Returning Home
Reconnecting with the spirit of nature
puts a new light on an old place
by Janina Lynne-Marie
One of the articles in Living With The Land (IC#8) Winter 1984, Page 15
Copyright (c)1985, 1997 by Context Institute
BY CERTAIN STANDARDS, the California ranch where I grew up was a large
one: it included nearly 5,000 acres of land, some owned, some leased; 1200
ewes, 200 cows, and several hundred acres planted yearly in oats or barley.
Yet despite the size of our operation (or perhaps because of it), we were
by no means self-sufficient. Aside from the beef and lamb we slaughtered,
we bought what we needed at the supermarket in town, just like everyone
else, and I don't believe it ever occurred to my parents to put in a vegetable
garden or plant fruit trees. Ranching was considered a business, like any
other business - a fairly profitable one in those days. My mother spent
time working in the garden, but she went in for lush lawns and ornamental
shrubbery, not food. "Crops" were my father's department. Like
many housewives of the postwar era, she had a passionate attachment to prepackaged
frozen vegetables, which were a novelty then, with the result that I was
something like nineteen years old before I discovered much of a difference
in taste between broccoli and brussel sprouts (fresh).
Years later, after my father and grandfather died, there was no one around
to take over the ranch, and the once- prosperous business fell into ruin.
Chunks of land were sold to pay taxes and debts; leases were given up, livestock
sold; eventually the last 400 acres were leased out to strangers. They treated
the land as people often will who use it on a temporary basis: they overgrazed
the pastures, let culverts wash away, neglected the fences and water systems
and outbuildings, and in general accelerated the process of decay.
My husband and I spoke of going back and ranching the place ourselves.
We'd lived there in the first years of our marriage, and both remembered
that time with fondness. My husband had come to feel the same way I did
about the beauty of those low, rolling hills, the yellow-green fields of
oats ripening in the spring, the husky call of a ewe to her lamb in the
fog of a winter morning. And though the house we'd lived in had been sold,
and we'd moved away, living for a time in Mexico, then Taos, New Mexico,
and finally settling in the Russian River region of Sonoma County, the possibility
of returning to the ranch had always lingered in the back of our minds.
We read books on the subject of organic farming; we experimented with bio-dynamic,
French intensive gardening methods in our back yard. Our vegetable garden
expanded each year, but still could not keep pace with our four growing
children. Every time my fourteen-year-old son sat down at the table, I felt
a little surge of panic at the rising cost of food. We began seriously calculating
the advantages of milk cows, chickens, a freezer full of lamb.
But when we went to the ranch to look things over, and saw everything
so utterly neglected and falling to pieces, we came away depressed, unsure.
So much time and energy and money it would take to fix that place up! And
it wasn't as though I were the sole heir to the property - there was no
real guarantee that we wouldn't get the place going again, only to have
it sold right out from under us. At California real estate prices, buying
out the other owners was not a likely alternative either. How could we plan
and do the kinds of things a farming family does with future generations
in mind: planting fruit and nut trees, practicing conservation, building
houses and barns to last a hundred years?
Then we took a good look at the town nearby. In recent years, tract homes
had gobbled up most of the irrigated cropland that once surrounded the community
I'd known as a child, transforming it into a sprawling, traffic-choked suburb:
a place where one's sense of community was nurtured and symbolized, not
by the town plaza, not by the civic center, but by the fancy new shopping
mall with its skylights, its artificially controlled temperature, its endless
array of glitter and pseudo luxury. Fighting despair, we stood there watching
the shoppers, their wallets evidently bulging with credit cards, their faces
inexplicably weary and devoid of animation.
The whole atmosphere was quite different from what we'd known in Mexico
or Taos, as well as our present life on the River; so much so that it was
difficult to imagine finding people in this town who would share our interests.
Would we end up driving back to Sonoma County for friendship and social
life? How well would our small daughters adjust to the rigors of the suburban
school system, with its emphasis on fancy equipment and elaborate testing
procedures, after the low key atmosphere of their school on the River?
The more we turned these questions over in our minds, the more confused
we became. Just when we'd all but decided that the potential profits of
the ranch outweighed the drawbacks of the town, one of us would say, "What
profits - if the place gets sold in the near future?" After more discussion
we'd decide we were willing to take that risk, for at least the experience
would be valuable... and a chance stop at that glittery shopping mall would
plunge us back into a state of discouragement.
Then we underwent an experience that changed everything. During the summer,
we heard of a workshop in Huichol shamanism to be held at Mount Shasta.
When I spoke on the phone to Brandt Secunda, the man conducting it (a New
Yorker trained by the Huichols of Mexico), he said there would be other
families coming and he urged me to bring all four kids. This sort of response
being outside the realm of my everyday experience (lots of people tend to
back off at the mention of that many children), I began to suspect that
there might be something special in store for us at this workshop. On the
spur of the moment we packed everyone and headed for Mount Shasta. We were
not disappointed.
In the course of our week there we did sweat lodge ceremonies, prayer
circles, a hike partway up Shasta to leave prayer arrows to the dreaming
god and goddess of the mountain. One night we each went out and slept alone
in the woods while Brandt, assisted by Rob Menzies (horticulturist, author
of The Star Herbal), babysat the kids back in camp. We returned in
the morning full of dreams and visions to share with one another. Toward
the end of the week, we held an all-night ceremony on the banks of a beautiful
lake, watching the moon rise and set, drumming and dancing and praying.
I had read about such things, just as I'd read people's theories about
all of nature being alive. But my experiences at Shasta were more direct
and personal than a reading experience can be; I came away from there knowing
that my whole relationship to the Earth had been awakened and energized.
Even my doubts about the ranch were dispelled, primarily as a result
of a dream I had while I was there. In this dream, I'm telling Rob Menzies
all about the ranch, the run-down conditions, the tremendous amount of work...
"A place in need of healing," he says.
"Also," I say, "I have my doubts about raising meat animals
for money. I do eat meat myself, though. Especially lamb."
"It's not eating meat that has to change - it's your attitude toward
the animal and the land that produced it. You're going to have to do things
differently, with more love, more reverence. And don't forget, every time
you take from the Earth, you should give something back."
"Yes," I say, just a little impatiently. "But the problem
is, we don't really own the place."
He smiles. "Of course not. Who does? Ownership is an illusion, a
convention of our society."
"Maybe, but the money it'll cost to get things going again is no
illusion."
There is a pause, then he says quietly, "Then focus on the healing
and don't think about money. If you have love for the land in your heart,
if wherever you go, your concern is to love and heal the body of our Mother,
the Earth, the money to do it will come."
In the dream I believed him, and later, pondering the matter, it made
sense. I saw that it was time for me to stop paying lip service to the idea
of ecology and begin the actual work of healing - starting right now,
where I was at. There were other places, perhaps, more desirable places,
but I was intimately familiar with the ranch, and already had a lot of emotional
energy invested in it. That seemed the logical place to begin.
Further meditation exposed to me the pettiness of all this sweating and
stewing over long-range profits, all this worry about who would end up eating
"my" walnuts and almonds twenty years from now! I stopped thinking
in terms of sowing in order that my own children might reap, and began to
see it as simply caring for the Earth so that She might go on feeding us
all - my own children, and the children of everyone's children - indefinitely.
I realized that the earlier deterioration of the ranch, though painful
for me at the time, had been a healthy thing - the natural decline of one
particular way of relating to the land to make room for a new and hopefully
better way. It was impossible to imagine bringing to that land the sort
of care it required, the awareness, the knowledge of detail, if we'd still
been dealing with 5,000 acres. It was impossible to imagine constructing
the kind of self-contained, "permaculture" unit we had in mind,
and still be running to town to buy all our food, as my parents had. The
collapse of that big business had pared things down to a manageable size,
and Brandt's workshop had given me a clearer vision of what our new relationship
to it would be.
Someone at Shasta had also suggested I read The Magic of Findhorn,
and that book helped me to recognize some of my hidden reservations
in regards to this idea of healing. It seems that whenever I thought about
moving "back to the land," there was a certain mental image that
superimposed itself over that of the ranch: a lush green meadow encircled
by trees, the babbling creek flowing beside the little log cabin with blue
calico curtains, etc. So deeply was this image embedded in my mind that
I unconsciously considered that scene, that idyllic perfection, to be the
only legitimate setting in which to embark upon the Great Healing Task.
My gut response to the description of Findhorn in its early years was "God,
how could they stand it!" The place was so bleak and cold - so depressing!
But the founders of Findhorn were able to stand it because they were
following the promptings of the Spirit, not seeking the ideal spot in which
to "do their thing." Their stupendous gardening successes were
attributed to the intensive communion with the Spirit which preceded them.
And that's what Mount Shasta was about, for me - learning to be aware of
the Spirit within nature. Without such an awareness, I think it's difficult
to experience anything beyond the most superficial relationship with land.
On the other hand, once one achieves even the merest glimpse of this spiritual
aspect of things, the possibility of using land for superficial purposes
- exploiting it - is out of the question.
So I've given up my search for the perfect piece of land, the perfect
"enlightened" community, and decided to begin with what's close
at hand. Perhaps we'll stay on the ranch a long time, perhaps not; we'll
stay until we sense it's time to move on. But I'm not worrying about whether
I'll be around long enough to eat walnuts from "my" walnut trees.
If the Earth is truly our Mother, a living entity with spirit and feelings
and intelligence, as I believe She is, then what I sow in one place I can
reap in another. For the Earth remembers those who love Her, and She will
always find a way to feed and shelter Her own.
Please support
this web site ... and thanks if you already are!
All contents copyright (c)1985,
1997 by Context Institute
Please send comments to webmaster
Last Updated 29 June 2000.
URL: http://www.context.org/ICLIB/IC08/Janina.htm
Home | Search
| Index of Issues | Table
of Contents
|