Park Attwood Clinic
Weleda USA
Seven Angels All in A Row
Water Check - Transforming your relationship to water
Camphill
True Botanica
Natural Pod
Administration Services
Rudolph Steiner Clinic
Organic By Nature
Barbara Brennan School of Healing
Custom Web Development
Custom Web Development
Park Attwood Clinic
Weleda USA
Seven Angels All in A Row
Water Check - Transforming your relationship to water
Camphill
True Botanica
Natural Pod
Administration Services
Rudolph Steiner Clinic
Organic By Nature
Barbara Brennan School of Healing
Barbara Brennan School of Healing
Custom Web Development
Park Attwood Clinic
Weleda USA
Seven Angels All in A Row
Water Check - Transforming your relationship to water
Camphill
True Botanica
Natural Pod
Administration Services
Rudolph Steiner Clinic
Organic By Nature
Organic By Nature
Barbara Brennan School of Healing
Custom Web Development
Park Attwood Clinic
Weleda USA
Seven Angels All in A Row
Water Check - Transforming your relationship to water
Camphill
True Botanica
Natural Pod
Administration Services
Rudolph Steiner Clinic
Rudolph Steiner Clinic
Organic By Nature
Barbara Brennan School of Healing
Custom Web Development
Park Attwood Clinic
Weleda USA
Seven Angels All in A Row
Water Check - Transforming your relationship to water
Camphill
True Botanica
Natural Pod
Administration Services

Lilipoh ~ the spirit in life

Author: Ricardo Sierra
Issue: Spring 2008: The Spirit in Color - Issue #51, Vol. 13
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Contact with Wild Places: The Antidote to Nature Deficit Disorder
by Ricardo Sierra

“It is hard to argue with a thunderstorm, or blame poison ivy on the plant.”

As a boy growing up in upstate New York,  I attended the pioneering class of the Hawthorne Valley Waldorf School. It was a very rural area, (some of my classes were taught in an ancient goat barn), and most of my free time was spent outside. My childhood, like many readers who are over thirty, consisted of imaginative play, reading, cooperative games with neighborhood kids, and family time. We built forts, wandered in the woods and fields around local farms, discovered which ponds held fish, what to wear when it rained, how to recognize poison ivy and which local dogs to avoid. The places I explored, alone or with friends,  helped shape who I am today. Seeing that I work in various areas of earth skills education, and wilderness leadership, I haven’t fallen far from the tree.

However, I never imagined that my days outside planted powerful seeds of protection, life skills or inner development. In fact, that was never in my mind at all. It wasn’t in anyone’s mind. It was a matter of what options were available.

My journey towards mentoring youth started with my passion to know how the native peoples in America survived for thousands of years without WalmartHome Depot or Red Lobster. Everything they needed was handmade, directly from nature, which, when considering clothing, shelters, tools and medicines, was impressive. I studied ancient skills voraciously, practicing fire-making using fire by friction, tracking animals according to Apache methods of observation, learned wild edible plants and stone tools. My confidence grew with each new skill gained.

Taking kids on my gathering forays, wilderness trips, or tracking adventures, I was amazed at the changes that took place in them. Making a fire for the first time, learning to handle a knife, or build a shelter that will shed rain effectively changed these young people in powerful ways. It wasn’t just the challenges, either. The solitude, the connection to plants, trees, rocks and birds all seemed to combine with the self-reliance skills to form a foundation upon which self-esteem, confidence, empathy, leadership and inner strength were established. I was fascinated by what I observed in these students, seeing them pull many of their reasoning, creativity and communication skills all together on a trek, with powerful results.    

Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder, has almost single-handedly initiated a wave of concern leading to action on the issues of obesity, depression, attention deficits and loss of creativity, all symptoms of our disconnect from nature. His interviews with children who prefer to stay inside and play with electronic media rather than risk getting dirty outside indicates a cultural shift where nature is intellectual and marginalized. It has happened over several generations, with each loss of our connection balanced by a new ailment, problem or crisis.