Sunday, March 28, 2021

Can we behave as if the living world were a gift?


One of the best books I have read recently is Robin Wall Kimmerer's Braiding Sweetgrass. Kimmerer is a biologist by training and a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. In the book, Kimmerer weaves together her academic training with indigenous ways of relating to the world and nature. She talks at length about treating the fruits of the earth as gifts. She writes:

How, in our modern world, can we find our way to understand the earth as a gift again, to make our relations with the world sacred again? I know we cannot all become hunter-gatherers—the living world could not bear our weight—but even in a market economy, can we behave “as if ” the living world were a gift?

In other passages she writes about how gifts of the earth are present without us doing anything if we are open to seeing them. 

Most of my upcycling projects are about making something I can use.  And things appear in my life without my going to the store and finding something that was newly extracted from the earth. Since I am on social media and have been asking for materials, some of my neighbors will now just drop stuff off. Other times, I stumble upon something.  For example, I had denim idea projects swimming in my head. I can never find jeans that fit and my kid won't wear them so I actually don't have offcasts of my own.  However, on one of my daily walks, I happened upon free items on the curb, which included two pairs of used jeans with  usable fabric

A pair of jeans is from the earth and I have come to see these things that I happen upon as gifts, but unfortunately I am not sure that most of my fellow Americans feel the same away. I live in a household in which we all compost and recycle religiously and even have purchased Terracycle boxes. My kid is beginning to think his mother is super strange and has tried to physically lead me away from a dumpster on the curb (I found a bin of sewing materials in that particular dumpster bag).  My spouse's tactful answer about my projects is, "I like that they keep you busy."  Though he does like the Tupperware lid chaos reducers I sewed and put in the kitchen cabinets. 


Dumpster bag with a bin of sewing supplies


I wonder how we shift our thinking about stuff and what we do with "garbage." This blog is designed to give you some ideas on what you can make or do, so that is one things.  But you and I are only two people.  We need to change societal attitudes about stuff and garbage. What a difference treating our things as gifts would make.  

Stay tuned to future blog posts about this subject.

4 comments:

  1. You are absolutely doing right. I know it's hard for kids at certain ages not to be embarrassed by pretty much any we do. My 17 year old is now independently shopping second hand and finding true joy in reusing and repurposing. Stay the course mama, you are saving his world one project at a time. I'm sure it's keeping you busy but I suspect it is also filling your soul a bit.

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  2. Thank you Erin. Glad to hear about your teenager! I do let my kid review what I write about him before I publish it. He changed what I had written to "S..'s mother is strange" rather than "my kid thinks I am strange." I changed it back, but we did laugh about it :-)

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  3. Rowzat, you are on a right path to save Mother Earth. Recycling of waste has been accepted, but reusing the stuff in American psych has not taken place which can make the difference. Third most important element will be REDUCING our demands and desires of consumption(necessary or not). Consumerism of many same things are promoted by the business for the profits. Time has come to have minimization life style by rich populations of this world to save the Earth and ecology.We need this education at all levels of the society . Wish you great success in your journey,

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  4. Thank you very much Ram uncle. Couldn't agree with you more .

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