Trees, Steve Loved

Steve's Words:

The driver, the
trees, the sun and the seasons.

Yesterday I named three favorite winter trees at 86th and 5th Ave -
"reaching, curling and spreading".

I've gotten so I love trees. When I first got my glasses in about the fifth grade, I came out of the
optometrist's to realize that I could actually see the individual leaves. I had come to see trees as little kids draw
them - circles of green on trunks of brown.

It was before disease stripped the Midwest of its American elms, which really did make cool arched boulevards of our
modest main streets. Old towns now look like denuded suburbs.

Before that only many decades or the big winds near tornados
could kill off a few of them.

In my backyard there was a huge one which took several kids
to touch hands around.

When we learned to get to its lower limbs with a rope, we
began to build a tree house in a very high crotch. My dad took over and built a
big, solid one, much lower down. For beams he used the varnished hardwood
pieces of a big old pipe organ, which had just been replaced in the next door
church where he was pastor. He did not view little kid helpers as actually
helpful or safe, which I understand, but also regret.

Today, in New York City, I often reverse "you can’t see the forest
for the trees". Here they stand
more isolated, individual.

In winter we can see the fabulous differences of their limb
structure. Since they've been cared for and pruned over their decades of life,
I sometimes wonder if an old arborist could say, "Now that's pruned in the
Mendelssohn manner. And you can see O'Neal's work in that one."

The isolation and care of our trees in Central and Riverside Park and around the Natural History museum may
explain why we enjoy some of the few stands of these magnificent trees which
remain in North America.

We all enjoy the first leaves in the spring. The green that
will later seem uniform at first has great various beauty, just as the fall
dying leaves draw bus tours to Vermont,
but may be less noticed in the midst of our city.

Then of course there are the many stages of a tree's cycle
of renewal that each species present to us as the days grow longer, and then
shorter.

If we look up close, we can see the wonderful little
structures that nature has constructed over ages to give each tree the best
chance to live on.

Horse Chestnuts are my favorites. Lindens are good too.

As well as the changes over the warmer months, each day
trees present many different views to us. At high noon, the shade of their
leaves cools us, but obscures the tree's details.

But as the sun lowers, its light cuts between the leaves and
lets us glimpse the structure that we love so much in winter.

These are things I've learned to see over time as I grew
older. Who says there’s nothing to look
forward to. Just like the little piece
of white paint that looks like a gold ring on the finger of a Rembrandt
portrait.
---------------------------

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Civics Class, by Steve Kindred


Note: This is a nearly finished, but unsent, letter to my childhood home town paper in Indianola. September, 2007

After returning from a class reunion in Iowa, I cried on a bench in Central Park in New York, my home for the last twenty years.  I was taken back to my eighth grade civics class in Indianola, Iowa.
       I was reading a column in Sunday's NY Times about an interview the famous trumpet player Louis Armstrong had given to a part-time cub reporter in Grand Forks, North Dakota.  
      The Little Rock school integration crisis of fifty years ago was in its early days.  The Arkansas governor had deployed the state National Guard to block nine Black children from Central High.  President Eisenhower had been indecisive so far.  Who would prevail?  An order from a Federal Court or a governor pandering to a mob of adults, apparently driven berserk by hatred and fear.
        In the interview Armstrong responded with a sometimes obscene fury.  Previously he had declared himself “not involved in politics”. Ebony magazine had suggested he was an “uncle Tom”.  He was one of the State Department’s most effective goodwill ambassadors.  [retaliation, solidarity, tears]
        The Des Moines Register and Tribune, for whom I was a delivery boy, had very good coverage.                         
         Perhaps the events themselves would have imprinted on my thirteen year old brain.  But what I remember most clearly is my silver haired civics teacher in a second floor classroom on our Junior High's east side.  Every day of that crisis, he walked our class through its lessons.  He knew a real civics lesson when it happened.  As far as I knew. Indianola was all white.  The few Catholics had to go to nearby St. Marys for the sacraments.  I hope my civics teacher felt no fear.  If he did, it didn't slow him down.  I have forgotten his name[James Kennedy], but I will never forget him or those autumn days.  I had learned that from time to time common people, even children, can do things they never dreamed of. My life would never be the same.  
      I loved growing up in Indianola - riding our bikes out to the muddy pond on Mr. Buxton's farm, finding the fossil sea shell that said the earth beneath my feet had once been very different.  Delivering my papers to the stores and apartments around the square, sitting in a stairway baked by the afternoon sun, eagerly reading of Dr. Salk's discovering the Polio vaccine.  Stopping at Truman’s Drug Store to compare the labels on the then modest selection of pain relievers.  Since they then all had the same active ingredient (aspirin), I wondered what all those commercials with hammers in peoples’ heads were trying to tell me.  Going in the record store off the square's southeast corner to buy Elvis Presley’s Heartbreak Hotel with my buddy Bruce Wilson.  At Bruce's house he played the newest albums by strange Black men with slicked down hair.  Only later would I learn, through The Autobiography of Malcolm X, that many Blacks of that time put their hair under hot irons to hide the curly hair of their ancestors.  I also remember a “Minstrel Show” put on by my Cub Scout troop.  My den was assigned to sign a Negro spiritual.  Since we had no idea what that was, we sang the Battle Hymn of the Republic.  It’s an inspiring song and we sang it with fervor.  When an adult in the audience prompted us to “slap your knees like darkies” none of us did.
    Added to the revolt by the common people of distant Hungary against tyranny the year before, I learned good and evil were more complicated than on my favorite TV show, I Lead Three Lives, about Herbert Philbrik, an undercover FBI agent fighting the danger of the tiny and isolated American Communist Party.   It helped me see through the claims by southern sheriffs and FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover that Blacks would be happy but for outside agitators.

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Thanks for your input to the Steve Blog. Learning about him through one another's stories is something we can continue to enjoy, beyond his passing. May his vision, work and passions live on through our paths, and be invigorated by our stories, sharings, and dialogues.
Thanks, from niece Audrey Kindred