Green for the Gray

Green for the Gray

Being a big believer in listening to those quiet whispers in your soul that serve so well as guides, I found myself driving yesterday to Frederick Meijer Gardens for a bit of Gray Tunnel Relief (GTR). The Gray Tunnel was named by the man formerly known as my husband, who loathed the day-after-day grayness of this lake-effect affected patch of terrain known as western Michigan.

 
 

The Gardens from outdoors on a grey day

 
 

It seems worst at this time of year, even though the optimist in me knows that the days are, in fact, getting longer. Although it’s my own personal policy not to complain about the weather, it can be challenging to maintain a chin-up attitude when confronted by the monocolor of late January, especially when a warm front adds fog to everything in sight, from the dirty old snow to the unyielding gray-scale of the sky.

The billboards proclaiming relief at the end of a flight to the warm, sandy beaches south of here are not helpful when that’s just not in the cards for whatever reason, so, my soul whispers, why not go to the Gardens?

 
 
 
 

When I get there, I always feel a surge of happiness just to be there. On my way through the main building, I always divert to the cactus pathway instead of instantly indulging in the best part. This gives me time to slow down, catch a whiff of beauty in its own, arid way. That path wanders after the desert display into the mirror room (I call it), where there’s always a burst of color from blossoms such as early daffodils, geraniums, and more. Then through the Victorian room, where I wish they’d put back the wrought iron table I used to sit at under the winding overhead vines on the arbor, listening to the fountain. Since it’s gone, I carry on, exiting the Victorian Room and turning left into the Best Part.

 
 
 
 

The automatic doors slide open—shoosh!—and you step through to be enveloped like a hug by the humid wafting of earth and plant smells. It’s the finest kind of GTR. I always smile like a dazzled teenager in love at that moment. Mmmmm.....the sound of the waterfall, the birds, the overarching greenness, the bursts of color, the variegated leaves, the orchid wall. Mesmerizing. Truly lovely. Best at a quiet time of day, but always, always worth the trip. It never fails to slow me down, soothe my cold bones, elevate my mood. Green for the gray: yes!

 
 

A more colorful spring day, outside!

 
 

Fun story: once I was sitting on a bench there in the Meijer Gardens rainforest, working on an essay, using just a finger on the down button to scroll as I re-read it. A baseball cap shielded my face, but I became aware of someone standing beside me for a long time, so I looked up. He jumped back, astonished, saying, “I was trying to decide if you were one of the sculptures!”

It’s a world-class place, Frederick Meijer Gardens & Sculpture Park, in my adopted hometown of Grand Rapids, Michigan. I heartily recommend it for GTR. (See more at meijergardens.org/)

 
The Day After

The Day After

Why Our Times Are Not Simple

Why Our Times Are Not Simple