Someone had already hacked off a corner of the old sheet, probably to use as a rag. I smoothed it out on my lap. It felt cool and a scent from long ago wafted up. With a start, I recognized the scent, the linen closet from my childhood home, detergent and soap. I looked more closely at the green and pink plaid sheet. It was from my parent's linen closet.
I remembered that sheet. I remember peering down at my sleeping mother, the sheet pulled up to her chin, whispering, "Mommy, I don't feel good. I want to stay home from school."
I remember that sheet flapping on the back laundry line. My mother had a peculiar habit of whistling through her teeth, the sound even more strange when she had a bunch of clothespins in her mouth while she pinned sheets to the line.
I remember countless times folding that pink and green plaid sheet with my dad, helping him neaten up the linen closet after my mom died. He was actually better at folding sheets than I was, but somehow when he pushed them onto the narrow shelf in the linen closet they'd all bunch up and some would fall off and on top of the vacuum cleaner and we'd have to start again.
How old is this sheet? I wondered as I held it out to judge how long a strip of cloth I could get out of it. Cloth strips are the best for tying up tomato plants. My grandma taught me that.
The pink and plaid had spots so worn I could see through it, the cotton polished like velvet. If I was whispering to my mother that I didn't feel well and didn't want to go to school, and the sheet looked new...I was probably 9, 10 years old? Which would make the sheet at least 20, 30 years old.
It is on its last bit of life, that pink and plaid sheet. I tied up the tomato plants last night with parts of the old sheet. Strips flutter from the recycled tobacco sticks my neighbors gave me to use as tomato stakes. The long, sturdy, solid cloth connects me to my past, my present garden to the past that nurtured me. Like the tomato plants setting down deep roots, it reminds me of the place that helped me set down my deep roots, roots strong, straight and true.
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This blog is a labor of love and a way for me to share my personal essays and garden writing in a different way from the paid work that I do for websites and magazine. I am honored by the recent fan mail that I have received. As a writer, I always thought I'd publish the Great American Novel and receive sacks of fan mail from my adoring public. With the advent of the internet and the realization that my novels are tangled skeins of words that need to be unraveled before I can knit them back into shape, I now blog my stories or write articles for my clients and share them through social networking. I am honored that friends - both people I know and people who have found me online - have thought it worth their time to read these little essays and drop me notes about them. Thank you.
One parting thought, however - if you feel inclined to share my writing, that's fine, but please share just a link which points back into the post or this blog. Please do not reprint the entire blog post verbatim. I love links. Reprinting my stuff is no-no unless you have my specific permission. Thank you and drop me an email if you have any questions or would like permission to reprint anything I have written. For my professional writing services, please visit my website, Seven Oaks Consulting.com

3 comments:
All of that in an old sheet. It is amazing what memories can come back if we just let them. Keep braving the heat! Your garden needs you.
Great blog post - It's funny how things forgotten about in a closet can bring back all the great memories once fogotten.
Pierr is adorable!
Memory is fantastic, it can really put us back to senses, putting meaning to yesterday as it evolves to today. It can definitely calm us down..., even heat wave cant take that away. ~bangchik
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