I love Saturdays. I have come to think of the work that I do on Saturdays as "farming." Now, I know it isn't farming--not really. We have a medium-sized vegetable garden and two dogs, and that's not a farm, by any stretch of the imagination. But I keep thinking of a comment Joel Salatin made in Yes Magazine once, about how Americans have become used to thinking of our homes as centers of consumption, but how once, thinking of your home as a center of production (typically, a farm, for most of us for most of our history) was the norm. And between trying to live with less plastic junk and trying to eat more sustainably and locally, Saturdays at home have become very productive days. And that productivity--the willingness to substitute patience, skill, and thrift for consumption--I've come to think of as a species of farming. (My apologies to actual farmers, whose work I increasingly appreciate. But thinking in this way works for me, somehow.) First
Welcome to the online journal of a pair of Quaker Pagans.