Allison B Young Allison B Young

September Journal: 'Waste Prose' & Late Summer Reflections

Hi friends!

I hope this finds you well, simmering in the final stretch of these dog days and finding as much shade as possible. I’ve been absent recently, and so, thought I’d begin with a little catch up.

My hopes for August had been to simmer quietly with the season: reflect on the year so far and write episodes for the fall. It proved to be a much busier month and I didn’t get to my writing as much as I would have liked, but I still plan to release monthly episodes, starting in September.

Instead, a chunk of the month was spent navigating some health issues, something that feels like its own full-time job, and punctuated by the happy visit with a dear friend I hadn’t seen in a while. I also found myself out in the garden losing track of time. This year has been the first that I’ve tried gardening beyond a few potted plants around the house and I had some incredible beginner’s luck!

From establishing a compost pile (then a second), to starting seeds, and playing the mother-hen over her seedlings, this year has been marked by seemingly infinite lessons the garden has to offer.

 
 
 

Newly planted seedlings became…

 

(Starting at top left): Violas; ‘White Finch’ Orlaya (or Lace Flower); ‘Limon’ Talinum
(Bottom left): Giant Swan Milkweed; Nasturtiums, Snapdragons, & Larkspur; ‘Dark Mystery’ Hibiscus with an early Aster bloom leaning into the shot


My experience as a florist has primarily been removed from a flower’s true origin. My understanding of the flowers I’ve worked with began when I opened a shipment of packed flowers already cut and needing to be hydrated. I didn’t know what many of them looked like growing. Were they cut from a shrub or a tree? Do they grow in the straight rows in a greenhouse? Imagining the far-off places that these flowers traveled to reach my hands was always something that dazzled me, but I also recognized the toll those travels have on the environment.

Working at Nature Composed has been the first flower job I’ve had where we’ve relied more on local flowers than those sent from a wholesaler. Getting to know the people who grow the blooms and seeing the incredible beauty that they can create from working the land has added a whole new sense of wonder to my job. Thanks to working at Nature Composed and learning from my boss, Jenn Pineau, I feel very lucky to see this new depth to the world of flowers and the possibilities of what can be achieved in our own backyards. I think it’s been an added boost of inspiration to get me out in the dirt, too. Never did I think I’d reach a point where I could put together arrangements purely from flowers I grew from seeds!

 

Another insight that’s become a bit of a refrain in my head is something many of us probably learned in a middle school science class. It’s the idea that energy is neither created nor destroyed but able to shift and alter its state. The garden illuminates this idea with its own efficiency; it does not produce waste. Leaves that wither and turn brown are fed to the compost heap, which breaks down into a layer of organic matter that can spread around the plants and feed extra nutrients back to their roots, the soil, and all the other organisms that can work for our plants. This cyclical nature isn’t so different from my writing.

So often, it takes a solid three pages of writing for me to find a couple sentences that feel worthwhile or useable in a longer piece. It takes writing into the heart of a story or idea, a kind of digging, before reaching something fertile, something that wants to take root. But over the years, I have also found that the extra, “waste prose” I needed to go through will reveal itself to be useful down the road. Simply by virtue of writing it is useful, but with a few edits I can also repurpose a stream-of-consciousness rambling to be the apt description for a character, a scene, or piece of dialogue.

Ideas continue to crop up, and it becomes an exercise of curiosity and imagination to find its use.


And speaking of ideas, this fall season I hope to carve out time to explore some current ones and include them here, on the podcast, at my job at Nature Composed, and a new shop I’ve opened on Etsy. If you’re interested, please sign up for the newsletter where I’ll keep you up to date and if you’d like more flowers in your life.

Thank you for reading and until next time!

 
 

 
 

 
Read More