By Joyce Alexander, RNP (Retired)
I live in the woods, and what passes for a “yard” (I can’t possibly call it a “lawn” with so little grass!) is pretty much in deep shade most of the summer due to the tall trees. Because of the deeply wooded environment, I’ve had to make a choice to have either trees or grass, but not both. I chose the trees.
Many of the trees are different varieties of oak, some of which tend to shed the lower limbs as they grow taller and the lower limbs receive less sunlight. This self pruning of the trees benefits them by taking the limited resources of nutrients from the ground and moisture from the rains, and using it to grow taller and wider at the top where it receives the most sunlight, rather than maintaining those lower limbs that are not as productive because they don’t get as much light.
In keeping other trees in the yard that don’t “self prune” healthy, I do this pruning for them with a saw. I trim the lower limbs off so that the resources of the tree will go into making it grow taller and straighter. I also trim off any limbs that are broken in storms, so that the amputation will be smooth and not collect rain water or rot and kill the tree.
There is a lesson to be learned, I think, in the analogies of pruning the dead wood of our relationships, so that the healthy parts of our lives can grow taller and straighter. The unhealthy relationships, both major ones and minor ones, use more resources than they contribute to the overall health of our lives, and will deplete the resources available to us to live good lives. They suck the resources we have and give little or nothing in return. The resources we do have are wasted in trying to maintain these sick “limbs.”
Sometimes unhealthy relationships will fall out of our lives of their own accord, just like the self pruning Jack oak trees drop limbs, without any effort on our parts to remove them. Some unhealthy relationships just seem to depart, and drop out of our lives.
Other unhealthy or broken relationships sort of hang on in our lives, like a hanging limb that we call a “widow maker,” because even though it is dead and detached from the tree, it hangs there precariously in the top of the tree ready to fall on someone walking underneath it without any warning. These unhealthy and essentially dead relationships become dangers to our lives, as well as to the lives of those around us.
There are many things that can damage a limb, or even an entire tree, making it necessary to remove all or part of the tree. Lightning strikes have actually taken out five trees over the past few years. The entire trees, though they struggled to remain alive, finally succumbed to the injury and the insects and mold which took root and finished them off. We had to remove them. Sometimes losing these trees seems like I’ve lost an old friend, and their shading of my home in the summer time is greatly missed when they are gone. In their places I have planted new trees, which I have fertilized and watered and pruned to help them grow tall and straight. The relationships that are “lightening struck,” through no fault of their own, are still not healthy ones and no matter what I try to do to heal them, there is little chance that they can recover. Their departure though, leaves a space in the sun for new growth to flourish.
Not every tree, and not every relationship, makes it for the duration of our lives. Some shed parts of themselves, and some die of an injury or of their own accord, or change in some way so that it is not possible to continue to have them in our lives. Sometimes trees reach their natural age span and they, like old friends, depart this mortal plane. Sometimes a tree, just by the position in which it grows, will lean too close to the house. It becomes a danger that during a storm it might fall on the house and crush it, so it must be taken out before that potential danger becomes a reality.
Relationships in our lives, just like the living trees in my yard, are constantly changing. The only thing in this world that is a true constant is change. In order to keep our mutual space healthy, the trees and I must work together. During the dry years, I water them, and they shade my home from the beating heat of the summer. During the cold blustery winters, some of the cedars shield my house from the winds that seem to be directly from the North Pole. They also provide berries for the cardinals that winter in my yard, giving a splash of bright red to an otherwise dreary day. Since cedars require a very acid soil, I don’t try to make grass grow under their roots by spreading lime, because if I did, the cedars would sicken and die. I trim them gently in the fall so that their branches will not be overcome with a wet snow or ice and broken off during the winter leaving them injured and sick.
I moved into the clearing here in September of 1994. During that time here, there have been both major and minor changes to both the trees in my “hole in the woods,” and in the relationships in my life as well. I’ve pruned the trees, removed some entirely, some have died, and I’ve planted new ones, and all of them that are here now have grown. I’ve also pruned some of the relationships, removed some entirely, some have died, and I’ve formed new ones, and the ones that are still here have grown and matured and become stronger.
I have fed and watered, nurtured and defended the ones that were healthy and not poisoned them by trying to make their environment into something that they can’t survive. I haven’t tried to make this “hole in the woods” into something it isn’t. I don’t try to make it like a suburban sodded lawn, with manicured grass and topiary trees. If I wanted that, I would move to town.
I accept my relationships and myself for what we are, enjoying healthy relationships with the people who make my life a better thing and trimming out the dead wood and the “widow makers” from both the trees and the dead wood of unhealthy relationships. This makes for a much safer, healthier and more peaceful life in my little “hole in the woods,” where the fauna and flora and people can have a peaceful environment in which to thrive.
Beautiful imagery, EB.
Thanks for those thoughts.
Beautiful post EB! This is life!
EB – Nice post, but don’t burn that drift wood.. Keep the beautiful pieces for yourself, hang them on the wall, put them in your flower beds, or take them to farmer’s market and sell them, people love interesting, beautiful weathered driftwood. Seriously darlin.. I have done it, people make extra money selling natures treasures – wish you could see my Gazebo I am working on, the post are weathered out and sunbleached telephone poles, framed in time worn sunbleached driftboards, the side’s are weaved with interesting pieces of driftwood with grapevine wrapped in and out…
Oh Hens……in my old house I had tons of driftwood in the yard, cool tumbled roots. I made a handrail for my stairwell out of a cool branch that was sitting in a stream for years. All I did was rub it down with some bees’wax and shabang, smooth as silk…..it was the coolest thing. I did bring that with me to this place….but I haven’t put it up yet.
I just have no room. No wall space…..and the association is hounding me about my ‘garden’.
I do have a cool redwood burl out there….that I dragged off the beach years ago in Mendocino. It was huge and waterlogged…..but I was determined to have it! I gorilla glued a piece of slate on it and it was Jr’s nightstand for years. I found some seaweed and wrapped the burl in it and dragged it forever to my car. Don’t know HOW I got it in my car……sheer will! 🙂
I made Jr a bed out of Mt. driftwood…..was the coolest thing ever. I did a valance over the window out of the little pieces glued to a board. I sold that when I moved. No room here for such a big-hearty bed. I did move the valance here and have it in my office.
If I had a garage…..I’d keep some of the wood……and sell it or make something cool out of it. But I don’t have anyplace to store it for now.
One of the peices was a cool branch that was rounded….it woulda made a really cool shower curtan rod. Jr looked at me when I made the suggestion and said….MOM-STOP!
I laughed.
I am all about the repurposing of things from nature….I love it!
Your gazebo sounds delightful…..I can only imagine.
Oxy,
I always love your illustrations of life’s problems and hard lessons that so many of us at LoveFraud have learned the hard way.
Your illustrations drive it home so nicely.
Glad I stopped by this evening…
Aloha
P.S. I have definately trimmed the dead wood out of my life. :O)
Aloha, darling Praise is always High dollar when it comes from you! Thank you so much! Doesn’t take much to get an idea for an article, all I have to do is look out the window and see the several trees that desperately need taking out (lightening strikes) and a couple of widow makers hanging over where we park—well where we DID park until the widow makers got ready to fall.
I know you’re busy with school and your job but wish you’d do us another article! Or let us read some of the papers you have to write for your classes! ((((hint-hint))))
Oxy,
I wouldn’t torture you with my papers. They are torture to me! I might write an article when I graduate. It will be a good time to look back at all this.
I have been working with a client that I know is on the spectrum somewhere. I can’t quite decide but my time at LF and with the BM helps me see it. We don’t want to give up on kids but at the same time, I was getting annoyed with dancing around the topic at the consultation tables. Ya know what I mean?
She lies even when she knows the person she is lieing to knows the truth for sure. For example, I started a baby blanked project with her a few years ago. She sewed two rows of squares together and it was very hard to get her to do that. So, I finished it recently. I brought it to work because she wanted to see how it turned out. Then she announced, “I MADE THAT!” I would say that is a bit of an overstatement.
She also tells anyone who will listen “Eminem is my Uncle” and “my parents had 12 kids” (4 is the real number).
But the lies are not really the problem. The total lack of empathy for anyone and the total lack real connection to anyone or the desire TO connect with anyone… and the stealing.
On September 11th, the kids wanted to watch stuff about 9/11 because they were little when it happened and they don’t remember. This little girl, after 60 seconds, says, “I’ don’t see what the big deal is. I’m over it.”
Anyway… about that paper. I better get to it. This is the last installment of the semester and as soon as I am done, I am FREE for 6 weeks!!!!
Aloha……… :O)
Dear Aloha,
You know, the thing is the “politically correct” therapist has to subscribe to the “party line” that “these KIDS can be helped and we just have to find a way to do it.” In truth, there are some, my son was one of them, that by the time he hit puberty there was NO saving him from himself, from the lies or the desire to control.
The literal WASTE of time, effort and resources on these kids is to me a big waste.;…and if you were to say that, the “party liners” would say “well how else could you tell WHICH kid among the large number CAN be saved if you don’t try equally hard on them all?”
Also, I will say that judging which kid has empathy and which one doesn’t is a SUBJECTIVE judgment. Then, if it were determined some way objectively that the child was hopeless, WHAT do you do with them?
It is sort of a catch 22 situation AT BEST I think, but I know what you mean about seeing that the girl is personality disordered and knowing within yourself that there isn’t much hope for her to develop empathy, to quit lying etc.
Looking back at some of the children I worked with in inpatient settings, that had such GLEE at doing things to hurt others, or set fires, or any number of other kinds of “bad behavior” I too was so frustrated at working with them, and frankly my empathy centered more on their parents’ plight. Working with inpatient kids (starting a few months after my son Patrick was arrested for murder) actually was THERAPY for me! Because I realized that(A) I wasn’t the only parent with a child like this and (B) there were kids who had done WORSE things than murder. Even with this “therapy” and these realizations though, it took me a long time to finally cut the EMOTIONAL umbilical cord and free myself from being TIED to him emotionally.
I admire you so much, Aloha, for using your experiences with the bad man for helping those that CAN be helped. God bless and enjoy your six weeks of freedom! (((hugs))) AND God bless!
Hi All,
Oxy and Aloha..I don’t know exactly what Aloha is doing (working with at risk youth?) but I have been thinking aLOT lately about my own childhood journey, and bad behavior, and how grateful I am that I wasn’t given up on, as hopeless and unsalvageable. That a few someones stuck with me and assisted me in changing.
I recently have been triggered by a 30yr old woman who cheated on her lovely husband. I did this same thing to my first husband, who I was briefly married to. And watching this woman hurt her husband has brought up my remorse over the horrible treatment of my first husband. I have been remorseful for years about my callous treatment of him. And now I find myself going NC with this woman, and feeling conflicted about being so judgemental, when I was in a very similar and self-centered place myself as a young woman (this was twenty years ago). I am so angry with her. And I feel like a bit of a hypocrit. But I am staying NC because I don’t feel I am the right person to help her, and I am friends with her husband and very supportive of him.
It has also brought up lots of thoughts about how selfish non-disordered people can be if they don’t have the tools to understand themselves, and haven’t developed a defined sense what their values are. How cowardly and confused we can become given the right mix of life experiences, and yet still be capable of real change and redemption.
I was raised by a narcissistic mother, who doesn’t have a nurturing bone in her body. Her family were all alcoholics and drug addicts. I had four different dads before the age of 9. I abused by one of them. My grandfather was a peodophile. I acted out from the time I was in my teens and well into my twenties to get back at her and the rest, and from the sheer confusion of not having any idea who I really was.
This included compulsive lying, total irresponsibility, stealing, detachment from the consequences of my behavior, and being insensitive to others’ needs. Interspersed with dependency on multiple disordered people, promiscuity, manipulativeness. It also included profound feelings of self-loathing, depression, loneliness and shame.
If I use the criteria for being disordered, I would say I was moderately classifiable. I hurt many people. It was difficult for people to ‘get through to me’.
I never enjoyed hurting people. I never went out of my way to scheme or destroy. I derived no pleasure from my fucked-up-ness. But I also felt I had no control over myself. When I looked inside all I saw was a big fat ZERO.
I also stayed in therapy for nearly 20 years. And I was/am SO grateful that my therapist saw something in me that could be worked with, and saved. That with some reparenting, challenge, behavior modification, love, and consistency I could become a more whole person.
I came to understand that I vacillated between mimicking my mother’s narcissism and re-enacting my own ‘trauma’ of being parented by her (and sexually abused) as a way of trying to cope with my lack of life-skills and to try and heal my relationship with her.
However, this was a VERY long journey, and I was intermittently involved with more and more highly disordered persons, until I ‘got it’. It was a journey of defining what was NOT mine. For years I think I acted out my mother’s and grandfather’s projected and disowned ‘badness’. And I was the one who suffered most from it. But I did finally get who and what they are. Got that I am NOT disordered. That I was capable to changing and growing and becoming a person of integrity and caring. Not a door mat, not a selfish woman. Someone with emotional and psychological equilibrium.
So, though I recognize the difficulty in identifying who is salvageable, and who is doomed to the darkness of being permanently disordered, I do hope that therapists will continue to err on the side of ‘possibility’ with young people.
If not for my therapist and a few close friends I could have been thrown on the trash heap. I think I would have killed myself. The sacrificial lamb to my family’s projected narcissism and abuse.
Healing to all,
Slim
((Slim))
that was so inspiring. thank you for sharing that. There is hope, at least for those who want to change.