04/06/2026
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Love wins.
Itâs so much more than flowers- growing them, selling them for people to gift to others, giving them away. Abundance and beauty and love and best part of humanity- community, thoughtfulness, kindness, generosity.
Loved reading this story and hope you do too!đđ
Every June, people leave empty jars on my front porch.
Not fancy vases, mostly. Pasta sauce jars. Pickle jars. Jelly jars with the labels soaked halfway off. Sometimes a mason jar if somebody is feeling organized. They line up by my door in a crooked little row, and every year they make me smile.
If you had told me ten years ago that my porch would become the neighborhood drop-off spot for empty jars, I would have laughed.
Ten years ago, I had just moved into my little yellow house after my divorce. I was forty-three, tired, and trying very hard to act like I was âdoing greatâ in that way women do when we are absolutely not doing great but still remember to bring muffins to work.
The house had a tiny kitchen, squeaky floors, and a backyard I did not know what to do with. I had never been much of a gardener. My ex-husband used to handle the yard, and before that I lived in apartments with one brave basil plant at a time.
So when spring turned into summer and a giant peony bush in the back corner suddenly exploded with pink blooms, I just stood there and stared at it.
I had not planted it.
It had been there before me, quiet and plain when I bought the house, then suddenly full and showy like it had been waiting for its moment.
My next-door neighbor, Norma, leaned over the fence one morning and said, âYou better cut those before the rain comes.â
I looked up from the flowers. âCut them?â
She nodded like this was obvious. âStorm tonight. Big one. If you leave them out there, the rain will beat them flat.â
I looked back at the bush. There had to be thirty blooms on it. Maybe more.
âI donât even have enough vases,â I said.
Norma laughed. âHoney, nobody with sense has enough vases.â
So that afternoon, right before the sky turned dark, I went outside with kitchen scissors and a laundry basket and started cutting.
At first I felt weird doing it. The bush looked so beautiful in the yard, and I kept thinking maybe I should leave them. Maybe I should save them. Maybe there would be a better reason to bring them inside.
But the clouds were already rolling in, and Norma had that look of a woman who knew weather and was not to be argued with.
I cut every bloom.
Then I carried that basket into my kitchen and realized I had a new problem.
I had a mountain of flowers and exactly three actual vases.
So I opened every cabinet in the house.
A spaghetti sauce jar.
A pickle jar.
A pitcher.
Two mismatched drinking glasses.
An old candle jar I had cleaned out for no reason I could remember.
I filled them all.
And still I had more flowers.
I stood there in my kitchen surrounded by pink peonies and suddenly thought of all the women on my street.
The widow three houses down.
The mom across from me with twin toddlers.
The older teacher who lived alone with a cat named Frank.
The night nurse at the corner house who always looked tired and kind.
I found a stack of sticky notes in my junk drawer and wrote the same thing on each one:
Storm tonight. Thought these deserved one more day inside.
Then I started walking.
I left a jar on Mrs. Campbellâs porch.
A bunch in a glass by Tashaâs door.
A small one for the teacher, Ms. Greene.
A tall one for the twinsâ mom because I figured her house could use all the cheering up it could get.
I did not knock.
I just set them down and came home before the rain started.
That night the storm came hard.
Wind, thunder, heavy rain. The kind that rattles windows and makes trees bend. I stood in my kitchen looking out at the backyard, and sure enough, the peony bush that had been bursting with flowers that morning was flattened and dripping by night.
But in four houses on my street, those blooms were standing in warm kitchens instead.
The next morning, there were notes on my porch.
One from Mrs. Campbell, written in neat blue ink:
I put them beside my husbandâs picture. Thank you.
One from Tasha on the back of an envelope:
Came home from a double shift and cried when I saw them. Good cry. Thank you.
And one text from the twinsâ mom, Ashley, with a picture of two little boys staring at the flowers on her table like they were magic.
She wrote:
They think a fairy brought these.
I did not correct them.
I laughed so hard I had to sit down.
That should have been the end of it.
But the next June, when the peony bush bloomed again, there were three empty jars on my porch before I had even cut a single flower.
One had a note tucked inside.
If the storm comes again, Iâm ready.
âAshley
That year there was no storm. I cut the flowers anyway.
And by then, something had shifted.
I did not want to save beautiful things for a âspecial reasonâ anymore. I had spent too many years doing that. Saving candles. Saving dishes. Saving dresses. Saving joy for when life felt more finished than it ever really does.
So I made jars of peonies and left them around the neighborhood just because it was June and the flowers were here.
Then other people joined in.
Norma had hydrangeas.
Ms. Greene grew black-eyed Susans.
Tasha brought home sunflowers from the farmerâs market and split them into little jars for porches.
Ashley started planting zinnias in a side bed with her boys.
By the third summer, the whole thing had a rhythm.
When the flowers started blooming, jars appeared on my porch.
Then bouquets appeared on everyone elseâs.
No sign-up sheet.
No committee.
No big speeches.
Just women quietly making sure beauty did not go to waste.
Then came the summer my sister had surgery.
It was serious enough to scare me, though she came through just fine. I spent two weeks sleeping in hospital chairs, eating vending machine crackers, and driving back and forth between towns with that tired, buzzy feeling women get when they are holding it together on purpose.
I came home one evening in June, unlocked my front door, and stopped.
My porch was full.
Not of empty jars.
Of flowers.
Pink peonies from my own yard.
Blue hydrangeas.
A bunch of daisies tied with ribbon.
A little jelly jar with three bright zinnias and a note in a childâs handwriting that said:
For your table because my mom said you do this for everybody.
Under that was another note from Norma.
We saw your blooms opening.
We handled it.
Go inside and rest.
I sat down right there on the porch step and cried.
Not because of the flowers, exactly.
Because I had been seen.
Because somewhere along the way, the little thing I started had stopped belonging only to me.
Now every June, the jars show up again.
The kids on the street call it Flower Week.
Ashleyâs boys, who are not boys anymore, still help carry buckets.
Ms. Greene retired, but she still brings clippings from her yard.
Norma is in her eighties now and still gives orders over the fence like a queen.
And me?
I still cut the peonies before the rain.
I still think about that first storm and how close I came to leaving all that beauty outside because I thought maybe there would be a better time for it.
There usually isnât.
Sometimes the special occasion is just that something lovely bloomed and we are here to share it before it passes.