We are all a garden of sorts. We all spring up from a single seed. And like a flourishing tree or an expanding bush we can branch out and multiply in number and in strength surrounded by tender loving care, being watered by others, paid close attention to as the gardener nurtures us to maturity.
We bloom. We blossum. Beauty abounds. Our colors come forth in a harmony of hues upon every petal and every leaf.
But then come the weeds that choke out our foliage and wrap around our roots, our foundations. The weeds of hatred, the weeds of bitterness the weeds of loneliness, the weeds of shame, the weeds of fear, and depression invade.
Bugs infest our garden and eat away at us, tormenting us, picking away at us, and the beauty and produce that once was the glory of our garden has gone away.
Did we do this to ourselves? We often wonder. Did the gardener get too passive, get too neglectul and uncaring and forget to tend the garden? Maybe we were not strong enough to take up the fight, wilting, fading in the sun.
Yet even a dying flower produces seeds of growth, and of renewal, as a rebirth will come from its entrance into the earth. Even the most tragic looking of sickly plant life will have a comeback, a resurrection of sorts when golden raindrops do fall again like prayers from the sky.
And so it is the gardener was never asleep on the job, did not neglect the duties. And like all healthy ones do abundant food shall grow once again in our garden, fragrant flowers, and branches for the birds to perch upon when at one time all seemed dead and hopeless and lost.