From: gilliam@rudkin.fccc.edu (Jon Charles Gilliam) Newsgroups: rec.gardens Subject: Re: Why do we garden? (was deflowering of puck) Date: 13 Oct 1994 14:30:11 GMT John Woodworth (jrwoodworth@mmm.com) writes: > You raise an interesting point, though. Why do we garden? For me > there's nothing sensual about it. It's more biblical. I play god in > my own little universe. I plant something and command it to grow. I > am pleased if it does my bidding. I am overjoyed if it exceeds my > expectations. And I am saddened if it disobeys. It must be > vanquished to the compost bin. > Of course, I garden for practical reasons: to beautify my house or > the challenge of (dis)proving conventional gardening wisdom by > growing plants that have no business living in MN (where plants > suffer, TM). For me, It's more of a Zen/Pagan thing. Pagan in that it brings me closer to nature, and brings a reverence for the sense of sacredness I find in working with the land. Zen in that the peaceful, repetitious, solitary acts of gardening -- weeding, pruning, harvesting -- lead you to a search for satisfaction in the acts themselves, apart from the results they bring. But, in contrast to that, there's also the expectation -- like counting down the days before christmas -- until the first fruit or the first flowers. And the planning and arranging, and then seeing the results of your work take hold and prosper on their own. A nurturing sort of thing, I guess. Bright Blessings, :jon