Serving The Planet With Plants

Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Even tiny gardens honor and serve the earth

So Many Ways To Serve

On Friday I facilitated a fascinating and troubling conversation with a group of service veterans, a few still active, most long-retired. They shared stories about some of the hidden costs of service, from not being around to raise your own kids to returning from active duty in Viet Nam to be harassed and jeered at by civilians. One main theme that ran through the stories was the deep bond they share to this day, recognizing each other as brothers and sisters no matter when or where they served. The word camaraderie was mentioned many times and was obvious in the respectful, affectionate way they listened to each other and encouraged each person to speak.

That bond of sibling-hood seems beautiful to me, as does the kindness every participant displayed towards the others. However, there were also comments expressing the idea that people who don’t participate in military service don’t appreciate their freedom and “don’t know who paid for it.” It didn’t really need that to make very aware of my own complex feelings about the many ways we may be protectors of freedoms of many kinds. During the Viet Nam years, I was an active war protestor and though I certainly never felt or expressed animosity towards anyone who served our country (or any country), I did and do feel strongly that far too many wars are less about righteousness than about political power and corporate interests. I also have strong feelings about the nature of service, and what we may choose to be in service towards. Personally, I want my life to serve not just family and country but the planet and all its myriad, marvelous beings.

Building Powerful Connections

In my lifetime, that tension between those who fought and those who did not has echoed and reverberated through the civil rights movement, women’s liberation, Black power, gay pride and more. All those powerful social justice energies provoked shifts in awareness that are still changing the world, but always so slowly and painfully. I’ve been thinking all weekend about the intense bonding those veterans share, and how sadly rare that camaraderie has been in the various social justice movements I’ve participated in. There were certainly moments of feeling part of something larger than ourselves during peaceful marches and protests, yet perhaps because many people were serving different visions, the unity seemed fleeting.

Several veterans suggested that our society would benefit from a mandatory year or two of basic training or community service at age 18. I don’t know how much the psychology of military training contributes to that deep bonding the veterans share, but I suspect the deliberate breaking down of old patterns and habits that basic training involves may be a factor. When people are ‘trained’ out of old patterns into new ones, they end up with shared common goals and earn healing respect for their new skills. A similar sense of connection often exists among young people voluntarily offering a year or two of community service in AmeriCorps, the Peace Corps or similar groups, again perhaps because of being shaken out of familiar patterns and developing common goals.

Planting Joy For The Planet

For most of my life, I’ve followed the Quaker tradition, and consider both praying for peace and being a social justice activist to be forms of service as valuable as anything involving weapons and destruction of life. As a gardener, I find myself praying for planetary peace that includes the planet, the plants and animals, and the habitats they depend on. In one of my favorite books, a post apocalyptic culture has arisen in which people choose to become Sisters To Trees, replanting places destroyed in destructive battles. I fondly imagine myself to be a Sister To Plants, encouraging people with concerns about climate change to become proactive planters.

Quite often people dismiss such ideas as simplistic and ineffectual, yet proactive planting is far from a bromide. Recent research shows that adding as little as a quarter inch of compost to bare earth or poor soil triggers carbon drawdown almost immediately. Every little backyard pollinator patch may be habitat for a surprising number of tiny creatures, each with important roles to play in local ecology. In my little neighborhood of mostly small, elderly mobile homes, pocket hanky sized gardens support hundreds of living creatures, while a bigger, monocultural lawn can’t support much of anything. When tempted to give in to fear and despair, let’s plant pollinator patches, plant trees, spread some compost. Equally important, let’s teach others to do the same things and find joy in them.

 

 

This entry was posted in Birds In The Garden, Butterfly Gardens, Climate Change, composting, Gardening With Children, Health & Wellbeing, Plant Diversity, Plant Partnerships, Pollination Gardens, Social Justice, Sustainable Gardening, Sustainable Living, Teaching Gardening and tagged , , . Bookmark the permalink.

7 Responses to Serving The Planet With Plants

  1. Isabel Belanger says:

    Loved this post – right on! Plantings contribute to positivity in this world – even on a small scale. Actually I like all your posts.

    • Ann Lovejoy says:

      Thanks, Isabel, I really appreciate hearing this. I’m struggling hard many days and both practicing gratitude and joyful observation of the natural world are very helpful.Being in the garden, even just weeding, always brings me back into balance (eventually; sometimes it takes a lot of weeds!).

  2. Carrie says:

    Thank you for this encouraging message! I sometimes feel
    overwhelmed and hopeless – what difference can I possible make? I will keep serving the earth in the small ways that I can.

    • Ann Lovejoy says:

      Thanks, Carrie, I totally understand those feelings and often share them. Shifting my focus to the garden, watching the little birds seeking seeds, a few wakeful pollinators investigating late blossoms, the adventuous new shoots, the budding new leaves nudging tattered old ones off (already!), all these things help me find hope and comfort.

  3. Barbara L Stewart says:

    Thank you for this insightful essay. I, too, have noticed this bond via the military. Interestingly, my Father, a WWII bomber pilot, eschewed any contact with “military buddies” and the entire military culture when he returned home. He was turned off by the glorification of war, and considered the awards handed out for things like bravery and valor to be vainglorious artifacts that hid the true horrors of war. Our home was filled with books picturing the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps. He would point out to us kids that those military men were as loyal to their leaders as the Allies. I often wonder if there were many others like Dad, and we just never heard from them.

  4. “Northwest natives nurture birds through winter”
    Great Article–thank you!!
    Jeannette

    • Ann Lovejoy says:

      Thanks, Jeanette, I am always looking for ways to welcome birds into the garden and nothing is more effective than nurturing native plants!

Leave a Reply to Isabel Belanger Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *