Friday, February 10, 2017

Profile Essay Rough Draft

Shannon Krenik
Professor Maltman
ENG 1101-03
February 5th, 2017

A Man and His Garden

            Turning your passion into a reality is challenging but not impossible. That was my goal for this profile essay, I sent out on a quest to find someone that didn’t think that their job could make it in this world but succeeded with his passion in hand.
            The man with a garden has combed back white side hair and is about half bald on the top of his head and wears bland colored clothing. I noticed his nose is thinner from the inner ends of his eyes and extends down into an arrow shape, he also has dark blue eyes like the bottom of the sea. This man is Steven Ruse, he grew up in Deephaven, MN, graduated with a BA Degree from St. Olaf College and studied for a Masters Degree in Horticulture. When he was a young boy growing up in the suburbs of Minnesota, he had a passion for the outdoors. His first job was at eleven years old delivering newspapers then moved on to mowing lawns. By the time he was fourteen, he had his own lawn mowing service, most of his customers were friends of his parents. Right then and there, Steve knew he had started something that he loved. When college rolled around, he got a job around some of the estates in Minnetonka, MN, while working for them, he saw for the first time, the art of gardens. Later in college, he met people through the Minnesota Landscape Arboretum where he did his research and after talking with them, he came to realize this is something he wanted to do and was passionate for.
            Any job you dream of having doesn’t always come true to your liking, you may get close but not the way you hoped or you just give up all together and be stuck in a rut of disappointment in yourself and the job you found but Steve Ruse got the dream job he always wanted because he never gave up hope. People told him it won’t work and he even thought to himself it wouldn’t work out but he put those thoughts aside and made it a reality.  “I think the feathers in my hat, I gotten through the years the satisfaction of making a garden, being outside, doing what I really like to do and making a living at it, that’s a luxury, you just feel not only a luxury but a situation where you’re lucky to be in that. You can be in a job you like and be around people you like, just make a go for it.” His dream job was to be able to design gardens, so his love for the outdoors and a little creativity, he made it possible and made the life he wanted come true.
  “I think a lot of people have the idea and over the last couple of decades that they don’t have a connection to the environment and they spend a lot of their time going to their jobs, back to their houses, looking at electronics, you know, they have no connection to their mediate surroundings and to have something of beauty where you can create to make an issue or reason for them to come out, open the door, step outside and just wonder at what is right there.” Steve Ruse explained this in a way that opened my eyes, there is more to life than the normal setting. I would agree with these words of wisdom because this is what our world has come too nowadays. Everyone gets up, goes to a job that pays the bills and comes back home to the electronics. No one has a connection with the outside world and what it’s like to see something grow into such a beauty, we just let it slip through our fingers as days go by.
I had to ask him one last question and it surprised me of the history and the meaning of the name, I never knew. “I named my company after a plant that’s called Heliotrope and the reason being is that it’s a plant that doesn’t survive our winters so it needs protection which any business does and it’s very fragrant, I liked fragrant plants ones that have a sweet aroma. Heliotrope has a sweet vanilla like a cherry pie aroma you might say, but it’s also from a stand point of what the word means. It has a Greek root, goes back to two words that are Greek. One is Helios which is the Greek word for sun and the other one is trope. It’s a scientific botanical term and it’s a stimulus that, for example, why do roots grow into the ground rather than go up in the sky. So it’s a stimulus of something towards a plant that makes it survive. A heliotrope is a stimulus toward the sun and that is what gardeners are, they go out, work when the sun comes up, follow the sun and work till the sun goes down. That is the meaning of heliotrope.” Before I asked him, I didn’t know a thing about this type of plant, now it makes me want to smell it or plant it, to be able to smell that sweet aroma of vanilla and cherry pie he was talking about. I want to be able to sense it for myself because I can only imagine that sweet fragrance.
            I learned many things from Steve Ruse, one, to never give up on the dream your wishing of having. Instead of thinking about it and longing for it to come true, go out and experience that dream and tell yourself “I don’t want to be stuck doing the same old thing every day, I want to go out and be free!” and do not listen to the people that think it won’t work or your making a mistake, otherwise you will second doubt yourself and it will never come true. Second, I learned the meaning of the word heliotrope, it fascinates me how that came about and the sweet aroma it gives. Steve Ruse is a very smart man and he is also a funny one but when it comes to his work, you can tell he’s very passionate in what he does and make sure everything is perfect in his art of the garden world.


            

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