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Mulberry
Truths
By
Jesse Wolf Hardin
There's no greater repository of instruction and inspiration
than the natural world. Search and you will find courage and compassion
in the acts of animals, contentment in the embrace of shifting
clouds or a tourquoise sea... and enlightenment in the lessons
of a single wild mulberry tree.
Well
managed orchards are impressive, but the rareness of wild mulberry
trees make them the most special of all: Seek friends and lovers,
causes and careers, places and moments that embody character and
meaning not those that conform best or produce the most.
Hikers that were busy talking, have been known to walk right under
a tree's branches without noticing its berries: The entire
natural world is constantly trying to engage, instruct and nourish
us. There are lessons, gifts and miracles all around, if only
we'd wake up and open to them.
Turn or duck your head even the slightest bit, and you may spot
berries you hadn't previously seen: In life, the slightest
change in perspective often bears fruit.
The sweetest berries nest high in the tree, and it can be risky
getting to them: Special rewards come to those who are willing
to risk a fall.
At the same time, we often overextend ourslves in order to pick
what looks like a special berry, only to find sweeter ones right
under our nose: The distant and exotic look good from afar, but
often the greatest treasures in life are close at hand.
We'd likely hurt ourselves if we tried to get out to the berries
nested on the end of some slender branch. But then again, we may
be able to pull the branch closer instead: It can look as though
the things we want in life are out of our reach. But sometimes
by staying true to our values, beliefs, assignments and purpose
we can pull closer those people and situations we desire.
When high in the tree, the careful gatherer keeps a firm hold
with whichever hand isn't busy picking: When taking risks
and making changes when projecting into the future or reaching
an arm out into the unknown it's wise to hold on with
the other... maintaining a grip on the here and now, the real
and reliable, the tested and true.
Test the branch that you take, before putting all your weight
into it: If we don't want to fall hard, we should carefully
consider any forks in the trail of life before fully committing
ourselves.
If the tree gets no rain it will die, but if overwatered, its
fruits turn out colorless and bland: a person, whether a child
or an adult, needs sustenance and attention. But those who are
fussed over and smothered, who never learn to do without, are
often the least interesting and effective people.
From a single branch, broken by the snow, two new branches grow:
If our lives are rooted in truth and place, trauma brings about
new awareness and growth. We branch out in response to each broken
effort, doubling the number of approaches and attempts.
For every season of giving, there are months of preparation: The
mulberry only produces berries for a brief three week period,
while the rest of the year it rests, draws sustenance from the
Earth, mends its wounds, and replenishes its vital sugars.
Sometimes the smallest mulberries have the most flavor: In a culture
that claims bigger is better, it's good to notice
how much character can be found in the small, the near and the
accessible.
The softer the berry, the sweeter it usually is: We don emotional
armor and cultivate strength, but hardness brings with it a certain
bitterness.
It takes a lot of roots to hold a tree upright through the heady
winds of Spring: Family, community, history, tradition, and relationship
to place are what keeps us grounded in the face of disruption
and change. To keep our balance requires as many roots as branches.
Thinking about a previous year's bountiful harvest, makes
it harder to appreciate what is found on the tree today: Dwelling
in our minds, in the past or the future, can make it hard to fully
taste the fruits of the present.
Mulberry
seeds somehow live through the process of being eaten and then
passed by birds, and the trees are spread in that way: We spread
the seeds of insight that survive our lengthy digestion. Those
that remain viable are the ones we pass on. And as it is with
the birds, we may never get to see what sprouts from them.
There are only mulberries on a wild tree for a short time, and
the conscientious gatherer will make sure they don't miss
it: We're each only healthy and savvy for a brief and glorious
season. It is thus unwise to allow ourselves to be distracted
from the fullest living of life, even for a single day. Nor should
we take advantage of its fruitful bounty unless we can give it
our complete attention... honor it with our gratitude, and repay
it with our acts.
Excerpted
from Jesse Wolf Hardin's Gaia Eros: Reconnecting To The Magic
& Spirit of Nature (New Page, 2004). For info on this and
programs, write The Earthen Spirituality Project, Box 820, Reserve,
NM 87830.
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