Category Archives: Nature

Static-Free Trails: On Amusement, Power, and the Hunger Beneath the Hunger

Alice Dunbar-Nelson once wrote, “The American public does not want to be uplifted, ennobled—it wants to be amused.”

A poet, journalist, teacher, and political activist, Alice belonged to the first generation born free in the South after the Civil War. She helped shape the Harlem Renaissance and understood, with unsettling clarity, the forces shaping American consciousness. From where I stand, she was a visionary. And I often wonder what she would think if she were here today.

Who doesn’t want to escape? You work all day at a job that drains more than it gives, for a boss who doesn’t recognize your brilliance. You come home too tired to cook, so you toss something lifeless into the microwave or reach for ice cream to soothe that ineffable hunger nothing seems to touch. Even when you know the darker truths—the consolidation of our food system, the patenting of life forms, the quiet march toward corporate control of nourishment itself—facing it all can feel too daunting.

A recent New York Times report noted that Americans now spend more on entertainment than on gasoline, household furnishings, or clothing. The Twentieth Century Fund estimates that total recreation spending reaches around forty billion dollars a year. I suspect that’s conservative. We are, as Alice suggested, on an amusement ride—and many have no intention of getting off. And perhaps that’s convenient for the small handful of men who benefit from a population too entertained to resist. I contemplate this as I tear myself away from a recorded episode of American Idol. I’m not immune to the pull. But I refuse to go quietly.

William Engdahl’s Seeds of Destruction details how four Anglo-American agribusiness giants seek global dominance by patenting genetically modified life forms. Their aim: control the world’s food supply—and, by extension, our lives. Government subsidies for industrial agriculture in North America, Western Europe, and East Asia exceed a billion dollars a day. A billion. And I can assure you the organic farmer isn’t the one cashing those checks. Why not? Inquiring minds—including mine—want to know.

I’ve ordered Engdahl’s book, eager to see whether his findings echo what I discovered during my ten years in Washington. History has a way of whispering warnings, and I’m drawn to the voices of those who saw the machinery of power more clearly than most.

President Woodrow Wilson, reflecting on the passage of the Federal Reserve Act, confessed:

“I am a most unhappy man; I have unwittingly ruined my country… A great industrial nation is controlled by its system of credit… We have come to be one of the worst ruled, one of the most completely controlled and dominated governments in the civilized world.”

Thomas Jefferson warned, long before Wilson:

“If the American people ever allow private banks to control the issue of their currency… their children will wake up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered.”

Sometimes, the weight of these truths makes me want to drown myself in “fun.” But the fun eventually feels shallow. Empty. What should I be doing with my time? What do any of us have the energy to do? Most Americans work long hours for too little pay, too undernourished to complain, let alone to fight for change. And that emptiness inside—the one no entertainment or processed food can satisfy—grows louder.

Entertainment occasionally reveals more truth than it intends. In House of Cards, an irate citizen is handcuffed to a light pole, screaming into the void. Francis Underwood approaches and says, “Nobody can hear you, nobody cares about you, nothing will come of your screaming.” Fiction, yes—but fiction with teeth.

Our children are waking up homeless on the continent their fathers conquered. And the question remains: who has the power to take the issuing power from the banks and restore it to the people? Kennedy spoke of doing so. His voice was loud. And look what it cost him. No president since has dared to touch the subject. And me? I’m just another sound bite lost in the static.

So I step away from the static.

I leave technology behind and disappear into the woods, where the creaking of trees and the soft shuffle of animals remind me what real nourishment feels like. There, I can breathe again. There, I can satisfy that ineffable hunger. In the meantime, I make choices—small, responsible choices that shape the quality of my life. What a luxury it is to choose how I spend my time. I don’t take that lightly. Isn’t that what we all want? To do what we want, when we want?

Eating locally and organically whenever possible keeps my body strong enough to pursue the things that matter. Hugging a tree—yes, I’m proudly a tree hugger—grounds me in a way no entertainment ever could. Leaning against a trunk, arms open, eyes closed, I breathe as the tree breathes: one long, slow, 24‑hour breath. In that moment, my power returns. My compassion returns. My clarity returns.

It’s the little choices we make every day that shape the world we live in. Choices that feed both body and soul are rare in this static-filled age. But they exist. And they matter.

Alice Dunbar-Nelson understood the seduction of amusement—and the danger of it. She saw how easily a nation could be lulled into complacency. Yet she also believed in the power of individual agency, of art, of truth-telling.

If she were here today, I think she’d recognize the landscape. I think she’d recognize the hunger. And I think she’d tell us that stepping out of the static—into the woods, into nourishment, into awareness—is not an escape.

It’s resistance.

Happy Static-Free Trails.

 

Seeping Mud Tea and Traveling Back in Time!

Tea cup Stock Photos

 I drink what I call ‘mud tea’. My acupuncturist recommended Chinese herbs to help with the heat in my body. Apparently, I’ve too much fire. I do have Ares rising. If you know me, you’ll understand. Any way the tea works well.

Sipping this tea is like stepping back in time…I’m a six-year-old girl growing up in a small town in Texas building mud towns next to our house. I’m sure to have had a bite or two. I’m swinging from ropes across and into creeks. Falling in love with nature. Battling boys with BB Guns who do harm and kill tiny wood creatures indiscriminately.

It’s the 21st Century and I’m still battling boys with guns who harm and kill indiscriminately. How am I different? The choices I make either set me apart or makes me more homogenized. I want to be different. But, in what way? Each of us is different, yet we are also the same. The same feelings of anger, pain, confusion, desperation, joy, peace, love…the whole gambit of feelings flow through us at different times in our lives.

The knowledge of who I truly am, different and the same, humbles me and brings me to a point. When I come here and tap these words in so purposefully it seems more than appropriate that I come straight from the heart, but, afraid to say out loud what lies so deep.

I’m so very sorry for all my transgressions in life. Must I list them? Shame also lives there. Is that not enough? I beg forgiveness and struggle to forgive myself. Resting with love and light as I sip my Mud Tea!

Magic for the 21st Century!


 
 
 

A beautiful picture, isn’t it?  But it’s nothing in comparison to the real thing. No image or video will ever come close to the real thing.

I recently heard the term Forest Bathing. I believe Forest Bathing is a good thing. How long does a forest bath last? And do the bathers understand their environment? Do Forest Bathers know nature has a language of its own and that understanding the language of nature takes slow observation?  I see pods in Forest bathers ears and they seem oblivious to their surroundings. Is this Forest Bathing? 

I advise making Forest Bathing your heart’s desire and unplugging from technology. Only then can you truly begin to understand the magic of Earth?

As a child, I lived with the wilderness outside my door. Just a couple of blocks away. And Red River was only three miles from my door.  Forest bathing was a daily affair.  Barefoot at times. Wiggling my toes in the earth. Wild smells filled my nostrils as I made my trail.  Rustling leaves. Squirrels chasing around trees, and the flurry of chirpping birds all around.

I had an advantage growing up. No technology. My forest bathing began at about age eight. Every visit lasted for half a day or more. The forest opened something I didn’t have a name for…maybe it was magic. My world was small. I breathed sweet air.  I was the kid swinging from a rope into a pond, hugging and laying against my tree, and dreaming.

The forest and all who integrate their livelihood around and into nature are truly magical.  Working with Cosmic Rhythms isn’t a new thing.  There are Ancient Mysteries, ancient technology, unexplained history, biblical prophecy, alien origins, secrets of the occult, lost worlds, secret societies, the paranormal, quantum theory, sacred monoliths, and forbidden knowledge that science cannot explain.

There are ancient Earth Grids. Working with these grids has been going on for a long and distinct period. The grids are of nature. Scientists do not have a name for the unseen forces in nature. Some scientists call it magic. Denial of its existence does not serve us well. My personal experience with nature tells me that the magic in nature is extremely real.

Twice in two days, a hawk flew maybe 30 feet above me, and I jumped an unnamed tributary and sat listening for a long while. The babbling brook carving its trail and wonder what architect plays here?

Who am I to be a part of this? And, as a part of this, then best I understand the language of nature. I’ve been learning the language for decades and have my people.  Together we grew an industry by 3200% in 10 years. Unprecedented growth! No industry has ever done more.

My people and I sold the US of A on organic farming. It’s been a game-changer.  It’s a huge leap for humanity! Organic and Biodynamic farming that works with cosmic rhythms sets a new bar and brings back the relevance of what came before.  Understanding that we are a part of this magic is a thrilling discovery. Knowing oneself connects us to the cosmic rhythms. It’s an incredible journey! An intricate trail that’s becoming a more and more traveled trail.

 Happy Magic for the 21st Century trails!