This Christmas, my sister Lorie gave us all a very special present: beautifully wrought wooden bowls. These true gifts were crafted by my uncle, Bob Clayton, with wood from the maple tree we were forced to cut down in my mom’s front yard this past year.
The maple tree was planted in 1978 by my father, to commemorate
the marriage of my eldest sibling, Tom, to his wife Karen. It
was barely taller than me at the time.
As we grew, so did the tree, until it towered over the house. My father would sit on the porch, stare
at that tree, and say it was getting too big.
But he let it grow, for reasons I understood completely. That tree was part of our family. Mom, with Lorie, Tom and baby Sally |
In 2011, Dad and I sat on the porch of the home I grew up in,
the house he bought with his pregnant wife over 50 years before, and where he had raised a
family.
The sun shone over the
neighbourhood on a perfect July day, as if everything were going to be perfect,
the birds singing, the grass lush and green, my mom’s roses in bloom. Only now, my Dad knew he was dying and so was the tree. It was my 50th birthday. And Dad said, “I should have taken that tree
down . . . I wanted to . . .” He turned to look at me, and I understood the regret, the desire to preserve a
life we all valued.
And I said, “I will
take care of it, Dad.”
Landscapers came to assess the trees on my mother’s
lot, and they agreed the maple must come down, and the many mature ash trees in
the backyard would need to be treated to prevent infestation of the Emerald Ash Borer, now sweeping through Ontario. It seemed to me that so much of what I thought was permanent was being eroded.
The Maple and the Ash
by SA Moore
Cut down,
because you towered over my mother's house;
the wedding that planted you
long since sprouted grandchildren
Housefront obscured
Infested,
because Chinese lumber is cheap;
fifty years at creekside
no match for foreign pests
Backyard at risk
Alone,
because black cells
invaded my father’s stomach;
the marriage that made
you
cut short to fifty-five
years
Inside suspended
My younger brother, John, began inviting people to take pieces of
the tree, and his friends from my dad’s hunting camp and my uncle, a wood
carver like my dad, obliged.
To have a
piece of that tree now in my house, and so beautifully crafted is a reminder of
the values my dad and I shared. Family
comes first, true beauty lies in duty, and our place on this earth requires
dedication . . . and sometimes, it requires letting go.
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