My third-grader has one of the favorite teachers at the elementary school. My son just loves him. So of course when my son's teacher gave him a young lilikoi (yellow passionfruit) vine as a prize for being a good student, that little plant was precious.
We picked a nice spot in the yard, by a wall for the vine to climb on. Then we dug the hole together and put the plant in place. It was close enough to the wall that I thought the people who come to mow the lawn would leave it alone. I knew I ought to tie a bright pink ribbon around it to make sure they'd see the leggy vine with its three big green leaves and know that it was meant to be there.
I never did.
One day I went out front, smiled to see the grass cut, and then spied a sad little stick poking up by the wall where our lilikoi used to be.
It had been mowed.
Heartbroken, I told my son the sad news. He took it better than I did, assuring me that the stick would grow new leaves. But I knew better. The next time the mowers came, the stick disappeared entirely.
Hoping to grow a replacement, I saved the seeds from a lilikoi and put them in a pot. Weeks went by. The children knocked the pot over while playing and I had to sweep the dirt up and dump it back in. Oh well. Nothing would be coming up in there.
Last Friday as I walked home from teaching I thought of that lilikoi again. I grieved, wishing I'd taken better care of it, sorry we'd lost the opportunity to say, "That beautiful lilikoi growing all over the wall was a prize from my son's favorite teacher." I prayed that I could forgive myself for being careless with something that was precious to my child.
When I got home I happened to glance in the pot, the pot where I thought nothing would come up.
Three lilikoi sprouts!
I called my son, telling him I had a surprise for him. When I showed him the baby lilikoi he asked, "Are those for me?" Yes, I told him, to make up for the one we lost. The hug he gave me melted all my guilt and regret away.
Thank the Lord for tiny blessings.
So glad the lilikoi sprouted! What a beautiful lesson to all of us on tender mercy, on hope, on balance. What a great mommy! What a lucky son. =]
ReplyDeletewhat a great story!
ReplyDeleteAnd soo--also with your writing career pot!!
ReplyDeleteI just love this. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, everyone! There's two more seedlings now, and even the pot from my "Writing Career" post has a baby tree coming up!
ReplyDelete