Compost

Managing my kitchen, the influx of groceries and the outflow of meals, has never been my strong suit. It’s my job. I do it. But it’s a chore. The longer I am in my kitchen, the nastier I get. Every day I wait as long as I possibly can to even enter the kitchen, and then I try to come up with the meal that will take the least amount of prep time, cause the least amount of mess to clean up, with the ingredients I happen to have on hand.

It is like an Escape Room challenge, “how to get out of this room before Mommy Dearest emerges and traumatizes my children?”

Shopping is a matter of making sure I have the basic building blocks for all of the kinds of meals I might want to make. Multiply this by the fluctuating and spontaneous number of mouths I might be feeding on any given night, you come up with a not too tiny sum of perishables that get thrown out in any given year.

And each one of those trips from the fridge to the garbage bin weighs heavily on my conscience! I’ve taken to saying a little prayer of repentance each time I throw out a rotten cucumber or a moldy tomato. “Lord, forgive me for I have sinned against you and your bountiful provisions!” Those leftovers that have been in the fridge longer than anyone can remember? They travel “The guilt-avoidance-underground.” First stop is offering them to my husband to eat. If he passes, they are doomed for the bin, but not before they do their time on the counter waiting for me to summon the courage to actually commit the crime. All the while, I pretend I’m weighing my options. The condements and products that have expired in the fridge or pantry are not a problem at all. I just completely avoid them until my college girls come home and toss them for me.

But for the past year, my conscience has been much lighter. This is not solely because I am only cooking a few times a week for just the two of us now, and thus might have less that goes to waste.

No, it is because I have discovered the secret to life itself!

I grew up in the inner-city. Everything went into one bin, back then, in DC. Plastic, paper, cans, glass, old shoes, sanitary napkins, banana peels. We didn’t have a garbage disposal and we didn’t have a garden, just a back lot with a lot of junk on it. That all changed when I moved to Germany thirty something years ago. When we first married, we lived in a town where we had to even separate out a few different kinds of plastic in addition to the paper, metal, organics, brown glass, green glass, black glass, and clear glass. We had one whole room in the cellar full of boxes for sorting and collecting these different items of trash, and every Saturday morning we would take them to the dump. Thankfully here in Augsburg, the city isn’t so particular about plastic. We have four large garbage bins, brown, green, yellow, black. Organic, paper, plastic & metals, and the rest. We have to bring our glass to a large sorting container on the corner. All very doable.

But having a large brown bin for organic “waste” is not the same thing as actually doing compost, as I have recently found out. Though for the last twenty years, we have lived in a home with a rather large garden for being in a European city, we have only started composting about a year ago. I still don’t know heaps about it or gardening, slow learner that I am, but composting has taught me something pretty essential to life, something I only actually knew in a bookish way. A proverbial truth that I might have even glibly offered to others as a comfort, all while still carrying the burdens a deeper understanding of this truth could have lifted from me.

Nothing is wasted!

It is really true. If it grows, it sows.

My (organic) trash is my garden’s treasure!

Actually seeing this process of egg shells and rotten apples and wilted brown iceberg being turned into soil right in my own yard is a revelation.

There is no garbage in nature.

There is nothing organic that is unusable.

There is no ‘expires-by’ date on plants for being able to replenish the soil.

Just because I can’t or won’t eat it, does not mean I have denied it some fundamental purpose or removed it from the cycle of life. One way or another, my two-month old zucchini will go the way of all living things: From dust to dust.

What a relief this has been. I’m not saying I now think I can let my vegetable drawer become a greenhouse for fungus, or that I can flush left-overs with impunity. I try to do right by the contents of my refrigerator. I do try!

But at the most, it is a sin against my own wallet when I fail, and not a sin against Mother Nature herself. She graciously accepts my slimy, smelly, green and brown gifts, and with willing and industrious hands, she folds them back into herself.

In return, she gives me color, flavor, sweetness, fiber, vitamins, air and beauty.

I give her death, and she gives me life.

Nothing wasted.

Prompt: Iron

Those creases were so sharp they could almost cut you. We wouldn’t leave the house without them, that stiff, crisp line right down the front of our jeans. Right out of the laundry and hot off the press, that is how it had to be. The older the jeans, the lighter the crease. We may not have always had time to shower, and make up in our day was so paired down, it could be done on the move if need be: black eyeliner heated over a lighter-flame and poked in between our lids and quick left and right motion, swipe of the finger across grey eyeshadow and onto our lids, two quick strokes with the blush-brush, and tinted lip-gloss. Voila. Ok, sometimes there was that god-awful zit that needed coverup and powder, but we had the whole procedure trimmed down to a Formula 1 pit-stop. But the pants? There was no shortcut for the crease and no occasion when it wasn’t mandatory. I couldn’t tell you if it was an ‘80’s thing or just a DC ghetto thing, but it was a thing.

Until it wasn’t anymore. Eventually I traded in my creased jeans for mini skirts, or hippy skirts, or cut offs, or just creaseless jeans.

What did we think those creases would give us? What did we think would happen if we were caught without one? Did we think we could validate our right to exist in this world, add more value to our net worth, or would somehow form deep and meaningful connections only when we had a crease in our pants? How quickly and easily we women are fooled out of our birthright. Through the years I have traded it away for so many stupid and inconsequential things, but none so absurd as when my best friend and I handed it over for an iron.

Prompt: Stormy Winds

Sometimes it was like a gentle breeze. And just like that, she would put herself right in the middle of it, close her eyes, and let it wash over her, caress her thirsty skin, her thirsty soul. In these soft moments, she would turn toward it and let every inch of her face be kissed. Then she would soften too. She liked it when she could be soft.

Other times, it was like nothing. Like sitting in a motorless sailboat on the Chesapeake, dead in the water. Sails hanging like a fickle and wilted Hydrangea. Nothing. Just hotness. Just a visible shoreline with no movement toward it. Just sitting there in your own little boat with nothing but yourself and your boat, and all the things still not done. Pitiful.

Other times it was like a whole lot’a somethin’. Too much somethin’. Like it was on steroids, whipping everything up, setting everything in commotion. Not a far cry from those stormy winds that got up to terrifying and chasing the fall leaves around the garden. Those times it was like trying to catch a hurricane in a shot glass. Those times she could get just a glimpse of how much more of everything there was, and it was frightening. Those times she thought it better just to shut the hell up.

And sometimes… sometimes, it was amazing. It would come in strong, like it had purpose or something, and those sails would be up, just as strong and determined, pulled in taut and razor sharp. Then things would get going! Hold on! They would fly over those choppy circumstances! Those times made her feel like the queen of the Regatta! It didn’t happen much any more, but that’s what she was always hoping for…

Yeah, it’s about like that

with her and God

Sometimes

Prompt: Sisters

They are more than sisters, they are friends. Not inseparable, not exclusive, but they enjoy each other, trust each other more than anyone else, and love each other deeply. They go “into town” together, code for hitting the shops, going to a cafe, meeting some friends. Or in summer, they go to the lake with their books, bikinis, a pick-nick, and their phones of course. When they come home for a couple of days or a week, they cook together, wear each other’s clothes, stay up late to watch a movie together, and share a room, though there are enough for everyone to have their own. All the while they are catching each other up on their lives in their respective cities, the college roommates in their apartments, the intrigues in class, their fears and frustrations about their own performance, their romances. There is lots of laughter and silliness when they are together.They have the same humor and get each other. They celebrate each other in grand style on birthdays, their successes, or special occasions, are in constant communication, and yet visit each other whenever possible. Unconsciously, throughout their lives, they have been stitching ever more strands of connection with each other, and these have, over time, turned into strong chords of love and trust and goodness. These chords are all the more secure, because they know that they are much more than best friends. They are sisters.