What Can Plants Teach Us About Value?
You can see where the trauma is, where the gnarled and twisted parts of the trunk form. But the tree is no less of a tree, unless you value it only by the wood you can extract from its dead body.
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What Can Plants Teach Us About Value?
You can see where the trauma is, where the gnarled and twisted parts of the trunk form. But the tree is no less of a tree, unless you value it only by the wood you can extract from its dead body.
What Can Plants Teach Us About Hyperindividualism?
As a tree breathes, the leaves release bacteria into the air and up to the clouds. Humidity in the air condenses around these “Cloud Condensation Nuclei”, creating raindrops. The rain then falls back to earth upwind. In other words, the trees literally call the rain. This supports the larger ecosystem.
While turning on the AC immediately brings the temperature down in a room, the ultrafine pollution from generating “clean” energy destabilizes the rain cycles, resulting in humidity, heat waves, droughts and floods. In other words, the electricity generated to power the AC for one person’s comfort can worsen a heat wave for the rest of the community.
Further Reading
https://understandingag.com/regenerative-rainmaking/ https://acp.copernicus.org/articles/11/12917/2011/ https://www.sott.net/article/318260-Harnessing-the-ice-making-powers-of-bacteria-scientists-crack-mechanism
What Can Plants Teach Us About Our Perspectives?
Unchecked, Knotweed (Polygonum cuspidatum) can get out of control, spreading and "invading." In some places, however, it is prized for it's medicinal qualities (powerful against Lyme disease) and nutritional merits (delicious in pie). In those places, it is loved and harvested and isn't considered a menace at all.
Further Reading:
Invasive Plant Medicine by Timothy Lee Scott
Healing Lyme by Stephen Buhner
Knotweed recipes
What Can Trees Teach Us About Our Role in the Environment?
What Can Plants Teach Us About Striving?
"If you do follow your bliss you put yourself on a kind of track that has been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought to be living is the one you are living." -- Joseph Campbell
So often, it can feel like we're spinning our wheels and burning out in an effort to DO something amazing and big for the environment, or for whatever else is going on in our lives. Yet nothing else in the natural world seems to have this dogmatic concept of "should" - they just follow their bliss instincts.
Further Reading:
Humans: Pleasure Activism, Joseph Campbell
Cows: Allen Savory: How to fight desertification and reverse climate change
Dung Beetles: Can dung beetles rein in cattle’s methane emissions?
What Can Plants Teach Us About Wondering?
What Can Plants Teach Us About Enjoyment?
What Can Plants Teach Us About Attitude "Problems"?
Image: Tree trunk with two eyes peeking out of a hole. Upper branch shows smooth leaves, lower branches are prickly.
"Why do you have to be so prickly all the time!?"
"You would be too, if deer kept biting your head off."
The holly tree is heterophyllous, meaning it can grow its leaves in different shapes. As you might expect, the lower leaves get spikier the more they are chomped on.
Further Reading:
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/686024
What Can Plants Teach Us About the Just World Fallacy?
Sometimes things just happen and there isn't any rhyme or reason to it. The Just World Fallacy is the idea that people get what they deserve. If good things are happening, you've done well and if bad things are happening, you must have done something wrong. It's your own fault things aren't working and you get full credit when things go well.
Has anyone else noticed how, when you have a chronic condition of some kind, that there’s always the basic assumption from people around you that you’re not already doing everything you can?
It’s all about the illusion of control. People who are healthy like to believe they can always keep being healthy if they do the right things. They don’t want to think about how good people get struck with terrible circumstances for no reason. So they keep assuming that if they got sick, they could do something to make it better. And if you’re still sick, that must mean you’ve done something wrong or not done enough.
Nail. Head. The same attitude can be seen in how a lot of people talk about poverty.
And sexual assault. All they have to do is not go there not drink that not wear that not date them and they’ll be fine, right?
The Just World theory - that as long as I do everything right, I’m safe, and everybody who isn’t safe is at fault for not doing everything right - is perhaps the most harmful and widespread mindset today
if you ever see a conservative and wonder just how in the world they have so little compassion? they are genuinely convinced that most - not all, but most - bad things that happen are the fault of the person affected, because then they don’t have to feel bad
somebody explaining this to me as a young adult was, quite literally, the start of me seeing the world in a new way and moving considerably to the left politically. by letting go of the just world mindset my conception of reality shifted considerably
Snowed in
A blanket of snow is like a pause button, insulating plants from cold winds and keeping them moist until the environment is more hospitable to growth. When we’re feeling buried in the storms of life, we too can hold still and wait for it to pass.
Further Reading:
A Blanket of Snow: Good or Bad for Plants? - Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Wintering by Katherine May
What Can Plants Teach Us About New Years Resolutions?
Growing almost anywhere, Little Bluestem survives and thrives as it is. No need for resolutions. This year, let's notice our own colorful uniqueness and how we, too, are withstanding and flourishing - even in the harshest of conditions.
Further reading:
https://perennialplant.org/news/575083/2022-Perennial-Plant-of-the-Year-Announced.htm
What Can Plants Teach Us About Appearances?
I get so caught up with what I'm supposed to be doing, and doing well, that it makes it hard to take a break. It's nice to know that my experience has value too, and that I'm not just an accomplishment-bot.
What Can Plants Teach Us About Wintry Darkness?
The poinsettia is a photoperiodic short day plant, meaning the long dark nights of winter are crucial for it to flower. Darkness triggers replenishment and growth in us, too, if we can let it in. Happy Winter Solstice!
Resources
Waking Up to the Dark by Clark Strand
Wintering by Katherine May
What Can Plants Teach Us About Preparing to Let Go?
Resources
More about the transformation of autumn leaves:
Why Leaves Really Fall Off Trees
Can you hear the trees talking?
For perspectives on personal transformation:
Somatic Experiencing
Qi Gong
Growth Mindset
Time's up!