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Topic: Tamarack Song on rewilding

Part of the forum "Library" in the IshCon Forum Archive

Poster and Date Post
arkface
Sun Sep 18th, 2005 at 11:31 PM
"Tamarack Song recently wrote this & I thought it would be well worth posting here:

Someone recently asked, "How long does it take from knowing nothing about the
wilderness to going off and living in it, and when do you know when you are
ready? I basically just have a few books I haven't started reading about
it."

This is a profound question, and I see it is the main theme in various group
discussions lately. Not a day goes by that someone does not ask me the same
thing, or else a related question, such as, "What are the top skills I need
to know?" "Learning the Old Ways should be free, like it used to be; why do
I have to pay money?" "Where can I find an elder to teach me?" "Is it even
possible anymore, with all the hunting and fishing regulations?" "All the
land is private or restricted, and I can't afford to buy any, is there
anywhere can I go to live primitively?" "I want to learn on my own, what
steps should I take?"

I'm going to give you all some straight talk, in hopes that it will help to
steer you on to a track might get you somewhere. The reality of the
situation is that I have not met, or heard of, a single person in the past
40 years who has used the approaches that we have been talking about, who
has been able to return to primitive living. This includes the authors of
the popular books. Yeah, they might talk a good talk, but look at what
they've actually done -- a month in the mountains, a solo year in the woods,
some time in Alaska -- is that really living the Old Way? Where is the
clan? Where are the elders? The children? Where is the example and clan
memories to learn from?

Why didn't it work for them, and why won't it work for you? Because they
carried civilization with them into the wilderness, and you likely will as
well. You can learn all the skills you want, and The Mother will spit you
back out just about as fast as you went in. The more stubborn individuals
will last a few months or maybe a year, but rest assured, they'll be back.

Why? Because they didn't do their work. We come from a technological
society, so we naturally think that substituting primitive technology for
civilized technology is our doorway. The only problem is that Native people
are not into technology. They spend only a couple hours a day providing for
their simple needs, and they mostly use simple means. Look at their
tools -- few and crude, and their craftwork -- basic and utilitarian. What
a Native person excels at is what I call qualitative skills -- how to sit in
a circle with your clan mates and speak your truth, how to find your special
talent so that you can develop it to serve your people, how to use your
intuition, the ways of honor and respect, how to live in balance with elders
and women and children, how to speak in the language beyond words, how to
befriend fear and live love. Without these skills, you will surely die. Or
else you'll go back to the life that shuns these skills.

Will a book teach you these qualitative skills? Will a class or a workshop?
Is learning firemaking or edible plants going to give them to you? They
actually take you further away from what you need to know, because focusing
on them reinforces the technological approach, and that 95% of your brain
which you don't use, shrivels up even more. We become what we surround
ourselves with; the way to learn Truthspeaking is to share with other
truthspeakers, the way to bring life back to our dormant brain is to immerse
ourselves in the full spectrum of life in which our brain evolved, the way
to elder wisdom is to be with wise elders. There are patterns to break --
crippling, blinding patterns that take continual, unrelenting attention if
we are ever going to see, hear, smell, and feel as fully as we are intended.
That takes guidance, a supportive environment, and example. Otherwise, it's
just another exercise, another class, another walk in the woods, and then
it's back to life as usual, with no end in sight.

Roughly 80% of what a Native person eats is not affected by hunting and
fishing regulations. There are vast tracts of public and unregulated
private land that are available to a hunter-gatherer, with virtually no
human competition. If you think there are a lot of people at your favorite
state park or national forest just step a few paces off the trail, and they
all disappear. Very few people really go "out" in the woods anymore. I
know a dozen ways to live legally on or adjacent to foraging lands without
having to pay big bucks. I can grow fat by living primitively in a farmer's
woodlot or city park. It doesn't take Alaska or the Grand Tetons. It takes
shaking off the old preconceptions of what primitive living is and
rebecoming the Native person you already are.

It simply can't be done alone. We evolved as social beings, and we
literally start going crazy when we spend too much time without company of
our fellow creatures. Learning skills alone, buying land alone, is feeding
a pipe dream, a romantic fantasy, that will likely only lead to frustration
and disillusionment. Virtually everyone I know who has tried it for any
period of time, has given up and bought back into the system. Try to look up
some of the older people who once had dreams as you do now. You'll see --
they now have mortgages and jobs with benefits they can't let go of, and
kids' educations they have to worry about. Yeah, they might still be
talking about their dreams, and they might practice their skills and head
out in the woods now and then, but realistically, when is that dream ever
going to become reality?

And then there's the cost of your rewilding. Yes, I said cost, because
nothing is free. Money is the least of what you are going to be asked to
give. There is a world of difference between something for free and
something that is freely given. On a stay with one of my elders in Canada,
I built her a cabin. 15 years ago another elder asked me to literally lay my
life on the line for him. I would gladly give my last dollar, and much
more, for the privilege of walking in my ancestor's footsteps.

The alternative? Sit in the city, whining about how things used to be and
ought to be. Or look at the cost of NOT rewilding, and come to realize that
one has to give before they can receive. Then you'll be ready to throw away
your books, turn your back on the "experts," and turn your face to the wind.
You'll start hearing voices that help you walk rather than give you sweet
talk. There waiting to greet you will be your clan, your teachers, and your
real self. You'll leave survival behind and walk into the Beauty Way.

Tamarack"

thought this was very interestin.
wildway
Mon Sep 19th, 2005 at 12:14 AM
Hear hear!
MidnightBoos
Mon Sep 19th, 2005 at 06:08 PM
THAT was ACE.

MB
Huby7
Tue Sep 20th, 2005 at 07:07 AM
Hey all,

I ran across this live journal entry from Redwolfreturns about "re-wilding" that I found to be interesting and inspiring. I think he is a former student of Tamarack, but i'm not entirely sure on this one.

Here is the link to the journal entry titled "Wildness Returning":
http://www.livejournal.com/community/anotherway/85559.html?#cutid1

When the page opens up make sure you scroll up to the top of the page.

Thank you,

Curt
Occupied Anishinaabe Land
 
This page is part of the archives of the IshCon.org discussion forums, as they existed from November 2002 to January 2007. Some links and other content references may be outdated or broken. For more information about IshCon, visit www.ishcon.org.