
I wonder, quite often, actually,
if I think too much about flowers. The ability to have a little yard where
I work and plant (and sometimes sit and dream about bigger and grander gardens
in true American style) seems like a way of hiding, a way of slipping unconsciously
into a state of ignorance about the world outside of my own yard, which I
ought to resist.
But the fact is that
from the moment when the first green starts to show through the dead grass
of the previous year, all thinking, pondering, reasoning, and connecting of
any kind takes place through the filter of the outdoors.
I track mud everywhere.
And so I defend my
decision to bring the hibiscus into this text, because it is there, whether
or not it is supposed to be. The Gardener's Encyclopedia and that clump
of purple crocus flowers that comes up under the maple tree are as present
in this text as the events at Columbine High School and the texts of Patricia
Williams and Ruth Frankenberg.
Much later in the
summer than the original idea for this text, some of my neighbors said to
me, "Oh, we've enjoyed looking at your flowers this summer, especially
the big pink-and-white ones."
As all of these things
fire through my synapses in their recursive way, they are bound to bump up
against one another continually, so that I am forced to ask myself, "what
do these things have in common?" I am both pained and refreshed by my
ability to turn serious matters into garden fodder. 
An attempt at
connection:
Gardens of any kind
work as a metaphor for me. Not as a representational space of safety and hiding,
but as a space of potential. Things are happening in the garden, whether you
see them or not.
The hibiscus grows
and blooms. The Japanese beetles have to be considered. (Their claim on the
plant as food may usurp those of the neighbors for something nice to look
at.) My efforts to discourage the beetles may effect the larger environment.
There is the potential of disease here, as well as cycles of decay and renewal.
The leaf blight that has infected my roses since I first put them in the ground
returns every year to yellow the leaves. The bacteria causing the leaf blight
has been integrated.
In this, as in other
places there are no easy answers.
Yet I like being here.
My Question: Could
I possibly take this feeling and displace it, move it onto my interactions
in a larger social framework?
It seems worthwhile
to try to build things both beautiful and useful ( as nasturtium leaves and
flowers can be used for making salads) in this larger social framework. What
I would like to build are relationships which seek to both accept and change.
Carolyn Guyer, in
her text, "Into the Next Room," puts it this way: " It may
be that the most useful and beneficial way of really knowing what the differences
are is to pass through them. Not take them down, imagine they don't exist,
but to experience them, which is to say, to be committed to change even as
I commit change" (328). 
My goal for this
text, and for my larger interactions in the world outside of this text, is
not to transcend issues of race but to experience them in ways that are complicated
and provide multiple spaces for perspective, but also provide moments for
sitting on the front steps (or watching cartoons on t.v.)
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