Hurt

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

About a year after we moved here my oldest son and I built a tree house in one of the big maples in the front yard. It was a giant, healthy tree that has stood in that spot for a good 200 years or more and it was shaped almost perfectly for the platform; four massive leaders spreading out like a human hand held palm up, fingers bent at ninety degree a angle. It was the first maple I’d ever tapped, On a warm, late Winter day in 2009 I’d drilled a single hole in the rough gray bark, tapped in one of the antique spiles that came with the farm, and I hung an old galvanized bucket from a hook and watched as the first drops of sap fell.

That night I boiled the very first few ounces of pure maple syrup on the kitchen stove and I can still remember the flavor when I tasted it, dulcet, incomparable. The kids used the tree house off and on for childish purposes, in a kind of developmental progression, from our eldest son, to our daughter, to our youngest son, and all of their friends that came along with them. It gave you a very nice view of the barnyard, the big paddock and the out buildings, the sugar house and the hog pens. When it was full Summer and the tree was loaded with green leaves in was like a breezy, living cave up in it, always cooler by ten degrees than it was anywhere else.

It wasn’t fancy but it was a nice spot in a lovely tree and it offered the kids a place to go and be alone if they wanted and whenever kids who visited the farm they were drawn to it like a magnet. Once I’d finished building it I never gave it much thought, but whenever I heard the sound of children’s laughter through the foliage I was reminded of what a great investment of time I’d made in building it.

When the barn burned down in seven years ago the heat produced by the fire killed every tree that stood within fifty feet of the conflagration. Most of them we cut down and split for firewood and a couple of the much bigger ones we gave a chance to recover. The tree house maple took a hit, at least a third of it dying out the first year. I trimmed it severely, removing the dead wood so nothing would fall on its own, and for the first couple of years it seemed to make a comeback, fresh shoots emerging from where I’d cut it back.

It was terribly lopsided but other than that it appeared to regain some of it’s vitality. Three years ago the sap barley trickled out and what little we collected in the bucket was discolored and we’d throw it out on the snow. Last year the first mushrooms began to grow on the big leaders and only half the tree leafed out by the end of May, and most of what emerged green slowly turned over the warm months until it was completely bare by early fall.

So I decided that sometime after Thanksgiving when I had a nice, windless day I would take her down, block up the limbs for firewood and see if I couldn’t saw a few big planks of spalted maple for future use in something special, to keep some memories of that massive tree for a long time to come. On the Saturday before Christmas I filed the chains and topped off the saw with fuel and a neighbor stopped by to hang out while I took the tree down.

I took most of the smaller branches down with the pole saw and then dropped as many of the main limbs as I could from the ground. I had the four main leaders to drop and since I no longer work off of ladders I put a set of staging on the forks of the tractor and worked from that platform. My friend had only to lift the loader arms and keep an eye on me while I worked and in no time I had most of the big limbs on the ground and in order to finish the last big trunk I stepped onto the weathered boards of the old tree house and cut from there.

The deck of the tree house gave way instantly and tilted earthward so quickly and without resistance that I had almost no time to react, but something else kicked in and handled the important decisions without me. I threw the saw out and away from me and my arms raised up to protect my head and face, my body flexing itself into a modified PLF-a parachute landing fall, something I hadn’t practiced in thirty years, but it came back in an instant. I hit the ground with the full force of being dropped ten feet and it only took a few seconds to realize what I had done.

A couple of weeks back I wrote about the fact that we’d been at this for ten years. The amount we’ve learned, the things we’ve accomplished and the myriad benefits of that life changing decision has brought us so much satisfaction and happiness that it would be impossible to consider having done anything else. Along with those freedoms and experiences come the risks, we understand them. In many ways we have been very fortunate and most of our lessons have been painless, but the decision I made to stand out on the tree house platform on Saturday morning was the kind of mistake you hope you never make.

Tomorrow morning I go in for the first surgery on my badly broken body. I will spare you the sad story of having my son drive me to the ER with my foot twisted into a knot at the end of my leg. The entire drive passed by in a howling blur, the effects of shock keeping the pain off at the periphery, and during that entire time my mind tried to work out a solution to the obvious dilemma I now faced. That I would be unable to get back up on my own two feet for months was obvious.

That my contribution to our farm would be something close to zero in the coming months, or that my wife and children would now be saddled with not only their own responsibilities but have to split up mine weighed as heavily on my mind as my own injury. I looked down the line at the upcoming obligations and seasonal cycles and saw immediately that the most important aspect of our entire lifestyle as agrarians would not happen this year and so I come around to the point of this piece.

There will be no maple syrup this year. I don’t know if it’s ironic, poetic or some perverted form of natural law that the maple tree that gave me my first taste of sweetness was at the root of why I would lose the season. Stephen King could hardly have come up with a better tale, but there it is. It had given so much to us and now it took it’s payment in kind. And so the story began to take shape; these past ten years, the revolution of our life, the choices we make and the decisions that are made for us.

The beauty and the pain, the immeasurable gifts and blessings, the incalculable price we pay for the path we walk. Even before they got me into X-ray, before they shot me up with whatever it was they put in the IV that washed away the agony of the grinding of bone on bone, even before I’d listened to what the doctor had to say, I saw how this played out. Two weeks ago I was promising my children the book they have asked me for again and again and that I have put off doing again and again and now the only missing thing- free-time- suddenly became available, for the first time in recent memory.

So there’s the good news and there’s the bad news and averaged out, it’s perfect. Well, almost. I will probably walk with a limp but in the next 90-120 days, come hell or high water I will also complete my first book. I will also have a lot of time to come up with an innovative way to keep this farm afloat without my day to day input beyond the bed and I will gladly take any suggestions you might have for a guy who is an eye patch and a parrot away from being a certifiable pirate. I am very grateful to my family for jumping right in and handling everything without missing a stride and in good spirits and I know that I can never thank them enough for their grit and determination.

“There is no coming to consciousness without pain.” – Karl Jung

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125 Comments
ottomatik
ottomatik
December 28, 2018 2:53 pm

Damn it, stupid fucker.
What else could a roofer say?
“Get well soon”
“Make lemonade”
Thanks for sharing I will use it to (hopefully) tighten up routines, a tale of woe to add caution.
Best.

Crawfisher
Crawfisher
December 28, 2018 3:04 pm

HSF,
My heart goes out to you, reading your story, I got the chills. I had the same basic thing happen July 2017. Broke my heel bone (calcaneus) and wrist jumping off a ladder 8 ft up (long story). Each required a different surgery / surgeon – great guys and very nice staffs. The heel bone was a long recovery. I made up mind to do what the surgeon and especially the Physical Therapist, said to do (needed to walk again for work). I limited the Meds they gave me to get through the surgeries and NO more! (buddy of mine had the same injury only worse, almost got hooked)

I was back traveling by air in a little over three months, walked with a cane for another two. (Daughter got married, walked her down the aisle w/o a cane).

I got to know the PT guy, he told me many people up in middle age don’t want to do the work to get well. That motivated me even more to own my recovery. Today walk no problem with occasional soreness.

Recovery will be a good time to write your book, please keep us all up to date on your progress. I know you will get better.

starfcker
starfcker
December 28, 2018 6:52 pm

Really a downer to read something like this. Being the same age as you, I feel it even more. I’ve been through a few rounds of things like this, not only with myself, but with key people. Me and the main guy who works for me got bored 20 years ago and decided to do some fun stuff, and work concerts. We had a lot of connections in the business, one phone call and we were hired, but were told we would have to do grunt work until something else opened up. So the first show we worked (oddly enough, a NIN show, Trent is everywhere) we were assigned the job standing in front of the stage and pulling people who are getting crushed over the barrier. Another one of the guys pulled someone over and they kicked my buddy in the hand, breaking his hand. That was a disaster for us. Because it was so disruptive, I learned the folly of staying small. One bullet can kill you. You don’t have any capacity to absorb the occasional hits that life throws at you. I hopped out of my pickup bed one day like I had a million times, and twisted my ankle so badly I had to crawl over to get in my truck. I learned another lesson there. We ain’t getting any younger. I’ve never hopped out of my truck bed again, I climb. It seems your thinking is headed that way, I’ve had a no ladder rule now for at least 10 years. After the hurricane last year, I was working out at the farm about 12 hours a day, salvaging what I could, wading around in two feet of water. I started getting a little heat strokish, and realized, that if I passed out, I could drown in knee deep water. So I worked at night some when it was cooler, thinking that might be a good idea. And it was so fucking creepy wading around in that water and realizing that if the hurricane had moved any big crocodiles around, things could get real ugly for me. I feel your pain, my friend. Use the time you have to do some good thinking. Try to build some resilience into your system. The older we get, the more critical that becomes.

MightyMike
MightyMike
December 28, 2018 7:05 pm

I did both feet in my fall. Bilateral calcaneus fractures.
33 days on my back in a hospital bed with feet elevated.
3 months in a reclining wheel chair with feet elevated.
A metal plate with 11 screws in the left and two screws in the right.

Ten years later, i still have difficulty with foot controls in the Bobcat skid steer.
I’m 65, and just happy I can still walk.

Wish the best for you, HSF.

Mike

no one
no one
  MightyMike
December 29, 2018 8:12 am

Congratulations on your recovery… that takes some real fortitude.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  MightyMike
December 29, 2018 10:28 am

That was the injury- bilateral calcaneus fracture- plus a few others. The surgeon did tell me that even if it recovers exactly the way they want my foot is never going to be the same, but like you said, I’m just happy I’ll be able to walk. Glad you got back up on your own two feet.

Old Toad of Green Acres
Old Toad of Green Acres
December 28, 2018 7:34 pm

Condolences.
No fool like an old fool.
Been there, done that, don’t get hooked on the pain med’s and may God bless you.

StackingStock
StackingStock
December 28, 2018 8:39 pm

HardScrabble, I’ve always enjoy your writing, the way you tell the tales, tells the story, not many can do that. One of my favorites is the one about the deck of cards for your son. I read that one at least a couple times a year, incredibly written . Anyways I wish you a speedy recovery and I will definitely buy your book.

motley
motley
December 28, 2018 10:28 pm

HSF – Amazing the amount of love and concern the readers of TBP are showing you. You truly are a wealthy man. I know I will pray that God helps and is with you in your time of need as will many others on this website.

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 1:34 am

Hardscrabble, I hope your surgeries go well and your recovery is quick. I’m really looking forward to buying your book when it’s finished.

james the deplorable wanderer
james the deplorable wanderer
December 29, 2018 2:17 am

Damn, no syrup this year? Oh well – let’s talk about the cured meats ….
No, let’s not. Please heal up and get well. My carpentry skills are about on par with my needlework skills – you DON’T want me to come up to your place and “improve” much of anything!
But – I’ll throw my hat in for proofreader / draft editor / picky ninny if you need one. For example – “the sap barley” you meant “barely trickled out”, right?
How did that get past both you and Jim?
Anyway, if you can look past my lack of tact and beauty, I might be able to help in that department.
But I do hope you recover quickly, with a minimum of fuss and complications. And as to directing farm activities from your bed – you do have a cell phone of some kind, right? Last night my wife and I worked through a plumbing problem with two of them – her describing symptoms upstairs as I made alterations downstairs, until the clog was located and dispatched. Perhaps something like that might make traffic flow smoother?
Anyway, best of luck to you in your current situation, and if anyone can turn lemons to lemonade it should be you. Isn’t lemonade a LOT simpler than maple syrup, and you can do that already!
Blessings and wishes for complete recovery,
JtDW

Vixen Vic
Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 2:20 am

Hey, Hardscrabble, now that you have some time on your hands, if you haven’t already, you can watch the entire Osmond Brothers Ohio State Fair concert. It’s highly entertaining and only about an hour. Start at the 4:00 mark.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9xPYHCmYbcw

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Vixen Vic
December 29, 2018 5:42 am

It’s 5 am everyone is still asleep and I’m laying here in bed, with my leg up above my head and a foot full of titanium parts reading through this thread with the biggest smile on my face. I remember you posting a segment of that concert before and I watched it with real amusement. It was genuinely entertaining and fun to reminisce on a time that is irrevocably past. Thank you for that and I will watch the entire thing probably more than once.

This, this is what I have been trying to convey; our situation is just as much what we make it as what it really is. If humans can create artificial realities that have a negative impact, then we can do the same thing with a positive cant. The people who’ve responded, the things they’ve said, and the genuine nature of the sentiments have completely altered my reality. Instead of feeling defeated or broken and descending into self-pity, I’m encouraged, commiserated with, held-up as if we were all part of an authentic community, an extended family of like-minded, respectful and engaging friends in the truest sense of the word. I can’t begin to express how truly grateful I am for allowing me to be a part of it.

I especially appreciate the random shares of similar calamity- it comes to us all- and how we decide to react to it is every bit a part of our character as the damage itself.

My wife read this piece, something she almost never does, and she was deeply moved by all the comments and honors you have bestowed and she is as excited about this next adventure as she has been about everything we have ever done together. I don’t speak of her much because what could I begin to say? I have never known anyone like her and that she chooses to go through this life with me gives me the confidence to face anything. And she’s able to laugh about it. I couldn’t be more fortunate.

So as the warm air comes in over the mountain in the pale light of dawn, the lower fields filled with fog, I sit here with nothing but gratitude in my heart. There’s no way I could ever express my appreciation for walking along with me through what could have been a far more difficult journey.

I think I’m going to take a little nap.

James
James
  hardscrabble farmer
December 29, 2018 7:43 am

“I think I am going to take a little nap”,translation:the pain killers kicking in.

Sleep well young man,you earned it,and,you will need the rest as at some point there tis a maple tree take down that needs finishing.

Word to the Wise
Word to the Wise
  Vixen Vic
December 31, 2018 2:42 pm

I guess they didn’t listen even then…”NO RUNNING, NO RUNNING WITH THOSE CHAIRS!!!”

Bilco
Bilco
December 29, 2018 6:36 am

Having been there…….You will be very surprised what you will be able to do.Hurt or not.

Purplefrog
Purplefrog
December 29, 2018 7:31 am

It has been observed that we grow best in confined spaces. For example Joseph in prison (Genesis). I look forward to the results in your writings. You are quite special.

Stucky
Stucky
December 29, 2018 10:24 am

When you first told us you fell out of a tree and hurt your ankle I made a series of wise-ass comments, naturally. Of course, I did not realize how serious the situation was! Nevertheless, I apologize for my lack of sensitivities.

I wish there was something I could do, like drive up there and offer my labor for a week. But, I can’t … I am stuck here, literally, attending to my mom’s daily needs. They say “it’s the thought that counts ” …. and that’s all I can do … wishing you good thoughts and a speedy recovery. I’m sorry I can’t do more than that.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
  Stucky
December 29, 2018 10:32 am

The positive thoughts are their own currency and right now I’m flush. Thanks for the genuine good wishes, I knew you were kidding. I just wish someone had been taping it, that would have made a great youtube. And the saw was unhurt.

L. E. Thissell(TS)
L. E. Thissell(TS)
  hardscrabble farmer
December 29, 2018 11:52 am

Thank goodness the saw emerged unscathed. That could have set off a chain reaction.

nkit
nkit
  hardscrabble farmer
December 29, 2018 4:15 pm

Would have made a great FF gif. Get well soon, old man. You have overcome worse – says the man with a fused foot/leg. Yeah, I feel your pain. Best wishes for a speedy recovery.

EL Zorro
EL Zorro
  Stucky
December 29, 2018 5:05 pm

Stuck, I thought it was a bit too soon but you da man and we all know you got a wild sense of humor. We all had a laugh at your expense with the raccoon.

Gayle
Gayle
December 29, 2018 10:49 am

Farmer
I am so sorry you fell out of your tree. I am so glad you “only” smashed up your foot when it could just as easily been your neck or back. I’m not surprised you are choosing to perceive this as an opportunity for a different kind of work for a while, and it is gratifying to read the offers of help from those in your neck of the woods. I do hope you will accept their offers.

This made me think of Billah’s Wife, who calls you Hardscramble, and wondering what has become of her (or him). There would be some salty words delivered to you for sure, but they would probably elicit a grin.

Anyway, enjoy your winter respite from physical labor. Love to you and yours.

L. E. Thissell(TS)
L. E. Thissell(TS)
December 29, 2018 11:50 am

100!

impermanence
impermanence
December 29, 2018 12:31 pm

It is always the worst things in our lives that produce the greatest benefits [equal amount of good and bad in everything].

Believe it or not, you will most likely look back at this accident as a profoundly positive turning point on your life.

Best wishes for a fast and full recovery!

Harrington Richardson
Harrington Richardson
December 29, 2018 2:23 pm

“the choices we make and the decisions that are made for us” Sorry for this awful, painful event. It is that fear in the back of every old or aging man’s mind that this might be the last time or if I f’ this up I could be screwed but good playing out. I truly believe while one chapter may have ended, the window opening to a book and perhaps an entirely new chapter in your life are summed up in the Psalms. “The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away. Blessed be the name of the Lord.”
You will be in my prayers and I will buy your book. A speedy recovery to you and grace and strength to those helping you day to day.

dunno y
dunno y
December 30, 2018 7:32 am

Well you won’t make that mistake again hopefully. Find the nearest backpackers put a notice up free board and lodging for some manual labor on proper northland self sufficient farm and wait by the phone. Offering a bus ticket and away ticket helps also within reason. We do it here and have had no worries they actually like the safe atmosphere before venturing on. They come skinny go a bit fattened up and they luv that so do their parents. Fine recovery fellow hope it doesn’t take to long.

Skindog
Skindog
December 30, 2018 9:27 pm

Wishing you a fast recovery with proper healing in all the places. Your mishap proves how a person’s life can change in the blink of an eye.

I always truly enjoy your posts here on TBP – Thank you.

WRITE YOUR BOOK !

EL Zorro (a real American)
EL Zorro (a real American)
December 30, 2018 9:55 pm

You guys are no help. This is the proper way to offer support:

HF, if you need help starting that book, I have got your first sentence which is always the toughest – Once upon a time on a farm on the side of a hill in NH…it’s all downhill from there, bro.

Your welcome!

gilberts
gilberts
December 31, 2018 12:21 am

I’m sorry you got hurt. Your posts here are always great reading. You read like someone who has it together and someone to emulate. Best wishes to you and your family for 2019.

SmallerGovNow
SmallerGovNow
December 31, 2018 10:16 am

Anyone have any updates on HSF’s condition? Happy New Year to all… Chip

Houston Davis
Houston Davis
December 31, 2018 12:00 pm

Some contemplative coffee coming your way to help with the creative composition process. ?

Word to the Wise
Word to the Wise
December 31, 2018 2:55 pm

Hardscrabble –
Many people here have advised you to be sure to NOT try to do things too fast, too soon. You mentioned “months.” Be prepared for longer. And learning new ways to do things with what you will have to work with.

Several years ago, in much younger days, I broke my ankle playing volleyball. The doc said “No dancing for a few weeks!” Well, it was over a year before I could walk up a flight of stairs without feeling a huge twinge of pain in that foot. Your injury is much more severe.

Please take heed to those of us here who warn you to take it slow. Good healing takes time. Which you now have lots of to get that book started. Count me in for a purchase also!

As creative as you are….your recovery will not be a waste of time.
God never wastes our experiences!

niebo
niebo
January 1, 2019 4:13 am

Hardscrabble, I say this without reading a single comment, just voicing my reaction to your post and the predicament in which you find yourself: you have your voice, sir; let no one else in the world entire dictate how, fact or fiction, you use it. At the end of the day, the song that you sing into the sunset light echoes between you and God; everybody else who listens can but hum along to the melody and, as darkness falls, mourn its passing. Perhaps they will remember and retell . . . or perhaps not. Regardless, the beauty of the truth of what you speak is not lost, either way. God remembers, even should we fail.

I pray that you walk without a limp, with the light of the word as a guide for your feet.