Previous Challenge Entry (Level 4 – Masters)
Topic: In and Out (04/30/09)
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TITLE: The Scents of Spring | Previous Challenge Entry
By Emily Gibson
05/05/09 -
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So for a week or more of spring mornings, I have been rising just before dawn, and have gone outside to breathe deeply of the scents that hang heavy in the cool moist air. The perfume from thousands of orchard blossoms on our farm is heady and intoxicating. There is nothing quite like these three weeks each year when our farm becomes a mass of snow white and pink scented flowers, busy with honey bees and eventually showering petals to the ground as the fruit starts to form.
However, such blessing can come with a price. I’m allergic to tree pollen. I breathe deeply and… sneeze and wheeze. Even the best medicine can’t stop my reaction. So much loveliness causes so much misery. So I retreat back into the house and look out the window and enjoy the outside view from afar, dabbing my dripping nose.
Not all the spring scents are of the floral variety. This is also the same time of year our dairy farm neighbors start to empty out their manure storage lagoons and begin to spread their thousands of gallons of liquid manure on the surrounding fields, allowing the “brown gold” to soak into the earth, readying the ground for the hay or corn crop to come later on this summer. That scent hangs heavy in the morning air as well, pungent and unforgettable, penetrating into our clothing and hair so we carry the smell back into the house with us. Of course, I’ll never become allergic to manure. In fact, as nasty a smell as it is, it’s invigorating in a perverse sort of way. I know where it comes from, I know what its potential is, and I know the crop it yields. It is, in itself, as treasured as the blossoms that yield fruit on our farm.
So taxes become the manure in our lives. They are pretty stinky too. Just like manure, they are an inevitable part of our daily existence, and just as disagreeable. Yet, spread out where needed, those collective taxes fertilize and grow our communities, our schools, our roads, our health care and... a few other things we may wish would not be funded.
So next spring, as I lock myself indoors to spread numbers across my desktop, I will hope they may yield fruit in the outside world, sometime, somewhere.
And I’ll stifle my sneezes as I celebrate the Cents of Spring.
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