About as big as a raindrop, this flower is a spring ephemeral; among the first to go from seed to bloom after a rain. Its seed lay in crusty mud on a rockbed, dormant for a year until the first rain.
Spring ephemerals, as their name suggests, appear briefly. They are the earth’s memory of the first rains. They fold back into mud as quickly as they came.
While the bolt of lightning that erupted the tree in flames and whose shock of thunder reverberated in the hollow of every tree and lived as fear within every animal that witnessed it, the little flower came into bloom and returned to dust…and nobody noticed.
More or less, this is how we remember ourselves.
Ever the landmarks of glory and triumph, grief and loss, the monuments of achievement and effigies of thwarted dreams and love not returned. Very little place, for everything in between.
I am looking through a set of pictures from an evening in 1992.
That year, a gas balloon slipped from my fingers and brought down a collection of glass bottles standing on a ledge. They came crashing down on my father’s head. This was my first memory of blood.
The human brain has about enough storage to hold a sitcom broadcast uninterrupted for 300 years. It isn’t that we forget. We categorize. In the liminal space between memory and non-memory exist the ephemera: the forgettable yet not forgotten, briefly appearing miniature blossoms in our inner landscapes. The faces passing you by on the sidewalk at rush hour. The nameless, dime-a-dozen stormtroopers appearing in the Star Wars trilogy named after us.