The Gardener

Artwork by Elowen Digital

if you see me in heaven,
tell the gardener

i lived sumptuously
as pomegranates do

- From "Pomegranates"

The narrative that follows is about an archetype I like to call “The Gardener.” I first wrote about The Gardener in February 2025. She is, without a doubt, my favorite of the feminine archetypes, as I envision (or re-envision) them, and the narrative that follows (now revised) is probably my most cherished self-fashioning narrative to date. 

I see The Gardener in many ways as an extension of the nurturer or mother archetype. But she’s also more than that: she is a spirit of warmth, loving, receptivity, and abundance that is rooted in feminine sensuality. I’ve come to think of her as a lavishness of spirit, as someone who plants seeds of life wherever she goes. She is also an agent of transformation, similar in some ways to an inner alchemist.

Additionally, before I begin, I’d like to point out that this is the first revision I’m publishing of a self-fashioning narrative. As I’ve said before, I think the goddess stories teach us that the path to integration for women should be poetic, dynamic, and rooted in wholeness, not hierarchies. Therefore, I view each of these narratives as a work-in-progress: they can and should be dynamic and fluid enough to evolve with me. I like the idea that I can return to them whenever I wish and revise them to reflect my own growth, creativity, and changes in perspective. The face of the goddess changes as I change. This is part of what it means to move toward wholeness.


The Gardener is a spirit of abundance. She operates from a place of love. She can turn a house into a home, a meal into a celebration, a humble garden into a habitat. Everything she touches increases in life. The ground she walks on is always fertile ground.

The Gardener treats her environment like it has soul. That which she tends to becomes an extension of her. She uses her creativity to make spaces that are warm, welcoming, and inviting. She knows how to harness the power of the seasons to create an atmosphere that feels both celebratory and alive. In the wintertime, she fills her home with the scent of freshly-baked cookies and long, slow-cooked suppers served in front of the fire. In the spring and summer, she cooks with herbs fresh from her garden and adorns her table with vibrant colors and fresh flowers. The Gardener knows how to make the everyday feel extraordinary. She understands the power of turning simple activities into celebrations of life. This is what makes her feel magical.

If she cares for you, she won’t buy you gifts. She will create for you. That is the ultimate labor of love. 

There is a spirit of eternal youth about the gardener. She is vital, open, active, and receptive to life. If there is a shadow side to this archetype, it is probably the propensity to give too much to the wrong people and situations, to be too soft and understanding, and/or to have weak boundaries. But much of this I attribute to youthful naivete. The Gardener, as she appears in the more mature woman, recognizes her tenderness, her warmth, as well as her capacity for giving as tremendous sources of power. And she knows how to wield them judiciously.

The gardener is a maker of worlds: she creates an environment that is inherently nurturing and healing for herself and for those she loves. I call on this archetype often when I feel discouraged, stressed, overworked, or in need of self-care. There is something alchemical for me about spending hours in the kitchen making a healthy, nourishing meal or filling my home with the aromas of a slow-cooked dinner or the scent of something freshly baked. The same is true for decorating, perhaps with fresh-cut flowers, handmade potpourri with essential oils, or even DIY planters, bird feeders, or bee baths for my garden—anything, really, that makes my home feel more beautiful and more alive. These kinds of activities bring me comfort. They nourish my spirit and help bring me back to a place of alignment. 

8 responses to “The Gardener”

  1. I love the idea of seeing God as a gardener. Much more holistic.

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    1. Thanks! I like it, too. I also like the idea that we can sow little seeds of life wherever we go.

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  2. I really do love all of your self fashioning narratives 🙂 they not only explore the depths of womanhood but are also a playful exercise with important discoveries..really beautiful..and I love the idea of God as a gardener..quite honestly, I think it is very accurate. The Bible also connects trees and vines and various parts of trees to God, to Jesus, and to his calling…a gorgeous story that does not separate but connects all of nature. And I love your development of the Gardener…she is someone I aspire to be every day…you spoke of your own desire to create beautiful spaces, another characteristic I share with you :), and the Gardener does this without striving. As you describe her, she gives from this wellspring of abundance, as if she was born with it, and yet, she also actively creates more beauty beyond herself when “she cannot find beauty and goodness in the outside world”…I absolutely love how you describe her as the “maker of worlds”…your narrative seems to both give honor to what she already possesses from her first breath as well as what she makes , or rather pours out from her creativity, love and care, and gives selflessly to the space of this world. In doing this, she builds her strength, her resilience, and clothes herself in endless beauty..as you describe her, I feel like people flock to her naturally…how could you not? She soothes and welcomes in a world that so often sows anxiety and tension…we can’t help being drawn to the garden she creates everywhere she goes…as you stated, “everything she touches increases in life. The ground she walks on is always fertile ground.” You have written a beautiful image on the hearts of your readers…your deep love for beautiful things extends to the heart of the woman, of the feminine..revealing our enormous possibility…to “make new worlds” by merging our own fertile garden with the garden of the world. Lavishness indeed! Well done, my friend…I will continue to cultivate my own inner gardener…to be the respite, the cool drink of water in an often parched world.

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    1. Thank you so much! I really enjoyed writing this narrative. It’s probably my favorite self-fashioning exercise so far. I like feeling that I have the freedom to be creative and playful with these portriats of womanhood (and I adore the image that goes with this post 🙂). To create my own personal vision that, I always hope, resonates with readers. Based on some of our previous conversations, I felt you might connect with The Gardener. When we tap into that warm, sensual, abundant side of our spirit, it is a beautiful and fulfilling experience. To “make worlds” and homes and atmospheres for loving and healing and nurturing–I definitely see that as part of the divine within myself, as well as a great source of strength. And I love that you talk about the importance of having a place of respite in a world that’s riddled with tension and anxiety. So important! Thank you again for the wonderful feedback, my friend!

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  3. […] been woven into several of the narratives in my self-fashioning journal, including On Nurturing, The Gardener, and The Natural Healer. I was actually close to titling this one “Forest Mother” or “Woman […]

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  4. […] Spirit, a Spiritual Healer, and a construct that is near and dear to my heart that I like to call The Gardener—and I’m not done yet. And, finally, there are some archetypal experiences, for me, that are […]

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