[AGL] Fw: (")OWL(") The Ecology of Work
michele mason
yaya.m at earthlink.net
Thu May 17 10:18:03 EDT 2007
I have been trying to convince my sons and others for 15 stinkin' years
to work on my place; help me make a real farm—get in shape and see REAL
ORGANIC food growing—enough for all to eat and make a profit!!!! Deaf
DEAF ears. So I did it myself and beat myself nearly to death, or it
feels like. Now too crippled up to do it any more, but it probably gave
me strength for a longer period than I would have had. Bad sentence
structure—don't have time to make it nice.
Anyway, thanks, Michele
On May 16, 2007, at 12:22 PM, Gerry wrote:
>
> This is a great piece. Being old enough to recall the '40's when the
> world
> was simple I often wonder how we have allowed modern values to corrupt
> our
> world.
>
> And while on the subject, I read recently about a professional athlete
> whose
> off-season training regimen is hard work--not in the gym or the fitness
> center, but taxing physical labor in agriculture. He says that his
> strength
> far surpasses that of his team mates who get into shape riding
> treadmill
> bicycles in air-conditioned gyms, etc. Somehow the spectacle of
> well-employed people paying to use weight machines and the like, doing
> aerobic dancing, etc. to stay "fit" while outside the facility Mexican
> nationals are doing the work strikes me as absurd. Now we have all
> these
> escapes from real, meaningful labor in the form of organized outdoor
> activity like cycling, skiing, hiking, beach play, 4 wheeling through
> the
> forests, etc. in which we attempt to reach the same kind of
> conditioning our
> forefathers achieved by engaging in hand labor. Now the laborers are
> at the
> bottom of the pecking order (and increasingly difficult to find)...bad
> ecology. The worst result is our extended life expectancy which is the
> major
> cause of over-population which is the greatest danger to planet Earth
> and
> the major cause of global warming (although you won't hear Al Gore
> saying
> so).
>
> There does seem to be an unconscious need to perform labor on the part
> of
> many people such as the college students who have been volunteering to
> do
> real shit work in places like New Orleans. We see some of them each
> year in
> our little valley far away from the burger chomping hordes. The
> attraction
> of learning agriculture seems to be a basic need in many people. By
> the
> time these young people are my age there is good chance that this
> knowledge
> may be necessary for their survival.
>
> Anyhow, my read is that there are too many people and too many cars.
> Some
> kind of moratorium on both would seem to be a crucial step in saving
> the
> planet.
> G
>
>
>>> This is the end of an essay called The Ecology of Work
>>> Published in the May/June 2007 issue of Orion magazine
>>> http://www.orionmagazine.org/index.php/articles/article/267
>>>
>>> .......
>>> ...
>>> Spiritual rebirth will mean the rediscovery of true human work. Much
>>> of
>>> this work will not be new but recovered from our own rich
>>> traditions. It
>>> will be useful knowledge that we will have to remember. Fishing as a
>>> family
>>> and community tradition, not the business of factory trawlers.
> Agriculture
>>> as a local and seasonal activity, not a carbon-based scheme of
>>> synthetic
>>> production and international shipping. Home- and community-building
>>> as
>>> common skills and not merely the contracted specialization of
> construction
>>> companies and urban planners. Even "intellectual workers" (professors
>>> and scholars) have something to relearn: their own honored place in
>>> the
>>> middle of the community and not in isolated, jargon-ridden
>>> professional
>>> enclaves.
>>>
>>> Such knowledge was once the heart of our lives, and not that long
>>> ago.
>>> Before 1945, survival meant that most families would have all of
>>> these
>>> skills to some degree. These families were certainly materially
>>> poorer
> and
>>> perhaps more naïve, but they were richer in human relations, less
>>> bored,
>>> less depressed, less isolated, less addicted to food and drugs,
> physically
>>> healthier, and they had the rich human pleasure of knowing how to
>>> make
>>> things. It's clear that we haven't forgotten these skills and their
>>> pleasures entirely, but their presence for us is strange and a little
>>> unreal. What used to be life is now "fine living": an array of
>>> expensive hobbies for the affluent that are taught through magazines,
>>> cable
>>> and PBS programs, and local guilds dedicated to gardening, basket
> weaving,
>>> cooking, home remodeling, quilting, and woodworking. Although we
>>> rarely
>>> recognize it in this way, through these "hobbies" we express a desire
>>> for a world that is now lost to us.
>>>
>>> My argument is not, I assure you, a longing look back to the
>>> wonderful
>>> world of pre-war rural America. But it is to say that in the course
>>> of
> the
>>> last century of global capital triumphant we have been further
>>> isolated
>>> from what Ruskin called "valuable human things." In exchange, we have
>>> been offered only the cold comfort of the television and computer
> monitor,
>>> and the GPS device that can locate you but only at the cost of being
>>> located in a place that is not worth knowing and certainly not worth
>>> caring
>>> about.
>>>
>>> The turn away from this ugly, destructive, and unequal world is not
>>> something that can be accomplished by boycotting corporations when
>>> they're bad or through the powerful work of the most concerned
>>> scientists. It will not be delivered with glossy brochures by the
>>> President's Council on Sustainable Development, and it will certainly
> not
>>> be sold to you by Martha Stewart. A return to the valuable human
>>> things
> of
>>> the beautiful and the useful will only be accomplished, if it is
>>> ever to
>>> be
>>> accomplished, by the humans among us.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> ********************(")OWL(")****OWL-Old Ways
>>> Living****(")OWL(")**************************
>>>
>>> "We abuse the land because we regard it as a commodity belonging to
>>> us.
>>> When we see land as a community to which we belong, we may begin to
>>> use
> it
>>> with love and respect." - Aldo Leopold
>>>
>>> ************************(")OWL(")****OWL-Old Ways
>>> Living****(")OWL(")********************************
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