Kitchen / Garden / Sanctuary - Urban Homesteading to Nourish Body + Spirit

Category: Thoughts + Inspiration (Page 14 of 18)

Wow It’s Cold Out!

"Hi!" - After my walk home from work.

We’ve got some deep cold going on right now!

Has it hit your neck of the woods?

Today broke a record; it only got up to -1!

Tonight will be -21 with windchill around -30! And it’s humid, making the cold seem colder. To breathe deeply makes your lungs hurt, and the moisture in your nose freezes on each in-breath! I walked home from work today (2 miles) instead of taking the bus, just to feel it. Invigorating, but two rules! 1.) Keep moving. 2.) Don’t take your hands out of your mittens, ever! I was amazed at how quickly they got numbed and absolutely chilled to the bone. Shew!

And how grateful I was to come home to a cozy house with a hubby who squeezed me close to warm up my icy skin! And then to sit with my feet against the space heater and have a steaming cup of tea in the dimming twilight. ***Ahhhhhhh***

On My Mind: The Artificiality of City Life

This past weekend, Hubby and I were in line at the deli of an upscale gourmet food market in the city where we live. I was tired and not feeling well, my feet were screaming, I wanted to go home, and our order was taking forever.

While standing there, I began to look around me at all the expensive food items, for the first time seeing the complete picture of city life, brought into crystal-clear focus at this little market.

The meat we were in line for…we could have hunted that. The beautiful selection of mushrooms…we could have grown those, or gathered them. The cilantro in our basket…it could have come from our garden. The pricey sushi-grade fish we purchased…we could have caught that ourselves.

And so it is with cities. They’re artificial. Some folks thrive on the city lifestyle — and more power to ’em!

Here in the city… We wake before we’re rested. Trudge to work day after day after day. So that we may sit in a tiny cubicle and stare at a computer. Wasting our precious life force on things we care nothing about. We come home stressed and exhausted. All to make money. Money, so that we can afford to live in the city so that we can be close to the jobs we need in order to make money. Money, so that we can afford to buy the food we aren’t growing ourselves because we’re too busy working, and because we live in the city and have no land.

See what a circle it is?

It’s self-sustaining. Vicious, indeed!

And so how do you get off the merry-go-round if you were born into it? If your family no longer owns land?

The cruel answer is…with money!

You hunker down, trudge to the job, and live below your means. Get a cheaper apartment. Get rid of your car. Visit the library instead of the bookstore. Eat out less. Kick the Starbucks habit.

All the while, stuffing as much money into your savings account as you can. And then, decide when you’ve saved up enough. Don’t keep saving and saving till you’re dead! When you’ve reached “enough,” quit your job and buy some land — with cash; no debts, no banks. Someplace where you can hunt and fish and garden and forage. Live in a temporary shelter and build a house if there isn’t one there already. With your neighbors, trade the goods and services that you have for the goods and services that you need. Follow your passions…create things…and chances are, you’ll earn the little money you need from those soulful pursuits alone.

And you’re free! You’ve broken the cycle that dates back to the Industrial Revolution, when our ancestors left the land and came to the city.

And you’ve created a new self-sustaining circle that’s healthier, happier, freer…lighter.

You were the maverick! You broke away! So pass that land onto your children; tell them not to sell it, but to pass it down to their children, and on down the generations. Show them by example how being self-sufficient on their own land is the key to their freedom!

Savoring the Christmas Season

I love Christmas, and I have great Christmas memories from childhood, so it’s a sweet time of year to me.

I find that Christmas is pretty much what you make it out to be (hmm, kinda like life), so I savor the aspects of it that I like, and politely bow out of — or totally ignore — the rest (like holiday potlucks with coworkers, secret santa gift exchanges, white elephant gift parties, the obnoxious commercialism of the season in general, etc!).

What I love are the Christmas trees, the lights and candles and decorations, Bing Crosby singing carols, spending time with people I love, the smell of pine boughs…of cookies in the oven, and the cozy, dreamy atmosphere of all those things combined.

For me, the Christmas season means taking a break from ordinary life to slow down and soak up the beautiful sights, smells, and sounds that are unique to this season. And if I feel any stress creeping in, I know that I need to simplify my plans or cut back on any obligations I have in order to preserve my love of this time of the year.

One of my favorite “Christmas delights” is to ride my bike around the historic neighborhoods after dark to see the Christmas lights adorning the beautiful, century-old houses with grand Christmas trees in the windows and stockings hung on the fireplace mantels.

How do you create your Christmas season? What are your favorite things to savor?

Going to Argentina on Friday!

We have a big trip planned!! We’re leaving for Argentina on Friday and will be there for a little over 2 weeks. We’ve been talking about this trip for a long time, but only last week did we actually bite the bullet and buy our tickets. And then only last night did we really begin hammering out an itinerary. We’re still working on that part! Guess that leaves the plane ride to brush up on my extremely minimal Spanish. F used to speak fluent Spanish but not anymore. Though I’m sure we’ll get by OK!

At first we were planning to wing it completely with the itinerary, but realized that not having a plan would waste a lot of precious time (and probably money) because we want to see many different places with only 2 weeks to do it! I think having a rough plan will cut down on stress, too.

We’re going down there primarily to scope it out as a possible place to live. We’d like to be in the countryside (with several acres), but within reasonable distance from a good-sized city. We like smaller towns, but with a progressive mindset. And preferably near a beach! So we’ll be looking around in the area south of Buenos Aires and north of Bahia Blanca. Any recommendations? Have you been there? Know of a good spot to visit? Leave a comment and let us know!

The rest of the trip, then, will be sightseeing and getting a feel for the rest of the country. We’ll see some penguins in the south, the Lakes District in the west, and possibly Iguazu Falls in the northern jungle. If you have any recommendations regarding these places, too, please leave a comment!!

It’ll be a whirlwind trip! I think we’ll both be glad when we’re finally on the plane. We’ve been in trip-plan mode pretty heavily these past couple days, and as F and I both keep remembering more and more things we need to do, it’s getting overwhelming! Trip planning stresses me out, and traveling often stresses me out, too. I love travel, but I’m also a homebody and get easily overwhelmed. But gosh, I do love being out in the world seeing new places!

Preparing for this trip has been a little easier than previous trips, though. I’ve done the solo backpacking thing through New Zealand and some of Australia, so I know what to pack…already have everything I need…and have done it before and know the drill. SO helpful!

Anyway, our itinerary will still be fairly open, so if you have any pointers about places to see, or travel tips for Argentina, leave a comment!

Philosophy Friday: All That Glitters Is Not Gold

If we were to look at our lives on paper, they might well glitter — at least by societal standards. Looking at our resumes, we’re proud of the outward things we’ve accomplished: the jobs we’ve mastered, the roles we’re been valued for, the amount of money we bring in each month.

But we must also consider the reality of our hearts. We may look pretty accomplished on paper, but what’s the feeling behind all that? Is it true joy? Did you love doing all that stuff? Do you love what you’re doing now? Or was it stuff you did because of the influence of someone or something outside yourself? Or maybe the feelings are mixed.

I’ve found that what makes life worth living, for me at least, boils down to two things:

Being with people or pets that I have a strong heart connection with (for me this is a very small circle), and doing things that my heart loves to do. I always know what my heart loves because those are the things that give me energy, uplift me, and excite me. What drains me and depletes me has nothing to do with my heart.

In this urban reality of high rent, high food costs, and expensive healthcare, sometimes we must do what drains and depletes us temporarily, at least until we can make the transition to live more in line with what our hearts ache for. And F. and I are in that boat together right now…temporarily doing what drains and depletes us, in the form of our rat-race jobs, in favor of earning and saving money so that we may then buy land for homesteading and living a more heart-centered, self-sufficient existence.

What makes the situation trickier is that “in this economy” (are you as tired of that expression as I am?) we feel lucky to have jobs. It’s hard to think of quitting glittering-good jobs that provide steady income, health insurance, and paid vacation. It’s also hard to think of staying at these jobs because of the way they drain every last ounce of our energy…and how we come home angry and stressed from the day, too tired to even do the footwork involved with transitioning into a life closer to the land. Those same impressive jobs that decorate our resumes are precisely what’s preventing us from doing what’s most important in the whole entire world — devoting time to who we love and what we love.

It’s hard to know what to do. It’s hard to know when it’s the right time to give your two weeks’ notice and go for your dreams, especially when there are some very practical considerations to be made like rent, food, and health insurance. The health insurance, especially right now for me, is important. And I’m so not into western medicine or health insurance…but that’s a whole other topic. I’m very split — appreciating my insurance, benefits, and steady income…while at the same time aching like never before for some land and a slower, quieter, more soulful life. I don’t know the answer, so I’m waiting as patiently as I can until things become clearer.

Are you in a transition like this too? Is it as hard for you as it is for me?!

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