Tuesday, December 8, 2015

APW: Meaningful Dialogue and a Return to Form

I sit near a window watching a male red cockaded woodpecker work his neck muscle repeatedly on northern red oak bark outside the library window.  I've been in a less appreciative state this last year, and would normally not pay much attention towards this bird.  In fact, the pattern of my mind would read as follows:

I see the bird
Then I distract myself with the task-at-hand
I observe the bird again
Without an actual feeling of curiosity, I think I should be interested in this observation
(My former self has had the tendency to become willfully lost in the natural world)
I return to what I was doing
And then I feel guilty that I'm not interested in the bird
I remain distracted

This process of intellectualizing emotions has been more persistently distracting and rather unhealthy as of late.  Though I've been going on walks in the forest and getting to know techniques for identifying trees and becoming familiar with my surroundings, I haven't felt any deepening relationship with the forest outwardly, nor inwardly have I offered gratitude for its inherent value.  I fault myself primarily through lacking clear intention in my life. 

I've been selecting the easier path, the one of least resistance, through adopting a mindset of surrender, settling, and making it through the day or week.  This has overwhelmed any possibility of creation, challenge and appreciation.   Functioning on the day-to-day, with a vague expectation that I will wake up from this philosophical coma.  This is no doubt a familiar feeling to most of us in this modern world.  Balancing acceptance with innovation, taking care of yourself while diligently pursuing a professional career, going through states of complacency, burning out, stressing over not knowing if tomorrow you will have a roof over your head and then a year later forgetting how important it is to meet you and your family’s needs of food, shelter and community.

Though the length of time associated with this mindset may last an afternoon, a week, a month, it may also range to several years or decades.  I recently heard a story of the “hero” bus driver who one day, after 20 years as a New York City bus driver, took his bus away from his regular track, and drove the metropolitan bus down to Florida, sick of the routine humdrum.  He did not phone in to work nor his family for several days.  These actions represent a wake-up call, wondering where have the years gone, finding a deep inhale of freedom after years of clogged lungs.  These actions, however, beget consequences, such as in this ‘moment of glory’, the bus driver left behind an insecure, under-valued and abandoned family. 

Where do you meet in the middle?  I ask this, because I don’t want to be the bus driver.  How do you bring meaning into daily existence while there is a persistent feeling of being in an unfulfilled funk?  I’m currently trying a change in perspective.  The goal is to embrace several conversations or situations each day for what they are: a transient opportunity, with a strong possibility never to experience these unique set of circumstances of who you are, and what the surrounding environment is like in this precise moment again.  Inviting purpose into your life outside of the big picture lens of mitigating climate change to save-the-planet, or rescuing a child from a burning building. 

This is a goal of mine moving into 2016.  Cherishing the present environment and current relationships in my life, as opposed to living in the future or the past, as was common for me in 2015. 

Elaborated path to more meaningful conversations (based on my own personality).

Set a specific intention for your conversation at its onset. I'm generally not assertive in calling the other person or myself out.  So if I don't have an intention set, then I’m unable to fix what is missing or off, even when the environment doesn’t feel whole or right.

Engage with people you care deeply about, share a history with, have similar passions that you’d like to deepen your exploration with, or are challenged by them due to surficial or core disagreements.  The development of relationships is rewarding, though they certainly require energy and work, especially if one is physically distant. 

Questioning and challenging each other, while that may disrupt the surface, can yield a deeper understanding of how we perceive and interact with our surroundings, hopefully in a more beneficial way. 

Ensure there is consensual engagement in the topic of conservation and create a safe space for the dialogue.

While it is easy to regurgitate what we learn or experience apart from each other, and then share that experience (i.e. small talk), little emotional and mental intelligence is required for such exchanges.  Try to synthesize your experience, relate them to your own, and explore the subject further.  Not to come up with "answers" as much to "dig deeper" and explore that process and see where it leads.  This exercise is both inherently valuable and pragmatically useful.

So, here’s a challenge, write to someone you haven’t spoken to in awhile, or a close friend that you haven’t been engaging with deeply in the recent past.  Reach out honestly, without an agenda outside of reconnecting, and aim to deepen your understanding of each other. 

That’s my theme this week.  A return to writing, to caring, to reconnecting.    If you need someone to talk to, hold me accountable for what I say.  I’m grateful for the person who challenged me into this thought process by creating a dialogue that directly led me to writing this post.

Thank you, from the depths that I can reach of who I am, for taking time from your day to read this. 


MK

Sunday, March 22, 2015

APW: The Golden Record

The 3 year anniversary of my best friend's passing is coming up March 26th. 
This post is for all those who Love Z-Mo,
And everyone else who can relate to missing someone as time presses on.

Z-Mo Reflection + The Golden Record

It’s unbelievable to imagine 3 years passed
Can it be real? Time?

“I pack my belongings and I head to the coast”

We experience such diverse, enduring journeys,
Separately, while we orbit the same sun,

“A spec on a spec on a spec”

In this immense vastness, how extraordinary,
What a single person’s life can mean to you.

            “All the people, they say”

Time to zoom out, Grow a bit cosmic
Then sink down to the power of a single seed. 

            “Is there anybody going to listen to my story?”

I learned recently of the Voyager’s “The Golden Record.”  A message to outer space from Earth: encapsulating the culture and history of this Blue Planet in the Milkyway Galaxy, a glimpse of human’s essence through language and music.  An eternally romantic idea, projected to float to an anonymous recipient like a message in a bottle drifting across an infinite and expanding ocean. 

I was approached the other day, “what would you add to the golden record?”  What message would you share to the unknown that would reflect the ‘human experience.’  Now, I’m not the person for this task.  I’m a romantic and a skeptic. I try not to let that inherent contradiction cloak the magical workings of the planet.  I simply don’t understand how the human ego balances into ecosystem homeostasis.  So while I may find the notion of the golden record arrogant, I’m also enthralled by its intention and ingenuity.

So my first thought, with the Golden Record, was to dismiss people.  Consider the evolution of this planet, how freaking unbelievable and awesome were the dinosaurs! Where else in the universe could these beautiful creatures have survived and thrived for millions of years (to be erased, it is recently postulated, within a few hours).

Beyond that, think of all the incredible ecosystems and extremes and all the organisms who have adapted to living below sea level in deserts with little to no rainfall, to the arctic circle, to the high mountains of Nepal, to the jungles in the Amazon.  Then I thought of the 6 billion organisms living in a tablespoon of soil, approximately half of which is airspace!  Such incredible miracles, although if you’re an extra-terrestrial traveler happening upon the Milkyway exit, perhaps this biodiversity is not so fantastic to them as it appears to us.  Now it is time that I offer credit to where it’s due, and recognize the only reason I have an inklink of comprehension of the past, is through human’s unswerving pursuit of knowledge, philosophy and “going deep.”

So I reconsider what to draw the extra-terrestrial attention towards.  A unique trait of humans is the ability to interact with its environment with both wisdom and compassion.  I would try to convey the miracle of human will power and belief.  Though this opportunity, my life and planetary understanding is shaped by the enormous advancements in human intellect and technology: i.e. Tesla’s Coils, Einstein’s Relativity, Copernicus dispelling the earth-centric model, and so-on.  I would faster turn to the Polynesians finding the Hawaiian Islands, in sporadic waves beginning in the 3rd century up until the 18th. From the process of harvesting hardwoods and building double hulled canoes, to sailing across thousands of miles following HŌKŪLEA, navigating the guiding lights of the night sky.  These “ancient” practices brought many ships on many journeys across the seas to repeatedly end up on this tiny isolated island chain, thousands of miles away from a significant landmass.   I would share this event in history, for it may evoke empathy from the space travelers as a microcosm of the event that connected them with the golden record.

I would also include a number of human events attached with emotions:
-       a child’s first step into the ocean
-       the first time a child discovers death
-       how that notion evolves throughout one’s life.
-       Laughing ‘til it hurts
-       what it feels like to be loved
-       what it feels like to love
-       how it feels to have that taken away
-       how some cultures bury their secrets into the cracks of tree bark
-       how others sit still for most of their lives
-       how some hoist umbrellas when water begins to fall from the sky
-       How others give thanks for the sky nourishing their plants
-       How humans can remain faithful, loyal and loving despite all odds

 And I would show an image of someone lying down in a bed of fallen leaves, holding hands with another, watching the sunset, fading into stars, into the morning sky, a beautiful view of a day on Earth.

We all respond to this upcoming time of year differently.  We have all been affected differently.  Still, we share this incredible privilege, and host gratitude of having known such a special young man.  One who has drastically altered the course of my life in the most positive way.  And I am so lucky for all the reminders.  The look-a-likes, the flashbacks, the songs we blasted on pizza night, the plants we harvested, seeds we sown and the soil we double dug on the day it never rains.  The trip to the Source Water, posting up the amethyst on the bar at the Sierra Nevada’s Taproom.  I swear Zack’s days were more exciting than some of my months.  The ripple effect is unending.

There is one more story to share, for you, for me, and for the Golden Record.  It was one of those moments that passed without thinking about how many times I would return to it in my memory because of its casual nature.    Zack and I were working in the banana trees behind the Roadside Farmstand across the creek, a landscape now unrecognizable.  And we came across a heliconia plant with its flower in bloom.  Nothing out of the ordinary.  Until Zack pulled back the bracts and revealed these metallic blue seeds.  He held them in his hands, staring at them for several minutes, marveling their color and shape.  In awe that nature could produce this rare color when no other part of the landscape resembled a similar shade or tone, on the plant itself, or any other plant or animal on the windward slope of Haleakala.  Humans are so adaptable.  We get hung-up, attached.  Life passes us by and we take each day and breath for granted.  Yet a moment like this can occur, and we pause.  I am reminded of the law that nothing is created nor destroyed, only changed in form.

I would share this story on the golden record.  His face, his marvel, his smile, his joy, his unbounding love.  What a gift that would be to receive.  I am so grateful and I miss you so much.

Sunday, February 15, 2015

APW: Listening (Podcasts + Wind)

I have been working outside building a nature trail in Weaverville, approximately 20 miles north of Asheville. The setting is beautiful: hand crafted wooden houses, gardens and orchards and streams running through the land, hundred acres of forest in conservation, mountains of varying slopes, abundance and diversity of flora and fauna.  As I work, my ears are either listening to the breeze makes its way through the trees, brush the brittle leaves against each other, birds communicating to each other in a world we know little of, the silence away from the internal and external human chatter, or I am wearing headphones. In which case, I enter the world of Podcasts (primarily Radiolab, Backstory, Onbeing and 99% Invisible). 

These podcasts have become a weekly meditation.  They are very well produced, tremendously engaging and raise more questions than answers.  Blending great storytelling through captivating narratives, professional sound editing, objective journalism, and scientifically backed facts and true stories around the globe.  I am brought back to when entertainment was engaged with auditory rather than visual senses. One day I am transported to the day a 27 year old Mayan deaf-mute recognized that language exists and broke down in tears before wanting to learn the name of everything (Words ­– Radiolab)!  Or to a newsroom in East Africa where a young journalist from Nairobi questions an American government official whether they are ‘serious’ about what they say, meaning are you putting your money where your mouth is, putting his life on the line with this question (Translation – Radiolab).  Then I am transported to the 60s where an innovative design engineer invented the computer mouse.  His vision was for using a computer a to be a learned skill that the user engages with differently over time as your understanding of it improves (Of Mice and Men – 99% Invisible).  Though that lab is still operational and his ideas of global networking (google docs and skype) are coming to fruition in the last decade, his name and ideas were overshadowed by Steve Jobs, who designed computer technology with the goal to simplify everything, thus shaping the direction of the tech world to an easy to access user-friendly interface.  This story was sprung by the advent of all the Youtube videos displaying babies operating iPads.  These 2 year olds are not geniuses.  They are no brighter than the 2 year old a decade or century ago.  It is the world that has evolved, not the human, and this I find to be a very interesting distinction. 

Would you agree that it is always the environment that dictates growth and lessons?  Consider history.  If I am wrong, please reference a story that contradicts (or reinforces) this thought?  When I think of this, I am very humbled.  With a reverence to the natural world, for its intrinsic value and its influence on the social world.   This is one of the reasons I am trying to grow my depth of understanding of various sciences, primarily Ecology and Biology (focusing on plant communities). 

With more focused study, and a greater history of understanding, we are able to delve deeper into subjects.   Some would argue we have created an enhanced toolset.  Others might say it is the mind and that heart that truly guides and we are further removed from these warm lights that guide us in cold, dark nights.  Either way, I am certain that we have lost many ancient practices, including resting, zooming out and taking in the view.

The goal of modern society, as I see it, is to continually improve itself, and it teeters the edges of what is possible.  We’ve got a rush of people skirting towards the cliffs, both geographically and metaphorically speaking, creating a lot of room in the center.  When we are centered, we may see clearly and reach our greatest state of being.

Is our herding towards the edge free will, or a determined construct?  I am reading The Garden of Emuna, and I wonder, if everything is in fact the will of Ha Shem, how then to relate to the larger destructive patterns that exist.  I have a personal peace, though as I exist in this context, I wonder what direction to take, how I should interact with all the sizable communities on this planet.   This question does not gnaw at me, as I know where I am now is where I need to be.  Though the question certainly surfaces when I interact with the globe through current available methods of communication.


This is one of the reasons why I find listening to be so guiding.  Listening to both the social and natural world, while applying your own objective and subjective filters, to find and walk your path.  Observing and interacting.  Disturbing the norm, then observing, interacting, and reflecting.  Always listening, in the present.  Food for thought.  For you, for me.



I host all of human potential.
I am an accidentally cultivated expression, 
a Reflection of hundreds of selves, 
Thousands of suns / Millions of galaxies.

In this counteracting,
Integration of Thrust and Patience,
Gravity begets gravity begets the core
Becoming lighter (in dreams)

Is this the direction of inclination?
Of social breeding?
Of planetary concern?
And one more question

to ponder Down the lonely road
(bestowed with interdependent biota)
If life is infinite restraint,

Is Love letting go?

-MK

Sunday, February 8, 2015

APW: Supporting New Farmers


To New Farmers and Those Considering A Life “Back to the Land,”

I apologize that this message is not personalized, though please do not think I intend to give your worthy pursuits any less attention.  I am super excited that you are intending to engage with your land in a way beyond the typical American mindset of aesthetic value/ownership or bragging rights/fossil fuel dependent and move to developing a relationship of stewardship with your land.  While industrial agriculture production is one of the most destructive practices to the planet’s ecology, 'sustainable' or 'regenerative' agriculture is one of the most restorative.  (See links to Perennial Solutions and BioIntensive Farming).     

The goal of a farmer is to produce something from the land while nurturing it concurrently.   Every good farmer will agree that soil is the foundation of your farm and well-being.  If one continually tries to grow annual heavy feeding plants such as vegetables, which are an early successional species, typically followed in nature by the establishment of trees, an understory and more plant diversity, the biology (insects and microbes), physical structure and nutrients in the soil will slowly degrade.  Into a lifeless medium that requires intensive tillage and heavy fertilizer to cultivate your crop (sound familiar?)

I'd like to mention here that it would be irresponsible for humans to never harvest or interact with a forest, given that humans and forest share the same ecosystem.  Though this is a dangerous statement to make, because it is often misinterpreted and leads to devastation.  A forest that is pruned, selectively harvested and intercropped with beneficial species adds layers of diversity and resilience to its ecosystem.  However, a sustainably managed forest is becoming an even trickier job at the moment with our shifting goals in respect to a growing population and climate change.  Our idealized view of restoring the forest to the ‘pre-western contact past' is impossible for two reasons.  One, there is a false conception of what the ecosystem was like before the Europeans came to the Americas, and secondly, there has been and will continue to be a significant shift in the ecosystem, in the previous and upcoming century.  If you’re more interested in this subject, I’d highly recommend this podcast: http://backstoryradio.org/shows/untrammeled-2/ and this book: 1941 by Charles C. Mann.  I digress.

There are so many directions one can take when starting/designing a farm, and what an incredible history and network of people you will be joining!  Whether it be a fruit and nut farm, an ecologically responsible vegetable market garden, an edible forest garden, an integrated livestock farm, an eco-retreat or agri-tourism model, subsistent family farm, a group of friends making a value-added product that offers benefit and perspective to way we currently operate.  Perhaps you already have an idea, or you’re completely in the dark.  A great book that can certainly help with this process is Karl North and Elizabeth Henderson’s Whole-Farm Planning: Ecological Imperatives, Personal Values, and Economics.

As mentioned in my previous call out to those with land and ambitions of building a farm, I am taking a class called Sustainable Farm Management, where the final assignment is to design (and perhaps implement) a Whole Farm Plan. I have chosen to work locally.  There is a 40 acre parcel within 10 miles of where I reside and the college campus.  The project will integrate Agroforestry, eco-tourism, and a wild foods plant walk.  Working locally will help me integrate better with the plant people and farmers in this community and walking the landscape as opposed to working remotely will offer a better sense of the project, direction and be able to address unforeseen obstacles.

I am writing to share that I am very willing to still assist with this process both as a consultant and as a friend.  The combination of being back in academia plus having worked in this field for a little over 5 years now has brought me to a place where I have learned much about systems that are more likely to work based on realistic goals, time management and personal experience.  I have been offered a lot of resources on campus and am astounded (positively) at how strong the current support system is now for new farmers.  There is a lot of government money and training programs available (some, of course, are better than others).  There are grants and microloans available and great books and speakers to cater to nearly every operation.  For example, Jean-Martin Fortier “The Market Gardener” explains a system in great detail of how to grow enough vegetables on an acre and sell them for $100,000/yr.   

If you figure out what direction you specifically want to take your farm, I can likely point you in the direction of available money and case studies of similar pursuits.  And it goes without saying, but talking to local farmers in your area is one of the best ways to get started, either to find out what grows well in the region, or discover your niche that has not yet been filled!

Some more resources:

Eric Toensmeier co-authored Edible Forest Gardens Vol. 1 and 2.
Perennial agriculture is possibly the best way to work with a changing global climate, and this site also offers excellent links to varied plant databases.

This site applies more regionally, but it is an example of what is available.

http://www.growbiointensive.org/grow_main.html
If you're unfamiliar with Biointensive gardening, I'd highly recommend this approach to growing annual plants.  Similar to Permaculture, it was founded by an ecologist, and offers low-tech, high yield solutions.  It's also proof that vegan agriculture can work (though some landscapes would severely underproduce without animal integration).

http://tcpermaculture.com/site/ ; http://www.patternliteracy.com
There are TONS of permaculture sites out there!  These are both excellently presented and well researched, which is lacking in some of the others.  So I give a nod here to John Kitsteiner and Toby Hemenway.  Also check out your regional Permies and if you're serious about undertaking a global journey, Permaculture One: A Perennial Agriculture for Human Settlements will only help you.

And if you’re not familiar with them, ATTRA and SARE, are incredible resources, with many free digital publications.
Highly recommend reading Applying the Principles of Sustainable Farming if you are newer to the field of Sustainable Agriculture.
SARE has different branches throughout states. Find and connect with your regional branch!

Hope this information is helpful, and if you have any further questions, please reach out through e-mail and I’ll do my best to respond promptly, or we can set up a phone conversation.

And if you're not in the business of farming, please support Reregionalizing the Food System through getting to know your local farmers, having a relationship with the person that feeds you three times a day, and growing a better understanding of where your food comes from!

Here is a link to a great live lecture series out of UC-Berkeley that you can stream Monday at 9:30 PM EST that offers an overview of the current global food system.  Next week's speaker is investigative journalist and author of "Fast Food Nation" and "Reefer Madness" Eric Schlosser.
http://edibleschoolyard.org/ee101

And I leave you with a quote from the great Wendell Berry,


"The atmosphere, the earth, the water and the water cycle - those things are good gifts.  We have to regard them as gifts because we couldn't make them.  We have to regard them as good gifts because we couldn't live without them."