When your wife is on the “edge,” you know that you need to tread lightly. She’s edgy. If you’re walking on the boat dock at Gray’s Lake, you know that you need to stay away from the edge. A misstep could find you in deep water. And you know you have to be a tiny bit concerned about traveling all the way to the edge of Iowa. A small nudge, and you could end up in Missouri.
Edges are dangerous. Cliffs have edges, as do sharp knifes. The signs could not be more clear: Beware! Stay back! Danger!
But what’s happening at the edge? If the edge is the farthest point from the center, aren’t you just a little curious. Perhaps the edge is where the party is. Remember, you were told things were dangerous and needed to be avoided, but then you discovered that deep-fat-fried butter on a stick was pretty darned good. How can you stay down on the farm after that glance over the edge?
Tom Brown is a nut — my kind of nut. He has published a slew of books on tracking animals and living in nature. He can be found at http://www.trackerschool.com. Yes, he says things like: “Explore the Spiritual teachings of Grandfather and become one with the Spirit-That- Moves-Through- All-Thing.” Really? Out loud? However, he has a ton of information about the wilderness wrapped in a Zen-like approach. A piece of advice that he frequently gives in his Field Guide is that the action in the outdoors occurs at the edge. The edge of a field. The edge of a woods. The edge of a stream.
And remember Robert Waller? Yup, the Iowa boy who penned The Bridges of Madison County and then high-tailed it to Texas. Before he took that strange turn, he wrote a wonderful book of essays called Just Beyond the Firelight. In one essay on romance, he states: “Romance dances just beyond the firelight, in the corner of your eye.” Could Bob have been more clear: romance is at the edge of things.
Finally, there’s this quirky neuroscientist called David Eagleman. In his recent book, Incognito, he writes about perception and a phenomenon called Mach bands. When two paint strips of different colors are put side by side, where the two edges meet, the color will look a little darker on the lighter strip and a little lighter on the darker strip. They are in fact not darker or lighter. Weird. But the lesson: at the edge, strange and wondrous events are occurring.
So what is on the edge right now in Iowa? Well, on the edges of city parks . . .
Loved the column about sunflowers in Oct 18 CITYVIEW and I also love many noxious weeds including these wonderful ones. But especially liked the mention of Bob Waller’s book of essays, JUST BEYONE THE FIRELIGHT which proved him to be much more than a writer of romances. I re-read it now and then (and loan it out) and am always awed by his literary abilities and insights. I interviewed him a few times and have mixed feelings about his personality but will never deny or doubt his brilliance. Glad he was an Iowan.
I tried posting this response once before, but it didn’t appear. I will try again. This column is well-written but unfortunately mistaken. Only one species of sunflower in Iowa, the annual sunflower, is an illegal noxious weed. The other dozen or so native sunflower species in Iowa are entirely legal, beautiful, popular with butterflies and birds, and welcomed (and paid for) in conservation plantings by the USDA. They are perennial sunflowers, as are the sunflowers in the photos in this column. Please do post this correction so that people won’t read the column and then unnecessarily kill native sunflowers. Thank you.