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                                                                   Is the soul solid like iron?                       Or is it tender and breakable, like the wings of a moth in the beak of the owl?   Who has it, and who doesn’t?                   I keep looking around me.                   The face of the moose is as sad as the face of Jesus.                                          The swan opens her white wings slowly. In the fall, the black bear carries leaves into the darkness.                                 One question leads to another.           Does it have a shape? Like an iceberg? Like the eye of a hummingbird?       Does it have one lung, like the snake and the scallop?                                          Why should I have it, and not the anteater who loves her children?         Why should I have it, and not the camel? Come to think about it, what about the maple trees?                                       What about the blue iris?                        What about the little stones, sitting alone in the moonlight?                                     What about roses, and lemons, and their shining leaves?                                    What about the grass?

~ Mary Oliver, “Some Questions You Might Ask”

 

 

    

  

 

Herbal Medicine: Expanding Our Relations

     In late 2006, I stumbled upon Stephen Buhner's incredible book, The Lost Language of Plants. I had become interested in expanding my relationships beyond the food plants and was led, in early 2007, to begin studying herbal medicine at the California School of Herbal Studies, which happens to be just minutes from my home.

     What does herbal medicine have to do with my passionate interest in changing our relationship with food? Everything! In a sense, it's simply an extension of what I talk about under Radical Cooking.

     In just the same way that we have given over our power to feed ourselves to people we don't know and who have no necessary interest in our well-being, so have we given over our power to care for ourselves. The pharmaceutical companies, insurance industry and, unfortunately, even many doctors are more intent on bottom line profits than they are on healing. And for our part, many of us have become addicted to the quick fix that a pharmaceutical drug can provide rather than being willing to make the kind of far reaching changes in our lives that would lead to real healing.

     The current health care industry is at least as environmentally damaging to the planet as global corporate agriculture -- and as damaging to our bodies as the fast food many of us disdain.

     Coming to know our allies in the plant world offers tremendous benefits on all levels.