
Now that I’m officially one of the young-old,
as one of my old-old friends has dubbed me,
I have been made aware that I have a fondness
for certain citizens of gardens that are,
apparently to many, old lady plants. They seem
to live in the categories of the fragrant,
like lilacs and gardenias and roses, or poofy
like hydrangeas and rhododendrons, or
pretty like azaleas. Though I don’t math, I can’t
help but admire the geometrical perfection
of the highly ordered camellias with their
spiraling, overlapping petals in groups of
5s, 8s, 13s—a living example of the Fibonacci
sequence in which each element is the sum
of the two elements that precede it.
And really, isn’t that true of old lady plants?
They are the result of eons of evolution, like
all of us old ladies, if we’re fortunate to become
them. Like the ever-reliable geraniums, we suit up
and show up to grace our environments with color.
And how can we not get swoony over the scents
of lilacs and gardenias, which may remind us
of our grandmothers, likely the first old ladies
we knew? As some of us are now, cradling
our own grandchildren in our capable arms,
perhaps walking them into our gardens,
leaning in to sniff the new arrivals, introducing
the babies to the wonders of growing things
just like them.














