SACRIFICE

Guest Post by Hardscrabble Farmer

Fall has come on in full, the depressions in the land rich with color, the scarlets and canary yellows of maple and birch setting fire to the landscape. There is a vibrancy in the air that belies the process of decay and calls out to the hope that lies in every heart. As all things wind down, so too does the coil tension itself. Every aspect of the farm looks like an N C Wyeth painting and each morning as I sit and either read or write before chores it emerges from the darkness in an pale mist, the first traces of silvery light illuminate the pillars of water vapor that rise from the surface of the trout pond and then drift off into the trees along the brook.

There is the last solemn yip of a single coyote, a lowing of the cows to their calves, muted by the distance now and the ever brightening glow the suffuses the air itself, ethereal, dream-like. For the past couple of days I have been playing catch-up with the jobs that must be done before weather overtakes my progress. The days end in darkness as they usually do, but they sneak up on me when I still have a coil of barbed wire in my grip and a thousand feet to go, the light so dim that each staple appears like a ghost in the gray palings driven into the bramble thickened edge of the field.

Starting and ending each day in the numinous light of creation, solitary yet surrounded by life, gives one the expectation of something even bigger moving along at its own pace beneath the visible surface. There is a presence that works beside me, above me and all around me, stringing fences of it’s own design and perhaps regarding my pitiful contribution as nothing more than an animal sound in the symphony of life.

One of the more enduring scraps of human experience from a long time ago is the concept of sacrifice. The root of the word- “sacer”- itself means hallowed or consecrated and “facer” means to be made. The idea that human beings would deliberately kill one of their own, often young, healthy, virile or virginal in order to appease an unseen deity must seem awfully quaint by the standards of the I-Phone set.

People living on an endless diet of foods that come from brightly lit store fronts a hundred miles from the nearest farmer’s field have never made the connection between life and death and could only wonder at what must have driven Abraham to lead Isaac to the altar on the mountaintop. Movies like Apocalypto- both grotesque and cartoonish at the same time- fail to expound on the inextricable link between what is and what will be and the innate understanding agrarian people have of those systems, so much so that talk of things rooted in the soil have come to hold their own neo-sacred meanings, without understanding.

Sustainable, locally grown, fresh and natural are almost superstitious mantras to the very people who have removed themselves from that world. The truth is that we all must make a sacrifice if life is to have any meaning at all. These days so much of what we have and enjoy is the product of someone else’s labor, so much of what we revere and hold up as valuable and desirous is expected rather than earned. And so whomever promises these gifts is seen as the producer, rather than the charlatan that they are.

Nothing comes without sacrifice in this world, but we have become a people, like those at the base of Mel Gibson’s Hollywood pyramid, with hands extended, cheering the gifts from above while ignoring the true cost that make them possible. We no longer live in the real world where things are tied to each other in a web of life, but broken into units and atomized cells of consumers always hungering, always eager to be fed the next tidbit of junk food or news, processed sugars or gossip, empty calories for the body and the mind leaving us to slowly die from that corruption, bodies bloated to corpulence, minds filled with useless infortainment.

When I speak of my oldest son it is usually with confidence and pride but it has a tinge of anxiety below the surface. 19 is the hardest year and I have told him this more than once. He has managed to navigate through the difficult parts of entering his young adult life with very few missteps, but I understand how difficult it is far away from home. His journey out into the world away from us gives us an equal share of both sadness and joy and when he calls the day stops for the length of that connection.

A couple of weeks ago my wife came home with the news that one of our son’s friends, someone he played football and rugby with, a boy who had the tenacity of someone twice his size and an engaging personality, had taken his own life. I recalled immediately one particular game I had watched this young man grab on to a much larger player from the opposing team and hold on to him for twenty yards of abuse. Any other player would have been shaken off but this kid would not let go and ten yards short of the goal the big guy went down, the smaller kid wrapped around his legs.

I remember cheering for him, laughing at the pure joy and tenacity of youth expressed in a simple tackle. My wife made the call to our son and gave him the news while I watched. I could hear his reply from across the room and see it in my wife’s face and there I stood, my hands five hundred miles from my Son’s shoulders, unable to offer him a thing for his grief. He called back the next day to talk and I tried to explain as best I could that life is never what you think it’s going to be and some people who seem to be made of strong stuff just can’t stand up to it. Empty words, I suppose, but it was all that I could offer.

A week later he called again, this time to tell me about being called in by his boss. My heart hung for a few seconds in anticipation of what he’d say next, his voice grave. Already I was coming up with consolation and assurance that he could always come home and throw in with us whenever he wanted but even as the words were forming in my mind he finished his story. He’d been given his first raise, offered more responsibilities, shown appreciation by men he respected who were not his own family. My youngest Son was watching me as we spoke and I had to turn my head away, to look out the window so he wouldn’t see the tears that were forming.

Tears of joy, rare as hen’s teeth in this world, but precious beyond words. I congratulated him, told him how proud we were and then passed the phone to his brother. It isn’t my life, but even from my remote vantage point I could see that this was a defining moment in his life and that the loss of his friend was somehow part of his movement forward. That all tragedies are not necessarily losses and that not all victories are gains. What seems so personal in many ways is beyond our control and that the best we can ever hope to do is make our efforts worthwhile in the service of life no matter what the rest of the world may be up to.

Yesterday I spent the better part of my labor clearing out the deep bedding left by the stock at the far end of the eskar. It takes several hours using the loader to scrape the composted manure mixed with wood ash and shavings and then spread them across the fields, a repetitious job that brings up the trapped odors of decomposition and life with each pass. The material looks like potting soil and each load is dumped out in a fan across the weaker spots in the pastures, dark black streaks like brush marks on canvas.

There should be rain coming in with the front end of whatever is left of Hurricane Matthew and before then I’d like to have the job complete and the area packed up with fresh sand before we bring in the cattle for feeding the season. The area you concentrate your livestock overwinter is called a sacrifice. The manure and urea is concentrated in a small area and at regular intervals we dump loads of carbon to trap the valuable nutrients; wood chips, leaves, shavings and waste feed is ground under their hooves, mixed in with their wastes in a way that makes it both manageable as well as useful.

In larger operations these effluents and tailings are a waste product that has to be mitigated, but on a small homestead they are simply another feed for other species, the invisible mouths of a billion bacteria and paramecia that convert the dead back to life. The value of the loams they produce from the wastes that accrete exceeds any input that comes from a lab or a chemical plant, not only for our forage, but for the tilth of the soil itself. This cycle, forgotten by most people long ago, is the only true thing I have ever come to understand. It’s been difficult for me, coming from the kind of world I lived in before, the surface and the shallow depth of it built on man made concepts and ideations like finance and politics.

I am still drawn into those kinds of concerns and worries, especially at this time of the year and the political cycle, but I understand better than I have before that it is not my concern. I suppose that like the Celtic monks who scribbled and hid their secrets from the Viking raiders, there must be a few people committed to keeping something going at all costs if we are ever going to emerge on the brighter end of this someday. I’m getting older each day, the old wounds and scars feeding on themselves, my body shrinking back towards that helpless stage again, but worth every moment. I know I can’t change the course of history with the combined efforts of my whole being, but I can fix a field for next year and feed our animals this Winter and be there when my Son calls to talk, all small contributions of my time and efforts in the bigger picture of our life. And so, like that piece of soil at the far end of the farm yard I offer up myself as a kind of sacrifice to another season and that is enough.

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28 Comments
Gayle
Gayle
October 8, 2016 10:08 am

So beautiful.

Gryffyn
Gryffyn
October 8, 2016 10:14 am

HSF, another good one which I will have to reread a couple of times to fully absorb.
Here in the southern hills we have already received nearly three inches of gentle rain from the clouds being pushed your way by the hurricane. In a day or two the garden soil which has been hard as brick for the past month will be just right for planting the German Red garlic I’ve been holding for the right conditions. I bought the garlic last month from a couple who garden here during the spring and summer and then fly to Antarctica every Fall, like Arctic terns. They work through the South polar summer and return to set out the crops they will sell here at home. Their produce is some of the best available. Everything from lettuce and green onions in the spring, tomatoes, peppers and squash in summer and then garlic and potatoes last week, their final day at our weekly farmers market.
Even though I support our local farmers I still put out a small plot, just to keep in practice and remind myself of the constant attention required. While I quit hunting years ago I need to get out and do some target shooting, for similar reasons. We appear to be enjoying the ancient Chinese curse of living in interesting times.

Maggie
Maggie
October 8, 2016 10:22 am

Wonderful essay.

Grog
Grog
October 8, 2016 10:39 am

@HsF,
I doubt your maple sugar is more sweet than the missives you write so well.
Thanks

Rob
Rob
October 8, 2016 10:53 am

Well Grog, buy some of his maple syrup and see for yourself. There is literally none better.

Homer
Homer
October 8, 2016 11:43 am

HSF–I liked your descriptive verbiage. The problem with writing is that it is more telling about the author than the story being told. Sacrifice is just a way of looking at some experience. One can look at events in one’s life differently. It is just assuming another mindset. I never think in terms of sacrifice. I think in terms of service to others, of being a blessing in the lives of others.

I’ve thought that Jesus never thought that His dying on the cross as a sacrifice. It was a mindset that others placed upon Him, later. It was just a job He had to do and He did it. It was a great service to us. Most people don’t even understand what He did and what it means for us.

Sacrifice? No. It’s not even in my lexicon.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
October 8, 2016 11:59 am

Homer, you’re probably right. I think I have been trying to come to an understanding of the deeper meaning of that word- it’s roots are firmly embedded in the concept of making something hallowed through effort. Every living thing serves another through it’s death- who understands that today? No one living in the fast paced human environment of information and ideas has the time to slow things down to the level of their own respiration, nor the time preference that allows them to grasp something as regular and stable as seasonality. Lifespans and purpose are archaic anachronisms in this age even as they fuel it from the provinces.

randy
randy
  hardscrabble farmer
October 9, 2016 8:11 pm

As a former factory worker I can attest to the un-natural cycles of modern economics and how it breaks down the bonds of humans to the earth, and just as significantly, humans to humans.

How the din of the modern age – central air units and road noise – the barrage of twenty-four hour and day, seven-day-a-week commerce has quieted the natural world, and family dinner.

Having left the rat race and working for myself, in the out doors, I find myself often staring off into golden wheat fields, fields of lush soybean, or trying to quietly follow a gaggle of wild turkey through a small county woodlot.

While the compensation for my work has declined, I get to enjoy the morning air. I don’t worry about what time it is. I eat when I’m hungry. I sleep well.

Free market laissez-faire economics has brought us to an age of Valentines Day cards, Easter Egg hunts, Halloween masks, and Christmas expectations. While Spring brings us rejuvenation, Summer growth, Fall harvest, and Winter rest.

As a seasonal worker, your writing speaks to me. Your eloquence paints. And your take on life – simple yet thought provoking.

It takes time to read your prose…even more to read it again. Time well spent.

Francis Marion
Francis Marion
October 8, 2016 12:36 pm

Jeebers HSF,

I have a good friend who does a lot of youtube videos. He’s developed quite a following. He often comments to me that when he looks back on his original videos he is always struck by how much they have evolved since the beginning.

I used to simply enjoy reading your prose. But lately it has changed. Now it grips me and pulls me in and I find myself looking at the world through your eyes and experiencing it through every sense and emotion. It is a rare thing in a writer these days. You are refining what you do with every major piece, weaving lesson with experience, touching all senses, emotion and reason. Very rare and by and large a lost art in this day and age. Keep at it. Keep refining and thanks for sharing your gift with the rest of us. It is appreciated.

PS – good sons are God’s gift to good and patient fathers. They are the greatest sort of reward are they not?

Westcoaster
Westcoaster
  Francis Marion
October 10, 2016 4:35 pm

I was about to write a comment but you said it better.

SaamiJim.
SaamiJim.
October 8, 2016 3:40 pm

HSF,
Thank you for taking the time to write & post. You have made my day again.

Anonymous
Anonymous
October 8, 2016 4:52 pm

Your words and thoughts have once again dragged me – if not kicking and screaming – at least with heels dragging into your world. I learn from each and every post of yours and while to old to do what you do now, I did do it it once although not close to the depth where your life has taken you. None the less, I understand better than most.

And I thank you, yet again..

Muck

Muck About
Muck About
October 8, 2016 4:55 pm

The above was, of course, me.

iconoclast421
iconoclast421
October 8, 2016 4:55 pm

“but I understand better than I have before that it is not my concern”

It will be your concern when this corrupt cabal comes and takes your land in its conquest to feudalize the entire world. They will not be stopped by passive resignation.

Unspoken
Unspoken
October 8, 2016 5:27 pm

On another blog, I once read what a random commenter had written to the author of the piece that I had just read. He wrote something to the effect of: “Don’t be concerned regarding any dearth of comments. It would be like photographing Alaska.”

I am so glad I read that comment because it explains how I feel right now. I want to tell you something about what I just read. But I can’t. Besides, it wouldn’t do it justice anyway. In my own case, some things are better left unsaid. Therefore, I will not say anything else and, instead, just read it again five or six more times.

Unspoken
Unspoken
  Unspoken
October 8, 2016 5:34 pm

But I WILL tell El Coyote this: If you make fun of me for weeping at the sunset, I am gonna’ be pissed! 🙁

starfcker the deplorable
starfcker the deplorable
  Unspoken
October 8, 2016 8:20 pm

Jim Quinn, you’ve got to be a proud man. Look at the top of your line up right now. Uncola, Hardscrabble, Francis. Great content originating on your site. Yes, you get all the same ones as everyone else, but the original content that you and everyone else puts up with no PC strings attached makes for enjoyable reading. How come you don’t have reader stats like ZH? I love watching your articles triple everyone else over there.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Unspoken
October 9, 2016 4:11 pm

Uncola, your my favorite turd. I went back to the AG article and couldn’t find where I had said FU to you but if I did, it was only to toughen you up. This is not a place for pussies and weeping on the swing-set does not sound very macho. I hope your wrestling coach never reads that or he’d be fit to be tied or put you in a full-nelson.

Stubb
Stubb
October 8, 2016 8:40 pm

Hear, Hear! All hail the mighty Quinn! We have $5,400 more to go and just 85 days left until New Years. $65 a day. We can do this people!

Edgar Grana
Edgar Grana
October 8, 2016 11:16 pm

Who are you I’ve never heard or read your work. I came upon it through the burning platform. I have two sons the youngest and at times the most difficult for me although the oldest yells a lot about Hillary into my ear there’s no discussion about my taste in politics so we stop. but the youngest is moving inexorably forward in away the sentences me to silence in awe of his path. He wants to study medicine after securing a x ray cat scan job at an inner city New York city hospital and the private practice of a group of orthopedic surgeons on Union Square.

I thought he would never get out of middle school.

The oldest works hard writing thinking raising his baby while his wife manages Playwrights bar in Manhattan. They are the next folk I am concerned what it is they will be living in.

Again who are you I have never heard nor read your work I think Ill post a paragraph on Facebook with the proper citation given to you

susanna
susanna
October 9, 2016 8:37 am

good morning HSF,

You are a good hard working man, and you write about
your thoughts and your experiences in a very lovely style.

We too are blessed to have given up city life. We have our
small community here that gives us pleasure and also humbles
us. I love my 110-115 yr old farmhouse and it is our home.
We aren’t farmers, and we no longer have the strength to raise
cattle and manage a large property. Yet, the farmers are all
around us. The dairy farmer a couple of miles away is one of
my favorites. His land is split and there is a cattle crossing sign.
My “crops” this year are apples, pears, raspberries, tomatoes,
and a slew of ground cherries. The neighbor gave us a huge bushel
of nearly unblemished honey crisp apples…and I got to make
a very old fashioned lattice top pie with a butter crust.
Simple pleasures/wonderful life.
Thank you for your prose.

Suzanna

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
October 9, 2016 12:27 pm

Beautiful description HSF. I can tell all the folks here that his farm is as he describes, as he has been kind enough to allow me to visit on a number of occasions, letting my German Shepherd pup run with his working dogs as they chase us around in the Gator zig zagging around his property.
Seasons are indeed changing, the foliage bright, the nights dipping into the 30’s, frost threatening. Harvest from the garden has begun in earnest, today being the day to dig up the sweet potato patch and set them to cure. Yesterday took the boat and dock off the pond (Sorry HSF, hope to get you out fishing again next year). On the way out to peruse the garden I found the entrails from one of my chickens, and followed the feather trail to the half eaten out carcass. Probably a coyote. Mr. Fox would have come back until they were all dead.
Sorry to hear about your son’s friend, that is truly sad and I feel for the nightmare his parents must be going through. I am blessed with the sons I have, as are you. You stated “there must be a few people committed to keeping something going at all costs if we are ever going to emerge on the brighter end of this someday.” I truly believe my oldest will be one of those.
Thanks again for the imagery and philosophy.

curtmilr
curtmilr
October 9, 2016 3:01 pm

HSF’s writing is always a balm to the soul! A deeply felt THANKS once again!!

AND his syrup is the epitome of sweetness converted from light itself.

Lastly, Christ was fully aware of the sacrificial nature of His crucifixion, as all the Levitical Offerings spoke of His mission and purpose, for He was their Author as well.

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  curtmilr
October 9, 2016 4:48 pm

Autumn always bring this mood of reflection. The waning light can cause depression. Depression can bring on thoughts of suicide. Maybe that’s why I didn’t like to read of Uncola’s weeping at the dying of the light.

cort gets it right. the old testament is but a foreshadowing and prophesy of Christ. HF says he sacrifices himself. God has done the same. He says he is one who was dead and lives once more forever. Life comes from the giver of life. To try to know all the things God knows is to try and photograph Alaska. We share some of his knowledge when we read the bible. Therein, we find that no one can imagine or conceive of the wonders God has prepared for us.

However, we cannot make it to there without sacrificing ourselves here.

Uncola, you have not seen EL Coyote weep like Mary Magdalene over all the shit he’s done. One of the guys here said it was typical of older Hispanics that they became more sentimental with age. I say they just become more expressive of their feelings.

RiNS the deplorable
RiNS the deplorable
October 9, 2016 4:37 pm

HSF

Nothing really to add except thank you again for your wonderful prose.

randy
randy
October 9, 2016 7:32 pm

And there it is…

” That all tragedies are not necessarily losses and that not all victories are gains. What seems so personal in many ways is beyond our control and that the best we can ever hope to do is make our efforts worthwhile…”

The best we can do is hope, the worst we can do is fear. The only thing we fully control is ourselves. And the truly worthwhile effort is personal sacrifice for the greater good of others…

A very evocative piece HSF. Your flourishing style is not only impressive but thought provoking.

p.s. as it always is…

Suzanna
Suzanna
October 9, 2016 8:47 pm

HSF,

I was obsessed with picturing your fall farm and seeing my very mini farm,
and baking my pie. It had to be just so as my cousin and his wife were to be
visiting. I read your piece again today and saw the condolence message
for your son’s friend. What makes someone so vital and strong decide to
end their life? Very very sad for your son, and this may put a tiny seed of
doubt in his mind. You know that, and you will f/u with him several times
so he can be reassured of your love and respect and pride in him. Yes?
Of course.

EC,
Who knew? Mr. Grumpy (the other day) is feeling better and is an expressive
older Hispanic gent., sentimental and lovely. I adored reading your poetic words.
And I pray God will look out for you so you are not sad or lonely in the darker
months. I know you are a handsome alpha male, and I wish for you a special
friend to enjoy the fall and winter season with. Go get one.
Also you could get a little kitty to make some trouble in your house. Or a puppy
for a companion.
We were visiting Aunt Polly in Door County/ actually we stayed at her home as she
was going to be away for a week. Polly is an artist and the house was filled with
oil painting stuff. She was 86 at that time. She asked that we visit her boyfriend
once during her absence. He was 91 and a bit wobbly on his feet. (I forgot his name
but he was a student/apprentice under F.L. Olmstead, Central Park designer…architect)
So we 7 women go to visit and he was charming. Also, he had a six month GS dog pup.
He laughed and told us the dog was to help him up and out of his chair. And he
demonstrated. It was a great visit with a cool older dude. He told us God encouraged
him to get the dog for company and to keep him busy/his MD agreed. Inspirational?

Suzanna
(we all love you EC, but when you are crabby, we hope it will pass quickly)

EL Coyote
EL Coyote
  Suzanna
October 9, 2016 11:35 pm

Suzie Q. I’m only 60 though not a handsome 60, just a short little 60ish dude. Hardly a crabby old man. I have the sexy mulatta who takes care of me.

We have a little boy, 11 months. He is no longer a baby. Nobody can be crabby around him. I ask the sexy mulatta if she doesn’t want him to grow up. She says she can’t wait for him to become responsible, maybe get a part-time job. But who’s going to hire a 1 yo with no experience? It is not looking promising, he’s got 5 adults actively spoiling him.

We used to have a dog, Shadow, he lived with us for nearly 15 years. It was a sad day when he died. I think I saw his last as I came out the door and he lifted his head and then dropped it quick. Somebody said he was probably holding on for somebody, that would be my mother in law who doted on him and fed him every day.

It affected her and all she could talk about that mother’s day (it happened that morning) was about Shadow.