Friday, February 19, 2010

Everything Has a Starting Point


Today marks about one year since I decided to plant a fruit and vegetable garden. As of today that idea has yet to reach fruition. For one year it's been a dormant idea collecting dust. However, upon my recent reading of a John Zerzan interview, the garden idea was smashed from its paralysis. No, he didn't say "go grow a garden and save the Earth". But he made a minute point that captured me; he spoke of alienation from our own physical conditions. Our alienation from natural things. A kind of living without being conscious or aware of our bodies. As if we were ghosts in a impartial machine.

The garden and Zerzan's point coalesce.

Living in the suburbs within a technologically advanced society, we find ourselves in a condition of dependence. Essentially, we play an indirect role in our mode of production. As a result, we grow outside ourselves. Practical things like fixing a car, building simple electrical devices, or even keeping a garden are all foreign things to most. Just 50 years ago all these things and much more were common knowledge.

But all drab shreds of theory aside, growing and tending a plant is my attempt to do something practical and direct.

So the process begins!
Step 1: Clean out my jungle of a back yard. Aside from the accumulated mounds of dog shit and wild grass(at a height of about 1-1.5 feet) that grew over the dead shrubs and branches, there was simply a lot of junk scattered everywhere. Plastic toys, dressers, dolls, a coffin(don't ask), old clothes, etc. So, step one was the disposal of all the junk, and general clean up of the entire area. A huge thanks goes to Twinky for assisting me in this task that I'm afraid I've under-stated.


The next step will be to tackle the over-grown grass and shrubbery. Sounds like a minor task, but that yard is a real monster.


The semi-before photo. (Note: this picture was taken after getting rid of all the junk aside from that splinter ridden ladder. Also, the picture does not include the other half of the yard that we cleaned which does not consist of greenery.)

6 comments:

The German said...

i enjoyed the post, i dont think there is any reason at all for you to be dissapointed in it...i mean look at my first post...they as in them? who the fuck cares about those sell outs right?
lol
anyway, good post, im looking forward to the garden, helping you out too if im not busy blogging braj, but i would love to plant some stuff since my mother has taken up every inch of ground in our yard.
...
as for the zerzan part...you can expand on that later, wasn't the focus of the post, the focus was the garden...
welcome to blogopshere...welcome to the revolution
-todos para todo, nada para nosotros

Anonymous said...

please tell me about the coffin... what the fuck? is your dad in the mafia?

Yvette & Armida said...

"Essentially, we play an indirect role in our mode of production. As a result, we grow outside ourselves. Practical things like fixing a car, building simple electrical devices, or even keeping a garden are all foreign things to most. Just 50 years ago all these things and much more were common knowledge."

I like that and yet it makes me very sad. Niceee first post my log.

irvingdizzle said...

What do you plan on growing? The easiest ones are of course tomatoes, carrots, peppers, onions, spinach and peas.

here are some more
http://ezinearticles.com/?10-Easiest-Vegetables-To-Grow-In-Your-Organic-Garden&id=997226

and here are some more great articles
http://home.ivillage.com/gardening/veg/topics/0,,4tm2,00.html

Good luck!

Every Tongue said...

Nick, you are more than welcome to join me in this garden project. It'll be great!

Anonymous, the coffin's past must stay anonymous. But here's a hint: blood, loud music, pizza, monsters, and candy. :)

Monster, that part is a fact about the structure of our society and just one implication of it. Some food for thought.

I.dizzle, thank you for the articles! Yea, i want to start with simple things. It'll be a developing project as i learn more about gardening. Right now i know zero.

Sibling of your gal pal said...

You should really talk to my parents. We had a pretty nice garden growing in Arizona for a while so I'm sure they would love to give you some helpful pointers. Good luck!