An excerpt from my empty nest essay, appearing in the latest issue of "Under the Sun" literary journal.
The note appears hooked to the knob of my front
door, a warning. The emerald ash borer disease has ravaged the hundred-year-old stately ash trees lining our road, and our city has
decided to take them all down. The forty trees that spread their canopies over
the length of six blocks like cupped protective hands will be removed as a
permanent solution to cure the infestation. The city offers a plan to replace
the trees in the spring with saplings, but how do you replace a tree that took
a hundred years or more to grow its roots down deep while sending branches
toward the heavens? And saplings come with no guarantee of surviving even
one brutal Chicago winter with its hostile winds and temperatures.
Gusty autumn winds have already stripped the trees
bare. I stare at the silhouetted branches most days as I come and go, as I
stand in the living room holding a warm cup of tea, watching neighbors walk
their dogs. The demise of the trees creates grief as I prepare to say goodbye
to their shade that protects me while I read in the yard, goodbye to the
whispers I hear through my open window on windy days, the haunting call of
leaves brushing together like two hands meeting in applause.
Then one day as I study the silhouette of the trees
against a gray November sky, I see something settled into the meeting place of
several branches, many dark and dense objects cupped in those tree limbs. Empty
nests—and lots of them. In the warmer weather, a city-sized community lives
just above our heads, hidden from sight. Maybe former birds' nests or squirrel's nests, but all that matters in my mind is the
picture of these shelters once formed by a mother to protect her young and
prepare them for life, built with twigs and leaves and probably even a few gum
wrappers – whatever it takes. CONTINUE READING HERE