at the age of 50. I am OSU bound and headed to agricultural communications so I can share my love of plants with others. One more thing I can't keep unless I give it away.

Friday, January 22, 2010

New to this blogging stuff

Gardening saved my life by helping me find a God I could understand. I'd been to church and religious activities and don't have a problem with Jesus Christ being my Savior....because he is. I lived with addictions and the shame and guilt that go with it. It was a living hell here on Earth and I was sick of living like that. In order to understand the things I was learning at the meetings I attended I had to find a God that would forgive and love me with all of my shortcomings and defects of character. There were many and I didn't know where or how to start. I worked as a gardener (still do) at a small JUCO in my town. The campus was in pretty bad shape and so was I. ( I was at the beginning of the end of my drinking and drug use.) Finally, it occurred to me to look at something I really loved.....my gardens. At first I had a 12 x 24 glass greenhouse to work in. It's older than I am. Then in 1993 the college built me a 21 x 96 quonset greenhouse to grow annuals to put out on campus. It will comfortably hold about 7,000 plants. Since I know very little about moderation, I had over 10,000 plants that first year. The process was slow and painful but if I wouldn't have had my gardens to tend, I would have been completely lost. To be continued