Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Going Organic

Organic is all the rage these days. Organic food, organic clothing, organic coffee. I make a point of buying organic milk and chicken. I try for organic veggies too.

Perhaps it's because of the popularity of organic farming that I have been applying the word "organic" to other aspects of my life as well. For example, I was thinking yesterday that I want my writing career to develop organically. Naturally. And at first, I thought that I should "just write" and not think about who was reading it or how to get more people to read it, that I should just wait for connections to come my way, wait to be discovered, so to speak. But then I realized that if farmers left their crops in the ground without any cultivation, they wouldn't grow. Even if tended without chemicals, they must be tended. Natural growth, and organic growth, in other words, are not the same thing. Left to nature, the crops would get choked, or eaten, or wither up.

I think about raising my children. To raise them naturally would be to allow their natural instincts to drive their decisions. Which means Penny would hit William. A lot. Which means William would soon enough sit on her and pound her. Which means they would harm each other and themselves, over and over again. Natural parenting. Not a good idea.

On the other hand, when it comes to writing or parenting or food, manipulation is not a good idea either. It's tempting. If I manipulate the market for potential readers (by writing what I think people want to hear, whether or not it is true, for instance) or if I manipulate my children ("If you stop hitting William, you'll get a special treat") or when farmers manipulate food with pesticides and other chemicals, the rewards on the front end are great. But the long term harm is obvious as well.

So I don't want natural growth, and I don't want manipulative growth. I'm going organic. Thoughtful cultivation of an audience for writing. Thoughtful cultivation of my children's attitudes and interactions. Thoughtful cultivation of this life.

5 comments:

Betsy said...

I love what you said about 'cultivation.' I agree that the word organic goes beyond just food. Thanks for that post!

Unknown said...

I really like this post. Thanks for sharing it!
- Commenting while eating organic granola

Unknown said...

I agree as well, Ryan and I talk all the time about letting God 'Organicly'grow as a couple and as His children.

Amy Julia Becker said...

Hobbes cornered the market on the "state of nature", defined as "during the time men live without a common power to keep them all in awe, they are in that condition which is called war; and such a war as is of every man against every man" (Leviathan, ch. XIII) and it's in this state that Hobbes said life is "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" (loc. cit.). This, indeed, would describe "natural" child rearing.

Amy Julia Becker said...

that wasn't amy julia--it was peter. google's confused