Sunday, October 29, 2017

On Harvesting

It is the time of year which popular culture refers to as "harvest time" though for those of us who grow, the truth is: we harvest continuously. We work that soil as quickly as we can and plant "as soon as danger of frost has passed". The season for spring peas and early lettuce? That was APRIL. Many of us do successive planting and get multiple crops of lettuce, radishes, peas and beans though we know that in July, they fight us by bolting, wanting the slower, less-lit cooler weather. No matter. We harvest what we get and we say thank you.

In one small corner of my property, I have a small raspberry patch. Small but sincere, truly. Probably 64 square feet, total.  It has been a prolific spot and I grow a variety that produces twice per season. The first burst of berries usually arrives right on July 4th every year. It is a short spurt of production and is done by the first of August. Then in early September, another round of berries comes on and goes until frost ends the party. We are in the waning days now. No frost yet but fewer and fewer berries get picked each time. Yesterday I picked about a cup and I think that may have been the last one-cup trip for the season. After this, it will be a measly handful or two.

The thing about picking your own raspberries or anything, is that it gets you to really look at each item as you touch it. You contemplate its ripeness, its shape, its color, so many factors that go into it as it has developed. Look at the curious shape of the stem or branch, after you have picked something. The architecture of it can be astonishing.

I need to address a couple of elephants in the room here: First of all, I am insanely aware that there are thousands of humans -- migrant workers and others - who do this work for little or no money, who don't have the luxury of time or anything else to be able to stop and contemplate any of this. Farm work -- even in the best of circumstances -- is physically hard, hard work.  There is no way that my experience can compare or be anything except one of choice and privilege. I know this and I own it.

But the other piece is that family farmers at their core, do get this. Farmers *do* look at what they grow and are as gob-smacked by the beauty as the rest of us. If you can grow something, anything, even if it's just one pot of basil on your window, do it. And if you can't grow something yourself, there are lots of pick-your-own farms. (Again, this is a privilege - some of these places are really glorified amusement parks) I know that sometimes, it seems like you pay more to do the work of picking something yourself -- apples are one example -- but if you do research, you can find out who stands behind each farm. I know of several family farms that I want to support. They have been on their land for years and sometimes generations. They do integrated pest management, rather than use pesticides so though they may not be legally designated organic, for all purposes, they are. I want to support them and keep them in business. I also believe in voting with my dollars. They care and you can, too.

So my encore for the day? If you can go pick something yourself --apples and pumpkins are still an option now in parts of New England -- go do it. Look at what you are touching. Stop and see the branches, the leaves, the fruit, the flowers. It's a miracle. Every time.







Sunday, October 1, 2017

Sabbath

Today, I start with a question: Do you have a Sabbath day?

I am using the word -- Sabbath -- because a couple of weeks ago, a new colleague asked me the question, using that word. Depending on your history and experiences, you may respond in any number of ways, but my hunch is that the majority of you will say: SABBATH? No one SAYS that, any more.

Well, they do, but you have to know where to look though certainly, not as frequently as they used to.

It appears as a commandment, as in: The Ten Commandments. The third of the "ten commandments" is "Honor the Sabbath Day and keep it holy", or words to that effect, depending on your translation. It's a day for rest and worship.

"Worship" is a word that assumes a lot, and rest? What is that?

When my colleague asked me if I kept a Sabbath, it surprised me. I fumbled an answer about how it depended on the day and what my teenage sons were doing. "Sundays are basically for me," I said - though the minute I said it, I questioned its truth.

I should interject here, too, to tell you that the program I using to write this is capitalizing the letter S in the word: Sabbath. It is not my decision to impress significance. Someone, somewhere, made that editorial decision.

Do I worship? Well, those of you who know me know that I am an engaged member of the First Parish Unitarian Universalist Church in Milton MA.

Do I rest? That is an excellent question.

"Sleep is overrated" I said in my twenties. Now, in my fifties, sleep is what it's all about. It always was, though I did a good job pretending it wasn't.

The real question I have both for myself...and for you...is: DO I honor it, "keep it holy", as it were.

I know several millennials who take a "digital Sabbath", which is cool. Because of the ultra-connectedness of all things electronic, to be able to unplug -- literally -- has become their signature at the bottom of their emails. They alert us to the fact that if you are trying to contact them on a given day, generally Saturday or Sunday, you can't expect a reply.

I am offline from sundown on Friday to sundown on Saturday, when I observe a 'tech sabbath' 

Offline. Unplugged. Being, just being. 

So I am thinking about all of this and wondering -- what IS a true Sabbath? What does one do or not do? Religious implications aside, what does it mean to take a day -- regularly - to refresh and nourish your body AND your spirit? Not to do it haphazardly, but to fully engage in it. What would it look like? Would one be engaged in quiet activities: reading, walking, meditating -- or more creative outlets: baking, gardening, crafting? 

I am asking the question of myself and I am also asking: YOU.  I am curious to know - do YOU keep a Sabbath? IF so, how do you define it? By what you do... or by what you don't do? Are you solitary in this or do you stay among others?

I don't have an encore for you this week. Usually, I have an idea to share or a realization, but this week, I am in the question stage. Perhaps this encore will come later.

So please, do tell me: DO you keep a Sabbath? What does that mean? I look forward to hearing your thoughts.

Peace







Sunday, September 17, 2017

On Tomatoes

I have a friend who calls me the "Eco-Chaplain", which I adore, though it is really she who is truly on the path to eco-chaplaincy. Mine is a part-time gig though it lives in my soul but it is she who is the one who will one day professionally carry the title. Still,  I will gladly accept the name.

Recently, we discussed tomatoes. She has been working with us in the HDS Garden and has been initiating gardens in multiple spaces...as we do. So we talked tomatoes last Thursday. On the day back in March when we began our seedling for the season, she was there,  We set eight -- ONLY eight of the thousands -- of tomato varieties in the seed-starting medium. And now, everywhere in New England, there are TOMATOES.

The tomato - Solanum lycopersicum - is in the nightshade family and native to western South American and Central America. It's history is fascinating -- to some of us -- and I won't go into it here though if this intrigues you,  seriously: look it up. One fascinating detail I read recently, though because it seems to have originated on Wikipedia and then been re-quoted verbatim (which makes it suspect) is that native Pueblo people believed that there was a power in tomato seeds that gave one the power of divination. Don't quote me on it but I think it's an interesting fact, if true.

You surely have heard about lycopene, the good stuff in tomatoes. Cooked tomatoes give you more than raw...because it becomes concentrated.... and yes, that IS awesome but that's not even why I am writing about them.





So here are some tomatoes that were recently harvested. Beautiful, eh?

We are in the thick of GLORIOUS tomato harvesting, these days. Trying to stay ahead of the ever-present tomato blight, we try to cut off the affected plant parts as fast as we can because the mostly-set fruit will ripen and we want to contain the spread. We are in our race to the finish, before frost closes out the season for us. Still, if we are really inspired, we may grab the green ones for fried tomatoes, canning or pies. My mother was good at wrapping the fully-formed green ones in newspaper and keeping them in our cellar in a cardboard box, until they turned red. They are never *quite* as good as fresh, but still a far cry above what you can ever get in a store.

So what IS it about tomatoes? As you might imagine, because I am who I am, I spend a lot of time in gardens, farm stands, farmers market, nurseries....etc... basically anywhere that the connection to growth and life and food connect. 

There are millions of plants and certainly thousands that we grow commercially and personally, but in New England, if there is only one plant that you are going to grow, it will be a tomato. Honestly, I don't know why that is. I could take some guesses based on nutrition and food storage and the need for these to be maximized historically. But today? Honestly, it doesn't even matter. 

Because here is the thing, and this is really what it's all about.  When you grow tomatoes, if all goes well or even moderately okay, there will be a day and hopefully many days, when you can go out into your sunny garden/deck/farm/box/hanger...and pick one dead-ripe beauty and bite into it. Warm. 

Everyone has their own way of enjoying this. Some will talk about salt, some: sugar, olive oil, basil...

But here is what I think: Pick a type you've grown, say: a purple Cherokee, which is one of the varieties we are growing. 

But that bite...that first bite.... it's flavor and beyond flavor.

Purple Cherokee is an heirloom, which speaks to chemistry and history. But with that bite, you connect with the work and the love and the reminder of the cycle of life and death. The flavor is exquisite .... but even more than that. That flavor shows you truth. That tomato slows us down and stops us in our tracks. 

If that isn't a truth, I don't know what is. 

So your encore for today? If you aren't a gardener...and that's okay, because who knows? Perhaps you can join with a friend or others and find a way to connect to this? Your encore is to find someone who has grown tomatoes. Ask them for one. Sit with it and think about this. And then, take that bite. 

There's your truth, your truth in a tomato. 








Wednesday, July 5, 2017

On Guerrilla Gardening

Anyone who know me knows I love plants and gardens. I talk to all my friends and co-workers and relatives and sometimes complete strangers, so I guess that means that people who don't even know me know this. Then it should probably not come as a surprise then that I need to confess that I have a secret love of guerrilla gardening.
See this picture? Yes, it's me. Shhhhh. It's my shadow, taking a picture of seedlings I planted -- specifically, morning glories -- planted somewhere that people neither knew nor expected morning glories to be. Somewhere where after they bloom, tangles of blue and mauve circles of petals and vines will turn a rather unattractive spot of land into a softer, lovelier rise, rather than the dirt mound that it is currently. Assuming they do thrive and bloom, those bursts of wandering color will surprise those who notice, hopefully offering delight. Many won't notice, but perhaps, those who do will find it magical. Did I ask permission? No, though if it comes to it, I will ask forgiveness. It's totally worth the small risk. And THAT is what guerrilla gardening is.

All over the world, lots of folks do it, lots of them to grow food. Yes, they are doing this in places that they do not have the legal right to. It's a movement based on some radical notions about land use of public space and the desire for beauty AND food justice. Is this beginning to sound like familiar theme? Absolutely.

It's not for everyone. BUT...think about it. Doesn't the idea of throwing seed balls (yes, this is a thing) somewhere sound fun? Think about it. You can drop seeds -- especially seeds like morning glories which honestly, are ridiculously hardy -- and keep checking the space until they sprout...then grow...then bloom. You are the artist and as long as you keep your mouth shut, no one will know WHERE those flowers came from. Did someone from The City/Headquarters/Operations/Groundskeeping put those in? No? Well, then, how did they get there? And you can smile, knowing, that it was that it was *you*.

Your encore for the day? Go spread some magic. Shhhh, it will be our little secret.









Wednesday, June 7, 2017

In Praise of the Free Cycle

We have a stuff problem in this country. Other countries do too, I'm sure, but I suspect we are worse. Basically, we have too much stuff.

We know it's true and yet. Our culture demands constant desiring and buying -- because something better has appeared --and constant replacing, because goods are cheaply manufactured and fall apart. I have lots of thoughts about this, more than I am going to go into depth about now. Do I blame greed and our current form of  unbridled capitalism? Yes. I think there are some bad built-in assumptions about what makes the our economy run and get reported as "recovering". One simple example is the basic premise that new homes must constantly be built and that this is *the* benchmark for a healthy economy. This feels foolish, baffling and short-sighted.  As someone who grew up in a well-made house built in 1850, I know that everything doesn't HAVE to be new. BUT with our current climate of uber-capitalism, God knows where we are headed.

But that's not what I wanted to write about. I am focused on what gives me hope.

Our Free Cycle gives me hope. It's really a simple idea. At work, we have one, which is a bookshelf where people put stuff they can't use or don't want. We began with extra office supplies and then it morphed into items that people brought from home. They appear one day and then are gone. It's all this extra STUFF. Rather than throw it into landfill, they put it on the shelf. Someone who can use it, takes it. That's it. Simple.



We find a wide variety of interesting items that magically appear. Right now, we have glitter glue sticks, lots of 3-ring binders, water bottles, and a large box of partly-used candles. Last week, someone cleaning out their office kitchen brought a box of with dozens of granola bars. We reached out to our friends at Faith Kitchen who will distribute them. We often find ramen and extra pairs of glasses, lots of books and one time, a haul of Christmas decorations. You never know and it's kind of a treasure hunt.

There are lots of reasons I love our Free Cycle but mainly because I know that at its heart, it represents a compassionate community. Compassion for each other and what someone might need, compassion for the earth, knowing how toxic what we dump into the soil can be, and compassion for ourselves, coming to the realization that stuff is a burden we don't have to bear.

The encore is easy: find or create a free cycle. I wish every single office and company had one. Can you imagine it?

The simplicity is deceptive. It seems like nothing but is a radical act that can change our perceptions and our lives. Go get rid of some of your stuff. I promise it can do you good.

Monday, May 29, 2017

The Dog Blog

This is my dog. Tito.

I didn't think I would ever be someone who writes about her dog, but here I am. A couple weeks ago, something began to happen to him. It started as a sort of hiccup-y twitch, then shaking. Then he started to walk as though each step hurt, which soon became obvious that it did. For a couple of days, he improved but then, it started again and got worse. Tito is a dog who has two speeds: on and off. You don't go for walks with him; you go for meanders. Sniffing and investigating, joyfully bouncing up to every dog, person, and cat you see, hoping for whatever attention or treat is available. But when this whatever happened, he didn't want to go out; he only wanted to curl up on his pillow. Then, he only wanted find a place to hide -- like under a desk or the back of a closet -- and sleep.

I began to panic. Tito is not an old dog; he turns five on June 24th.

When we first saw him as a puppy, I *adored* him immediately. We were just looking at different dogs as a way to learn about breeds and behaviors. We hadn't planned to get a puppy, certainly not right then. I had never had a dog, never spent time with a puppy, but this little guy.... When I saw him, that was it.

When we brought him home, I assumed that my kids would be his primary companions. No one told me that that's not how it works. I didn't know the rule: you don't choose the dog...the dog chooses you. Tito chose me.

He loves all of us because I think he understands the fundamental truth that love has no size and that he can love all of us 100% and there's still love to go around. But what I didn't expect was that I became his person. You dog people know what I mean.

I have had cats and guinea pigs, both of which I loved dearly and two of whom loved me back in wonderful ways. I had no idea how it could be with a dog. The absolute devotion has ruined me for life.

So, the first trip to the vet was inconclusive. The second trip to the vet, I was adamant: something was wrong; this was not normal behavior. This time, the vet agreed and guessed that it was a tick-borne illness. It I wanted to pay $300 in bloodwork, we could determine exactly which one...OR ... we could begin treatment. Knowing that the antibiotics would be the same regardless, we started. I gave him a pill for pain and a syringe of foul-smelling -- CHICKEN-FLAVORED!! -- viscous antibiotics once a day. 

It took almost a week to see improvement. Today, day seven, my baby is almost back to his old, silly self, so I am crossing fingers that we really got it. Like I said, I didn't think I would ever be someone who either had or wrote about a dog. But this guy...this little ten-pounds of fluff and adoration has changed me.

The world may be a crappy, terrible place much of the time these days. But Lord, there are dogs.

Thank God for dogs.




Monday, May 15, 2017

Mother's Day

Yesterday was Mother's Day. I preached a very brief "sermonette" as I called it at First Parish in Milton, and what I focused on was the history of it, and NOT the idea of chocolate, flowers, and obligatory phone calls to mothers.  Of course, anyone who cares for children should be appreciated regularly. I am not even going to think about how long it will be before this country makes the raising of children and families a priority.

But the interesting thing about "Mother's Day" is that originally, it had nothing to do with what it's become now.

In 1872, Julia Ward Howe -- you know: Battle Hymn of the Republic Julia Ward Howe - proposed an annual Mothers' Day for Peace.  For thirty years, it was honored but only primarily here in the Northeast. A Unitarian, she worked to end slavery, helped to initiate the women's movement in many states, and organized for international peace—all at a time, she noted, "when to do so was a thankless office, involving public ridicule and private avoidance."

Sounds kind of familiar, right?

Part of what I found so moving was a proclamation that Howe wrote in 1870 called the Mother's Day Proclamation. It goes like this:

Arise then...women of this day!
Arise, all women who have hearts!
Whether your baptism be of water or of tears!
Say firmly:
"We will not have questions answered by irrelevant agencies,
Our husbands will not come to us, reeking with carnage,
For caresses and applause.
Our sons shall not be taken from us to unlearn
All that we have been able to teach them of charity, mercy and patience.
We, the women of one country,
Will be too tender of those of another country
To allow our sons to be trained to injure theirs."
From the bosom of a devastated Earth a voice goes up with
Our own. It says: "Disarm! Disarm!
The sword of murder is not the balance of justice."
Blood does not wipe our dishonor,
Nor violence indicate possession.
As men have often forsaken the plough and the anvil at the summons of war,
Let women now leave all that may be left of home
For a great and earnest day of counsel.
Let them meet first, as women, to bewail and commemorate the dead.
Let them solemnly take counsel with each other as to the means
Whereby the great human family can live in peace...
Each bearing after his own time the sacred impress, not of Caesar,
But of God -
In the name of womanhood and humanity, I earnestly ask
That a general congress of women without limit of nationality,
May be appointed and held at someplace deemed most convenient
And the earliest period consistent with its objects,
To promote the alliance of the different nationalities,
The amicable settlement of international questions,
The great and general interests of peace.

Howe wasn't the only one with these ideas. There were other women working on this at the time. . These women believed motherhood was a political force that should be mobilized on behalf of the entire community, not merely an expression of a fundamental instinct that led them to lavish all their time and attention on their children.

And this made me think of the Women's March on Washington. Strength in numbers? You bet. A call for justice and peace? Absolutely. Peace didn't happen in 1870 but it's too important to give up on.

Your encore for the week? That's easy -- put on your pink pussy hat and get out there and work for a better world for all.

Happy Mothers Day!