Technology plays tricks on us, my Friends – it shortens processes, liberating us to partake of other activities.
by Granny Wise

Photo from photoXpress
There is nothing wrong with this, but do we not at some level miss out on beautiful, real, hands and minds-on experience? If everything happens at the touch of a button, then isn’t our creative involvement limited, even thwarted?
The answer, thankfully, is no.
Of course this depends on personal interests and lifestyle. A busy executive who absolutely loves spending long hours totally immersed in her work may favor as much automation as possible in other areas of life. This is a person who will select a healthy apple sauce or tomato sauce from the shelves of a grocery store instead of making her own. She still values wholesome nutrition while finding ways to allow time and room for her creativity to unfold where it is meant to do so.
And this is it. It is not a matter of being willing to make things from scratch; it is a matter of allowing proper expression to our creativity. For homesteaders, gardeners and farmers, creativity strives on the land and in the kitchen. Architects blossom at the drafting table. This is how we complement each other. This is how we design the world we share.
Gardening, cooking, canning, preserving, making cider and making tomato sauce from scratch takes time. The question that comes to mind for those whose energies are focused in other areas might be, “Why would I go through so much trouble?” The fact is, it is no trouble at all. When gardening, cooking, canning, preserving, making cider or making tomato sauce, we are like an artist.
The artist takes the time to pack up easel, paints and a good lunch, drive around in search of an inspiring vista, set up all equipment, mix the paints, capture the scene brush stroke after brush stroke, hour after hour, clean up, put away all tools and equipment, drive home, unpack everything and start over the next day. In truth, the words “take the time” actually mean “embrace the moment.”
So it is the moment we decide, “I will can some apples tomorrow.” It is a choice, not a chore.
Then, instantly, we look forward not only to the final product, but to the pure well-being that lies in every moment of the process. When canning, one must clean and set up and gather and cut and pay attention to timing. When making sauce, one must assemble the sauce maker, wash the tomatoes, store the sauce evenly in clean jars, dismantle the equipment and clean it carefully. Even the cleaning is not a chore. Instead, it is that part of the process where we realize that a good deed is done and that the last few hours provided nourishment to more than just the body. We are setting up or setting aside an entire process, in each instant realizing how fully alive and fully involved in living this process makes us feel.
Would it be more practical to buy a jar of sauce or preserve at the store? Yes. If your creativity lies in other areas of life. There is the word “practice” in the word “practical.” When we are exercising our creativity, in any area of life, the act of doing is what’s practical.
What practice would you do basic with your hands?
Granny Wise is All Season’s Homestead Helpers‘ writer and sustainability enthusiast. She urged us to create this Blog for her so she’d have a way to share her stories, knowledge and many findings with homesteaders, gardeners and simply all of you who like to take advantage of the abundance nature has to offer in any way that suits your lifestyle.
This made me hungry. I have to make some sauce (we call it gravy) very soon! 🙂 I love spending time in the kitchen, go figure. I believe in eating food that takes time both to prepare and eat. I’ve gone for the convenience as well, but it’s not as long lasting at all nor as tasty! 🙂
I totally get it. I feel the most creative when making bread but I love making other things from scratch too. Nice post!
I can enjoy the entire process UNTIL the clean up. That still feels like a chore.
Yum !
I like to make make bread, for some reason I love tweaking recipes until they are just right, and stirring by hand, kneeding doughs by hand is relaxing to me, but some people just don’t get it.
A nice coverage on the subject.
As chef …. I love to cook, but I would never stand in a kitchen for hours to cook only for myself – enjoy baking so long I don’t have to use yeast – because I don’t have an ounce of patience.
Some food products are marketed to “pressed for time but want homemade” people by requiring one or two somethings not included in order to prepare the dish. This gives the person the comfortable illusion of homemade. They really have people pegged.
A friend once said that we are in a microwave society. Everything has to be done quick and easy. My patience level is -0 with everything and everyone. So, learning to cook nice and easy and with fresh products has been a real eye opener. I’m enjoying reading through recipes and cooking fresh! Thanks for the great post, Great reads.
Our technology has evolved beyond our our moral abilities
Because we do not know the consequences:
We can create things we should not make …
We can fix things we should not fix…
We can cause actions with unknown answers..
I like this. When I feel stressed, I eat. When my eating gets out of control, I ask myself, “What am I feeding, because it certainly isn’t hunger.” Usually it’s because I feel pressured. It might be pressure from something I’m not looking forward to doing, but have to. So often it’s because I feel pressured to do something I “should.” I “should” vacuum, or paint, or mow, or make something like a homemade tomato sauce. When I find I’ve been shoulding on myself, I take a few hours to do something I “want” to do. If I really want to make the tomato sauce, then I do it and I enjoy the process. But if I want to sit down and enjoy a movie, I do that and it feeds my soul.
I guess taking time to share things on a blog fits into the same creative urge. It is a wonderful sense of accomplishment when I have packages of our own home-grown produce ready to stick in the freezer. And gathering the first egg from a hen I’ve raised from a day-old chick just can’t be beat!
Very well said. Thank you