Friday, February 13, 2026

Between Bananas and Babblers


 A Lesson in Patience, Life, and Faith

Philipose Vaidyar

Read in Malayalam 

Sometimes, in the quiet corners of a garden, life asks us to pause and choose—not between right and wrong, but between what we see and what we value.

Thirteen months ago, I wrote in lenght about the noisy fellowship of jungle babblers in our garden. I had watched them closely then, learning their rhythm, their quarrels, and their companionship.

(The blog link is here: https://pvarticles.blogspot.com/2025/01/the-guava-tree-chattering-jungle.html ) It must be their hatching season again.

A few days ago, I noticed a nest tucked among the bananas between the broad leaves at the head of a nenthran plantain in our garden, very close to our home. The banana bunch hangs full and heavy, ready for harvest. These bananas are not accidental fruit—they are the result of a year’s labor: bringing in the bulbs and planting it rightly, manuring the soil, watering through dry days, patiently attending the plant through changing seasons. Every cluster carries the weight of care, patience, and expectation.

Yet my eyes were drawn not to the fruit, but to a small woven cradle hidden in green. I wondered—was it new, abandoned, or active?

Last evening, I noticed a pair of jungle babblers in a nearby tree, alert and watchful. This morning, I placed an aluminum A-ladder near the plantain. As I approached, one bird flew away, confirming what my heart already suspected—the nest was active. I could not see clearly from below, so I climbed. Inside lay three eggs. Quiet. Undemanding. Full of possibility.

The ladder has since been removed and kept away, though it still rests elsewhere in the garden—a silent witness to that close encounter.


Now I stand beneath the bending plantain head and ask myself:

Is the whole bunch of bananas more valuable than three unseen lives?
Are those three eggs—warmly guarded by their mother, tiny, fragile—less important than fruit that represents a year of labor, care, and patience? Dry leaves coloured babblers often go unnoticed while rustling among leaves on the ground.  

The jungle babblers themselves are ordinary in color, blending almost perfectly with the earth and dry leaves, yet extraordinary in purpose. Life stirs in hidden ways, asking for attention we often give only to what is visible, tangible, or productive.

Over the past few days, I have also been painting on a handcrafted bamboo basin—picked up by a friend during his travels. His family felt I could do a better job and turn it into a meaningful wall hanging with a message. So I worked carefully on bird silhouettes across its curved surface and almost finished the piece with the verse:

“Look at the birds of the air… Are you not of more value than they?” (Matthew 6:26).

How gently ironic that while I was shaping painted birds into art, real birds were entrusting their future within reach of my ladder.

Can I carefully relocate the entire nest to the branches of a nearby tree? Will the mother return if I disturb her sacred work? Should I leave the bananas unharvested for a season, allowing life to complete its delicate circle, even though it is the result of a year of labor?

Creation now places before me a quiet test—not of productivity, but of compassion; not of ownership, but of stewardship.

Sometimes faith is not proved in grand declarations, but in whether we pause long enough to protect something smaller than our plans. Sometimes the question is not about what we can take, but about what we are willing to leave untouched. Sometimes the most ordinary things—fallen leaves, silent eggs, hidden nests—carry the future.

So I wait. The bananas hang. The nest rests. The mother returns and settles again. The ladder is gone, but everything remains a quiet witness to a choice between harvest and hatching, between visible reward and unseen life.

I warmly invite you to leave your reflections in the comments below. What would you do?
The harvest—or the hatching?
The fruit earned through a year of care—or the future hidden in three silent eggs? 

Read in Malayalam (< Click) 


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