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Nature and Nurture – By Jennifer Sturch

Published By Jennifer Sturch • Jan 4th, 2009 • Category: Flash Fiction


The soil is rich where I grew up. It captures a seed and nurtures it until the seedling thrives, and even then it doesn’t let go. It continues to cultivate the growth through its lifetime. I suppose that’s nature’s pact: to foster and bloom until it’s necessary to die. But still the roots remain buried beneath the soil. Dead or alive, something will always endure, holding its own memories.

Sometimes nature hides its beauty because of pain. Some call it hibernation. Some call it depression. It’s the in-between place – not quite alive, not quite dead – just giving pause… because to do otherwise in either direction would be too painful. It’s not your time. Not yet.

Being around death often as I was in the early days drained the life from me. I sagged lackluster and rarely had visitors, except when it was killing time.

Life at the moment that it was taken screamed out with a longing to keep on going. And when it bellowed, the energy reverberated and carried through space and time for all eternity with a never-ending cry, “Why?” And it burrowed within me and festered and turned and wallowed. And it never stopped…

…until the next hanging continued the cry, “Why?” and bent me down, still further.

Bending.

And one day I was bent so low, a little girl touched my hanging limb and said, “Why, you look so sad. Where did all your leaves go?”

Leaves?

“Maybe you don’t get enough water like the other trees do. Maybe the water rolls down the hill and feeds the other trees more water than you? See?”

She pointed out toward the yonder trees, so full and lush, basking in the warmth of the vibrant summer sun.

What was she saying?

“I know! I can bring you some water!”.

She trotted away, pony-tail prancing behind her.

Wait! I yearned to know, “Why?” My bare branches reached out with a gust of wind toward the young child in a desperate attempt to find understanding, to find…. what?

“But, why?”

And, as if in answer to my plea, the echoes of so many falsehoods heard at the myriad spectacle lynchings reintroduced themselves to me:

A father, his strong arm around the narrow shoulders of his young son saying, “You see there, son? This is proof of their inferiority. Remember this.”

His son looking at the tears rolling down the dark face as the noose was placed over his head like a crown of thorns and the white boy snickering, “Cry baby!” exclaiming his superiority, noting the proud puff of his father’s chest.

The rope being flung over my limb as I heard clearly through the ruckus, “Adam and Eve were white, sugar. And on the sixth day, God created the animals… it’s in the Bible, sweetheart, you remember that from Sunday school, don’t you, child?”

Feeling the burn of the rope as the poor man was strung up, the rope slicing through my flesh and through his in tandem, both of our souls screaming, “Why?” and my limbs embracing him as he left his body.

And the ancestors of my ancestors spoke to me from the Garden of Eden and uttered only words of love as the little girl watered my roots.

“There,” she said. “Now you will feel better.”

What?

Closed up in my sorrows and fears, I hadn’t noticed that time had continued without me and that the hangings had stopped. Nurturing comes in many forms and in surprising ways.

My leaves began to grow in earnest when I noticed the cruelty had ceased. The spectacle lynchings have turned into joyous occasions of holiday picnics and celebrations. The rope burning on my flesh is now the rope of the tire swing as children gleefully push each other back and forth feeling the exuberance of life, using me for support, not as an executioner.

And my low-lying limbs, which once resembled and felt like crooked, arthritic fingers, are now transformed and move in the gentle summer breezes, sounding like soft feathered whispers to anyone who will listen.

 

 

About the Author

Jennifer Sturch

At 40 years old, I am finally taking the time to write. After a decade of working in professional theatre as a stage manager in the New England area – working with some of the most prominent names in the field – I decided to bow out, take a breath, and utilize my own creativity. I’ve moved back to Texas to be near family and enjoy my evenings and weekends off underneath the Big Sky! My piece, Under the Influence of Gravity, was published on Short Story Library in October: http://shortstory.us.com/2008/10/under-the-influence-of-gravity-jennifer-sturch/

 

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9 Responses »

  1. Fan-tab-u-lous, Jenn.

  2. Beautiful and touching. Another great job!

  3. Well done!

  4. This is a stunningly beautiful read. I think of Dr. Maya Angelou when I read this; I had discovered her in high school and read more of her work in college. You’ve got a winner of a piece of writing here. Congratulations Jen.

  5. Let me second Liz’s comment: Well Done!

    Thankfully it had a happier ending than I anticipated!

  6. Wow. That blew me away Jen.

  7. I don’t often cry, unless its over something that really touches me deeply. Tears are just salty water but your story made them more in my eyes.

  8. It’s beautiful. really beautiful.

  9. You’re doing well, keep going!

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