The Weekly Watch
Experiential Learning
Experiential learning is defined as "learning through reflection on doing". I've been reflecting on some of the experiences in my life....the ones that helped shape who I am. We all have events in our lives that influence the path we walk. I thought I might share one of those experiences with you this morning as I travel across the pond on another new adventure. This is a story from my late teens. The time we pass through shapes us in profound ways. It was the early 70's and the world was very different...so was I.
I was disappointed in my first semester of college. I had envisioned great halls of learning...seemed more like a big high school. However I met some people that seemed to have a deeper understanding. They were older and had been involved in starting a chapter of SDS at the University.
McGovern lost the election that November (the first in a long line of my wasted votes). We all piled into the VW van and headed to DC to protest Nixon's inauguration and the ongoing Vietnam War. The mall was full. I still have a vivid image of people filling the Lincoln Memorial, smoking pot, and surrounded by police.
There was a Northern filmmaker that came to town and shot a documentary about black pulpwooders. He was shocked at the low price of property here and decided to invest in an 80 acre farm. There were a couple of houses and a barn. Most of the place was in weedy pasture. He needed someone to look after his place and we got the job. We got to live there for free provided we paid the bills and looked after things. So a group of us moved to the property in what we called a coop rather than commune. This was about the time they founded The Farm in nearby Tennessee. The Farm Community continues to survive demonstrating that people can live together in a way that is ecological, peaceful, and viable. We were fewer and less organized.
There were eight of us – six young adults and two kids along with three dogs (a great dane, chow, and toy poodle) and a cat. Three of us got a job with a carpenter, Joe. One was a lawyer opening a new practice in a small town 20 or so miles away. In fact it was the town featured in the S-town podcast. One a teaching grad student, and another a nurse. We didn't really have a formal agreement, but figured we would do our best to split the expenses. We wanted to be a cooperative community.
The farm had two houses. Mom and the kids lived in a small three room house, and the rest of us in the other. We usually cooked and ate dinner together. I had done some cooking earlier in my life, but I built my cooking basics and food management skills at the farm. We bought in bulk from the food coop. We ate well, and on the cheap. It is also where I grew my first garden.
It was the time...we all felt the change in the air and wanted to make our lives more fulfilling. The back side of the farm bordered the interstate, and it was the day of hitchhiking. One of my most most memorable trips was thumbing down to Florida near Grayton Beach. There was a solitary Motel that had been damaged by wind and fire, but the concrete portion was still standing and made a nice structure. There were about twenty young folks camping there. It was quite the trippy weekend – making sand candles in the beach, flying kites, playing frisbee, swimming...a real TAZ.
Sometimes we would load up the van and go to a concert. Usually nearby. The Allman Brothers often played free concerts in the quad. And a band we liked lived down the road so we sometimes went to see them. But occasionally we would drive all the way to Atlanta to the Great Southeastern Music Hall...which was really a pretty intimate venue. Saw some great folks there –early Emmy Lou and John Prine among them.
In early spring Joe the carpenter had a heart attack. Often the young women on the crew worked shirtless, but I don't tink that was the cause of his heart attack. As a result, three of us lost our jobs. I learned many building skills and tricks from him. I also learned pot and carpentry are not a good mix...I cut this board twice and its still too short. With bad there is often a little good. Loosing that job is what inspired me to grow a garden. I cleaned out the old barn and had a fair amount of composted manure. It was like magic to see that manure make the garden green and full.
Then I thought about making use of the barn and pasture, and everybody thought it would be a good idea. We placed an ad in the paper, and a local farmer showed up within a week. We walked the fence line and it needed some mending, but it wasn't in too bad a shape. He sent one of his hands over to help me and provide fence tools and stretchers. We gave him a bargain to graze his cows, and later to house a couple of horses. Suddenly I was making a subsistence salary staying home and being outside.
A last story. Doing carpentry work was easier wearing a pony tail. My thick hair made wearing it long a pain. So I cut my hair. Well you would have thought I sold out to the man (not the folks in the coop but the larger community). It was as though what is on the outside was more important than what was on the inside of your head. Besides everyone was growing their hair long. It no longer meant being against the war or for civil rights or anything other than a fashion statement. It was an important lesson to think for yourself and not to worry about the crowd.
It was that experience that summer that pointed me to my current situation, and led me to Ag school at Auburn. We all decided about the same time to go different directions. Most went to create a new community in California...somewhere near Eureka. Others wanted to live closer to their work.
Our experiences shape us as much or maybe more than our genetics. The time period we pass through during our lives also shapes us. A friend wrote a book about Alabama fiddlers back in the 80's. Listening to their fiddle styles you can hear the time period they came through...ragtime, big band, swing, bluegrass, and my aged fiddlers – rock and roll. We are a product of our time.
This piece is the first in a short series reflecting on things that shape the people we are and are becoming. Next week we'll discuss the effect of place....the where. I hope today's message of the effect of the when and the how was clear, and not me just rambling on about my memories. What are your memories of those times? I look forward to reading your stories and comments below.
Comments
A Japanese saying is that you cannot cross
the same river twice, meaning that passage of time changes a river.
Yes, we are all a product of the time, but of other things as well. For some reason, I used to regret not having been born into the Victorian time period.
The sixties
were not so bad. I'm glad to have traveled through those times....but it's your thing do what you want to do.
Once I did some research on neck ties. I've not worn one for decades. I wondered why they were ever developed. A Victorian idea...you don't want to reveal buttons which go through button holes. Pretty sexually repressed era. Big on scientific developments and industrialism though.
All the best!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
Interesting. Thank you.
Weird that they wanted to cover the buttons on a man's shirt, but not the buttons down the back (or front) of a woman's dress.
@HenryAWallace
That is interesting, and makes one wonder. Maybe you’ll find some answers, or at least some entertainment here.
… or here?
This song
not a perfect fit....but the era is right.
Another view
on the passage of time:
Both songs fit the story...
cause we all ride 'round the circle game...start to finish. Thanks for the tunes!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
What a wonderful Weekly Watch!
Thank you for sharing this story with us. Not all of us have ventured along that road less traveled but wish in retrospect we had tried to do so.
I read with great interest about the Farm Community because there is an intentional community in my home town of Tallahassee, Florida that has been in existence for 45 years and is still going strong. The Miccosukee Land Co-op is an intentional community in the country outside the city of Tallahassee. Unlike many other communities of that era, the Co-op is not a commune, but is a cooperative community. Many of its founders and earliest members became very successful in the greater community. I know over a dozen of them and every one of them is an amazing person.
Here is a wonderful article on the Miccosukee Land Co-op and the people involved in its early days until the time at which the article was written. What stands out is that not only were the founding members all very successful in their outside endeavors, but their children were also very motivated in so many good ways. Now multiple generations of families still live there.
Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?
“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy
I've called a dance or two there...
...and know many members from over the years thanks to the Florida folk festival.
Thanks for coming by...always glad to see you.
Edit to add:
Thanks for that article.
PS met a fellow from NJ who is looking at moving to Brevard. After hearing his horror tales of NJ life I can't blame him. Brevard is such a great place. I think you might enjoy next weeks edition of the WW too.
Have a good one!
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
The Farm
After reading the OP and your comment, I set out to find something I had heard on Pacifica "From the Vault." I thought it was about The Farm, but turns out it was about The Highlander Folk School of Tennessee.
Unfortunately, the broadcast is only available for purchase. https://www.pacificaradioarchives.org/recording/pz0673535
But, I found some background elsewhere:
https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/highlander-folk-school/
Tunes
from those days were pretty amazing:
Seems to me creative arts and efforts were steam rolling...
...in those days. Not to mention the civil rights movement, women's rights, anti-war, black panthers and on and on. I feel fortunate to have come along during that time period.
Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, Peter,Paul, and Mary and a big influence on me...Pete Seeger..among too many others to name.
A whole generation effected.
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
It seemed to be a rich time
Here we are though, with our planet in peril, aware, that the very lifestyle we had so correctly begun to question, is the very thing that is causing our downfall.
My first ever bumper sticker
"Question Authority".
Wore it proudly on my Studebaker.
Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.
Stumbled across this....
Compensated Spokes Model for Big Poor.
Well we know the FBI does exactly that don't we?
remember cointelpro
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COINTELPRO
“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”
It occured to me recently, Lookout
The same tactics the alphabet agencies use in other countries to control the population, be it dis-information, instigation violence at peaceful gatherings, funding thugs, flooding communities with drugs, creating shortages of critical products or medicines, are the same tactics used right here in America.
It's like a universal formula for repression.
Thanks for the WW collections you do every week.
Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.
BREAKING - US & UK troops trapped in Idlib
WTF are they doing there anyway ?
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YmFZihj8tYY width:500 height:300]
When do the White Helmets release the gas ?
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X-uqMjiRJB0 width:500 height:300]
We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.
Advisers to the terroists!
How the hell do the troops accept the orders to do that? I can't understand that. Imagine what would happen if the media reported that? Or if this report was shown on US tv?
I thought this attack was delayed because Turkey was leary of the refugees flooding into their country?
When you see the elites start bugging out get ready because BOHICA big time.
Thanks for this.
Pentagon sends marines for snap live-fire drill in Syria as ‘strong message’ to Russia
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
Rebellion, retrospect, and regret: a 1965 Vietnam peace march
https://nomadicpolitics.blogspot.com/2015/04/rebellion-retrospectand-reg...
As for the present day, remember when Obama launched his big witch hunt called “Insider Threat,” looking for leakers and encouraging everyone working in government agencies to inform on everyone else?
https://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2013/06/this-really-is-big-brother-leak-...
https://www.mcclatchydc.com/news/special-reports/insider-threats/article...
The hypocrisy of the agitators against Trump truly boggles the mind.
Amazing is it?
How Obama could be Bush on steroids and so many people still say that they miss him and that he was the best president since FDR. Seeing the pattern? The way people reacted during Bush, then Obama and now Trump. Bad, good, extremely bad. All 3 of them have done the same things.
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
Is that a picture of you, lookout?
If so, nice bod and hair.
Scientists are concerned that conspiracy theories may die out if they keep coming true at the current alarming rate.
I really like your essay,
your experiences seem to have led you to a good place.
Sweet...
sweet, sweet. Thank you. Brings back great memories for me. Big smile.
Stop Climate Change Silence - Start the Conversation
Hot Air Website, Twitter, Facebook
Wait. Wut?
You were/are a hippy?
You did stuff?
You and your flower children friends went sans shirts?
I am shocked and appalled.
* checks notes *
Oh wait, what was I doing at Woodstock?
Never mind...
Prof: Nancy! I’m going to Greece!
Nancy: And swim the English Channel?
Prof: No. No. To ancient Greece where burning Sapho stood beside the wine dark sea. Wa de do da! Nancy, I’ve invented a time machine!
Firesign Theater
Stop the War!
Wow Lookout, that brings back some memories.
I'm guessing you are a few years older than me. I was too young for Woodstock, my older siblings weren't. But, being younger in the family meant I got introduced to my older brother's and sister's music when it was fresh. My classmates were stuck with whatever was on Ed Sullivan or some such.
The following is random memories that your story brought to the surface....
In 1975 or so 17 year old me somehow attracted the attention of a beautiful, smart, 19 year old who also happened to own a VW van named "Peaches" (because she was handy with tools and had turned Peaches into a camper van, and much of the inside was finished with boards from salvaged Peach crates). Road trips, good music, and young love in a VW van named Peaches. Oh my, I was blessed at a young age. The art on your Allman Brothers music video brought that one back. Still a bit wistful with that one.
And...John Prine...I didn't listen to him much back then, but made a connection after I left the South. Real backwoods blues are kind of the same way. You might not miss it until you leave and don't hear it in the background anymore.
I worked as a carpenter through high school and summers in college, so your story about Joe brought back some other memories there. And so there is John Prine on that:
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sn-TXN0b6Bg]
I have some in common with John Prine here, except it was my Dad instead of my Grandpa that was a Camel cigarette chain-smoking carpenter. But, my Dad was one of the left-wing wobbly Union-carpenter types. He did shave even every door though so that's the same. He was also a bit of a racist ass until his hippie kids starting coming home from college and...reeducating him a bit. That was one of the last lessons I took from Dad. Even when you are old, you can keep learning and, it's OK to admit it when you are wrong. He happily did that and it was like a burden lifted from him in the process.
OK. I'm going to leave it there. Thanks for stirring so many memories. Most from this era are surprisingly nice to revisit for me.
I do also wish that it were the same for the young folks that are currently 18-25 and making memories...
Very entertaining and enjoyable, Lookout!
and revealing ... of your wonderful spirit ; ).
[video:https://youtu.be/sXjJhm7KBII]
Thank you, Janis. Quite a variety of theories about ties!