The Daffodil Principle
Several times my daughter had telephoned to say, "Mother, you must come
and see the daffodils before they are over." I wanted to go, but it
was a two-hour drive from Laguna to Lake Arrowhead. Going and coming
took most of a day--and I honestly did not have a free day until the
following week.
"I will come next Tuesday, " I promised, a little reluctantly, on her third call.
Next Tuesday dawned cold and rainy. Still, I had promised, and so I
drove the length of Route 91, continued on I-215, and finally turned
onto Route 18 and began to drive up the mountain highway. The tops of
the mountains were sheathed in clouds, and I had gone only a few miles
when the road was completely covered with a wet, gray blanket of fog. I
slowed to a crawl, my heart pounding. The road becomes narrow and
winding toward the top of the mountain.
As I executed the
hazardous turns at a snail's pace, I was praying to reach the turnoff at
Blue Jay that would signify I had arrived. When I finally walked into
Carolyn's house and hugged and greeted my grandchildren I said, "Forget
the daffodils, Carolyn! The road is invisible in the clouds and fog, and
there is nothing in the world except you and these darling children
that I want to see bad enough to drive another inch!"
My daughter smiled calmly," We drive in this all the time, Mother."
"Well, you won't get me back on the road until it clears--and then I'm heading for home!" I assured her.
"I was hoping you'd take me over to the garage to pick up my car. The
mechanic just called, and they've finished repairing the engine," she
answered.
"How far will we have to drive?" I asked cautiously.
"Just a few blocks," Carolyn said cheerfully.
So we buckled up the children and went out to my car. "I'll drive,"
Carolyn offered. "I'm used to this." We got into the car, and she began
driving.
In a few minutes I was aware that we were back on the
Rim-of-the-World Road heading over the top of the mountain. "Where are
we going?" I exclaimed, distressed to be back on the mountain road in
the fog. "This isn't the way to the garage!"
"We're going to my garage the long way," Carolyn smiled, "by way of the daffodils."
"Carolyn," I said sternly, trying to sound as if I was still the mother
and in charge of the situation, "please turn around. There is nothing
in the world that I want to see enough to drive on this road in this
weather."
"It's all right, Mother," She replied with a knowing
grin. "I know what I'm doing. I promise, you will never forgive yourself
if you miss this experience."
And so my sweet, darling
daughter who had never given me a minute of difficulty in her whole life
was suddenly in charge -- and she was kidnapping me! I couldn't believe
it. Like it or not, I was on the way to see some ridiculous daffodils
-- driving through the thick, gray silence of the mist-wrapped
mountaintop at what I thought was risk to life and limb.
I
muttered all the way. After about twenty minutes we turned onto a small
gravel road that branched down into an oak-filled hollow on the side of
the mountain. The Fog had lifted a little, but the sky was lowering,
gray and heavy with clouds.
We parked in a small parking lot
adjoining a little stone church. From our vantage point at the top of
the mountain we could see beyond us, in the mist, the crests of the San
Bernardino range like the dark, humped backs of a herd of elephants. Far
below us the fog-shrouded valleys, hills, and flatlands stretched away
to the desert.
On the far side of the church I saw a
pine-needle-covered path, with towering evergreens and manzanita bushes
and an inconspicuous, lettered sign "Daffodil Garden."
We each
took a child's hand, and I followed Carolyn down the path as it wound
through the trees. The mountain sloped away from the side of the path in
irregular dips, folds, and valleys, like a deeply creased skirt.
Live oaks, mountain laurel, shrubs, and bushes clustered in the folds,
and in the gray, drizzling air, the green foliage looked dark and
monochromatic. I shivered. Then we turned a corner of the path, and I
looked up and gasped. Before me lay the most glorious sight,
unexpectedly and completely splendid. It looked as though someone had
taken a great vat of gold and poured it down over the mountain peak and
slopes where it had run into every crevice and over every rise. Even in
the mist-filled air, the mountainside was radiant, clothed in massive
drifts and waterfalls of daffodils. The flowers were planted in
majestic, swirling patterns, great ribbons and swaths of deep orange,
white, lemon yellow, salmon pink, saffron, and butter yellow.
Each different-colored variety (I learned later that there were more
than thirty-five varieties of daffodils in the vast display) was planted
as a group so that it swirled and flowed like its own river with its
own unique hue.
In the center of this incredible and dazzling
display of gold, a great cascade of purple grape hyacinth flowed down
like a waterfall of blossoms framed in its own rock-lined basin, weaving
through the brilliant daffodils. A charming path wound throughout the
garden. There were several resting stations, paved with stone and
furnished with Victorian wooden benches and great tubs of coral and
carmine tulips. As though this were not magnificence enough, Mother
Nature had to add her own grace note -- above the daffodils, a bevy of
western bluebirds flitted and darted, flashing their brilliance. These
charming little birds are the color of sapphires with breasts of magenta
red. As they dance in the air, their colors are truly like jewels above
the blowing, glowing daffodils. The effect was spectacular.
It
did not matter that the sun was not shining. The brilliance of the
daffodils was like the glow of the brightest sunlit day. Words,
wonderful as they are, simply cannot describe the incredible beauty of
that flower-bedecked mountain-top.
Five acres of flowers!
(This too I discovered later when some of my questions were answered.)
"But who has done this?" I asked Carolyn. I was overflowing with
gratitude that she brought me -- even against my will. This was a
once-in-a-lifetime experience.
"Who?" I asked again, almost speechless with wonder, "And how, and why, and when?"
"It's just one woman," Carolyn answered. "She lives on the property.
That's her home." Carolyn pointed to a well-kept A-frame house that
looked small and modest in the midst of all that glory.
We
walked up to the house, my mind buzzing with questions. On the patio we
saw a poster. " Answers to the Questions I Know You Are Asking" was the
headline. The first answer was a simple one. "50,000 bulbs," it read.
The second answer was, "One at a time, by one woman, two hands, two
feet, and very little brain." The third answer was, "Began in 1958."
There it was. The Daffodil Principle.
For me that moment was a life-changing experience. I thought of this
woman whom I had never met, who, more than thirty-five years before, had
begun -- one bulb at a time -- to bring her vision of beauty and joy to
an obscure mountain-top. One bulb at a time.
There was no
other way to do it. One bulb at a time. No shortcuts -- simply loving
the slow process of planting. Loving the work as it unfolded.
Loving an achievement that grew so slowly and that bloomed for only
three weeks of each year. Still, just planting one bulb at a time, year
after year, had changed the world.
This unknown woman had
forever changed the world in which she lived. She had created something
of ineffable magnificence, beauty, and inspiration.
The
principle her daffodil garden taught is one of the greatest principle of
celebration: learning to move toward our goals and desires one step at a
time -- often just one baby-step at a time -- learning to love the
doing, learning to use the accumulation of time.
When we
multiply tiny pieces of time with small increments of daily effort, we
too will find we can accomplish magnificent things. We can change the
world.
"Carolyn," I said that morning on the top of the
mountain as we left the haven of daffodils, our minds and hearts still
bathed and bemused by the splendors we had seen, "it's as though that
remarkable woman has needle-pointed the earth! Decorated it. Just think
of it, she planted every single bulb for more than thirty years. One
bulb at a time! And that's the only way this garden could be created.
Every individual bulb had to be planted. There was no way of
short-circuiting that process. Five acres of blooms. That magnificent
cascade of hyacinth!
All, all, just one bulb at a time."
The thought of it filled my mind. I was suddenly overwhelmed with the
implications of what I had seen. "It makes me sad in a way," I admitted
to Carolyn. "What might I have accomplished if I had thought of a
wonderful goal thirty-five years ago and had worked away at it 'one bulb
at a time' through all those years.
Just think what I might have been able to achieve!"
My wise daughter put the car into gear and summed up the message of the
day in her direct way. "Start tomorrow," she said with the same knowing
smile she had worn for most of the morning. Oh, profound wisdom!
It is pointless to think of the lost hours of yesterdays. The way to
make learning a lesson a celebration instead of a cause for regret is to
only ask, "How can I put this to use tomorrow?"
Jaroldeen Asplund Edwards
Author
Shared by Michael Jackson Smith — reading This wonderfully inspiring story!
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