Ah well. At least they are all older now and can (mostly) occupy themselves until I have my precious few break times.
For today's Writing Sample, I thought I'd share a wonderful snippet I wrote for an environmental magazine a few years back.
As many of you know, I am very big on all things spiritual that connect one with the environment and to nature. In this article, I shared my experience and connection with Lucky Bamboo. I was introduced to it through a dear friend (thank you, Colleen) who gave me a bouquet of them to help me and my youngest through an emotional and scary time.
Enjoy!
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The Mysterious Lucky Bamboo
by Chynna Laird
Earlier
last year my best girl friend, Colleen, got me a fantastic gift for my
birthday: a small bunch of five lucky bamboo sticks. The little bundle was
wrapped with a red silk ribbon and presented in a gorgeous glass pot, filled
with smooth pebbles.
I didn’t want to seem
ungrateful, but it really wasn’t the most eye-catching bouquet I’d ever been
given. As I tried repressing a confused frown, Colleen laughed and said, “It’s
Lucky Bamboo, Chynna. Surely someone as in tuned with the more spiritual side
of life knows about Lucky Bamboo! It’s to bring peace to you and the baby.”
Now, although I’ve never been
a person who believes in lucky charms, Colleen was right in that I am a very spiritual person, drawn to the
Chinese and Aboriginal traditions. Those cultures just seem to be so connected
to the environment. And I love how they use things from nature to bring peace
and meaning into their lives.
I knew she was ultimately thinking of the baby but, secretly, I also
think she got the bamboo because I have a horribly incurable brown thumb. I
mean, I’ve managed to kill a cactus. But bamboo is very easy to care for as
long as you remember to give it fresh water, lots of indirect sunlight and, as
I liked to do, talk to it and tell it how beautiful it is (Hey! Whatever I can
do to help keep plants alive, I try!).
In celebration of this wonderful and spiritual plant, I’ve gathered
a few layman facts in case you want to purchase one for your own home.
What is “lucky bamboo? In Chinese, the bamboo is called, "Fu
Gwey Zhu." Fu means Wealth, Rich; Gwey means Power,
honor; and Zhu is bamboo. It isn’t the same sort of bamboo found at
back yard barbeque parties. They almost look like tiny palm trees with
their thick, fibrous stalks and sparse foliage. Ironically, even though they
are thought of in Chinese culture, they are actually species of Dracaena,
native to Cameroon
in tropical West Africa.
Why is it lucky? Lucky bamboo is the most popular feng shui
cure. The most amazing definition I’ve
seen states that the bamboo, “teaches
the ultimate wisdom: how to be flexible and hollow (open) on the inside, so
that the spirit can freely flow and heal your Being.” (About.com)
The
lucky bamboo is thought to emit a very peaceful and wise energy and considered
the most lucky when it combines all five of the elements of true Feng Shui:
WOOD
- the Bamboo itself
EARTH
- the Rocks the plant grows in
WATER
- the Water the plant grows with
METAL
- the glass pots belong to the metal element. If Bamboo is planted
in a pot other than glass (i.e. clay or ceramics), it will usually have either
a metal coin, or a metal figurine with it.
Why
are they bunched in specific numbers? I’ve seen these
little plants in stores and, although you can get one on its own, it seems to
be more common to buy them in little bunches. And specific groups of numbers
have specific meaning.
The
most popular combinations are three for Happiness and five for
Health. Other popular combinations include two for Love and Marriage and
nine is considered a lucky number overall representing Good Fortune. Of
course, there are other traditions for the bunching aspect, but those are the
most common.
It
wasn’t until I read up on Lucky Bamboo that I understood the significance of
the five bunching Colleen gave to me. The most miraculous part was that from
when I got the bamboo, and throughout the rest of my pregnancy, those little
sticks burst with life.
It seemed like every day a new stem bud appeared. And you know what?
It actually did made me feel calmer, despite not knowing the fate of my unborn
baby. It was as if the little plant was saying, “Don’t worry, Chynna. You’re
bursting with life too, and baby is fine. Take what energy you need from us to
give you strength.”
Weird, I know. But when I finally got to bring Sophie home from the
NICU, wouldn’t you know that little plant was big, leafy and beautiful. In
fact, I moved it into Sophie’s room the day after I brought her home. And as
she’s grown, gorgeous and healthy, the plant has too. I guess, in this case, my
brown thumb was overpowered by the strength of the Lucky Bamboo. And Sophie’s
Auntie Colleen who cared enough to share its calming powers with our family.
Why not balance the energies in your home with one of these
mysterious miracle sticks? I’m still not sure I believe in lucky charms but I
do believe in the powers of the Lucky Bamboo!
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