On Blueberries and Becoming Indigenous

  Last week, under a gentle August sun, a group of five people gathered at my cottage for two days of rich conversation. We ate every meal around a picnic table on the sandy beach, looking out over the lake and mountains.  In between us and the lake, circling the base of three white birch trees, was a wild blueberry bush that was almost as blue as it was green. Surrounded by this vibrant scene, we excitedly imagined a global movement that would usher in a new organizational story – a story with life solidly at the center of its plot.  And though they seemed to form only a lovely backdrop to our conversation, it turned out that the blueberries had important insights to share.

We had gathered on the occasion of Peter Goldsbury’s visit from New Zealand.  He had come to Montreal to share the indigenous wisdom of the Maori people – in particular, the story of a native school that had astonished the nation with its accomplishments, despite all the disadvantages that are common to indigenous minorities.  Peter had helped the Maori document their approach within a model they call Tipu Ake ke ti Ora, which loosely translates as “a continuous movement toward wellbeing in the largest possible sense and timeframe.”  I was attracted to this model because of its view of organizations as living systems, integrally related to all other living systems.  I found it to be completely coherent with my own views, at the same time that it added valuable new perspectives.  It even uses the metaphor of a tree, as I do. 

After Peter and the others left, I stayed at the cottage for several more days.  And each day, I spent time alone quietly picking blueberries next to the lake.  It was during those times that two thoughts came to me, as if the berries themselves were whispering their wisdom to me.

First, I noticed that when I picked the blueberries that were easily visible on the surface of the bush, it seemed that I'd gotten them all.   That was it.  But then, I would raise a branch and look another level deeper.  And that's where I found real treasure - big clumps, like clusters of tiny blue grapes.  Eventually, in search of even more berries, I stepped all the way into the bush.  Immersed, I found even more richness.   There was always more to be discovered as I looked at the bush from different angles.  And each day that I went back, new fruit had ripened.  

Then it occurred to me: all of this is true of the Maori way of looking at organizations, and my own, and any living systems model worth its salt (see also Margaret Wheatley, for example, or Peggy Holman).  On the surface, there may be a picture of a tree, along with a practical checklist of things to include in your organizational strategy.  But the real richness lies under the surface, in the different ways of thinking that these models represent. The real value comes in stepping fully into the new story they tell of wholeness and relationship, in addition to parts and processes (which are the sole themes of today’s dominant guiding story of organizations).  And like blueberry bushes in August, the story will reward you with new insights each time you come back to it. 

These observations reinforced my belief that the global movement we envisioned must center around ongoing conversation.  Only in this way will we be able to imagine and integrate a fundamentally new guiding story.

But there was more.

The group of five had shared the sense that food may have an important role to play in the movement we envisioned, but we weren’t sure exactly how.  Sitting together for our meals had certainly enhanced our own gathering.  But was there more to it than that?

As the conversation continued, we also wondered: what does it mean to be indigenous?  The Maori had originally come from somewhere else, as explorers crossing vast stretches of the Pacific.  So, being indigenous seemed to involve something more than all your ancestors coming from a certain place.  As we talked it through, we observed that indigenous peoples have not forgotten the unity of all life and the dynamic relationship they have with the land and all creation. To us, it seemed that this understanding, most of all, may be what makes a people indigenous.  They recognize that they are of the land (and more).

Later, there alone picking blueberries and of course eating a few along the way, I realized that – if we're intentional about it - food can help us sense the unity of life and our relationship with everything on Earth, including each other.  We are all made from the same Earth, as our bodies create themselves moment by moment using the food we eat.  We are what we eat, very literally. And in that way, we are all indigenous in the largest sense: we're indigenous to the Earth.  Some of us remember this; many of us have forgotten.  And it's in remembering that our world can be healed and made whole.  Living systems models like Tipu Ake help us see that this healing can take place even in our organizations and our economies. In fact, this may be where it is needed most.
 
Several days later, a larger group gathered in the city to hear Peter present an evening workshop.  We were incredibly fortunate to have the presence of Kevin Deer, a school principal from the Kahnawake tribe.  He opened the evening with a traditional greeting that brought tears to many people's eyes with its graciousness and its wisdom, which echoed what I had learned from the blueberries.   
 
Later, as we all stood in a circle at the end of an activity, I took the opportunity to pass around small cups of the berries I had picked, describing the insights they had offered.  I explained that I was sharing those berries so that they might help us be aware of our inherent unity and of our deep connections to the Earth and to each other.  With a smile, I suggested that, instead of blood brothers and sisters, maybe we were becoming blueberry brothers and sisters, knowing that fruit from the same wild bush now flowed through all of our bodies. 

All of this felt like an important step on the sacred journey Home that I wrote about in an earlier post. 

What are your blueberries whispering to you? 

Michelle, this is the pure voice of a spiritual warrior - clear and strong in intention and expression, and so valuable to all of us. Thanks for this, especially from those of us who were unable to attend the gatherings you and Pamela organized with Peter. Blueberries, a beautiful antidote to blackberries..... J.

Hello Jean & Michelle, nice to see you both here! and thanks for the post and the blueberry metaphor, Michelle.

Nature has a lot to tell us, once we listen. I try to commune with Nature every day, while sitting under a tree. Growing my roots and feelings its roots. And also feeling the connection with the Sky. My coach said yesterday that the branches of a tree get their nourishment from the sky. How true!

Nature is responding as well. I was surprised to find a lovely snake under our garbage bin on Sunday. I had seen him once perhaps two months ago as it was strolling on our pathway. It has grown quite a bit since and its yellow and brown body looked wonderful. Our landlord had mowed the lawn that afternoon and I suspect that it found refuge under the bin. I looked at him for several long minutes. Another way of communing.

Happy listening and happy harvesting to you!

Gilles

Thank you for the wonderful images of trees, sky and snake, Gilles.  I loved the story of how you commune with nature.  Here's what I found about the etymology of the word "commune" -  "derived from com- "with, together" + unus "oneness, union."  So you're experiencing your oneness with nature.  Beautiful.

Michelle, Susan passed this along to me. My talk on Sunday will be, "God All Around." She, and I agree, felt that this will be an interesting story to share. Thank you for your insights and your wonderful way with words. Blessings, Carol

 How wonderful, Carol.  I'm thrilled that the article had some inspiration for you.  Wish I could be there!

Berry picking does seem to plug us into a relationship to gathering food, reminding us where food - and we - come from. I didn't meet Peter Goldsbury when he came to Ottawa, just didn't work out, but would have loved to.

I'm interested in who's indigenous and who's "native" . . . how many generations before one is "native" to a country? There are lots of interesting questions just below the surface, (hidden fruit) in the question of nativeness and what it means. Among them, when do non-aboriginals really be at home and take care of their land. And do we project innocence and communion on native people? I think non-natives do this, though it could be true.

A downside of native culture it seems to me, and any homogenous group is the unconscious punishing of difference so one tends to fall in line. This has huge survival value for a tribe but doesn't foster the evolutionary spirit I think we need now to incorporate influences and support crucial innovation. Fostering commonness tends to not reward individuality, and we need both consensus and dissensus. These hidden questions and others aren't especially politically correct and aren't often aired.

Such valuable observations, Andrew.  Thank you.  My hypothesis is that indigenous people are the holders of the wisdom of convergence (wholeness, unity) and relationship.  But, as you noted, life also needs divergence, and this is the wisdom of the white people.  Now our urgent challenge is to integrate these stories into one.  It will be a delicate task that would greatly benefit from the Art of Hosting.  And, in fact, that integrated story is already emerging, though I don't often hear indigenous voices - only white interpretations of native wisdom.  Maybe we've been afraid to invite them to the table out of shame and fear or even ignorance.  Or maybe we just need more people like Peter Goldsbury to act as a bridge.   

An integrated white-native story would be a wonderful thing. I had lots of dreams of that in the past . . . and Art of Hosting would be such a good place for a conversation like that.

Where I live near Ottawa the entire area was ceded to native people (including Parliament Hill) and reparations were never held. Don't know if you knew or knew of William Commanda, chief of the Algonquin's north of the Ottawa who died last week at 93. He had an annual gathering that was very open to non-aboriginals, and many visited; a real peacemaker but he stopped short of the collaborative storymaking that AOH is learning to do.

Just discovered this from Rob Paterson in a book called More Space:

"Just as people at the end of the Middle Ages rediscovered the wisdom of the Classic world, so we are rediscovering the experience of tribal life. I don't mean by this that we will have to take up hunting and live in caves. For we have made a Great Return before and we know how it will play out. Renaissance men did not put on togas. What they did was to remember the wisdom of the Classic world that had been forgotten in a millennium-long dark age and applied this wisdom to the world of their time. So we too will begin to experience a new way of living and of being and apply this experience to our own time and to our own challenges."
 
I think here he's talking about the trendy concept of tribes as people you feel a deep connection with.  But I read what he's written in the larger sense of "tribal life", rediscovering the experience of being indigenous. 

For me, becoming indigenous just means being deeply, solidly where you are; relating to others and to the Earth in a profound and rooted manner, that is inherently respectful, fiercely proud and honestly humble. The way to do this is to fight for the protection and restoration of your land, for the balancing and equalization of relations and dynamics, between people and with nature. I believe removing asphalt and reconnecting the sunlight with the earth is a major part of this process, one we can't get around; I wonder what would have to happen for whole communities to come together with such a goal, and to do it; somehow, I think all my work is connected to this.

Thanks Michelle. I've always loved blueberry pie :) Let's plant more blueberry bushes!

I love what you've written, Cameron.  Be here, now, deeply.  

Let's find out what would have to happen for whole communities to come together with such a goal - and do it! 

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