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Plant Killer I spend a lot of time apologizing to the plants. It's not that I'm negligent; it's just that there is so much on TV. Sometimes I forget to water a plant for, say, April, and then, to make amends, spray the others with a fire hose.And the victims add up: creepers, climbers, berries, shrubs. I even killed a perennial (talk about false advertising). I'm not proud of this, Sierra Club. I suffer every time it happens. I even perform a service where I bury the plants in Glad trash bags, hoping the angels will take care of them ... with their tears. It's a good thing we can't be tried for plant murder. I could just see the detective poking around in my garden: "Broken stems, dehydration, cigar butts in the soil ... Yeah, this is our guy." When I was a child, my mom said that I had a green thumb. Unfortunately, she was talking about how I picked my nose. My actual relationship with plants was a little more clumsy. In first grade I did show-and-tell on my uncle's "orgasmic garden." Mr. Pringer would have stopped me but for the resale value of the video. Later, in my teens, a supervisor grabbed my watering can and said, "Uh, Jason -- those plants aren't getting any faker." Today my home is a Glad-Bag nightmare to plants from all stalks of life. Some have already passed on; others are counting the days. They sag when I enter the room, trying to catch my attention before "Family Guy." You can almost hear the violets gossip at night: "Can you believe he left Sylvia for dead in the planter? Talk about bad feng shui. Hey, did you fart? It smells beautiful." ![]() It is only for love of nature that I keep trying. I admire how plants grow through cracks in the sidewalk and how, like the common nose hair, they always stretch toward the light. It's almost like ... they're alive. When I shop the K-Mart garden section, it is with a sense of possibility, as if I had never killed at all. I study the containers carefully and weigh all of my options before making a bad decision. Two months later, you can't tell the flowers from the weeds but for Gallagher's Theorem: "If you water it and it dies, it's a plant; if you don't water it and it grows, it's a weed." For the record, Sierra Club, I've tried everything. I watered the plants with Dasani instead of tap. Dead. I sprinkled the soil with coffee grounds. Jittery, then dead. I even sang to the poor things. I think they died to shut me up. So it goes. Maybe it's time to introduce plastic plants, which don't pester you with things like photosynthesis. I would, of course, need to find diseased plastic plants to mesh with the others. While we're at it, I may as well get stuffed animals to replace those needy living ones. Or maybe, at the risk of serial murder, I will carry on. In fact, I promise to turn over a new leaf, buh dump bump. I will redouble my efforts to save this secret garden. Excuse me while I step out to K-Mart for some fresh seeds, a little pesticide, and just in case, a giant box of Glad Bags. |






I spend a lot of time apologizing to the plants. It's not that I'm negligent; it's just that there is so much on TV. Sometimes I forget to water a plant for, say, April, and then, to make amends, spray the others with a fire hose.

