I
go religiously to the Alemany Farmer’s Market on Saturdays. I’ve been going for
decades now. Farmer’s markets have sprung up all over the city, but I am
faithful to Alemany. It now has it’s share of “foodies”, of which I have to be
one of the first, but it remains wildly diverse, a relic of the San Francisco I
refuse to let go of.
I’ve
been a Pagan since my early twenties. It was then, after my father’s suicide
and the death a beloved cousin, that I moved to a small town on the Oregon
coast. Recognizing the cycles of the moon and the turning of the tides became a
lifeline as I moved through the shadowland of grief. When I got sturdier, I moved to San
Francisco. It has been here that for most
of my adult life I celebrated the turn of the wheel at public rituals.
The
days of public ritual are past, but the farmer’s market remains. Here, I
celebrate the first asparagus and rejoice during the brief weeks that
asparagus, fava beans, and cherries are all in season. Winter means root vegetables, Napa cabbage and
empty booths. The woman who sells zucchini, summer squash and berries also
sells sweet peas in early summer, replaced by sunflowers later on. The cycle of
the earth around the sun is marked by the bounty of the earth through the
changing seasons.
Last
Saturday was no different. A close
friend had surgery on Friday and our fears were confirmed that she has ovarian
cancer. She had a ticket to fly to Italy that Saturday, the first trip to Europe in her
lifetime. Instead, she is in the hospital trying to fart so she can eat
something other than broth and jello. I was going to see her on Sunday and my quest was to bring her a bouquet of fresh flowers and to get my usual provisions
for the week.
So, I
move through the market, collecting delphiniums sweet peas and roses. I’m happy
to see there is still spring garlic to buy and notice there is no longer a fava
bean to be found. And then I go to the booth on the southwest corner where I
get cherries.
Picking
through the boxes of ripe cherries a man next to me says to the farmer “Is
this the last of them?” This startles
me. Cherries have come early this year, I think because of the drought. But I
expect them to last through June and into July.
“Next week will be the last, most likely, so get your fill”, says the
farmer.
And
I lose it. Which seems to be happening a
lot these days. I say “NO!” with more
emotion than anyone around me is prepared for and the tears start. I am blubbering and saying I am sorry, my
good friend has cancer and I can’t stand
that it is the end of cherry season. Then the guy next to me and the farmer get
embarrassed and kind all at the same time. There are lots of “I am sorry” and while that
is happening I somehow buy 20 bucks worth of cherries.
Life
is indeed bowl of cherries. Sweet, lush, and only here for a short time. I go home
and make a cherry clafouti for dessert that night and put the flowers on my
altar to charge up for the hospital visit the next day.
What
can we do but honor the place we are on
the wheel and fully taste it? And in the
tasting, to be mindful that some are living on broth and jello. My dear friend
doesn’t fart until sometime Wednesday. And, there’s a huge bag of pitted
cherries in the freezer with her name on it.
1 comment:
Good reading, your piece on cherries et. al. And good to read that a good loving connection is in your life again, and the good sense about the things you're cautious about. Am finally looking you up on the computer via this blog. Like the blog's name, branches up, roots down. I go back to S.F. when Reclaiming was in its early days and one (or maybe two?) sessions with you, about 30 years ago. Would like to be in touch again, if you'd like to reply.
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