By Courtney Pierce
I’m thankful for many, many things in life, but I have to
say that 2021 took “being thankful” to new heights. I’ve lived through
turbulent times, not like the atrocities experienced in WW2, but close. Lock
downs, censorship, distancing, and tearing apart of the family unit in schools
have weighed heavy on my heart. Their slave playbook is trying to rear its ugly
head in current events, but it won’t work. We boomers have too much resilience to not overcome adversity. Although we may feel drowned out by yelling, accusations,
and downright lies, we have a voice . . . a big voice.
After more than forty years, we’re finally getting to the
truth. Some of the nuggets we may not like; others might blow us away. That’s a
subject for another blog in about six months. History in the making is still
bubbling on the stove. Truth serum. Veritas elixir.
Spring of 2021 sprang forth with an idea when my career industry
shut down. No concerts, no Broadway shows, no gathering of entertainment. I switched gears to work at a local family-owned
nursery while I finished my new book. My mother was a commercial organic
gardener and got the bug. I learned all the Almanac wisdom from her and my grandmother. My husband added more. It was a priority for
us to create our own sustainable garden.
But after working in a huge commercial nursery that was beloved
throughout the entire Flathead Valley, I found my niche. I learned much from
dealing with the public . . . not just any public. Most of the 40-year customers had been coming
there to pay top dollar for beauty, walk the aisles with their dogs, talk about
their kids, and seek help for what they didn’t know.
Other than getting back into shape at 22,000 steps a day
(according to my FitBit), I reveled in working physically hard. Next came
listening to the 30-year-experts who gave me plant advice. I drank in every
detail of alchemy of our area, trends of varieties, and optimum conditions of
our Zone. There’s a lot more to sticking a plant in the ground and expecting it
to grow.
I had an epiphany that I’d stumbled into something special
and quite personal: the customers.
“Are you looking for annuals that do well in sun or shade?
Or would you like perennials that come back every year?”
“What’s your favorite color combination?”
“How much time do you have to water?”
Greenhouse after greenhouse, I zigzagged to show off our
thousands of living trophies. These questions were how I got so many physical
steps, so many overflowing carts, and so many hugs of thanks. Through our human
connection, the customers were thankful, and so was I. I reveled in helping puzzle
the plants and baskets into their cars and SUVs. The customers who wanted to plant
their gardens, plant by plant, inspired me to spend the time to help them achieve
the daily joy of blooms. The joy hung from their porches, graced their raised beds, encircled their mail boxes.
That was the goal . . . the crowning achievement of helping
others. My customers were ecstatic about
leaving with their garden transformations of plants. Like me, they wanted to
nurture living plants and help them thrive. I had no agenda except to make them
happy.
As a writer, I captured that emotion and incorporated into
my prose. You can’t make this stuff up. I have to experience the emotion of
what I write, even if it’s a fictional story. I was accused once by a boss for
being too benevolent. Their negative accusation was a personal badge of honor
for me.
Every 25 years or so, we move up one generational seat on the life bus. In
my teens, I remember thinking what it would be like to be grown up, taking care
of myself, earning my future security, and being “old.” Back then, old age
was imagining future life in my sixties. I’ve now arrived at the place that seemed
so far away. I’m pretty darned close to the driver seat on the bus. The good news is that I still feel as young as I did in
my teens. The only difference is that I have more wisdom from experience . . . gain and loss, joy and sorrow, enlightenment and
disillusionment.
My husband and I, my siblings, and my in-law siblings will soon
take over as drivers of the bus, to maneuver through the curves and obstacles
of what our current turbulent life has to offer us. We boomers are heartbroken
to let go of the generation above us, those who’ve put their heart into
investing our generation. If not already,
they’ve handed over the wheel of trust to us. We can’t let them down, and we will
get through the summits and valleys ahead.
At stake is everything right now, but when we stand tall, we will still
have our country, our freedoms, and our sovereignty. Freedom is a precious gift
we must hold dear. It can still slip from our fingers when we look the other
way or have our voices censored. Our flag is an amazing symbol, along with all
those who’ve died to fight for it. We’re not chattel who have to show “papers”
to shop, travel, or eat at a restaurant. It’s happening in real time. Check out
Australia, New Zealand, France, and the United Kingdom.
We’re at a crossroads of tyranny or freedom. We can’t "unsee" what’s about to put in front of us. We can feel it ramping up. No more sleeping or blind trust.
In spite of everything that’s happening in the world, I’m thankful for my family. They hold my
spirit in their hands, and I hold theirs.
Courtney Pierce is a fiction writer living in Kalispell, Montana with her husband and stepdaughter. She writes for the baby boomer audience. She spent 28 years as an executive in the entertainment industry and used her time in a theater seat to create stories that are filled with heart, humor, and mystery. She studied craft and storytelling at the Attic Institute and has completed the Hawthorne Fellows Program for writing and publishing. Active in the writing community, Courtney is a board member of the Northwest Independent Writers Association and on the Advisory Council of the Independent Publishing Resource Center. She is a member of Willamette Writers, Pacific Northwest Writers Association, and Authors of the Flathead. The Executrix received the Library Journal Self-E recommendation seal. Print and E-books are available through most major online retailers, including Amazon.com. Check out all of Courtney's books:
New York Times best-selling author Karen Karbo says, "Courtney Pierce spins a madcap tale of family grudges, sisterly love, unexpected romance, mysterious mobsters and dog love. Reading Indigo Lake is like drinking champagne with a chaser of Mountain Dew. Pure Delight."
Coming in 2022!
When Aubrey Cenderon moves to Montana after the death of her father, the peace and quiet of Big Sky Country becomes complicated with a knock on the door from the sheriff. An injured grizzly bear is on the loose and it must be eliminated before it kills again. The sheriff's insistence that she buy a gun for protection will present Aubrey with some serious soul-searching, because the grizzly-on-the-run is hunting her too . . . for a different reason.