There is very little that is pretty about the work I do for my day job. I work in a field that I am not natively inclined to or trained for and of my own volition I would never have chosen it. The good days are rare and cherished. The hard days are common, some of them simply brutal. In between, they are mostly just a tough, lonely slog. Spreadsheets, employment law, performance reviews, talking people through difficult situations at work, fielding questions, making decisions, trying to keep people focused, or keeping them from breaking, and trying to hold on through one more day in a long line of high stress and hard days. At the end of most of these work days, my husband Peter and I come home to quiet house still reverberating with the echoes of our children’s voices now grown up, and our grandchildren now all thousands of miles away. Sometimes we are too tired and bruised to talk. Nearly always we are too tired to cook or make a phone call. We usually go to bed early and we get up in the morning to do it all again. In the midst of this God is present and faithful. And out of this hard, dry climate grows a project about goodness, truth, and beauty.
Many years ago in another house in another time and place, I grew a rose garden out of despair and defiance. I was stronger physically then. After 10 years in that place I had planted 200 roses and countless companions for them. I cannot count how many cubic yards of stubborn clay soil I dug up with a hand spade and amended with truckloads of compost and topsoil. Nor can I count how many hundreds of aged bricks and pieces of flat stone my husband Peter and I hauled in to make walkways and paths. But those garden beds circled the entire perimeter of our property. They represented sanity to me, and they represented hope. They became a wall of beauty to defend us against all heartbreak. Those roses, and the furious digging and amending of our soil, brought more healing to me than Prozac ever did or could. They were the physical place I worked out my rage, my powerlessness, my unspeakable sorrows, my profound disappointments with life. The creation of living beauty was my wordless manifesto for the bone-deep belief that every act of Beauty is a defiance of despair, that Truth prevails over darkness, and that Goodness will overcome evil. Every time I bought and planted one of those roses, part of me was wielding not just my trowel and spade, but I was wielding a shield and sword, too. If that sounds overly dramatic, well so be it. Trowel and spade, sword and shield it was for me. It still is. A warrior~gardener I am.
We moved from that house and that garden nearly 15 years ago now. Last year we sold the property and after we finished all the work for selling the house, I made one last cutting of those roses as a final hurrah from the garden that saved my life. It was a big, lavish bouquet as only English Roses can make. Eventually, of course, those beautiful petals fell from their cut stems and the leaves all withered. The petals began to dry on my kitchen counter and I gave myself permission to keep a token of what I had once planted and now let go of. The very day the petals were completely dry, my daughter Regina was cleaning out her house and found a lidded glass jar she no longer needed. She brought it to me and, without planning it, the jar was is exactly the size to hold the exact pile of dried rose petals. I filled it and felt something rare: a sense of closure without grief. Completion. The jar of the last roses of my first garden sits on my desk to this day. It means love to me. God’s love, my husband’s love, my daughter’s love, and my own love, too, for my family and for Beauty itself in the midst of terrible ugliness, loss, and struggle.
When we moved from that house to the house we live in now, very early on my husband Peter wisely told me I could not plant another garden here like the one before. At first I was angry, but he told me what in my heart I already I knew. He told me if I gardened like that here, I would never write. I would garden and it might be beautiful indeed, but it would take all my time and all my strength. He was right, of course. And what he didn’t say was also right. I would never rest.
What followed after we moved in unfolded seemingly without any real plan. We dug in beds along the fence lines, and rototilled an existing garden bed to put in something of a planting garden for me. It was large and an act of love, mainly Peter’s. We put in an irrigation system and later doubled the size of that first garden bed. I moved wheelbarrows of grey rock, amended the soil beneath, and replaced the rock with soaker hoses and mulch. But I did not take quickly to the new places for plants. I wasn’t angry enough anymore to plant fast and furiously. I needed to see how the light fell here in its seasons. I needed to let go of the other garden. I needed to listen to what kind of garden this place was asking for. I needed to find my reason for growing another garden at all.
For next 14 years our life unfolded in ways I did not see coming. Some of it was heartbreaking and some of it was simply drenched in a grace only God could give. It was a rhythm of losing, letting go, and being given something back we didn’t know to ask for. Peter and I grew our company, planted and pastored a house church for nearly 10 years, transitioned as best we could into parenting adult children, gained son-in-laws, became grandparents, saw people come and go in and out of our house, had parties in the backyard, sat quiet on our deck on the weekend mornings and watched the golfers across the road from us. We traveled to England, Ireland, Wales, and Africa. Peter planted his endangered species Colorado butterfly plant and nurtured it into a budding nursery to help re-establish its population. I planted slowly and rather methodically, if less exuberantly than before, at least more mindfully. The garden came in charmingly.
But I planted this way not with any claim to wisdom, though I wish I could claim that. In truth it was because I was emotionally and physically tired. It was a tiredness no amount of sleep could mend. For many years I thought it was grief.
Toward the end of this period, I was traveling heavily over 3 or 4 years, so much so that almost every time I talked to my sister I was calling her from an airport. Teaching, speaking, giving workshops and photographing events. And not too surprisingly, I also became ill. Ill for so long I couldn’t garden and couldn’t travel. As I unraveled, so did the garden.
The garden became infested with a terrible kind of grass. For 3 years I weeded, I pulled, I dug. The grass took root and dug in deeper than I could. Peter was the soul of discretion. I tried to give the whole effort a spiritual allegory spin about reclaiming weed infested ground and the importance of keeping our gardens weed-free. I was too tired from weeding to write that. That’s probably just as well. My daughter Regina, a brilliant gardener and photographer herself, suggested after hearing me complain about it for the third year in a row without really changing anything, that I should just rototill the whole garden under and start over. I was not receptive. I had plants in that garden that I knew personally by then and loved. Sure, I could barely see them any more but I knew they were there and I was fighting to give them space to live. I was also fighting the change of my own seasons.
By some presence of grace the following year (and aided by more defeat than I could bear) Regina’s suggestion sprouted as a perfect seed of hope. Peter valiantly and without a word of reprisal, did what for years I could not bear to do. He took out that garden I had planted and loved. He rototilled the evil grass to shreds, saved what good soil he could for me, poured it into one deep bed against the east fence, compacted the ground, laboriously put in giant pavers, and made a beautiful patio for us. And he gave me one gloriously deep bed to plant in. Yes, I cried, but yes, I was grateful.
The gardens here are far more modest in comparison to the lavish wonder of the other one. They have given us far more enjoyment, rest, and restoration than the complicated one I grew before. One garden was grown out of despair and in defiance of it. One was grown out of rest, curiosity, and trust. Both were good, true, and beautiful. Both have had reasons for being. Both have had their seasons. One garden healed my mind. One healed my soul.
Only now in reflection do I see the tiredness I suffered during those years of travel and teaching and failing to conquer the grass in my garden came because I was growing and tending something else. A different kind of garden. I was growing a rose garden known as Cultivating. Growing Cultivating was happening simultaneously with all these other things. In 2007, I had timidly started blogging which at the time I barely understood. We had moved into this house just two years before. I started without any clear plan at all but was driven toward a single point, just as I was driven in the planting and building of that first garden. The vision was small and flickering at first, living like light on a distant horizon. It gleamed with hope and it held steady. I reached for what I barely knew or could articulate. Out these hard dry days, so often full of grief, illness, and stress, I grow Cultivating just as I had once grown a garden of 200 roses. I follow a silver thread sometimes into dark, dark places and yet unexpectedly find refuge. And in season, I am shown a way out.
The gift of grace in my own life has never, ever come because of what I planned. It has always come as a gift from someone who loves me, and rarely of my deserving.
Grace has painted the walls of this house, grace has planted a spacious garden and lawn that we watch from our deck. Grace has given us travel and friends, family, and a place of rest. Grace has given us a place – however humble – of benediction.
Benediction is a beautiful word. It means to speak well of, to speak good for and into, a kind of holy incantation invoking blessing on another. Benediction is a grace that in mystery works for the flourishing of the blessed and as a protection against evil. In this house with this husband and this family, with these beloved friends, I have received a benediction I could never make for myself. It was given to me in love by a God who loves me and planned for me to flourish in that which I am intended for. The benediction comes with the willingness to let go in peace of what has been, even the beautiful and beloved, and the openness to receive something new in its season. I cannot give this benediction and blessing to myself. I have received it without asking and without earning it. I see the effect and presence of it not by looking at what is tangibly around me but by following its light that invisibly shines here. In these patient seasons of being taught through gardens what the seasons of life mean, I learn to hold less tightly to what is fleeting – no matter how I love it or how beautiful it is for an appointed time. I learn to fix my eyes on something invisible, something deathless and everlasting. A beauty that does not wither with age, a love that does not perish or cease with death. In the fruit of that slow learning, I see a parting in the veil between earth and heaven. And here I offer the benediction of letting go.
The images here are (c) Lancia E. Smith and are used with glad permission for Cultivating and The Cultivating Project.
Author’s note: This piece is offered with particular thanks to three men who continue to influence and encourage me. Malcolm Guite who teaches me about the significance of benediction; Roy Salmond who kindly pushed me to write something more personal and exercise my writer’s voice; and to Peter who allows me to cultivate a writer’s life.
Lancia E. Smith is an author, photographer, business owner, and publisher. She is the founder and publisher of Cultivating Oaks Press, LLC, and the Executive Director of The Cultivating Project, the fellowship who create content for Cultivating Magazine. She has been honoured to serve in executive management, church leadership, school boards, and Art & Faith organizations over 35 years.
Now empty nesters, Lancia & her husband Peter make their home in the Black Forest of Colorado, keeping company with 200 Ponderosa Pine trees, a herd of mule deer, an ever expanding library, and two beautiful black cats. Lancia loves land reclamation, website and print design, beautiful typography, road trips, being read aloud to by Peter, and cherishes the works of C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and George MacDonald. She lives with daily wonder of the mercies of the Triune God and constant gratitude for the beloved company of Cultivators.
A Field Guide to Cultivating ~ Essentials to Cultivating a Whole Life, Rooted in Christ, and Flourishing in Fellowship
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Lancia, this is beautiful. Thank you for telling this story and inviting us into the benediction with you.
Matthew, thank you so much. You have a strong presence in this piece. I wrote half of this after you and I talked that night I came home so fried from work and went into my office to make notes from our conversation. Somehow the 30 minute talk between us in the reading room shifted something and I found my voice for this and found the telling. You are a blessing in your very self.
Lancia, from the very first line, I could not stop reading. Thank you for sharing this powerful and captivating story. A warrior-gardener you are, indeed!
Dear Lancia,
I come to this space by way of Christie Purifoy (fellow writer an online friend), and in that good, good, good way of God, I find your words the balm and encouragement my mind and soul have deeply been needing. Thank you. Thank you.
With each paragraph of your essay, I found myself laughing tearfully, Me, too! Me, too! How much we have in common, and how much insight you have shared into what is hard and painful for me in my own life’s moment, over here in Virginia with a garden too big to tend and a body too ill to fight back against this summer’s heat and lack of rain. (I could make an essay out of that metaphor, probably, but just as you say – I probably shouldn’t!)
All to say: thank you for being here, and for tending a space like this and giving life to the beautiful words in this essay, so I (and others) could read them and be heartened.
~ Rebecca
Ashlee, thank you. This means a great deal to me and I am so glad this was a good read for you. I am slow to share my own story, so much preferring to advance the telling of others’ stories. But how good it is to have the company of friends to tell our tales first and to practice our words in the company of family. I wish all writers had such a place of safety!
Rebecca, you are welcome for the good words, and welcome to Cultivating. I suspect so many of us have so much in common that we would all be shocked if we knew the extent of it! May you find rest here, and a refreshing place of beauty to carry you through dry seasons. This is a full table and there is plenty for everyone who comes here. We are delighted you’ve found us. And Christie is a jewel, much loved and rejoiced in here. Blessings!
Lancia, I felt somehow that it was important that I read this before wading into the ocean of beauty that is the rest of this issue of Cultivating. Like those commenting above, I too thank you for the work of the life you have lived and shared here so honestly. How very helpful. A verse from the Psalms comes to mind —“The trees of the Lord are well-watered, the cedars of Lebanon He has planted”. Privileged to have a place in your shade, Denise
Denise, thank you for reading it and for your beautiful words ~ “wading into an ocean of beauty that is the rest of this issue of Cultivating.” And thank You for this beloved verse. It is a privilege to have you here with us; you are part of the ocean of beauty here, and the fruit of your life is part of the feast at this table. We can both rejoice in that, friend!
I am literally weeping at the beauty and loss and grace poured out in abundance in this benediction. We feel it! We receive it! May it return to you with everlasting joy upon your heads (and garden!)
Jordan, thank you for such a bounty of grace as you bear witness to in the way that you live and love. Thank you for the blessing you give. May it be also upon you and yours.
Oh Lancia, this is beautiful. Warrior-Gardening. I love that image so much.
Thank you, Gillian! Don’t you think it would be cool for us to have brooches of a sword crossing a trowel? 🙂
Tears came to my eyes as I read this piece. I’m grateful to partake of the beauty that has come forth from your suffering and pain. thank you for sharing hope.
It is my privilege, Grace. Thank you for your own courage to press on, make beauty, and defy despair. It is a valiant battle, but a battle we know is already won for us. I am grateful for your presence with us here.
Your lovely words are such a benediction to me today. I’m walking in a hard season where my career, like yours was not of my own choosing and now is turning into something That is more burdensome than I care for. But I know my God is planted me here for a reason and I’m learning to let go of other good things to make way for new ground and new opportunities. Thank you for your gracious encouragement.
Linda, you are most welcome. I am glad to know an account of my experience is encouraging to you. That is one of the great challenges, isn’t it? Letting go not only of the past things, or hard things, but also sometimes the good things, “to make way for new ground and new opportunities.” It takes a listening heart and an obedient one to do that. I am encouraged by your trust and obedience and pray you will be empowered to continue in those. May you find much fruit being borne from blooming where you are planted!
Oh, Lancia- I am sitting, looking out my window at snow piling up, covering my own garden and feel as though you are right here with me.
I had never made the connection between anger and the garden I crafted at our old house but now it makes complete sense. It’s been five years since we moved but I still mourn the loss of those paths, those roses, the stock, and hydrangea, and all the other flowers. Now I know they were flowers for a different time.
We landed in a home that I never would have called my dream home but we are slowly crafting the home of our dreams- a place of comfort, quiet, and welcome. I battle the ‘gardens’ and relearn each year how to pick plants for the tricky ground and light. Perhaps I can let go now of trying to recreate something that was meant for another time and listen to what this garden is attempting to teach me for this season.
Thank you!! ♥️
Susan, thank you for this. I know there are reasons we are so kindred. There is so much truth and wisdom to your phrase about “crafting the home of our dreams” because home really is the art we make to dwell in. Learning to bless what we have left behind and welcome what we are given in this present moment is the real gift, isn’t it? It is the gift that comes with maturing and coming into full bloom. Blessings and every grace to you as you make a new garden and a new dwelling place.♥️