Notice the metaphors all around you

SprinklerirrigationwithdI wonder sometimes if sprinklers are a metaphor for something.

I’m teaching this month at an Institute that is housed on the campus of Reed College in Portland, Oregon. Once the 102 degree nonairconditioned temperatures of last week subsided and I escaped to the beach for a weekend, I have been considerably less grumpy – and more observant.

The construction of a new dormitory just outside my window begins at 5:56 a.m. each morning with one lone worker giving in to his penchant for syncopated hammering on a solitary steel spike. I’m determined to find cultural significance in the cadence and Spiky appears determined to give me adequate exposure to make my findings statistically significant.

Sometimes the cadence of the day bears messages – are we listening?

When I returned home from class late Monday afternoon, I realized as I approached the dorm that there was red "caution" police tape at the bottom and top of my stairway. Stairs were being replaced, wide gaping holes where I needed to step up to the second floor. "What keeps us from getting home?" I thought to myself.

When we tried to park the next morning near class, more than half of the parking lot was cordoned off so they could paint the lines again, akin to highway crews who repave roads at rush hour in high season. "What obstacles are appearing in front of me? What do they mean?"

We drove to another lot where orange cones blocked half the spaces so a team of workers could prune bushes. We walked to class, tree limbs being sheared from a tree blocking the path. And last night, leaving, the sprinkler system was set on "aggressive," wildly creating an obstacle course of water, creating instant strategists trying to time their movement past the water outbursts by counting the patterns of flip and spin and dashing out between rotations.

It was two full days of obstacles, clear and cumulative. I wonder what they were telling me? Go back? Don’t go? Stop? Run past? Play in the water?

About Patti Digh

Patti Digh is an author, speaker, and educator who builds learning communities and gets to the heart of difficult topics. Her work over the last three decades has focused on diversity, inclusion, social justice, and living and working mindfully. She has developed diversity strategies and educational programming for major nonprofit and corporate organizations and has been a featured speaker at many national and international conferences.

4 comments to " Notice the metaphors all around you "
  • Patti, I’m laughing to myself reading this…because I was just saying to J this afternoon that I have the WORST luck about this kind of stuff. Invariably, when I get time off work (and am therefore home), SOMETHING gets constructed or repaired. For almost two weeks now the neighbors across the street have had bulldozers and dump trucks coming and going and making a racket…often starting at 6 am. I keep wondering: WHAT is my lesson in this?! :)

  • I hate to say I’m a believer in signs and omens and messages from the great beyond, but it’s true. These kinds of things always make me think about what’s really going on in my life, where I need to pay more attention, or maybe take a sideroad instead of the freeway.

    Last Friday I listened to jackhammering all day at work. It was no more than 15 feet away from my workspace in the afternoon and the air conditioner couldn’t be used because of the cement dust. It was hot and I was getting cranky. It seemed I was being told to go home early. So I did.

  • Play in the water! That’s an easy one *g*…

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