2102: Journal of Thoughts

B&W image of man standing with shovel in his hand with holes dug all over the garden

Gardening Tips for Late Winter

The shovel was his wife’s. Silver-gilt handle, worn smooth by her grip. He’d kept it after she left, hung it on a hook in the shed where the light never reached.

He started small. Digging in the garden’s far corner, where the roses failed and the soil gave easily. He found a box of letters there, damp at the edges. Then the crawlspace under the shed. Her old jewellery box. The hollow beneath the porch where the floorboards groaned under his weight.

Each hole revealed another piece of the puzzle — why she left. A photograph with its corner burned. A key wrapped in ribbon. An address book with a name crossed out so violently the paper split.

He dug because digging felt like pursuit. Because the rhythm of steel into earth was steadier than memory. Because if he stopped, he would have to stand still inside her absence.

By February, he stood at the edge of a pit so deep the sun couldn’t find the bottom. The earth smelled metallic. Ancient. The walls pressed inward, damp and silent.

His wife’s shovel still in his hands.

He had once heard that when a man fell into a deep hole, it was usually a good idea to stop digging.

He jumped.

Jóhann Jóhannsson – A Model of the Universe 

Written for Violet’s prompt, including the phrase “…when a man fell into a deep hole, it was usually a good idea to stop digging.” by Sharon Kay Penman, A King’s Ransom. Some artwork is created using Midjourney AI. Poems/prose ©Misky 2006-2026.

3 responses to “2102: Journal of Thoughts”

  1. And here I was thinking to do some garden work this morning 😄… No, thank you!

    An excellent black ink, Marilyn.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. 😂 Save your garden clean up for Monday. Weekends are for fun.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. As I was reading your original comment to me came to mind- “even if he was digging his way out” and thus that last line really grabbed me! I love where this quote took you. Thank you so much for sharing your inspiration with me.

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