A Garden of Devotion: What My Grandmother Planted in Me

17 comments
Baby Elli sits on her grandmother's lap looking out toward the garden, her brother smiling next to her

I’m in my grandma’s backyard in Ballard, Washington. It's early summer, and everything is heavenly. The grass is lush and green, and the two cherry trees are ripe with juicy sweet cherries. One has red cherries, and the other has white and pink cherries.

There is also a glorious garden in the back of the yard perfectly maintained with rich black soil and strong, abundant plants. I wander through each row looking at what she has growing. This is the only place I have the opportunity to eat fresh vegetables and fruit right off the vine or plant, and everything I try redefines that vegetable for me.

I hated the peas my mom gave me frozen or from the can, but Grandma’s peas from her garden were sweet and addictive. Tomatoes weren't my favorite, but a warm tomato I could smell as Grandma cut it and put it on a plate with just salt and pepper I could eat until the end of time.

My very favorite delicacy from her garden were raspberries from the bushes along the neighbors’ fence. To this day, every time that I eat raspberries or see them in the store, I think of my grandma. It is one of the very few imprints she left on me in our very short time together. Her raspberries tasted like nothing else on earth. They had an incredibly potent flavor and perfect sweetness. I ate as many as I could before my mom would collect me and force me to do something else.

The Summers That Stayed With Me

Elli holds a toy in the middle of the living room with her grandparents and dad sitting around her

When I was in my grandma’s backyard climbing trees, eating cherries, and wandering around her little utopia, I felt transported. I felt connected, like I had a family. Most of the year, my dad kept us all inside a pumpkin shell, and we didn't visit my grandparents, who lived only 45 minutes from us. We saw them at Christmas, and in the summer my mom took us over often when my dad was at work. I nearly forgot about them all year until summer came.

I didn't see my grandparents on my dad’s side either because they lived in Greece. I only met them three times my whole life—once when I was two years old in Greece, once when I was about seven years old in Seattle at our house when they visited, and once in New Jersey when I was eight when they came to visit my aunt. They were strange and mysterious and smelt like moth balls. My Greek grandmother adored me, but she could only make the long trip once. We didn't ever go back to Greece. Both of them died young before I turned 14.

Glimpses of a Grandmother

Elli's Greek grandparents hold her and her brother while posing in the street

My only real connection to an extended family was my mom’s side. They all lived in the Seattle area, but my dad always spoke terribly about them, so I thought there was something wrong with everyone. We barely saw them anyway. Looking back, I think my dad just wanted my mom and his family all to himself and discouraged my mom from connecting much. At that time she didn't have the strength to challenge him and only saw her parents on a limited basis.

Anytime my mother announced we were going to Grandma’s, it meant being in her garden and going to the grocery store for them. She gave my brother and me 50 cents each to buy a candy bar we wanted. This was one of the few times I got to eat candy.

My grandpa died when I was eight, and my grandma lost it. She had Alzheimer’s, and her memory left her more and more as the days passed. It made our visits harder because she wasn't quite all there. We moved to Alaska when I was 10, and I didn't really see her again until she died two years later.

More Than a Memory

Elli sits on her grandmother's lap with her grandfather sitting next to her

My connection with grandparents was very brief, and I have only a few precious memories of them. My two grandmothers each left a small imprint on me that I still carry with me today. My Greek grandmother brought all of her art books she had that taught her how to draw and paint. I held on to those until I left for college. I used them often and tried all the exercises and practiced the techniques. She wasn't a great artist, but she painted a lot and was known as “the artist.” Everyone says I get my “talent” from her. They are probably right.

My grandmother and her garden left a deeper imprint on my soul. She was kind, lovely, and loyal. She was one of the most cheerful and joyful people I have ever known. She was constantly humming songs or chatting with someone. She only said nice and encouraging words, and when my dad was mean or snide to her, she didn't snap back but found some cheerful, joyful remark. In spite of his rude ways, my grandma always spoke very highly of my dad.

She did not have an easy life. She was a young woman during the Depression and scraped by living off her garden. My grandpa worked for the railroad, and they had their children late in life. She was already in her forties, and my grandpa in his late forties, when they had my mom. My grandma experienced the pain and loss of having a stillborn baby. Her oldest son, Fred, died to leukemia when I was two years old; and her youngest son, John, was born with some mental disabilities because she got pneumonia while pregnant. He later went to Vietnam and developed schizophrenia.

Despite all of these hardships, she was full of joy. Although I hardly knew her and spent very little time with her, I feel like I miss her. I often think about what she would think or feel about how our lives have unfolded. I think about what I have missed, like the many conversations, or maybe trips to Europe. She could have given me tips on growing my own garden. I would have loved to hear her stories about her life. I was too young to listen or ask questions, so I only really knew her from her garden.

Beyond the Gap

Elli's grandma stands in front of a Christmas tree

I am grateful for the few memories I have with her, but I feel like I have a hole or gap in me called “grandmother.” It's almost like I didn't have any grandparents. I don't have a model to follow or a legacy to build off of. It's probably why legacy is so important to me and creating something that will last generations has become my mandate.

Now I am a grandma. For now it is Zion, but there are many more beauties to come. I get to hold that place in his life. I get to make an imprint on him that will last and help form who he is. I want to make myself known to him and allow him to hear my stories and know what I care about most. I want him to remember me as someone who would listen to him, encourage him, and ask him questions. I want to be someone who is greatly interested in his life and his destiny. I don't want my grandchildren to have a missing hole in their heart.

As artists, we create legacy every time our brush touches the canvas. Our paintings will outlive us. Our sketchbooks will be evidence of our struggles and our victories. Our writings and posts will live on. My grandchildren and their children will see my artwork and read about what I cared about. My paintings are like my grandmother’s garden, and every painting a sweet fruit to know they are connected and their life matters. They have significance. They fit inside a glorious puzzle and are a necessary thread of a giant tapestry of all of God’s children.

What your hand makes, what your soul creates, will live beyond you. We paint for our future generations.


17 comments


  • Tash Joy

    Thankyou for sharing Elli. You give so much to the world through everything you do and share. My Grandmothers both had beautiful inspirational gardens and the experiences and memories have nourished me for life. They both lived in the Adelaide hills in Australia. I am Australian and have been learning so much from your courses and products/materials. Thankyou. I was particularly personally touched by the information you shared about your Grandmothers children and sons Fred and John. It takes such courage to share such personal information. Bless you for your generosity of spirit and heart. I hope one day as my art progresses I will make you proud.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Hi Tasha. I’m so happy you are learning so much from our school! I’m sure you are growing into a fantastic artist with lots to share. 💕


  • Jayjay

    What a beautiful write up.. my mother was an artist who died way too young when I was 23 . She never met any of my four kids , I never got to ask her all the big questions including all her artistic tips instead I rely on instinct . I know if she had been given the chance she would not have taken the role of grandparent lightly to my four children whom she never met. I love hearing how passionately you feel about the legacy you pass on to Zion. My mother’s legacy is indeed her art. Art is her soul in my soul.. I paint to feel her and my children also paint and draw . She lives through us and our art .Art connects us all. I adore seeing how you guided your daughter with her art. I imagine how my mum would have been able to do the same for me. xx
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Oh wow! This is beautiful! I’m sorry for your loss.


  • Dawn Safarik

    You lived in Alaska?! I didn’t know that. Where did you live and for how long? I was born in Fairbanks and lived in Anchorage for many years. I’m glad you have good memories of your grandparents. I only knew my paternal grandma. She was kind and loving. I inherited her figure! I fondly remember spending time with her and sleeping over. I miss her now that she’s gone.
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Oh cool! I lived in anchorage for 1 year before we moved to Hawaii. That’s so great you got a special relationship with at least one grandparent.


  • Infante Leovigilda

    You are so blessed to have beautiful memories of your Maternal Grandmother, that stimulated a joyful and tactile sense from her garden harvest and your Artistic Paternal Grandmother. A truly bountiful and loving experience. There are some of us who weren’t so lucky. I for one, had grandmothers by name, but remote and distant. My maternal grandma was widowed early and I Remember her mostly cranky and my paternal grandma who yearned for my absentee grandpa , working for a brood of 13, thus a family in constant struggle mode. As a child, their image gave me an impression of women with a cloud of sadness.
    As you share your Odyssey, a bright light always sparks up my spirit. A theme of Hope, Beauty and Courage. Grateful always💞
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    I’m so sorry. I’m learning there are many that missed out on loving present grandparents.


  • Jo

    Your story is so sad yet uplifting, I wanted to be an artist when I was at school I didn’t think I was any good because I wasn’t taught to draw people even in school they didn’t really teach you how they didn’t even say whether it was a good or bad you only knew when you got your results. The guidance councillor said I would never be an Artist even though I got A’s.
    My Grandmother used to like to paint by numbers, by my Mum learnt to paint on porcelain and decorated cakes and learned to paint on canvas at a community group, she only learned these skills when I left home so she didn’t teach me anything either.
    When my children were small I went back to school as a mature aged student I was 23, I hoped to be a fashion designer, ( you didn’t have to draw faces)
    But They didn’t teach me how to draw there either only colour and screen printing they just told you to draw a tree or a flower but never how to do
    it, so when I left that school I started to teach my self from books how to paint joined a small art gathering the same community group my Mum was in and watched others paint I had learned about perspective so I got by copying pictures out of calendars and photos. I hung my paintings on the walls of my home proud of what I had achieved.
    I now have two grandchildren and when they were young I always had paper and pencils for them. I hope they remember those times but they were so small, their parents broke up and I didn’t see them for 10years when I did see them again the oldest one only remembered fragments of the time we had together we were strangers really, it only lasted a year and now I don’t think I we ever see them again but I hope one day they will want my paintings even though I know now they are not very good.

    When I see your art I am inspired again, I am 67 I am living in a Caravan on our block building a shed by hand and hopefully a home, everything is in storage and I don’t have a place to do my art or even the time right now but I purchased an art program anyway so I can just watch and learn and maybe I can leave my children and grandchildren something to remember me by.
    I still take photos thinking this would make a great painting, one day I will paint again it gives me such joy to create even if it isn’t very good.

    My Mum and Grandmother gave me this to pass on, one of my grandsons is a good drawer so maybe he has something from us already even if he doesn’t remember it.

    Thank you for your wonderful inspiration I look forward to your newsletters and utube videos.
    Love and Light Jo 💜😁💜
    ———
    Elli Milan Art replied:
    Oh Jo thank you for telling me your story. I hope you will be reunited with your grandchildren one day. Don’t lose hope! Keep painting even if it’s just watercolors or drawing until you can get a place.


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