Make Something

In a culture that wants fast and easy, cheap and replaceable, instant gratification and consumerism, convenience and mass-produced, it makes no sense to walk away to something totally different. It makes no sense to do for oneself. To take the long way around. To do it the slow way. To accept and embrace inconveniences.

If you had told me how satisfying it would be to eat eggs from my chickens, milk and cream and butter from my own milk cow, our own meat and vegetables and fresh baked bread, I would have believed you, but I wouldn’t have understood. Five years ago and ten years ago, my heart wanted that. But I had no idea.

No idea how satisfying it would be. How inconvenient and simple and hard and beautiful and growing it would be. How frustrating and elevating. It has moments of romance and sheer hilarity and humbling. And I wouldn’t want to change a thing.

Push back against a consumer mentality and become a producer. In small ways. Learn to make bread. Cook from scratch. Grow a few veggies on your deck. Keep an herb garden. Learn a few skills to do things yourself. Dust off your sewing machine. It doesn’t have to be complicated and baby steps are beautiful.

Because there is nothing like serving a home cooked meal, picking veggies from the garden, or pulling a loaf of fresh baked bread from the oven, or handing a neighbor a dozen fresh eggs, or a gallon of fresh milk. There’s nothing like knowing you made that. A factory in China didn’t make that. A computer didn’t execute that. You did that. You did the cultivating and the picking and the mixing and kneading and milking and stitching.

So go make something.

2 thoughts on “Make Something

  1. Darling Granddaughter, I love your words here. God made us all with a spirit of creativity, and most of us experience that creativity in terms of how we provide for ourselves and our loved ones. It’s also in how we support and partner with our spouse — for some of us (you, for example) it involves mud and recalcitrant calves and hens and more mud. We’re not all Leonardo da Vinci. Love you tons, Grandma

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  2. Love these words! Love to pick a tomato warm from the vine and mint for my tea from my small garden. If we ever have a war on our soil we have lots of folks who will not be able to feed themselves. Every child should learn to garden and grow things. Happy day!

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