After this month’s livestock auction on Saturday morning, we
stopped off at the farm on the way home. I noticed that the front door of the
cottage, which is off its hinges for painting, was lying flat on the floor of
the cottage. Normally it’s propped up in the door frame. It had been quite windy
on Friday so, I dismissed it, but could not help to feel a little suspicious. I
unlocked the store room, immediately looking for the chainsaw. I looked high
and low scratching through boxes and unlikely places in some kind of denial and
disbelief. It is nowhere to be found.
Mandoza says he last used it on Thursday. He suspects the casual labourer that
we employed the week before. A guy called “Sticks”
The door to the storeroom was not forced open,
it had been opened with a key and the key had been returned to its normal
hiding place. Mandoza thinks that Sticks may have seen the hiding place for the
keys. Anyway, I am really upset. I am angry that we have thieves moving around
on the farm, I am angry with myself for not being more vigilant with security
and I am worried that I now have to find money to replace this piece of
equipment that I really liked. In this soup of emotions that are now still
floating through my brain as I write this on Monday morning in the coffee shop
just up the road from my office. As I sit here in the smoky interior with the
familiar seventies music soothing softly in the background, I struggle to remind
myself of Law of the farm number 24:
“Some low life will steal your
chainsaw” Or as some American hippy once said “shit happens”. The mongoose will
eat your hens, the bubbler in your Tilapia tank will fail, ticks will infest your
cattle. These setbacks are constants. They will happen. The extent to which
they happen and the degree of damage they cause may be variable, but they will
happen. I try to console myself with the truth of this law. It helps a little,
but maybe tomorrow I will be OK. Maybe tomorrow I will come to see that we have
become softened by the illusion of comfort offered to us by our lives. Perhaps
I will come to see that we are lead to believe that nothing can go wrong.
Everything happens at the flick of a switch. Even here in South Africa, and
especially if you are urban and middle-class, you may go through very long
periods of time where nothing ever goes wrong. The bottle store never runs out
of beer, the soccer is on the television every Saturday, the mall keeps it opening
times as advertised and the lotto draw happens as scheduled every weekend. When
things go wrong, they are small, they are temporary and we are shielded from
the crisis, by layers of government and corporate structures. When the farmer’s
potato crop is destroyed by a swarm of locusts, we somehow magically still get
our Lays lightly salted from the all night convenience store. The massive corporate
chain makes sure they import potatoes from some other part of the province or
some other part of the world, we do not so much as notice a difference in
crispness of our favourite snack.
Everything we consume is in this way filtered
to be free of risk, to the extent that when our restaurant scrambled eggs aren't exactly the correct degree of softness, we feel completely obliged and
entitled to feel miserable and to throw a tantrum. What I am saying is that
governments and corporations have very effectively come to create the illusion
that rule of the farm number 24 does not exist. It does. Some low life will
steal your chainsaw, and the sooner you (and I) wake up an begin to live and
plan our lives according to this law, this non-negotiable constant, the sooner
we can be more closely aligned with the way things work. Delusion may be
comfortable, but making peace with the brutal truth brings us into closer union
with the universe and its laws. And in this way we make ourselves free, not by
selling ourselves into slavery to pay for the cost of the triple insurance
premiums of comfort, safety and security.
I'm in Redhouse PE. My son and I have just started Geoff Lawton's online course. My son is already a certified PDesigner but he knows there's so much more to learn. Many around that can give you guidance re your farm. Not too late to register - closes tomorrow or Sat, I think. http://www.geofflawton.com/sp/13753-sales-page My tel 041 463 3316 or 0828575755 All the best, Hugh
ReplyDeleteThanks Hugh. I enjoy Geoff Lawton's work and would very much like to do his online course. Not right now though. (got to get my life a little more organised)
ReplyDeleteBut, thanks for the "headsup"