I Dumped the Pot
What happens when you stop turning neglect into your responsibility.
There’s a question I don’t ask.
Not usually. Not out loud.
Why would I plant something like this?
I ask it now.
But it took a cup of soil, a Ziploc bag with no label, and a slow-building irritation I couldn’t quite name to get me there.
This is where you usually say yes without thinking
When the little pot was handed to me, it should have fit right into that rhythm.
A simple thing.
A cup of soil. A handful of seeds. Something to start.
But it didn’t land that way.
You already knew something was off — you just didn’t want to say it.
There were supposed to be seeds.
A Ziploc bag. No label. I turned it over, looked at it, couldn’t tell if there was anything inside at all.
I poured it anyway. Or tried to.
Maybe something made it into the soil.
Maybe nothing did.
I genuinely couldn’t tell.
There was no water.
That part kept catching in my mind.
No water. No extra soil. No space to loosen what was already packed in.
Just this is what you get.
I stood there longer than I needed to.
Turning the cup in my hands. Looking at it like something would reveal itself if I paid enough attention.
It didn’t.
What I felt instead was a slow irritation building underneath the surface.
Not at anyone.
At the whole thing.
It felt like a performance.
Like we were going through the motions of planting something without any intention of actually growing it.
That’s when the question showed up.
Why would I plant something like this?
That question doesn’t get asked.
Not by me.
I’m the one who fixes things.
I take something half-done and finish it.
Take something with no water, no soil, no care and make it work anyway.
I could feel that instinct kick in almost immediately.
Take it home. Add soil. Water it. Figure out what it’s supposed to be.
Make it real.
That would have been easy.
And it would have been mine.
Instead, I stood there holding something I didn’t trust.
Something with no care in it. No real chance of growing unless I stepped in and forced it.
And for the first time, that didn’t feel like responsibility.
It felt like being handed someone else’s unfinished thing and being expected to love it into existence.
“No is a complete sentence.”
— Anne Lamott
I’ve done that before.
With people. With work. With versions of myself that someone else needed me to be.
I know how that ends.
The clearest moment wasn’t the frustration.
It was this.
This would just become something I ignore.
Because I know what it feels like when something matters.
You don’t ignore it.
You check on it. You think about it. You adjust for it.
And I could already see exactly how this would go.
A windowsill. Half-forgotten. A small guilt every time I passed it.
Before anything started.
So I stopped trying to fix it.
I didn’t take it home.
I didn’t add soil or water or intention.
I dumped the pot.
Just like that.
No ceremony. No second-guessing.
What caught me wasn’t the act itself.
It was how final it felt.
Because I don’t do that.
I don’t walk away from things that could be made better. I don’t leave something half-finished if I know I can fix it. I don’t meet something that lacks care and respond with then I won’t care either.
But that’s exactly what happened.
It wasn’t anger.
It wasn’t even rebellion in the loud sense.
It was quieter than that.
More like a refusal.
And underneath it — something I didn’t expect.
Relief.
Not everything deserves your effort just because it’s in your hands
Spring always starts the same way for me.
Not on a calendar. Not on a date you circle and prepare for.
It starts the first time the ground softens.
Spring will keep happening.
The ground will soften whether I participate or not.
There will be other seeds.
Other moments.
Other things that actually want to be planted.
But some things aren’t waiting to grow.
They’re waiting for someone willing enough to pretend they are.
I’ve been willing before.
I’m not anymore.
I could have made it work.
I just chose not to.
And once you make that choice once —really make it —it changes something.
Because you start to recognize the feeling sooner.
The lack of care.
The absence of anything real to grow from.
And you realize how often you’ve stepped in anyway.
Not because it was yours —but because you knew how to carry it.
“Let everything happen to you: beauty and terror. Just keep going. No feeling is final.”
— Rainer Maria Rilke
So the question isn’t whether I could have made it work.
I already know I could have.
The question is —
why I ever thought I was supposed to.


