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Thursday, July 9, 2026

Solitary Corn

I got to hug my mama this week in advance of her 80th birthday.  But more about that in a second. 

In front of my breakfast joint is a small patch of scraggly grass, eking out a hardscrabble existence between the asphalt of the road and the concrete-hard soil adjacent.  It is not lush.  It is not pretty.  More weed than grass, it has hung on despite two major episodes of construction.  

In the middle of the patch of grass grows one solitary stalk.  Somehow, a single corn plant has volunteered between the still-under-construction hotel and the newly resurfaced asphalt of the Waffle House parking lot.  

A profile of the 57th Street corn stalk, radiant in the golden hour near the Minnesota Avenue intersection on Aug. 16, 2020.

(I stole Joshua Kovak's published photo in the Argus Leader article here.

For the past few years, I have had a work hobby. In front of the office building are concrete barriers that are placed there to protect us.  They are three feet high, and are planters.  For the first few years of my time working there, they were occupied by dead trees.  It was truly awful.  


And so it was that one day I dug the trees out, added some soil, and dropped some plants in.  Then some seeds.  Then more seeds.  I have written before about my devil-take-the-hindmost chaos of my planting process, and this fits it perfectly.  

And so it was that two years ago, I had three random stalks of popcorn that pushed their way past the surface, growing past the crowded tangle of pumpkin and oregano and kale in the understory.  Those three stalks grew strong, and they got a cup of water every day as I walked out of the building. 

A co-worker stopped me one day.  "Crorey, you do know that you will not get any corn from that, right?"

Um, no, I replied.  I did not know that. 

"Yeah.  Pollination of corn happens by wind, so you need a field full of corn to get enough windborne pollen to make corn.  That is why fields of corn have rows packed so tight.  So that the wind blows the pollen over to the other stalks and the pollen from the tassels get picked up by the silks of adjacent plants."

Huh.  And sure enough, the corn ears I eventually harvested were puny to the extreme.  Three kernels.  Five kernels.  Not even enough to keep for replanting. A little internet research confirmed his statement.  

Back to the visit with Mom.  We celebrated her 80th anniversary this week, and made a big fuss.  A couple of dozen members of the Parker family traveled from Washington State, Idaho, Illinois, Massachusetts and Mississippi, to come to SC to celebrate with her.  Lawton clan members also showed up to love on her, and she received messages from Tokyo, Prague, Dallas and the UAE.  

It was a lovely weekend.  We all -- both sides of the family -- connected and reconnected and got to know one another as adults and made family once again. 

I have been a solo stalk for a long time.  After growing up with Sunday dinners with all of my Lawton cousins every week, and monthly visits with Parkers, I have known what it is to be surrounded by family.  And in the years since I left home, I have found the isolation of living a long way away from that family to be difficult.  I have local connections, and I have built community around myself, and have a rich life filled with music and theatre and art and bees and work and home and friends and acquaintances....  But I miss family.

I hugged Mom.  A long hug.  I hugged Jake, my cousin who works so hard to keep us all connected.  I hugged my sister, who organized the whole weekend and managed to reduce chaos within a chaotic group.  I held long conversations with Andrew, who visits me on his annual trip to retrieve alligator brains from SW Louisiana.  And with Chris, whose ship repair business is thriving.  With Brian, who told me of a lateral relative named Gus, who collects rocks in the US Southwest.  With my Idaho cousin Kirstyn, who combines a response career with a preventative career (she is a nurse working in two settings).  With Chelsea, a cousin I have not seen since she was seven, some thirty some odd years ago.  With Michael and Parker and Jonathan and John Mark and and I think there might have been a Steve and an Otto in there somewhere. 

And somewhere in the middle of all of these recollections and reconnections, I received a gift. 

Back somewhere around 1984, I spent a couple of weeks of my summer helping Granddaddy Lawton.  He would have been around 70 years old, and I was available for doing some yard work in the mountain house.  I built thank-you-ma'ams to channel water off of the gravel road.  I helped harvest and weed and pick and do general cleanup.  I got fed steak and eggs, and ate like a king every meal. 

And I dug holes for some 40 thousand daffodils along the edge of the driveway, taking bulbs that granddaddy had divided and spread out and made into a floral town crier, announcing arrival of spring in Cleveland, SC.   


The daffodils exploded on the landscape every spring, lining the road to Grandaddy's mountain house with a riot of yellow, ivory and orange.  When the next generation sold the land, several family members went and dug up bulbs to replant in their own yards.  Chip's daffodil bulbs were then split to become Roxana's daffodils.  

This week, Roxana gave me two bags of bulbs.

In her description of it, Roxana explained, "...all of these bulbs originally came from just twelve daffodils my grandmother gave my grandfather in 1955, planted at their mountain home in Cleveland, South Carolina.  That property has since been sold and is now part of a 365-acre conservation area in a natural trust. And somehow that makes me happy... imagining the animals quietly walking through those same daffodils each spring."

I am now back in Mississippi.  

"How was the week?" my coworkers all asked.  My response, somehow, captures none of the magic of being a single stalk who is fully pollinated.  Of the connection that I felt through storytelling and the reconnections that happened as ghosts linger around our every table.  Of food that makes you want to weep for the joy of it.  Of gift giving and pictures passed around that prompt one more story. 

"It was fine.  It was a very good weekend," I offer, lamely. 

But let me tell you.  This lone stalk has returned with a very full heart.



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