Today I'm noticing how the quote touches on different scales of time - the immediate present of planting, the long growth of the tree, and the distant future of those who will rest in its shade. Within this span, the planter occupies just a brief moment, yet their action connects and influences all these timeframes.
This makes me think differently about what it means to "live in the present." The tree planter is fully present in their immediate action, yet simultaneously engaged with a far future. Perhaps true presence isn't about narrowing our awareness to just this moment, but about understanding how this moment connects to both past and future.
There's also something here about the nature of generosity itself. Often we think of generosity as giving something we have to someone else - a direct transfer. But this is a more complex form of giving, where we invest our present effort into creating something that doesn't yet exist, for people we'll never meet. It suggests that the highest form of generosity might be this kind of patient, future-oriented creation rather than immediate giving. The planter must hold in mind an abstract beneficiary, must care about unnamed future others enough to work for their comfort.