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Summertime on Broadway in Spanish Harlem. Wide sidewalks glinting with mica, as I walked alone up this hill in our neighborhood for the very first time. Flag Day, my parent's anniversary, and a wish to give them flowers I would buy all on my own. Inside the hushed florist shop the flowers and plants seemed ready to interview any potential new owners who wished to take them home. A dignified, kind woman, spokesperson for their domain, looked down at this earnest little shrimp of a girl in a striped T-shirt and shorts, who wanted so much to be taken seriously. Respectfully, she opened heavy glass doors where the roses slept in orderly, long-stemmed rows. Heady, chilled. Their fragrance enveloped me, and still does. I chose one red rose, and one yellow, and the woman solemnly wrapped them like a baby in swaddling clothes, adding baby's breath and fern leaves. Cradling my paper bundle, I walked on home. Something deep inside of me had made that choice. It felt as though the flowers knew what I wanted to say to my cherished mother and father: *That this life they were creating for us, was abundantly full, and balanced.* Time flew by, and one day I learned from a holy and compassionate sage that my heart had chosen an ancient symbol for fullness of life: Two flowers, one red, one yellow, whispering the secret of life to the heart of a child who wanted, more than anything, to actually hear it, who wanted to know, above all else, what was really real.
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Jan 6, 2016
Jan 6, 2016 at 8:25 PM UTC
The Olympia Florist
Summertime on Broadway in Spanish Harlem. Wide sidewalks glinting with mica, as I walked alone up this hill in our neighborhood for the very first time. Flag Day, my parent's anniversary, and a wish to give them flowers I would buy all on my own. Inside the hushed florist shop the flowers and plants seemed ready to interview any potential new owners who wished to take them home. A dignified, kind woman, spokesperson for their domain, looked down at this earnest little shrimp of a girl in a striped T-shirt and shorts, who wanted so much to be taken seriously. Respectfully, she opened heavy glass doors where the roses slept in orderly, long-stemmed rows. Heady, chilled. Their fragrance enveloped me, and still does. I chose one red rose, and one yellow, and the woman solemnly wrapped them like a baby in swaddling clothes, adding baby's breath and fern leaves. Cradling my paper bundle, I walked on home. Something deep inside of me had made that choice. It felt as though the flowers knew what I wanted to say to my cherished mother and father: *That this life they were creating for us, was abundantly full, and balanced.* Time flew by, and one day I learned from a holy and compassionate sage that my heart had chosen an ancient symbol for fullness of life: Two flowers, one red, one yellow, whispering the secret of life to the heart of a child who wanted, more than anything, to actually hear it, who wanted to know, above all else, what was really real.
FrancescaRegan
Written by
Jan 6, 2016
Jan 6, 2016 at 8:25 PM UTC
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