Harvesting and Creating with Pineapple Sage

Harvesting and Creating with Pineapple Sage

It’s been hot and still this week with nary a hint of the autumn we’re supposed to be in. I love the cooler seasons, but this extended summer is rather splendid, especially for my gardens and the mama goats who look like they’re about to give birth any second.

Each day I’ve been harvesting something new: purple string beans, tomatoes, asparagus, and fat green capsicums that are wonderful sweet, juicy, and crunchy. Yesterday I filled a basket and chopped them up for the freezer, ready to be added to chili, soup, and casseroles this winter.

basket of green peppers

Today I’m harvesting herbs, collecting great bundles to be hung and dried for beautiful teas and tisanes.

I started with one of my very favourites: pineapple sage. The smell alone makes me happy, a luscious blend of tropical fruit with a hint of spice.

Native to Central and South America, pineapple sage is used in traditional Mexican medicine to treat anxiety and depression and level out blood sugar.

harvesting pineapple sage

I love making iced teas with it in summer, and hot ones in winter, sweetened with a bit of honey or real maple syrup.

The gorgeous flowers make a beautiful and fragrant addition to salads and desserts, and look especially nice scattered over whipped cream or used to decorate the top of a pudding like Russian Pashka.

pineapple sage

When I have an abundance of pineapple sage, I like to use the leafy branches in bouquets. They make my kitchen smell so good.

drying pineapple sage

 

Now I’m going to make a few cuttings so I can add a lot more pineapple sage plants to my gardens in spring.

What is your favourite herb to make tea with? xo

Thanking the Changelings

Thanking the Changelings

It’s dark and still this morning. The air feels thick and heavy, with barely a breath of air to stir the leaves in the trees. It’s a day for quiet contemplation, for gentle pokings and proddings as I examine my life and work again to make sure they’re reflecting what I value most.

As I look I see need for course correction, a little nudge here, a screeching halt there, and it’s good, scary, always scary, but always good.

Change is an unsettling thing, but one I’m getting better at embracing. I picture Change as a new friend, someone you have a feeling is going to be a kindred spirit, but you’re still at the get-to-know-you stage and things are a bit awkward. This week I’m sitting quietly with the latest Changeling to come into my life, asking questions, being vulnerable, figuring out how to work together in a way that’s nourishing and good, doing the things that always help me in these situations.

clover

Meet with the Trusted Ones

This week I arranged meetings with people I trust and respect, people who know me and can see my strengths and talents when I feel wobbly. It was so good to toss around ideas and list options and get their advice and insights. I’ve found that some Changelings can be a bit blinding, as if you’re staring blankly into a glaring spotlight and can’t see things clearly. It helps to have others sit with me and be honest and supportive until the glare subsides and I can see what they can see.

orange lichen on rock

Meet with the Healers

Change, even good change, can shake my foundations, and I need to get settled again before making decisions or moving forward. So this week I met with my healers, the people who have proven themselves trustworthy in caring for my physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual health. We talked and laughed and worked through the wonky thinking that was keeping me stuck in fear and distrust. We did physical therapy and chiropractic and as my body unclenched itself and released the pain, I was able to think clearly again. I ate nourishing things – grapes and tomatoes and cucumbers and lovely soups and herbal teas – and my body received the support it needed.

lush green grasses

Meet with Nature

I get restored by green grass and wind in the trees and early morning sunshine and afternoon rains. Running my hands over rosemary and lavender calms and settles me and gets the ol’ brain working better. I’ve loved getting outside this week, even in the rain, pinching flowers off the basil to keep it from going to seed, harvesting and roasting radishes, scratching pig backs and goat heads and dog ears. There’s something about connecting to living things that restores my spirits and gives me courage to press on with excitement into the unknown.

gum leaves in autumn

Meet with Myself

I’ve spent extra time sitting quietly with myself, letting the fears bubble up and dissipate, acknowledging my strengths and weaknesses, and figuring out my next step. I’ve slept more and given myself permission to stop worrying, gone for drives and taken walks, read books and listened to other people’s stories, brainstormed and wrote lists, researched and let my imagination run wild – all those things that help bring clarity and purpose.

I know my next steps now, and I’m excited, truly excited. It’s just a quiet little life with very small happinesses and tiny dreams, but it’s all mine, and I’m so thankful for it.

dew on white feather

I wasn’t keen on this Changeling when it first arrived, but now I’d happily leap back in time and give it a hug and say, “Thanks, luv. You were just what I needed.”

Making Peace With A Body At War With Itself

Making Peace With A Body At War With Itself

So honored to share the following post written by my dear English friend, Katy. Her courage, strength, love, and humor never fail to inspire me, and I’m delighted to share a bit of her story with you today.

————————————–

Hating my body is easy. Outward appearance is one thing: all the socio-cultural expectations we women deal with – the too-fat or flabby bits, the lack of a thigh gap, the faint lines and wrinkles slowly etching themselves on my face thanks to the natural (and mostly happy) range of my human expression over nearly three decades of life. They’re the kinds of things that women’s magazines simultaneously instruct us to love and shame us into hating.

But I’m usually able to temper these negatives and remind myself they come from a vacuous media world; they don’t need to register with me. I can find things I love about my appearance to swing the scales the other way, and I’m forever impressed by what a good outfit and a bit of make-up can do in a moment of insecurity.

What’s harder to overcome is the resentment I feel about my body’s functioning, or rather, malfunctioning. When it decides to initiate self-destruction proceedings because it believes that some entirely benign thing I’ve consumed is actually evil, or when my exhaustion and stress levels soar briefly high enough to push my defence mechanisms into overdrive, the results can range from the slightly uncomfortable and occasionally embarrassing to the completely debilitating.

tiny pink flowers

I resent the joints, and even the hardworking muscles, ligaments and tendons in my left leg, when the joints stiffen and become petulantly unresponsive, and the stretchy bits pull unnaturally to make anything work. I am conscious of this leg every time I take a step. Every step. I walk thousands of them a day, and with each one I notice the pushing back of the knee, the dead-lift of the foot, the straining of the ligaments, the overcompensation of the hip. Then there’s the pressure and double-click of the knee every time there’s a forceful bend, such as climbing the stairs or crouching. The occasional, sharp or jarring pain, or dull ache in a joint. The treachery of my foot when I stare at it, willing it into the full rotation it refuses to do.

I resent my brain when it forgets words, or knowledge of the world in general, when it seems to abandon me in a sea of confusion, and I can’t even explain to anyone in the moment what the hell is going on. I resent the impossibility of reading when tired, the miscommunicated messages because I’m suddenly and unexpectedly left to rely on a kind of sonic memory rather than actual vocabulary, the cringe-worthy moments like leaving an offensively low tip in a restaurant because I momentarily lost all understanding of place value.

I resent my gut when it grumbles and rumbles and sends me running for the toilet, as I desperately try to think of what gluten-containing item I could have possibly consumed, and fail to come up with anything. I wonder if that nutritionist was right about the common comorbidity of coeliac disease and lactose intolerance, but not for long enough to make any firm promises to try cutting out dairy, the foodstuff I love the most.

I resent the eye that has no central vision, the lack of throwing and catching ability it may or may not be responsible for, and the consequent humiliation in every PE lesson I ever suffered at school. I resent the maddening, bright, electric swirls that whirl about my iris in the dead of night when I’m trying to fall asleep, taunting me with some spectre of a visual sphere that melts away in daylight.

crocus

But then, at the risk of becoming a soul entirely at odds with the body it resides in, I try to pull myself together. I think of those thousands upon thousands of steps my leg takes in its backwards fashion, how the joints loosen with the right exercise, how the ligaments go to heroic lengths to keep me moving, how brilliantly the hip accommodates the strange movement. How, if my leg seizes up, it slowly comes back to life, with no perceptible damage done. I think of the perseverance of my right leg, which uncomplainingly takes up more than its share of the burden to compensate.

I’m humbled by the fact that my autoimmune disease is one largely controlled by diet. Simply from not eating gluten, my body has been able to repair a lot of damage, and keeps itself in pretty good health. Perhaps because my immune system is used to being on high alert, it takes a lot for me to get sick. Coughs, colds, shivers – in my adult life, I’ve suffered those less and less, even when they strike those around me. That’s when I can be proud of my body’s highly-strung defence system.

I’m amazed and grateful that I have pretty good sight, despite only having one-and- a-bit eyes with which to see. The missing circle of vision hasn’t stopped me driving a car, nor limited my depth perception in any crucial way. I may not be the next tennis star, but nor do I constantly bang into things, and I’m rarely aware that some of my sight isn’t there.

I’m slowly learning to understand my body’s flare-ups as warning signs, distress signals. They indicate that I’m pushing it too far, exhausting it too much, and they offer the opportunity to slow down before anything really bad happens. Refusing to read late at night is the sign that my brain needs to shut down and rest. My gut grumbling says that I’m not feeding my body as well and as healthily as I should. This body of mine might be an overdramatic communicator, but it’s an effective one. I just have to learn to listen, and not jump so quickly to frustration or panic.

It’s all too easy to fear that things might get worse. I might lose language or other mental capacities, and never recover them (that’s a dark fear reserved for late, language-less nights and strange, surreal moments when the world slips away from me, and I from it). My joints might stop responding to exercise, or the ligaments might give up. My body might damage itself so much that certain things are beyond repair.

But the resilience of this flawed, sometimes infuriating, body takes some reckoning with. It faces every problem with a lot more strength and courage than my soul often has. It instinctively knows when to rest, when to fight. It keeps going. Step after step, day after day, night after night. Even when I rail against it, my body carries on. Lungs keep breathing, heart keeps pumping, nerves keep firing.

Katy

There’s a lot this body can do. It can dance, jump, perform short bursts of what might kindly be described as running, contort itself into yoga positions, heft weights at the gym, climb mountains, swim, windsurf. It’s slowly learning how to tip-toe again. It can see, hear, taste, smell, respond to the slightest of touches, balance, anticipate, and it delights in making the most of each of those senses.

It improves, repairs, and heals itself. It can even occasionally catch a ball. For all of those things and more, I love it.

English sunset

My body is far from perfect. It’s a body in constant war with itself, a long, drawn out war, in which there are sometimes long ceasefires, but never a total peace deal. Yet it’s a courageous body, a problem-solver, a source of unimagined strength, even when it seems weak. Especially when it seems weak. How can you not love a body like that?

Rain, Campfires, and Russian Ballet

Rain, Campfires, and Russian Ballet

Rain is falling gently, making our world quiet and peaceful. I have an unexpected day off and am basking in the utter novelty of a day to myself. Bear and I had a leisurely breakfast, I watched Miss Marple and Poirot, and sipped tea on the veranda then hot chocolate in bed as I basked in the richness of stillness.

It’s been an intense week of hard physical labour in addition to my regular work. After several months of chiropractic work and physical therapy, my body is finally able to handle the demands of getting our farm back on track. I’ve loved every second of strengthening my muscles again as I hauled wood, piled trash, carted rocks, shifted furniture and equipment, dug some holes and filled in others, swept, shoveled, and raked. I could barely move at the end of each day, but it was good pain, the pain of a job well done and a body doing what it is meant to do. By next morning I was ready – albeit creakily – to go again. It’s a lovely, amazing thing to have strength and endurance again, and I’m cherishing it.

After so much work it was sheer bliss to clean off the dirt, straw, poop, and sawdust of the farm and get dolled up and head to the Empire Theatre in Toowoomba to watch the Moscow Ballet perform “Swan Lake.” It was exquisitely beautiful and inspiring, and especially fun shared with Oma and her grandson, Alex, who are always jolly company and great conversationalists. I returned home with visions of sumptuous costumes and soul-stirring music to send me off to sleep.

Next morning it was back to work as we bustled about getting ready for the arrival of our English friends – Gary, Lorraine, and Leah.

I had told Bear I needed a place on our farm where I could sit and only see beauty – no tasks to work on or projects to complete – just peaceful respite. I needed a pretty place. It would never enter Bear’s head to need a pretty place, but he’s a luv and helped me anyway.

We set up a campfire area with logs and stumps for sitting and one of our old medieval fire pits for cooking. We pulled in tables and chairs too because, I don’t care how spry you are, a fallen log is only comfortable for so long, and then you want something with a bit of squish to sink into and a solid back to lean against. We set up a bin to collect and hold firewood and then it was ready. It is a truly happy place for both of us where we can rest and look out on unencumbered views of trees and fields and goats grazing on a nearby hill.

campfire area

I decorated simply with cheery tablecloths and a cluster of marigolds given to me by Shadrach, a lovely Congolese man I interviewed last week. They make me so happy.

marigolds in blue jug

Our friends arrived and we had such a jolly and peaceful day, the sort of day that leaves you totally tuckered out but with a big smile on your face.

We walked around the farm, saying hello to dogs, geese, pigs, bees, chooks, turkeys, and goats, before making a beeline for some shade and cold drinks. We visited long over lunch – slow-roasted beef on soft, buttered bread rolls and potato salad with capers, red onion, and paprika – all of us letting the cares and stresses of the last few months melt away as we laughed and told stories and decided that next time we were going to pitch tents and make a weekend of it.

When we found out they were keen to learn archery, Bear and I hauled out our stash of medieval bows, arrows, and a thoroughly modern target for some training and practice.

archery target

It was so much fun, marked with much hilarity as initial attempts sent arrows flopping and dipping wildly. Bear is a great teacher though, and soon arrows were thwack-ing into the target one right after the other, followed by whoops and hollers from the peanut gallery.

https://www.ramblingtart.com/female-archer.jpg

The afternoon flew by and before we knew it the sun was setting and it was time for dinner.

I built a fire and let it burn wildly for a bit until there was a good bed of coals. Then we set a grate above the hot little beauties and put sausages on to cook.

medieval campfire

I thought I’d give the coals a little nudge with a few bits of kindling when WHOOSH a billow of flame instantly charred one side of the sausages. Thankfully Gary came to the rescue and managed to salvage my burnt offerings and turn them into something edible and downright tasty.

campfire at sunset

We filled our plates, toasted each other with red wine and cold beer, and sat around the fire visiting and eating and watching the sun sink lower and lower.

late summer sunset

At last it disappeared and a luminous moon appeared, casting a pale, magical glow over the farm. As the stars came out we hugged each other good-bye with promises to get together again soon.

It was a good day. xo

The Light Will Come

The Light Will Come

The late afternoon sun is casting long shadows through the trees, illuminating vivid green grass that sprang up since we had luscious rain a few nights ago. I’m sitting in bed in front of a fan, sipping apple wine, watching the day wind down in stunningly beautiful fashion.

I worked hard on the farm today, weeding and watering, transplanting and mulching, transforming overrun gardens into orderly patches again. I tidied up the farm yard, collecting fallen branches and leaves blown in from recent storms then hurtled willy-nilly around the place. I cleaned out the sheep pen and set the manure out in the sun to dry a bit more before it’s ready to spread on my gardens, then started the mammoth project of the goat yards. A freak wind storm flattened one of our sheds and the goats had a marvellous time spreading everything they found, and I do mean everything, all over their yard. Ayiyi. I’m about half way done and although every bit of me aches, it feels absolutely fantastic to see order restored, bit by bit.

It’s been a really rough week for me, so I treasured this day outside in the gorgeous late summer sunshine. My doc says healing from trauma is like peeling an onion. Sometimes the layers come off easy-peasy, but others, like this latest one, are downright awful, stubbornly sticking, and making your eyes water and nose run.

I’m learning to make peace with these layers, the ones that tear me open and wrack my body with pain and make night time a scary place because that’s when the bad dreams come. The layers that make me feel vulnerable, scared, and too messed up to be loved. I’m learning that it’s OK to not feel OK, to feel the darkness close in and remember that it won’t stay dark forever.

I cried and took naps. I downed my supplements, stood in sunshine every day, and got extra chiro treatments so my body would be especially cared for while it processed this layer. I let Bear know I was wobbly and might need more hugs than usual. I said sorry when my inner turmoil spilled over in ugly ways. And I took my pen and camera and recorded the good things that were around me, even in the darkness.

Like glorious sunsets.

purple sunset

And purple and pink skies.

purple sky

Five cute new piglets named Crackling, Porky, Parma, Prosciutto, and Pancetta, and episodes of Psych that never fail to make me laugh.

Rain to make our world grow again, healing words from dear friends, and clean flannel sheets that feel like a hug when I climb in bed.

dark purple sunset

It is OK to not feel OK, but it sure helps to remember that even at our worst we are still loved, still wanted, still believed in and cheered for. We’ll get through this and the light will come. xo