"Hi honey, I'm home" # 1: Bad-Boy-Lilies-of-the-Valley

Published 20 May 08 05:44 PM | Beth Patterson 

From now until the contest is over on June 25th  I'll be doing a series of photos and other stuff that illustrate 'home'.  This is a cleverly designed marketing ploy to get you to write/photograph/do a YouTube video, etc. of 'where's home' for you.  I'm getting some lovely submissions for the contest--what a delight! Keep those emails coming!

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Hi honey, I'm home # 1   The almost sicky-sweet and yet oddly refreshing smell of lilies of the valley, convallaria majalism, is one of the most ancient aromas for me. Both of my grandmothers back east in upstate New York loved the unpretentious and persistent  little plant.  So I was delighted, come spring of 2005, after buying my 60 year old house in hot and dry August of 2004, to find a healthy crop of lilies of the valley in both the courtyard and the backyard of my home!  Somehow these plants remind me of soggy upstate Pennsylvania where I grew up. Since it is a temperate plant, native to eastern US woodlands, I was surprised to see it thriving here around my high desert home in Central Oregon.

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Up close and personal with these guys.

The fact that all parts of this plant are highly poisonous is just one of those oddities of life that make me smile.

These fragile-appearing plants have some chutzpah, or flower-balls.  I have to tug some of them out every year from behind the steps, where they seem to enjoy growing through a tight crack that's not so tight anymore, thanks to the lilies, among other natural forces.  I clean up the edge of the bed in the courtyard, and the lilies' rhizomes consistently step over the line in their march to take over the known world--every spring they run further a-field, or a-brick in this case.  (Their determination to grow where ever the heck they want to, year after year, especially outside the prescribed perimeters, somehow reminds me of why we get parts of our bodies waxed for summer bathing attire.

All that being said, the 'white coral bells' look stunning next to the fallen petals of the flowering crabapples, which were humming with color and aroma and bees last week...ahhh!  I am most grateful for the bad-boy spirit of the lilies of the valley in my garden!  .

White coral bells
Upon a slender stalk
Lilies of the valley
Line my garden walk.
Oh, don’t you wish
That you could
hear them ring.
That will happen only
when the fairies sing.

Oops, there's a fairy right there and it's singing to the lilies, for god's sake! I'm straining to hear...it's a reggae tune...and...it's 'Bad Boys, bad boys, what you gonna do, what you gonna do when they come for you?'...  And listen--is that the lilies ringing I hear this lovely spring evening?  Probably just the American Red Cross calling AGAIN on my cell phone, wanting my life blood, but on their terms and schedule. Disturbing my reverie, it makes me ponder what a 'lilies of the valley ringtone' would sound like?  'Wild Thing', 'Tainted Love', 'Stayin' Alive' or...   

These delicate, poisonous, lovely, aggressive little colonies of white coral bells make me smile at the complexity of each little universe, each wheel within a wheel.  They somehow make me feel at home here, in my universe.

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Next 'Hi honey, I'm home' post will probably be about lilacs I've known and loved, unless something else catches my fancy and makes me feel like having a cup of tea and contemplating.

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# joy said on May 23, 2008 9:02 PM:

The lilies of the valley remind me of a home long ago.  One where all around was uncertain, except the fragrant, delicate, and comforting certainty, that in the area where the lilies grew, all was well.  

Of course, if you write on blooming lilacs, I am booking the next flight.  Lilacs and weeping willows, were yet another childhood delight of spring-time inspiring hope, wonder and comfort, in the midst of the ever-present threat of the bitter chill of winter.

Today, the orchids, so unique, distinct, unusual and exquisite brings the anticipation of the next one to bloom, and what wonder from these almost detached from the earth will evoke.  What intricate designs, and array of color will burst forth to bless the observer...

The roses are familiar, yet they never cease to amaze me because their lovliness and aromas often diminish the the hardiness and strength of the plant itself...  A metaphor in nature of a life worth living.

I shan't tease you about the papaya and pineapple, or the frangipani or the royal poincianas, lest that make you feel just an instant of longing.  HA.

Is the tea ready?

# Beth Patterson said on May 23, 2008 10:19 PM:

By golly, Joy,

The tea is steeping! Come on over (or up--sounds like you're south of Oregon in some hemisphere)...

I will be writing about lilacs this weekend, as they're in bloom all around my cottage and all over the town.

I can always brew a new pot  of ginger green  tomorrow if you can't come today...

So nice to hear your remembrances and your wicked little nuances about frangipani...

So, are you going to write about 'where's home'? Would love to get your submission!

www.virtualteahouse.com/blogs/beth/archive/2008/05/18/where-s-home.aspx

# Beth Patterson said on May 29, 2008 3:01 AM:

This is the next post in the series, "Hi Honey, I'm Home", as we work with the contest, "Where's Home?"

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About Beth Patterson

The Virtual Tea House website became 'word-ripe' when, over a cup of jasmine green, I realized that the web has an expanding part to play in the communal aspects of spiritual growth.
One of my favorite hats, among several is: initiated firekeeper in the Sacred Fire Community. Hosting a monthly community fire circle, I'm being taught that the simple act of sitting around a fire with the intent of holding open-hearted space makes for some soulful community!
With a master's degree in religion, my career spans 20 years in end of life care and I currently work in the field of child abuse intervention and advocacy.
Here in beautiful Central Oregon, my spiritual homes of the high desert and the mountains are both in proximity. And for good measure, four hours away is Grandmother Ocean and the stunning Oregon Coast.
I'm making decent progress on the goal set by my mother early on: she taught us that the goal of humanity should be to become ever-more eccentric, i.e. more fully human.
Entering the 'forest-dweller' phase of life, I am honored to host the Virtual Tea House for all who wish to explore how our lives are enriched and made new a thousand times each day by the spirituality we embody. Exploring this engagement together is the purpose of the Virtual Tea House.
Welcome! Let's have a cup of virtual tea together and share what brings us joy, what we are being taught by life, how we are leaning into the Big Questions posed to us each day in sometimes 'distressing disguises'.

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