RADICAL RELOCALIZATION


Eric's Tomato - Why we need a local food movement (and why it has a fighting chance)

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A few weeks ago Eric and Anne gave me a wonderful tomato, grown by

Eric in their garden. One slice entirely covered a slice of bread. It
was juicy, as full of tiny windows as a New York apartment building
and so tasty I'm writing about it three weeks later.

A tomato like that sheds a good light even on the storm that's

gathering around us. The storm of course is the effective collapse of
the house of cards global system, coming sometime soon to a
neighborhood near you. How soon is anybody's guess but for practical
reckoning, I just consider I'm in it now since my thoughts keep
cycling back to it anyway. I just assume this is what collapse looks
like in the early stages as it continues to gather. As someone said,
I feel better much since I gave up hope.

The gathering storm adds pressure to that familiar sense of

alienation many of us have dipped our toe in, or more likely taken
full-body baths in till our skin got all wrinkly. Alienation is that
modern initiation, the trite-to-mention but oh-so-real sense of
dislocation that comes from personal versions of feeling like a cog
in a machine, having to do a job we don't respect, being subject to a
political process we don't trust but don't know how to change, and
more. You know what I'm talking about? This common initiation
frequently extends all the way down to day by day feelings of being
and not central in our own life - as if the system has commandeered
that role for itself. It's not a good feeling. A GP friend tells me
three-quarters of his patients are on medication for stress and
psychological complaints; untold numbers are under the radar,
toughing it out. If angst and alienation is not with us personally
now, they likely have been and are sure to be for people we know and
love.

I'm contrasting the storm with the presence and bearing of Eric's

tomato which stands bravely before it. And behind his tomato, the
entire local food system peeking out. (Bear with me please as I
thoroughly conflate Eric's tomato with the emerging local food
system; it's the poet in me.) We're so caught up with the unconscious
assumptions of the global system, so entangled with it, that we can
hardly see all the rich implications of the emerging local food
system.

That may be just a matter of time. Local food, while spreading like

quackgrass, is hardly out of the starting gate. It has many strong
seeds. Not all of them will grow but I'm betting a lot will.

Here are some of the ways the seeds in Eric's tomato, and the

burgeoning local food system, are likely to grow:

Each and every step of local food production demonstrates that

members are valuable, important and essential contributors to the
well being of the whole. Tasks are done for their own sake, not only
for profit. (Profit is a good thing, not a bad, but it has limits as
a primary motivator.) People working in a local food system are more
than figures on the balance sheet and they know it, or they'll leave.
They get that they're part of something bigger than them that's
creating daily joy, especially right around mealtime, something that
connects their family to larger meaning and is very much in their
best interest to keep going.

Members share a perception of increasing wealth. Wealth in the gift

food system is marked by something as simple as the willingness and
ability to share a tomato. Anyone can have a part of this. The local
food system develops powerful roots and interconnections that become
available to each new member. This includes the felt realization that
wealth stems from land and soil and the complex web of
interconnections that support it.

Civic priorities shift toward the local and participatory.

Voting-once-every-four-years democracy, the art of maintaining the
system at all costs, is increasingly seen as irrelevant and members
will tend to reform the system or abandon it completely. (Still
others will watch the Daily Show. )

Health smarts go up. Members tend to see that health care means

taking responsibility for their own health, eating that tomato,
working to produce it, and being part of the network that shared it
around.

Family strengthens because members tend to be united in appreciation

for the real tomato.

Just as the tomato taps into the vine and the roots, local food

systems tap into the community and local networks of distribution,
connecting more and more people.

The tomato also gives us an opening to the social justice dimension

of food, the possibility and hope that all can be fed.

Some some will see that their personal story (what they most want and

need) and the world's story (what it needs) are richly
interconnected. In other words, it isn't just that food
relocalization makes practical sense though it does that. It's also
that full immersion leads to the community and culture that has a
powerful effect on our most intractable personal problems, the thing
that can wake us up at 3 A.M. in a cold sweat.

Those are just a few. The seeds of possibility inside Eric's tomato

are actually endless because they open up to new possibilities that
open up to still new ones . . .
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