
My daughter’s friend gave her a baby redwood tree. It is about
two feet tall and sitting in a large pot out in the shade of our front porch.
Redwoods and Sequoia’s grow to be about 300 feet tall and the largest one is
about 100 feet in circumference.
Yikes... But today this little tree is content to live in a large
pot. He is just beginning his life. The largest Sequoia is said to weigh more
than a million tons and is 2100 years old. That dates back to the time of
Jesus. These plants are the oldest and biggest known living organisms on the
planet. A pretty impressive heritage for
our little treelet. He has a long way to go.
We all have to start somewhere. I started having back trouble a
couple of years ago and it makes it hard for me to walk any real distance. The
pain actually limits me in many ways. My mother who lived a long and healthy
life used to tell me to try water aerobics. I felt like that was an
exercise for old people. And then one day while looking in the mirror I had to
finally admit...oh, yeah... I am one of those “old” people. So I dragged
myself to the YMCA the other day for my first water class... a lovely group of
happy, healthy, and admittedly older people were there cheerfully enjoying the
water and the exercise. A beautiful white haired woman who looked to be 90 gave
me a dazzling smile and welcomed me. The class began... by 15 minutes in I was
afraid I wouldn’t make it. 90 year olds were going to out do me. I hung in and
I found myself enjoying the weightlessness of the water. I was walking again
with no pain. It was exhilarating.
I think we can learn that from a redwood tree and from
water aerobics. Our lives are so filled with instant gratification. From remote
controls for our TV’S, to cell phones that give us games, news, friends with
the touch of a button, we come to expect everything to happen immediately with
little effort. Redwoods probably chuckle (to themselves) about our frenetic
paced lives. They will be around long after we have burnt through our life
spans and they still will be watching the sun rise and set, and the seasons
change. They are not worried about elections, or violence or breaking news.
They just grow. They provide shade, shelter and food for other species.
And they keep on growing as the animals come and go, as the storms rage and
subside. They grow through snow, and heat. Their root system connects to their
fellow trees. Together they hold themselves up through wind and rain.
But they started small and kept at it. And they help each other
and all those that sit in their shade.
In Matthew 6:28 Jesus says: Consider the lilies of the
field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin; and yet I say to you
that even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
So today as I take another small
step toward a healthier life, I think I will consider the redwoods and
have faith that God will give me the strength to keep at it. To grow and keep
growing.
Haha. Yes a very impressive heritage for such a little tree.
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