Backpack-wearing students once again stroll the streets to their bus stops or classrooms. School buses roll the highways. Once more I walk alongside golden fields and amongst trees blushing red and gold; friend, grandchild or dog keeping pace.
I love nearly everything about September. Always have. It tickles the senses. I thought about that a few days ago as the Preacher and I worked in our yard. He weed-whacked hedges and neat edges around bushes and rocks. I pruned our lilacs, remembering their sweet fragrance a few short blinks ago; ruing each severe cut at first, but knowing the necessity.
鈥淭o prune lilacs,鈥 gardening experts say, 鈥渃ut them back by up to a third shortly after they鈥檙e done blooming, when they set their blossoms for the next year.鈥
Oops. 鈥淣ever let Kathleen loose with a pruner or chain saw,鈥 the Preacher has said often. As a result of attempting to even things up, our twelve foot pink beauty now stands around four feet, a good two thirds less. Only a sorrowful cluster of erect bare limbs remains. But I鈥檝e slaughtered that bush before. It forgave me and came back beautifully, though it didn鈥檛 bloom again for several years.
Who doesn鈥檛 love autumn? Sampling the gifts of gardens and fields. Sniffing the fragrance of fallen crabapples. Meandering through a corn maze. Feeling calluses build during the binding up of summer鈥檚 looseness; the putting a place to rest for a season. Harvesting. Raking. Covering. Mulching. Tightening, straightening and pruning.
I鈥檒l soon retrieve our fall decorations from their hiding places in basement boxes and bins, anticipating the upcoming Thanksgiving gathering. Our large family (when they all come) crowds round a very long table, holding hands to sing grace. (We do this every year, sometimes posting the video on Facebook 鈥 a misleading Rockwellian moment of peace before everyone opens their mouth to either talk or eat (or, in the interests of honest reporting, complain about the Brussels sprouts or raisins in the coleslaw). Chaos ensues. Sweet moments, says the tongue in my cheek.
I wouldn鈥檛 change one. The sturdiest memories are woven with both warp and weft, I remind myself.
I write from Saskatchewan, mid-Canadian prairie. Winter could be on us within a matter of weeks. Everyone knows that, a knowing softened by the hint of Christmas in the air, the promise of a time devoted to generously, purposefully giving back to God. To loved ones. To our desperately needy world.
The earth will burn one day, the Bible says. Jesus will return and justice will finally reign. But today, like the leaves, I fall softly into fall. Tumble into the lap of grace, grateful for God鈥檚 shifting seasons that have always come and always gone.
Grateful for the lingering opportunity to share love and truth with those around me, leaning on God鈥檚 Word and this promise Genesis 8 verse 22, 鈥淎s long as the earth endures, seedtime and harvest, cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night will never cease.鈥