Monday, 25 November 2019

The View From The Garden

I ought to be working. But it's raining again. I spent a horrible wet day on Friday building a fence for a lovely lady whose gratitude shames me because, well, I feel my work was not as good as it could have been. I mismeasured, or misremembered the length and as a result, no standard panels would fit meaning I had to build them from scratch using feather-edged boards. It's an ok job, but it could have been better. And I still have one more panel to build to fill in the odd-sized gap remaining. It wasn't satisfying. I am better at plants.
I should be making that last panel. But it's raining. Again. I can't use the necessary power tools outside in the rain so that is out of the question. But I could be building the panel in the workshop. Instead, I am here, writing on the computer in the warm and the dry because, today, somehow, I needed to.

Leaving aside the stark and surreal contrast between this life and the other one I wrote about for years - the one where I traveled on aeroplanes, stayed in hotels, had meetings in cities far away and had a salary, this is a disheartening day. The East Wind blows rain-laden clouds of such leaden grey intensity that the atmosphere underneath feels tangibly compressed by their weight. In the workshop, I wouldn't see this. It would be out of sight and out of mind. So why am I procrastinating?

Well, partly, I feel the need to write something, to exercise this vocabulary that so rarely is given free rein in my new life. There are words in here which I have not recollected for months. Perhaps this beating of paths through the encroaching mental undergrowth might maintain some semblance of accessibility to the carefully collected lexicon. So, here I am, writing. I can still do it, it seems. At least, after a fashion.

And so, some ideas that accumulate over the days and weeks of manual labour  remain to be examined. Some evaporate before they can be acknowledged - a most frustrating phenomenon. Others lie there of sufficient weight and significance as to not be swept away by the torrent of distraction and chaos of everyday thought.

Most prominently one thought dominated this past week: I am struck by the dominant demographic of my clients. This can be explained most demonstrably by the phrase I hear most often: "Sorry it's a mess but my late husband was the gardener..." trailing off and accompanied by a wistful downward glance. It breaks my heart every time; The stoic acceptance of loss and the determination to keep living nonetheless. The full social calendars I observe hanging on kitchen walls demonstrate the almost convincing efficacy of inclusion and distraction.

I knock on the door and confess my forgetfulness: "I don't suppose you have a hammer I could borrow. I seem to have forgotten mine today". I am directed to a shed where neatly laid out hooks hold cherished tools, unused for years. I take down the hammer, respectfully. I think about whose hand last wielded it and what expectations were in the mind of the wielder. Of course I cannot no so imagination and speculation are all that can be brought to bear. And I put it back carefully in its allotted place once I have finished with it, with a nod to its deceased owner to show my gratitude. It is humbling and makes me want to go home and declutter to spare the pain and effort of my family when I am gone. Only, of course, I still use my tools so I probably won't.

The other phrase I hear, which is much more heartening, is a sincere "Oh! But that looks lovely!"; A matted forest of brambles and leylandii hacked back, paths and borders revealed, cleverly devised structure now once again evident. I see the happiness in the eyes and the genuine smile at a garden restored and allow myself some satisfaction.
This is something my old job never really gave me. There was never personal  gratitude for anything I did, at least not in this immediate way. It feels like it makes a difference to individuals in the way selling storage subsystems to large computer companies did not. Nobody ever viewed my work and was over the moon as a result.

It may feel like gardening is a slow route to poverty but it has it's other rewards. Of course they won't pay the mortgage, but it's healthy. There is the exposure to daylight and fresh air. There is the exercise: I can view my job as being paid to do what others have expensive gym memberships for (and it is astonishingly efficacious in this respect!) And I don't have to surrender. There is no reason to accept any subordinate position just because someone has employed you to weed their borders or cut their hedge. Indeed, only one client has attempted that and was gently reminded that respect is due to everyone, regardless of their profession. Being articulate is a wonderful and deeply satisfying facility to adjust the perception of others, especially when they have grievously underestimated one's intelligence.

I know it makes my knees hurt and this affects my dancing which is sacrosanct, but I think I shall carry on with it for a while. I can afford to, if I continue to be frugal. Gardens are beautiful places, even in November in the rain. And I have no Idiot Manager in Houston berating me for not completing some online course on diversity or pestering me for fabricated yearly targets. This has to be better, poorly paid or not, doesn't it? Better for the body, the mind and the soul I am unable to believe in? Yes, I think so.
And as for intellectual challenge, well, here I am, aren't I?

3 comments:

Jenny Woolf said...

A very interesting piece. I am sure that there are days when relative poverty and the weather weigh heavily but you list the advantages of your lifestyle even better than I can. I should add that I am not generally an envious person but I am envious of anyone who is practical, can build a fence, grow plants successfully, create objects that work.

Librarian said...

It looks to me as if the positives of your new life by far outweigh the negatives. The only thing I can see lacking in your new life is money - which is, after all, only money.
The satisfaction your work brings you now is something many people never find in all their working lives.
You bring your clients joy, which is also a lot more than many of us can say about their work.
As for the busy social calendars of the widows you encounter, well, there is a lady in her 80s whose blog I follow; widowed a few years ago and always writing about lunches and morning coffees out with her friends, poetry afternoons, walks with her dog and much more. She, too, has a gardener, as she is not physically able to do all the necessary work herself. Could be one of your clients, only that she lives up in the Yorkshire Dales.

Perlnumquist said...

Thank you both for your comments. And of course you make good points. Except, 1. I felt it wasn't a very good fence and hence unworthy of the satisfaction it ought to have brought and 2. this kind of lifestyle does not provide the mind with all that much food to power any kind of internal Life of The Mind. Of course, a curious mind can always find something to reflect upon, but it's easier when the world is flashing past a train window and each day brings vivid contrast to previous days. Such contrast is vastly more fertile. And it seems here there is a conundrum, a conflict, if you will: A quiet, small life of honest toil and minor practical creativity is restful and hence Good For You. But somehow, the reflection is brings is stultifying. A calm mind, at least I find, is quite a boring mind to inhabit. And frankly, I am bored. But at the moment, I have no inclination to go exploring. Meditative labour turns the mind into an uninhabited residence where conflict is absent. I miss the parties that used to go on in here.