This is a lesson on gratitude and perspective. One that I have not always seen. I think of myself as a man of vision, but, while that sounds important, I have come to know less and less precisely what it means. This erosion of understanding, or confidence, seems only necessary to me now as I’ve spent more time with my hands in the soil. Farm life, particularly livestock farming, includes daily surprises that test patience and resolve. It is very similar to parenting in that way. Then there are the chores that must be done every day. Practical daily events, in the house and on the farm, have a peculiar way of ordering life. I have not always appreciated order and, like many modern people in particular, I have spent my share of time avoiding and escaping daily ordered tasks. Yes, there is some monotony in the daily farm life, but there is something intensely wonderful about repeating the same chores and observing the myriad small changes in each performance.
Endless incremental changes become profound epiphanies waiting for us to catch up. Moving too quickly toward our current conception of the dream means we risk missing the most important feedback to get us to that vision. I have learned in this process of becoming a farmer, becoming rural that I must be conscious of the tyranny of the dream. My children may not get a chore done just right. Their participation in farm chores does not carry the same highbrow ideology of my own book smart but dirt dumb greenhorn self. To see those little changes, I have to see these little people. I have to see that none of the dream could happen without a woman who walks by my side and believes its possible. I think the best dreams evolve and include. I think my dreams should inspire both my parents and my children. It’s about connecting generations to create the future from the present.
Look into the future as far as you can and you’ll find nothing more important than the people who share your dreams of the present. The only way to get there is by holding their hands, listening, and putting all those hands in the soil together. I’m a work in progress but being mindful that the dream must be shared seems a step in the right direction. The challenge is to keep this perspective daily along with the order of the farm life. Cast vision with patience and resolve. Dreams built with pieces of present moments are less likely to be tyrannical.
I love pockets. Pants (and shirts) without pockets are useless to me. I love eggs. I could eat a fried egg sandwich on sourdough for every meal and I do, when my wife is visiting her parents out of town. You get the punchline already: love for pockets and eggs does not mean eggs belong in pockets. And, while there is much experience to substantiate the cliched maxim of not putting all your eggs in one basket, sometimes you have to learn by trying. I have read about as much as a man could read about farming. I have tried much of what I’ve read. I was never told not to put eggs in my pockets when collecting the day’s bounty. That may be self-explanatory to most but for me it was natural to put the eggs in my pockets as I went about my chores. Inevitably two things happen: 1) an egg or two will break in your pocket (this is the lesson of the day) and 2) eventually you will have too many eggs to fit in your pockets (this the moral of the story).