Saturday, October 20, 2018

Some Plants (and People) Do Quite Well When Left Alone


Leave It Alone!
Keikis are clones of orchid plants.
Put that person, place, or thing aside, leave it alone, and it might turn into something of beauty all on its own.

A mini-me growing from your arm or leg is not possible in the human world (yet), but mini-me growth often happens in the orchid world. Orchid growers know about the keiki (kee-kee), which is a clone—an additional plant that grows on a Dendrobium orchid cane or a flowering stem of a Phalaenopsis and some other orchids. I’m not an orchid expert, so I don’t know exactly why this happens. In my limited experience, it’s often another chance at life for a neglected, soon-to-die mother plant.
I overheard an accomplished grower say he places keikis in a basket until they mature enough to pot or mount. Because he’s a pro, he probably has separate baskets and his keikis have name tags, so he knows what they are. My method involves tossing random Dendrobium keikis into a plastic basket and abandoning them for a year—or longer.
Leaving things alone to thrive (or not) in their own way is not my MO. I named myself Interfering Mom years ago because I pick, I advise, I threaten, I beg. I offer the most helpful suggestions, but most of the people I am certain would benefit most from my advice ignore me. I know about being ignored, but not so much about ignoring.
However, I ignored a lot the last several months. I stayed inside because of the brutal heat and my flower and herb gardens are an overgrown, weedy mass of plants. I also wrestled with some physical limitations since late May, which presented even more opportunities to ignore growing as well as non-growing things. During that time, I focused only on what was important—working, eating, sleeping, meditating. I left most other things alone.
Now that the daily heat blasts of the Florida summer and my physical limitations have started to diminish, I find myself outside again, poking through the overgrown weeds and dehydrated potted plants, looking for what living things, like me, made it through another summer. I neglected (ignored) so much over the previous six months that I had to reorder my patio and its nearly ninety potted plants. I moved some plants, and behind a shelf I spied my hanging basket of abandoned keikis. I was stunned to see that many no longer were keikis—some were plants and one had a bloom spike. I stopped ignoring the basket and a few days later, the plant had bright, beautiful blooms.
Surprise gift of Dendrobium blossoms
I don’t recommend neglect, even though I know some plants (and people) do better when they are left alone to grow on their own. More than a few plants didn’t make it during those neglectful months (but all the people who rejected my interfering have done just fine). I have fewer plants than I did at the beginning of spring. But much of what I have has thrived in spite of me. It’s a good lesson when I see these blooms to remind myself that I don’t always have to preen, pull, pamper, and push—in the human world as well as the plant world. Sometimes, when I leave things alone, they grow and blossom and turn into something of beauty all on their own.
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Leave it alone does not work with many things in our lives, of course. It is not a great idea to leave our electric bill or mortgage payment alone, for example. Choose wisely when deciding when to “interfere” and when to “leave it alone.”