This isn’t about motivation or good intentions.

It’s about the kind of work that only happens when people keep showing up — to conversations, to decisions, to shared responsibility — even when it’s inconvenient or uncomfortable.

That’s often what holds the lifeboat together.

#BuildingTheLifeboat #ShowUp #Kimmerer #LifeboatAcademy

“Even a wounded world is feeding us. Even a wounded world holds us, giving us moments of wonder and joy. I choose joy over despair. Not because I have my head in the sand, but because joy is what the earth gives me daily and I must return the gift.”
― Robin Wall Kimmerer, in her book "Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants"

#nativePlants #quotations #gardening #nature #joy #plants #Kimmerer #book

2 more recommendations: ROBIN WALL KIMMERER "Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses" + THOMAS HALLIDAY "Otherlands: A Journey Through Earth's Extinct Worlds"

The biologist Robin wall Kimmerer, a member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation of the Great Plains region of the United States, observes that the indigenous Potawatomi language is rich in verb forms that attribute aliveness to the more than human world.The word for hill, for examples a verb: “to be a hill” Hills are always in the progress of hilling, they are actively being hills- Equipped with this ‘grammar of anomaly’, it is possible to walkabout the life of other organisms without tighter reducing them to an ‘it’, or borrowing concepts traditionally reserved for humans. By contrast, in English, writes Kimmerer there is no way to recognise the ‘simple existence of another living being’. If you’re not a human subject, by default you’re an inanimate object: an ‘it’, a ‘mere thing’. If you are repurpose a human concept to help make sense of the life of a non-human
organism, you’ve tumbled into the trap of anthropomorphism. Use ‘it’, and you’ve objectified the organism, and fallen into a different trap.
Biological realities are never black and white. Why should the stories and metaphors we use to make sense of the world — Our investigative tools — be so? Might we be able to expand some of our concepts, such that speaking might not always require a mouth, hearing might not always require ears, and interpreting might not always require a nervous system? Are we able to do this without smothering other life forms with prejudice and innuendo?
(this text is by merlin sheldrake about kimmerer)
@braidingsweetgrassbook #kimmerer #thomashalliday

#ClimateDiary Today is #Harvest festival at our children's school, and it's made me think about how all the food uncertainty #ClimateCrisis brings makes you all the more grateful for harvests. And about how #HarvestFestivals are/were so important throughout the world - something all cultures have in common. Am sharing Robin Wall #Kimmerer 's wonderful #HonourableHarvest talk here. Lastly, also reflecting on what it actually means at our school: 1/2

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lz1vgfZ3etE

Reclaiming the Honorable Harvest: Robin Kimmerer at TEDxSitka

YouTube
Some time ago I read the book "Braiding Sweetgrass" from Robin Wall #Kimmerer. She writes a lot about #reciprocity. How humans shouldn't only take things from #nature, but also give something back.
I love that idea, but I'm not sure how to do this.
So since a couple of days, I try to think about ways of giving nature something back every day. But it's difficult.
Today I collected some garbage in the neighbourhood.
Does someone else have some ideas?
#sustainability
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Braiding_Sweetgrass
Braiding Sweetgrass - Wikipedia

Der #Winter, wenn die grüne Erde unter einer Schneedecke zur Ruhe gebettet ist, ist die Zeit der #Geschichten. Zu Beginn ruft der Erzähler diejenigen auf, die von uns gegangen sind und die Geschichten an uns weitergegeben haben, denn wir sind nur die Boten.

Robin Wall #Kimmerer

Nachdem ich von dem Buch "Geflochtenes Süßgras" von Robin Wall #Kimmerer so begeistert war, habe ich gestern auf dem kleinen Adventsmarkt tatsächlich dieses #Süßgras entdeckt. (Wir haben viele einheimische Süßgräser, aber nicht dieses.) Es wurde dort unter dem Namen "Mariengras" verkauft. Jetzt liegt es auf meinem Räucherstövchen und duftet unfassbar gut!

@wefail Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall #Kimmerer.
💯Best book I've read in years. And refreshingly not depressing!

It complicates the story of humanities role on earth, merges scientific and indigenous worldviews and has honestly changed the way I view the world and the crises around us