Gardening with ME: the art of resting in the garden

You would think having a lovely garden to sit in, you would find me regularly resting there. You would think.

However, the one curse of being a gardener, even one with ME, is that after five minutes of sitting there enjoying the flowers, the buzz of the bees, the antics of the birds, the sun and a gentle breeze, you start noticing jobs that need doing. And you think, “I’ll just do this…”, and it starts from there.

Two magpies on a bird bath. The one on the left looks like it's screaming at the parent, who is on the right and looking away.
At the bird bath: the young magpie screams at it’s parent for food.
The parent is not amused.

Just jobs. When I was first diagnosed with ME, I saw a counsellor for a while, as part of helping me trying to come to terms with my diagnosis. She noticed that I kept saying, in relation to household and garden tasks, “Well, I just wanted to do X, then I was exhausted”, and coined the term: just jobs. We worked on me trying to stop finding something just to do before resting, with some success when it came to household tasks.

A plant with lots of thick stems falling over, and with lots of dead flowers needing removing. It looks messy.
Centaurea montana ‘Jordy’ needs deadheading, a good prune, and some staking.

But I have really struggled changing this behaviour in the garden. I go outside to spend five minutes enjoying the blooms, notice that something just quickly needs doing, and before I know it, I’ve just jobbed myself into exhaustion again.

Two brick raised beds with garlic growing. The leaves are going yellow-brown and leaning to one side.
the garlic is ready to harvest.

Part of the problem is, that I enjoy doing jobs in the garden. I love ‘playing with my plants’, which is what I call these tasks. There is a lot that I now get my gardener to do, such as all the mowing, digging and planting larger plants, adding manure, and most of the weeding, etc. But there is still a lot left to do. Potting up an alpine plant that’s outgrown its current pot, pruning as part of the three D’s (dead, diseased or damaged), deadheading (removing spent flowers) and taking cuttings. And then there is the garlic, awaiting harvest.

Two panels. On the left is a person digging out a bulb of garlic. On the right is a hand holding up the large harvested bulb.
First garlic harvested. Only 70 bulbs to go. That’s a lot of just jobs.

So, have I found a way around the ‘just job’ problem in the garden? A little. I use the Visible app to plan each day how much I think I might be able to manage, which of course includes common tasks like meals, the occasional shower, appointments, as well as gardening jobs. And I have Visible to go off, loudly, if I go over my anaerobic threshold for more than two minutes. I write lists, breaking tasks down into smaller sections, and go outside with a firm intention to ONLY do one just job from the list for the day. Ok, maybe two.

In the foreground is a small mass of pretty pink geranium flowers. Behind it are lots of brown dead forget-me-not plants that need removing.
Geranium ‘Elke’ is looking good, but it’s past time that the dead forget-me-nots behind, were removed.

Lately, I’ve been working at being more intentional about only doing one, only one, just job before going outside. If I notice something else, it goes on the list. I allow myself to just sit outside for a little while and enjoy the lovely space I’ve created. Sometimes I even go out with the intention of just resting in the garden, no just jobs at all! A novel idea, indeed.

A flower bed with a mix of different leaf shapes, and some white and some purple-blue flowers. Amongst the foliage are daffodil leaves that will be removed once the other flowers have finished.
Leaving the daffodil leaves until Allium ‘Cowanii’ (white) and Camassia Leichtlinii Maybelle (blue) have finished flowering.

I’ve found listening to my favourite podcasts helps, because to be able to take in what I’m hearing, I need to sit quietly and just listen. The problem is, the plants tempt me. I can hear them say, “could you just give me a quick prune, come on, it won’t take long”. I turn up the sound on my tablet, but sometimes, the plants are louder. Sigh.

An overview of the garden with a mix of brick raised beds, some plants in pots, and a greenhouse. There are a mix of late Spring colours including, purple, blue and pink flowers, and lots of yellow-green leafy plants and trees.
No ‘just jobs’, just enjoying the view.

So no, I haven’t mastered the art of resting in the garden. I’m getting better at it, but like pacing, it’s a very slow change in behaviour. The gardener in me, and ME in the garden, is a balancing act that still needs refining. Anyway, I’m off to do a just job. I am just going to sit outside and enjoy the garden. Really, I am.

4 thoughts on “Gardening with ME: the art of resting in the garden”

  1. I love this post and have also adopted just jobs since I first saw you talk about the term. I’m much better at sticking to one just job/doing one very short period of a just job if I know in advance that I’m going to do it (and that it will take several sessions to complete), but those just jobs which leap out and accost me, catching me unawares? Much trickier!

    Reply
    • Yeh, it’s fine to plan, break jobs down to smaller tasks etc and do those, but when something unexpected happens, all plans go out the window.

      Reply
  2. I can SO relate! I have a really hard time relaxing in the garden because all I see is all the work that needs to be done. And of course if I do do something, like you, one thing leads to another and I go beyond my limits. It’s validating to know that other people have the same struggle.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Ariane Cancel reply