35 Matching Annotations
  1. Mar 2021
    1. I like to imagine that when Skywoman scattered her handful of seeds across Turtle Island, she was sowing sustenance for the body and also for the mind, emotion, and spirit: she was leaving us teachers. The plants can tell us her story; we need to learn to listen

      Turtle Island is our home, the Earth. Full of diversity, love, care, knowledge, teaching, and harmony. Humans were granted the special "gift" of knowledge and this gift will help us serve our ultimate purpose in nature. Everything feeds eachother.

    2. In the Western tradition there is a recognized hierarchy of beings, with, of course, the human being on top—the pinnacle of evolution, the darling of Creation—and the plants at the bottom. But in Native ways of knowing, human people are often referred to as “the younger brothers of Creation.” We say that humans have the least experience with how to live and thus the most to learn—we must look to our teachers among the other species for guidance. Their wisdom is appar-ent in the way that they live. They teach us by example. They’ve been on the earth far longer than we have been, and have had time to figure things out. They live both above and below ground, joining Skyworld

      Humans and animals are to live in harmony. Humans are not the apex of creation although we were given a very special "gift". Note that without humans, this story would not have been given to us. This story was not passed down from the heavens and if it was, regardless, a human passed it down. Stories inspire and inspiration drives action.

    3. Look at the legacy of poor Eve’s exile from Eden: the land shows the bruises of an abusive relationship. It’s not just land that is broken, but more importantly, our relationship to land. As Gary Nabhan has written, we can’t meaningfully proceed with healing, with restoration, without “re-story-ation.” In other words, our relationship with land cannot heal until we hear its stories. But who will tell them?

      People must pass down their stories to inspire others to enact change.

    4. In the public arena, I’ve heard the Skywoman story told as a bauble of colorful “folklore.” But, even when it is misunderstood, there is power in the telling. Most of my students have never heard the origin story of this land where they were born, but when I tell them, something be-gins to kindle behind their eyes. Can they, can we all, understand the Skywoman story not as an artifact from the past but as instructions for the future? Can a nation of immigrants once again follow her example to become native, to make a home?

      To care, you must connect and to connect, you must know. Knowledge feeds connection and connection feeds care and action.

    5. As we consider these instructions, it is also good to recall that, when Skywoman arrived here, she did not come alone. She was pregnant. Knowing her grandchildren would inherit the world she left behind, she did not work for flourishing in her time only. It was through her actions of reciprocity, the give and take with the land, that the original immigrant became indigenous. For all of us, becoming indigenous to a place means living as if your children’s future mattered, to take care of the land as if our lives, both material and spiritual, depended on it.

      Metaphor for preserving the land for future generations. To advance and protect. Never settling yet never greeding.

    6. Perhaps the Skywoman story endures because we too are always falling. Our lives, both personal and collective, share her trajectory. Whether we jump or are pushed, or the edge of the known world just crumbles at our feet, we fall, spinning into someplace new and

      ...

    7. It is good to remember that the original woman was herself an immigrant. She fell a long way from her home in the Skyworld, leav-ing behind all who knew her and who held her dear. She could never go back. Since 1492, most here are immigrants as well, perhaps ar-riving on Ellis Island without even knowing that Turtle Island rested beneath their feet. Some of my ancestors are Skywoman’s people, and I belong to them. Some of my ancestors were the newer kind of im-migrants, too: a French fur trader, an Irish carpenter, a Welsh farmer. And here we all are, on Turtle Island, trying to make a home. Their stories, of arrivals with empty pockets and nothing but hope, resonate with Skywoman’s. She came here with nothing but a handful of seeds and the slimmest of instructions to “use your gifts and dreams for good,” the same instructions we all carry. She accepted the gifts from the other beings with open hands and used them honorably. She shared the gifts she brought from Skyworld as she set herself about the business of flourishing, of making a home

      People come from all over to pursue their dreams. No matter where they come from though or what societal job they hold, they all serve the first, most essential purpose. To preserve their home and the lives within it. Every person, no matter how evil or corrupt, follows this dogma.

    8. The earth was new then, when it welcomed the first human. It’s old now, and some suspect that we have worn out our welcome by casting the Original Instructions aside. From the very beginning of the world, the other species were a lifeboat for the people. Now, we must be theirs. But the stories that might guide us, if they are told at all, grow dim in the memory. What meaning would they have today? How can we translate from the stories at the world’s beginning to this hour so much closer to its end? The landscape has changed, but the story remains. And as I turn it over again and again, Skywoman seems to look me in the eye and ask, in return for this gift of a world on Turtle’s back, what will I give in return?

      Culture, tradition, the natural world, the way things were all call to a world of the past. Though the essential teachings remain such as, keep the harmony of the earth or thou shall not kill, the definition of care has and will continue to change. The future is uncertain but with hope and determination, we will persevere.

    9. buffalo are gone and the world has moved on. I can’t return salmon to the river, and my neighbors would raise the alarm if I set fire to my yard to produce pasture for elk

      Change can be good or bad. There's no telling until the waves have stopped. With that being said, however, humans are a very adaptable creature.

    10. In their time, Skywoman’s first people lived by their understand-ing of the Original Instructions, with ethical prescriptions for respect-ful hunting, family life, ceremonies that made sense for their world. Those measures for caring might not seem to fit in today’s urban world, where “green” means an advertising slogan, not a meadow. The

      Like the Catholic Church, to ensure harmony and protection of the natural world, humans must adapt to the changing, industrialized world.

    11. The Skywoman story, shared by the original peoples throughout the Great Lakes, is a constant star in the constellation of teachings we call the Original Instructions. These are not “instructions” like command-ments, though, or rules; rather, they are like a compass: they provide an orientation but not a map. The work of living is creating that map for yourself. How to follow the Original Instructions will be different for each of us and different for every era

      Reminiscent to the 10 commandments, although those were rules. As a Christian, the 10 commandments, besides things like do not kill, were there to more serve as a guide rather than a set of rules. Sure people still follow them but Christian teaching, regardless of your opinion on it, has transformed into a strict set of rules, to a set of loose rules with more emphasis on good morals and teachings, and will now be forced to adapt and change their rules due to the change of the world.

    12. And then they met—the offspring of Skywoman and the children of Eve—and the land around us bears the scars of that meeting, the echoes of our stories. They say that hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, and I can only imagine the conversation between Eve and Skywoman: “Sister, you got the short end of the stick . . .”

      Biblically, the inclusion of free-will is both a gift and a curse. A gift to do whatever you want and to be yourself, and a curse because those two can go unchecked and bring chaos, death, destruction, greed, and many other negative human traits.

    13. Same species, same earth, different stories. Like Creation stories everywhere, cosmologies are a source of identity and orientation to the world. They tell us who we are. We are inevitably shaped by them no matter how distant they may be from our consciousness. One story leads to the generous embrace of the living world, the other to banish-ment. One woman is our ancestral gardener, a cocreator of the good green world that would be the home of her descendants. The other was an exile, just passing through an alien world on a rough road to her real home in heaven

      Different lives guided by the political terms are built to divide. Division is not all bad, however. Division can offer different perspectives to ensure that all thrive.

    14. well-being of all. On the other side was another woman with a garden and a tree. But for tasting its fruit, she was banished from the garden and the gates clanged shut behind her. That mother of men was made to wander in the wilderness and earn her bread by the sweat of her brow, not by filling her mouth with the sweet juicy fruits that bend the branches low. In order to eat, she was instructed to subdue the wilder-ness into which she was cast.

      Humans are destined to conflict. People raised through different experiences are bound to disagree and everyone has valid reason to think they're in the right.

    15. I was stunned. How is it possible that in twenty years of education they cannot think of any beneficial relationships between people and the environment? Perhaps the negative examples they see every day— brownfields, factory farms, suburban sprawl—truncated their ability to see some good between humans and the earth. As the land becomes impoverished, so too does the scope of their vision. When we talked about this after class, I realized that they could not even imagine what beneficial relations between their species and others might look like. How can we begin to move toward ecological and cultural sustain-ability if we cannot even imagine what the path feels like? If we can’t imagine the generosity of geese? These students were not raised on the story of Skywoman.

      You can't blame the criticism of humans by humans when individuals eyes have been worn to this new world. Life, however, is about learning. It's not bad that they think this and the writer and I aren't inherently right. Answers must be found through experiences and exposure, just like environmental identities are founded. You have to hope that one's experience isn't so negative that they resort to violence or greed, however.

    16. On Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays at 9:35 a.m., I am usu-ally in a lecture hall at the university, expounding about botany and ecology—trying, in short, to explain to my students how Skywoman’s gardens, known by some as “global ecosystems,” function. One other-wise unremarkable morning I gave the students in my General Ecology class a survey. Among other things, they were asked to rate their understanding of the negative interactions between humans and the environment. Nearly every one of the two hundred students said confidently that humans and nature are a bad mix. These were third-year students who had selected a career in environmental pro-tection, so the response was, in a way, not very surprising. They were well schooled in the mechanics of climate change, toxins in the land and water, and the crisis of habitat loss. Later in the survey, they were asked to rate their knowledge of positive interactions between people and land. The median response was “none.”

      Industrialization and human advancement have damaged ecosystems. There's no question. Human's aren't living harmoniously with the environment, we're dominating it. An unbalance of power or control fueled by greed leads to people hating others. To survive and grow, however, we need to take just as we receive. The balance of the scales is heavily weighted right now, however. More balance must be restored in the political and organized world we have created.

    17. looks down on my microscopes and data loggers. It might seem an odd juxtaposition, but to me she belongs there. As a writer, a scientist, and a carrier of Skywoman’s story, I sit at the feet of my elder teachers listening for their songs.

      Stories give the purpose and meaning behind one's identity.

    18. I have Bruce King’s portrait of Skywoman, Moment in Flight, hanging in my lab. Floating to earth with her handful of seeds and flowers, she

      Stories feed into inspiration that feeds into passion that feeds into action.

    19. The story of Skywoman’s journey is so rich and glittering it feels to me like a deep bowl of celestial blue from which I could drink again and again. It holds our beliefs, our history, our relationships. Looking into that starry bowl, I see images swirling so fluidly that the past and the present become as one. Images of Skywoman speak not just of where we came from, but also of how we can go forward

      The invention of culture by humans plays a massive role in how individuals perceive the environment and how they choose to serve it as they bring people together.

    20. There is such tenderness in braiding the hair of someone you love. Kindness and something more flow between the braider and the braided, the two connected by the cord of the plait. Wiingaashk waves in strands, long and shining like a woman’s freshly washed hair. And so we say it is the flowing hair of Mother Earth. When we braid sweet-grass, we are braiding the hair of Mother Earth, showing her our loving attention, our care for her beauty and well-being, in gratitude for all she has given us. Children hearing the Skywoman story from birth know in their bones the responsibility that flows between humans and the earth

      Living in harmony is essential for the health and survival of our planet earth.

    21. Our stories say that of all the plants, wiingaashk, or sweetgrass, was the very first to grow on the earth, its fragrance a sweet memory of Skywoman’s hand. Accordingly, it is honored as one of the four sacred plants of my people. Breathe in its scent and you start to remember things you didn’t know you’d forgotten. Our elders say that ceremonies are the way we “remember to remember,” and so sweetgrass is a power-ful ceremonial plant cherished by many indigenous nations. It is also used to make beautiful baskets. Both medicine and a relative, its value is both material and spiritual

      The Earth's resources help form emotional connections and environmental identities based on the environment specific people and animals are exposed to and those resources help them to constantly better themselves and thrive.

    22. Sunlight streamed through the hole from the Skyworld, allowing the seeds to flourish. Wild grasses, flowers, trees, and medicines spread everywhere. And now that the animals, too, had plenty to eat, many came to live with her on Turtle Island

      Everything working together is required for the Earth to flourish.

    23. Like any good guest, Skywoman had not come empty-handed. The bundle was still clutched in her hand. When she toppled from the hole in the Skyworld she had reached out to grab onto the Tree of Life that grew there. In her grasp were branches— fruits and seeds of all kinds of plants. These she scattered onto the new ground and carefully tended each one until the world turned from brown to green.

      The world provides as it takes. The earth feeds off of itself in harmony unless interrupted.

    24. Skywoman bent and spread the mud with her hands across the shell of the turtle. Moved by the extraordinary gifts of the animals, she sang in thanksgiving and then began to dance, her feet caressing the earth. The land grew and grew as she danced her thanks, from the dab of mud on Turtle’s back until the whole earth was made. Not by Skywoman alone, but from the alchemy of all the animals’ gifts coupled with her deep gratitude. Together they formed what we know today as Turtle Island, our home

      Respect, Gratitude, and Love transcends humans, the rest of the animals, and the earth to form a community

    25. They waited and waited for him to return, fearing the worst for their relative, and, before long, a stream of bubbles rose with the small, limp body of the muskrat. He had given his life to aid this helpless human. But then the others noticed that his paw was tightly clenched and, when they opened it, there was a small handful of mud. Turtle said, “Here, put it on my back and I will hold it.”

      No matter how small you are, you can make a huge difference

    26. Loon dove first, but the distance was too far and after a long while he surfaced with nothing to show for his efforts. One by one, the other animals offered to help—Otter, Beaver, Sturgeon—but the depth, the darkness, and the pressures were too great for even the strongest of swimmers. They returned gasping for air with their heads ringing. Some did not return at all. Soon only little Muskrat was left, the weak-est diver of all. He volunteered to go while the others looked on doubt-fully. His small legs flailed as he worked his way downward and he was gone a very long time

      Analogy for different roles in society helping others to achieve a job and a hopeful message that the little Muskrat who didn't have the confidence to help and was not even considered for the most part may have been able to do it through bravery and perseverance.

    27. to rest upon. Gratefully, she stepped from the goose wings onto the dome of his shell. The others understood that she needed land for her home and discussed how they might serve her need. The deep divers among them had heard of mud at the bottom of the water and agreed to go find some

      The world helps her to be able to serve her role.

    28. The geese could not hold the woman above the water for much longer, so they called a council to decide what to do. Resting on their wings, she saw them all gather: loons, otters, swans, beavers, fish of all kinds.

      Although they helped, they cannot do it all for her. She sees a diverse spectacle of animals before her representing the diversity of our own world and her exposure to it. They call a council to "order her into a position" in society.

    29. She felt the beat of their wings as they flew beneath to break her fall. Far from the only home she’d ever known, she caught her breath at the warm embrace of soft feathers as they gently carried her downward. And so it began

      Far from home and in a world foreign to her, she gets accepted and carried further into her journey.

    30. Hurtling downward, she saw only dark water below. But in that emptiness there were many eyes gazing up at the sudden shaft of light. They saw there a small object, a mere dust mote in the beam. As it grew closer, they could see that it was a woman, arms outstretched, long black hair billowing behind as she spiraled toward them

      More uncertainty clouds her path but a faint glimpse of light and a woman reaching out to her beckons her forward.

    31. She fell like a maple seed, pirouetting on an autumn breeze.* A column of light streamed from a hole in the Skyworld, marking her path where only darkness had been before. It took her a long time to fall. In fear, or maybe hope, she clutched a bundle tightly in her hand

      What this first paragraph means to me is someone falling/dealing with the realities and hardships of the world. Perhaps she just graduated college or perhaps she set off on an adventure in a different way. Nevertheless, she is a maple seed that has yet to grow, plopped into a world of uncertainty and although scared and unsure before, a light from the sky shines a way to clear the darkness. Cautious to continue, she grasps a branch to hold on to as she ventures into an even more unknown territory.

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