Sitting in this park, there’s these massive old Silver Gum trees twisting their way easily 50 metres into the sky. Looking scraggly, yet majestic, and steely blue and silver grey colours curling their way around 3-4 metre diameter tree tree trunks. Bits of bark ready to fall off at the slightest hint of a breeze, but yet just blowing calmly as the breeze increases enough that I put on my jacket, and pick up my empty coffee cup that’s blown over.
The stories these trees could tell – the families of animals they have housed, the storms they have weathered, the amount of people that have become introspective over their absolute beauty – and still they just keep growing. Not impervious to impact of the world around them. They have knots in their trunk where branches have been taken away due to whatever force of nature decided to hit at that growing stage. Even the whole centre of one trunk is completely rotted away, right next to the branch where clearly a chainsaw has been taken to it for whatever human-determined purpose.
As I contemplate that thought, I’m left with a different thought – these trees have been tended to. Not told what to do, not directed to grow, just given the space to do what they are designed to do, and supported where necessary. Branches being removed occasionally, nutrients added to the soil to support the trees base, bark cleaned up off the ground, and then just letting nature take it’s course. That thought that these amazing, majestic, but imperfect trees have been tended to, really does lead me to think that the hardships that change us irreversibly, actually can have the power to make us unexpectedly amazing! That might feel like a leap in thinking, but these trees really are phenomenal in their intricate beauty, and aside from the Huon Pines in Tasmania and Giant Redwood Trees in California, really are favourites.
Now I just need to find the space to tend my own self, make peace with my history and enjoy the unexpectedly amazing!





