How lucky that they grow despite our seeming lack of effort: the lush fig tree in the yard, a stand of hydrangea pushing outplanet after planet of deepest blue. Beside the front steps, gardenia—rosal—unfurl and perfume our recent comin… | Luisa A. Igloria June 15 | How lucky that they grow despite our seeming lack of effort: the lush fig tree in the yard, a stand of hydrangea pushing out planet after planet of deepest blue. Beside the front steps, gardenia—rosal—unfurl and perfume our recent comings and goings. Children are like that too, though we try to be more faithful to their care. I remember how, before he was two, my grandson didn't know what sugar was—the kind you spoon out of a jar and sprinkle on cereal or toast, though fruit was fine. In their own childhoods, I watched out for my daughters' every elbow scrape, every tumble; tended their fevers with cool cloths. Isn't a certain steadfastness asked of mothers? That we make of ourselves a home to always return to. That we keep our hands on the rudder, bear them through the narrow channels so at the end, they might open up to embrace the sky.
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