Warning: this entry is really sappy and completely unfunny.
When I was a kid, my grandfather had a huge vegetable garden in his backyard. It was his pride and joy--if he wasn't digging around in it, he was talking about it, peering through the kitchen window at it, or just sitting in a chair next to it. He always enlisted my help in its care, and if I helped him pick green beans, I could take some home. There are very few children in this world for whom green beans are an incentive to work, but hey, I was a weird kid. I always thought I was doing this really hard job and being paid well for it, but in actuality, Gaga (husband of Nana, who was previously my Hero of the Day) just grew entirely too many vegetables for two people to eat. So he and I would go outside, and he would sit in his chair while I picked green beans into a basket, mopping his brow with a handkerchief and giving me gardening lessons that I bet he thought I wasn’t paying attention to.
Amidst my parents’ ineptitude for raising children, my grandparents stood in (and Nana continues to, of course.) Gaga cosigned my student loans for college and hung my report cards on his refrigerator. He gave me advice, threatened me when I messed up (seriously, I needed it) and once told Nana that if he weren’t so old, he would have tried to adopt me.
He died three Februarys ago. My heart still aches to think about it. My brother and I both took it hard—he was, after all, our father figure.
This past weekend, I planted my “garden” on my back porch—tomatoes, peppers, squash, herbs, etc., all in pots. When I was finished, I leaned back on my heels and wiped my forehead with my sleeve. And I thought, he would have been proud of me.
Monday, May 07, 2007
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5 comments:
oh my god katie, that just made me so sad, but happy too!
c, that's pretty much how i felt, too.
just be glad i deleted the paragraph about how he loved me more than he loved you. i kid! i kid.
aw, lady. so beautiful. i used to pick green beans too and it was so much fun. i miss the simple things like that. But they make us who we are.
Can I share with you my "Grandfather" story?
I will anyway.
My grandfather had a garden as well. I looked at the area where it was just this winter when we buried another "too young to die" cousin. It doesn't look nearly as big as it did in the mid 1970's.
But I digress. My "Pap" told me about playing baseball in a semi-pro league back in the 1940's and 1950's. Turns out the whole thing was a pretty big deal in Cambria County "back in the day." In fact, there was supposedly a part of it on display during last summer's All Star festivities.
He would tell me about catching without the protective headgear the multi-millionaires use today. Maybe that says a lot about my whole lineage. He'd laugh and talk about stoved thumbs and getting hit in the head.
Anyhoo, after Pap was buried in the early 1990's, we had a funeral luncheon at my uncle's house. I told of the "catcher's mask" story and looked up. The entire room of cousins were looking at me. Silence took command of the room.
He had never shared those stories with anyone else.
Grandparents are wonders indeed.
Trapper
Nice post.
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