Digging into the Substrate

It’s finally spring, and just days ago the apple tree in the backyard was a snow globe of petals, and the pear blossoms opened in delicate clusters in tiny bouquets. Then the petals started to drop like snowflakes, and the silent drift of pale petals against the deepening green landscape was heavenly. From my kitchen window I looked out on this, a miracle, an oxygen factory in this inner-city 32 by 42-foot oasis that once was a cracked, concrete slab to park cars on.

It takes a long time to make a garden, but I had only vague glimmerings of that when I set myself against the barren landscape our back yard used to be, trying to make something beautiful out of it. I’d grown up in a house with a large yard and perennials that made gardening look easy. I played in that yard as a very young child, following our cat under arching leaves of daylilies, popping the fat, green pods of the false blue indigo, negotiating the thorns of the fragrant shrub roses, and shaking loose the snowflake petals of the bridalwreath spirea that brooded outside the back door like a fat hen, wings at the ready.

My parents planted none of these; the perennials were the work of a former owner, and we let them grow and sprawl. The horseshoe garden developed an asymmetrical bulge on its right side due to daylily spread. Forget-me-knots and buttercups worked their way into the lawn.

Coming from a generation of victory gardeners, my parents planted vegetables, spindly rows of beets, tomatoes, green beans, and fern-like carrots that eked out their existence in the northern Minnesota clay soil. I used to dig the red clay out of a bank in the alley to make sculptures of dogs, cats, and (my favorite) horses. A callow youth, I was unappreciative of the food my parents grew, except perhaps for the small, juicy carrots and apples from an ancient tree that was easy to climb and rewarded us with small, zesty orbs that we stored for the winter under blankets in the attic.

I must have had that idea of a garden in mind when I first gazed out the kitchen window at a the expanse of cracked concrete that covered three-quarters of the space in back. I longed for the green scent of calm and shade.

It was the spring of 1987, about a year before the person I called my husband would tell me they were transgender, about a year before our long, 30-year transformative journey, with no clear map that led from he into she. Was any of the force I sledgehammered the concrete with, the way I threw my weight into the shovel and heavy pry-bar to heft the concrete chunks out of their alkaline substrate, was any of that fervor something I redirected from the problem of my marriage and my husband’s mysterious bitterness? His darkness would come on so suddenly, without warning, like a heavy cloud that blocked the sun.

We stayed married, and I discovered that with my spouse’s final transition, legally becoming a woman just a few years ago, some kind of transition in me has also happened. Not long ago I signed up for an online workshop and the screen prompted me to fill out a demographic questionnaire. Age, race, gender, ethnicity. . . fine. But then came the sexual orientation questions. Hetero—no, not anymore. Gay, lesbian, bi, pansexual, or queer? Maybe people consider me a lesbian now, but when I think about all my lesbian friends, it seems their experiences and outlooks are different from mine. I feel like an imposter if I calling myself a lesbian. Sometimes I think of the queer community as “my” community, the community I feel most comfortable in, but I'm not sure it's right. I'm not sure I've "earned" it. If I got into sexual relationship with another person, I imagine most likely it would be a man, maybe someone nominally a man with a lot of feminine qualities. Maybe someone gender-fluid.

On the questionnaire, my fingers raced to the “none of the above” option. I checked it, and a drop-down window asked me to fill in the blank with something. I stopped. I didn’t have a word for what I am. I still don’t have a name for who I’ve become.

Do any of us really know what or who we will become?

All those years ago in the back yard, I went at the problem with a small sledgehammer and only put on a pair of goggles when the grit from the concrete started ricocheting into my eyes. The goggles were hot, and I wiped the sweat from my face on my Talking Heads t-shirt. We’d decided to buy a big, cheap house because my spouse, toggling back and forth between music and art careers, needed a space to paint, and the warehouse spaces that were legal to live in were too expensive for us. We were also tired of the vagaries of renting, like being turned down on a rent application because my spouse had an earring or I had fuchsia extensions sewn into my blond hair. What we found was a house large enough for housemates whose rent helped us pay the mortgage, and a sagging, two-story carriage house on the other side of the parking area at the back that the seller offered to tear down for us. No, we said. It would be perfect for painting.

Back then, it seemed like the names for things were more dependable, but maybe that’s because I was young and didn’t know any better. Words were important to me: I was in graduate school studying English literature, and I wrote poetry. Words could create new realities. My spouse and I played a game where one of us would say something like “I like the way you tune your fork” and the other would reply, “There’s a song in that.” I was aware that when I learned a new term for something, say “commodification,” my view of the world clarified. It wasn’t that the idea had been invisible previously, more that it had been shrouded in fog. With each new word, the fog lifted a little more.

In my back yard, breaking and digging up the concrete created a new problem: where to put it all. Some of it I hauled to a narrow, unseen side of the carriage house in a red Radio Flyer wagon that had been abandoned by a previous tenant. Many of the larger pieces were piled into garden furniture, and one piece became a coffee table that I regularly scraped my shins on. I used a lot of the smaller clumps to edge two imagined gardens shaped like paisleys, or a single set of inverted quotation marks. Between the embracing elbows of the gardens would be a patch of lawn big enough to cradle a table and four chairs.

As I hammered and cleared away the alkaline chunks of concrete, I was disappointed to discover that the task would be even more difficult because there was a gravelly strata under the concrete. I shoveled, and it seemed to never end. A more studious gardener would have invested money into a better digging machine and then paid for topsoil by the cubic yard. I didn’t have the money for that. In desperation, I spread a few 40-pound bags around, and decided that part of the concrete could stay as patio and sidewalk space. Then I went to the garden center for 10 rolls of sod—about 130 square feet—and loaded it into the back of our aging Honda hatchback. I had to take surface roads home because the car sagged with the weight of the dirt.

When I got home, I rolled out the sod and lined it up with the curling outline of the twin gardens. I would have to go back for more sod, but from the very beginning I was struck by the change in sound. The traffic noise from the busy street in front no longer boomeranged around the hard surfaces at the back of the house. Instead, it sank into a velvety greenness, a cool, deliciously fragrant antidote to the machinery of the outside world. At the end of the day, I stood barefoot in the new grass between the graceful, delineating arms of the two gardens and stretched my toes to feel the blades of grass. I don’t remember if I was aware then that I had designed a garden that reached out to hug anyone who stood in the middle of it.

I know I needed a hug back then. As the process of my spouse’s transgender expression evolved, changed, and became public in a time of deep hostility towards the trans community, I would continue to need the loving embrace of natural world to hold me in its arms.

That first summer, everything I planted was cheap or free: irises, chives, mint, zinnias. The more invasive (like mint), the better. It should have never worked—there really wasn’t enough topsoil under the sod, but somehow green things grew. Now, nearly 35 years later, as I dig down every fall to plant bulbs, I still run into that archeological layer of gravel and turn the soil over to better mix it up. It’s strata from the past telling me I still need to work on this garden, that it still needs tending. I might dump a little bone meal in, arrange the bulbs, then close it all up. Somehow, the garden springs to life every year, despite nearly toxic alkaline conditions that lurk six to eight inches down. Even the apple trees grow, a miracle of persistence. Well, maybe that’s an exaggeration. One of the apple trees began to die back a few years ago, and now it’s gone. Maybe its roots were too close to the remaining concrete.

Last spring, as I planted pansies under the birdbath, my trowel hit concrete, and I remembered that the soil had drifted over some of the concrete, tugged along by creeping Charlie and who knows what else, and that there was still pavement under that section.

I don’t know what demographic label to give myself, and maybe I never will, but I do know that there’s something about watching things grow that helps me rebuild my soul. I needed to address that hard piece of inorganic pavement that lurked beneath the birdbath if I wanted the garden to flourish, to become what it wanted to be. Late last summer, Venus and I gently peeled back that layer of soil to expose the gray concrete, rented a jackhammer, and broke up the pavement. As I chiseled out the pieces, I dug out more of the gravelly substrate. It's still not perfect, but this time, I think it has a better foundation. I can't wait to see what starts growing there.

I Kind of Like You

Tuula chewing on the ferrule of my jacket.

There's something about Minnesota weather in late February/early March that can madden a person. The calendar suggests that spring is around the corner, but the weather remains firmly stuck below zero--or at least that's what it's been lately with the wind chill factored in--and this has been going on for weeks. I've tried to keep the bird feeders filled and the birdbath topped off. I've spent countless hours driving out to the barn, 45 minutes each way in good weather, to put my horse Tuula's blanket on, or take it off. If it looks like the weather will be below zero, the blanket goes on. If it looks like it will stay reliably above zero, including wind chill, the blanket is off.

 

I bought Tuula about six years ago from a place known as a kill pen. There are many these places where unwanted horses end up before being shipped to Mexico for slaughter. The horses might be injured, too old for regular work, have behavioral issues, or be too expensive to maintain. The kill pen where I found her advertised each week's horses online so people would have the opportunity to buy them for what they were worth as meat, a last chance before being loaded into a trailer and sent south. The last time I checked, this kill pen had nearly a 100% placement rate, so it's clear they were doing some measure of good in an industry that has a dark side.

 

I heard about this place when I was looking for a new horse. It brought me back to when I was a teenager and realized I had made a terrible, irreversible error. The horse I had through high school was boarded at a place that was sold. There didn't seem to be any other places in the Duluth area that had boarding that cheap, and many of the other kids were selling their ponies to a local dealer who promised to find them new homes. I was going away to college anyway, so I did what the other kids did. I sold my horse to the same outfit. When I returned home on winter break, I was curious about what had happened to my horse and called the dealer. At first he said something about an auction in Mora, then recognized my concern and said my horse had been bought by a little girl who would gentle him. It was a preposterous, romantic lie. I realized then that I had sent my beloved horse to a slaughterhouse.

 

Rescuing another horse from that fate wouldn't cancel what I had done, but perhaps it would be a form of reparation. When Tuula came up to me in the kill pen and put her nose in the halter I carried on my shoulder as if to say, "Please take me out of here," I knew I had to do what she asked. Eventually I would figure out that the reason she was there was that she was essentially untrained. She was smart enough to follow the horse in front of her but didn't know any human signals. This resulted in an utter fail on her second day at a children's summer camp, and she was sent to the kill pen.

 

The place where I board Tuula is not what most people envision when they think of horse boarding. Where we are, the horses live in a pasture year-round, not a barn. Retirees with horses are the ones responsible for the day-to-day basics: enough hay in the winter, enough water at all times, pasture rotation in the summer, and so on. It's not a glamorous place--for boarders, there's an old refrigerator in the unheated tack room for beer and carrots and an aqua blue port-a-john that gets "refreshed" once a week.

 

The horses have a sheet metal shed for shelter as well as a roof over the outside wall of a barn, but most of them decline those amenities. They prefer to stay at the top of the hill gathered around several hay racks, eating all day or gazing towards the horizon, perhaps wondering whether the snow really does go on forever. Sometimes they nest in spilled hay, curling up like large cats and lightly snoozing. Some of them flop down and lie completely flat in an unnerving imitation of a dead horse.

 

Horses generally don't die from Minnesota winters. They grow winter coats that insulate them from the cold--snow shouldn't melt off their backs. They generate heat by constantly eating, and the colder the weather, the faster the food supply diminishes. This pace of eating to stay warm is harder to do as a horse ages and has wear issues with teeth, but Tuula is comparatively young--in her prime, as Miss Jean Brodie would say--and probably could get by without a blanket. Yet her winter coat is fairly short, more posh thoroughbred than plushie Welsh pony. So lately I've been thinking that while a horse in her condition probably can survive the direst parts of winter without a blanket, that doesn't necessarily mean said horse is happy to do so.

 

Thus the seesawing February weather has meant that my own behavior must seesawed as well--driving out to put the blanket on one day, driving out to take it off the next. The calendar for February reads: 2/1 "Windy! Blanket on," 2/5 "Blanket off," 2/6 "Blanket on," 2/7 "Blanket off, did loop in the woods," 2/11 "Blanket on!" 2/14 "Blanket off," 2/15 "Windy! Blanket on," 2/19 "Cold, windy, blanket still on," 2/20 "Very warm! Blanket off," 2/21 "Blanket on..." you get the idea.  I don't like keeping the thing on her for long periods of time because it can cause wear marks and chafing, like what humans would experience if they had to wear the same items of clothing 24/7.

 

Tuula seems to enjoy her blanket. When I put it on, she stands regally, ears forward, posing like one of the model horses I used to play with as a child. Researchers wondering whether horses can learn to read symbols devised an experiment where horses indicated whether they wanted their blankets on or off by touching a pictures of horses with or without blankets. The horses learned quickly and made intentional decisions, asking for blankets in cold and inclement weather, then asking for them to be taken off when the weather was nice.

 

When I first read about this study, I daydreamed about teaching Tuula this trick, but then reality set in. I'm not at the barn often enough to act on her requests. I could imagine her pawing away at a picture of a horse, kicking at the paint in frustration. If I taught her this method of communication, I'd also have to teach her how to make a phone call and have some person stationed in the neighborhood willing to drive over at a moment's notice. "Yes, I know it's midnight, but Tuula just called, and she'd like her blanket now. There's a nasty front coming in from the northwest."

 

One thing she seems to have learned this year is that when the blanket goes on, it means that bad weather is coming. That, and the fact that I often can't stay long due to the cold or my schedule means our visits lately have been tinged with a bittersweet melancholy. I'll get there, ready her feed, then call to her. She usually sees me, whinnies, and ambles on in. Sometimes she's already near the gate, and she sees me before I see her. She looks at me, catches my eye, then gives a little whinny as if to say, "Here I am."

 

She doesn't get much feed, really just a symbolic gesture of being fed, and I brush her down, give her a few treats, and talk to her. She seems to enjoy my conversation and sometimes gives a little tug on the brass ferrule on my barn jacket. It's at nose level for her, at the end of the string that tightens my jacket's hood.

 

I wasn't completely surprised when she first started doing this. I had already noticed that Tuula likes to chew on metal. Perhaps it's a fidget or stress reliever, like when she was getting irritated with the farrier holding her hoof in the air but settled down when I gave her the snap end of a lead rope to play with. She loves having me put her bridle on, and when I take it off, I have to go slowly so she can chomp on the bit several times before letting it slide out of her mouth. She once picked up the metal twist-off cap from a wine bottle, and it took four of us trying to hold her mouth open, saying, "Drop it, drop it," before she did, leaving us with a bent mess of metal.

 

When she first started tugging on the ferrule a few years ago, I didn't know what she was saying. Was it her idea of a joke? Sometimes it seemed she was holding the string of it in her mouth like a pacifier.

 

In these cold February days where I have just enough time to get to the barn, feed her, brush her, then put the blanket on or take it off, it seems like we're both sad to part. We've developed a ritual where I dispense a certain number of crunchy treats and a certain number of molasses treats as I walk her back to the pasture and take off her halter. Then she waits by the fence at the corner closest to the tack room and watches me through the tack room windows as I walk back and forth, putting things away, before coming back outside to deliver the last two treats.

 

Lately, we've been standing at the fence together after those last two treats, and maybe I'm softly rubbing her ears or the whorl of her forehead. I sigh, apologizing that I have to leave so soon. I tell her to stay safe, to not get sick or injured. A lot can happen out there--a kick to the head, getting tangled in loose wire. Last summer, a new horse apparently tried to jump the electric wire fence, and a thin metal fencepost when straight through his neck. By some miracle, that horse is still alive, but he could easily have bled to death in the pasture without anyone noticing.

 

As we stand together on our respective sides of the fence, Tuula will pick up the ferrule on the end of the hood string, maybe giving it a slight tug, or sometimes not pulling at all. It's a gentle thing, almost a kiss. It feels as if she's saying, "I kind of like you. I wish you didn't have to go so soon."

 

But go I must. I give her a final farewell, maybe breathe a little air through my nose to her, something horses do in greeting. Then I walk back to my car. She usually stands at the corner a bit longer, because sometimes I've forgotten something and come back. But when she sees the car pull away, she knows it's time to leave and walk back up the hill to join her friends at the hayrack. Do they ask her about me? Has she been asking me to stay safe? I would love to know.

Breaking concrete

This morning I tried to smash up a large piece of concrete (maybe 1 by 2 feet, 5-6 inches thick in the center, thinner on the edges) with a small sledgehammer, then a pickaxe. Then I stopped. I was getting nowhere.

 

It isn’t the first time I’ve tried to demolish concrete with hand tools, and it probably won’t be the last. When we first moved into this house, most of the back yard was a cracked-concrete parking slab for maybe three cars. In some ways, breaking that up was easier because much of it was already in pieces—I could use a shovel to pry up the smaller chunks and leverage the bigger ones from there. Venus and I used a five-foot-long heavy metal pry bar to pull up some of the larger pieces, and we made garden furniture with some of the small slabs we didn’t have the energy to break up, lifting them with an assortment of car tire jacks left over from vehicles that had long since been towed to the junkyard. That was shortly before Venus came out to me as transgender.

 

I had forgotten all about this particular piece of concrete until I was sitting at my laptop in the shade of the grapevine-covered pergola that now serves as a sort of vestibule to the side yard. The concrete was the result of a failed and forgotten experiment that now makes me smile when I think of it. Left over from the back yard project, and too rough for furniture, it became an anchor. I’d rolled it like a terribly misshapen Fred Flintstone car wheel from the back yard to the side of the house hoping its weight would help me bend and anchor a couple of elm saplings that had “volunteered” to landscape the side of the house. I’d imagined some kind of magical arbor created by arching trees woven together at the top. The trees would not comply.

 

I discovered that trees, unless blocked by something much larger than them, want to grow up straight for the sun. Despite the ropes I wrapped around them, and despite holding a precarious ladder every few years for Venus to saw off the new growth that had escaped skyward from its training. My mind flashes back to each of those instances as I stood at the bottom of the ladder to steady it. At what point did the short-shorts appear? At what point did I realize that everyone except me and a few relatives called her a name other than Venus? Despite the concrete weight pulling the end of each tree down towards the ground, the mess at the side of the house looked nothing like an arch. It looked more like something had been tortured there.

 

So I gave up on the idea of the arch, and the concept of any kind of a bower dwindled—until one of the elm trees got so stout that it threatened the foundation of the house. Even worse, a grapevine had begun climbing the other elm a few years earlier. Due to what I had thought was benign neglect but perhaps more closely resembled criminal negligence, it had escaped maybe thirty feet into the air and was beginning to strangle a nearby spruce. So we cut down the elm trees, pulled the grapevine down, and stretched it up the side yard. The vision of a grapevine vine-covered pergola began to take shape.

 

When Venus and I do projects like this together, usually, I’m the one looking at pictures and measuring the space, trying to figure out the layout and what the final product might look like. Venus provides the engineering: she understands the finer points of how to put things together, and what tools to use for the job.

 

And that’s why I stopped hammering away at the lump of concrete this morning. I have a history of using the wrong tools for the job. My improvising brain kicks in—the tendency to want to use whatever is available. That’s fine for managing a classroom discussion and playing jazz, but not so good for heavy repairs.

 

My improvising brain has turned out to be both a curse and a blessing. People often want to know how Venus and I stayed together, when Venus was first beginning to come out, when no one, not us, not our friends, and not even the many therapists we saw over the course of decades, really understood how to approach the topic and still help us live our lives with something that resembled love and fulfillment of our dreams.

 

My improvising brain at that time turned to the tools at hand: I loved my spouse (most of the time), and we seemed more compatible than most other couples I knew. We enjoyed doing things together, exploring new places together. And we shared a lot of dreams for what our future lives could look like.

 

So I worked with the tools I had at the time. For the first few years, it seemed like Venus felt better if she just had the opportunity to dress in women’s clothes. Fine, it’s only clothes, I thought. I can handle that. Then she wanted people to accept her as her femme self—recognition and appreciation from other people, not just me. The outward focus was hard on me, but I was okay going to parties and gay bars where it felt safe for her to be dressed; in fact, I was surprised by the sense of freedom I felt in those places.

 

There were so many miniature steps along the way—something different with her appearance, and eventually the physical changes. By a certain point we’d been together so many years, it seemed normal to have to deal with some physical changes—it’s what bodies do. Venus’s physical changes were slow, brought on by hormones. Perhaps the slowness of time was another tool I had that I wasn’t completely conscious of.

 

Here’s the thing about improvising: even if you plan on what might come next, you will get surprised. It’s part of the genre. I was surprised when Venus came to me, maybe four years ago, and said she needed to have the surgery, and that she was going to legally change her name and gender. We’d fallen into a comfortable rhythm in our lives: I’d grown used to thinking that’s where we’d stay. The name change bothered me more than the surgery: Venus would lose the Grandell last name, the name I had hyphenated into my own over thirty years earlier. It felt as if she was dissolving an essential relationship with me.

 

We got through that, too, thanks to a therapist who had more experience with transgender people and couples than anyone we had ever talked to before. The community had not only caught up with us, it had surpassed us. I guess you could say that more tools were available in 2017 than earlier.

 

As I type this, I realize the reason I stopped pounding away at the chunk of concrete this morning wasn’t that I had decided to give up, it’s because I realized I would soon have a better tool available. We need to rent a jackhammer for a different project in a month or two and a tool like that can take care of something like this in less than five minutes. It’s not just about using the right tool for the job, it’s about having access to the right tool.

 

And here’s another disclosure: I kind of like jackhammers. In small doses.

Those weathered-looking pieces of wood? That’s what the trunk of the grapevine looks like now.

Those weathered-looking pieces of wood? That’s what the trunk of the grapevine looks like now.

With a little help from the jackhammer.