• About Callie
  • Blog
  • Books
  • Manuscript Critique + Coaching

Callie Feyen

Fledgling

in Uncategorized on 28/07/21

I learned recently that when you’re a fledgling, you learn to fly from the ground, in a hidden spot, and not from the nest you were hatched in. What happens is you hop and you hop, and you might make it to a tree’s lower branches, or onto the sturdy part of a hedge.

You’ll fall a lot.

I always assumed that when it was time to fly you were high in the tree, your wings twitching with anticipation and also fear, and your mom was standing by ready to push, as a mom does in a mixture of gentleness and strength that moves you to step out and spread your wings.

Turns out, I don’t think the mother has much to do with it. Turns out, the mother is off building a new nest. The father brings food to the fledglings while the mother collects twigs and leaves and whatever else is needed to build another home now that her baby birds are learning to fly.

//

Jesse and I spent an afternoon building a garden. I didn’t want a garden. I thought they were tacky. I wanted a waterfall. Something small that emptied into a pond with goldfish in it. Instead, Jesse and I went to the Farmer’s Market one Saturday morning and picked out basil, mint, mojito mint (who knew?), oregano, cilantro, tomato, and pepper plants. It was the first time we’d been to the Farmer’s Market since the pandemic hit, and it was the first time we went without kids and I remembered my domestic dream of spending Saturday mornings picking out sunflowers and veggies for the week, and sure, a free-range chicken for that night’s dinner. I would know the farmers by name. They would ask me about my writing and also how learning to knit was going, and there would be a blue grass band playing in the background singing about heartache but in a way that makes Saturday morning vivid and everyone smiles at each other because the melody is good and true.

“I want to do this every Saturday,” I told Jesse while carrying a bag of apple cider donuts in one hand and a turquoise carton of strawberries in another. I love those torquoise cartons. I vow to do something with them every time I bring them home.

We built the garden on a Sunday afternoon and truth be told, Jesse is the one who tends to it. I think we’re supposed to water it every other day, and I think we’re supposed to do something about the tomato plants that have grown to Jack and the Beanstalk proportions. I learned that if cilantro begins to bloom – little white flowers that quiver on already quivering green strands of stalks – that it’s turned into coriander, and who knew cilantro could become something else entirely?

//

Hadley and Harper are almost as tall as me. They are all legs and torsos and beach hair and blue eyes and I walk outside in the evenings to pick basil for bruschetta or pesto or to put on top of pizza and I wonder how the fledglings got to the ground in the first place.

Basil is wild. We have so much of it, and Jesse is using the word “harvest,” and I think we’ll need a bigger fridge and I stack the leaves up, roll them together then slice while I think about the mama bird. When did she know it was time for her babies to learn to fly into the world? When did she know to build a new nest?

3 Comments

« Scene In A Dressing Room
High School Orientation (for parents) »

Comments

  1. Melanie says

    July 29, 2021 at 3:28 am

    So poignant and beautiful. How the heck did they get to the ground, anyway?!

    Reply
  2. Stacy says

    August 1, 2021 at 4:13 pm

    I love this, Callie.

    Reply
  3. Ashlee says

    August 12, 2021 at 1:17 pm

    Beautiful, Callie. I love every word of this.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Stacy Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

 

IMG_0145

Hi! I’m Callie. I’m a writer and teacher living in Ann Arbor, Michigan. I write Creative Nonfiction, and in my oldest daughter Hadley’s words, I “use my imagination to add a bit of sparkle to the story.” I’m a contributor for Coffee+Crumbs, Off the Page, Makes You Mom, and Relief Journal. My writing has also been featured on Art House America, Tweetspeak Poetry, Good Letters, and Altarwork, and in 2014 I was one of the cast members of the Listen To Your Mother DC show.

I hold an MFA in Creative Writing from Seattle Pacific University, and I am working on my first book that will be published through TS Poetry Press.

Have a look around and be sure to subscribe to the blog. Thanks for stopping by!

Subscribe

Sign up for email updates from Callie's blog

My Instagram Feed

calliefeyen

When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth k When I was in fourth grade, I got my front tooth knock out during a baseball game. I was in the dugout, trying to make a butterfly in the dirt with my shoe. The batter, who’d hit not just a home run, but a grand slam, came running in and everyone cheered and so did I because I’d gotten really good at reading cues for when a good thing happens in sports. I even attempted a high five, and somehow I knocked my face into her batting helmet, thus spending the good part of that weekend summer day in the dentist’s office getting a root canal.

No teeth were lost in this latest incident, but I was lost in a bit of imagining on Sunday when I tripped and fell on Packard while running. I look like I’ve been in a bar fight and my shoulder looks similar to how Wesley’s looked after being attacked by an ROUS. 

But I’m going into work today, and when I told my boss I’m nervous about how I look she said, “It’s OK because you have a story,” and if that isn’t the best thing you could ever say to me, I’m not sure what is. 

So, here I am with a story. Thanks to all my friends and family who’ve been so kind and keeping me laughing.
A little Mother’s Day dancing is so good for the A little Mother’s Day dancing is so good for the soul. Thank you, @woodsbreeana 💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻
Last dances and first swims of the season and socc Last dances and first swims of the season and soccer and cherry almond scones and a new project with a friend and a lament for a fallen writer who paved a path for so many of us.
One spot left! C’mon, guys! It’s gonna be fun! One spot left! C’mon, guys! It’s gonna be fun! #linkinbio
Let’s bring back the Around Here post. Ok, I’l Let’s bring back the Around Here post. Ok, I’ll go first. #linkinbio
Follow on Instagram
This error message is only visible to WordPress admins
There has been a problem with your Instagram Feed.

Copyright © 2025 · glam theme by Restored 316

Copyright © 2025 · Glam Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in