THE KINGDOM IN THE KNEELING SPACE
I am seventy-three years old, retired, and I navigate the world from a wheelchair. Most people see the chair and assume my world has shriveled into a series of small, indoor movements. They couldn’t be more wrong. My world didn’t shrink; it simply relocated into my yard.
That small patch of earth is my peace, my “I’m still here” to a world that often looks past me. I have two young maples in the front, three fat, ancient evergreens flanking the side, and a garden I fuss over with the devotion of a new parent. Even in the dead of winter, I’m out there. I wrap the saplings so the frost doesn’t split their tender bark; I brush heavy snow from the evergreens so their weary branches don’t snap. I salt my paths in neat, surgical lines and fill the bird feeder every morning at dawn. The finches and cardinals show up on a schedule so tight you’d think they were punching a corporate time clock.
When the trash started appearing, it didn’t just feel like litter; it felt like a home invasion.
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