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Image of a raucous bucket of willow branches in the foreground, with an upright brown piano and print of Joni Mitchell against a dark green wall in the background.

Image of a raucous bucket of willow branches in the foreground, with an upright brown piano and print of Joni Mitchell against a dark green wall in the background.

Willow and the Sacredness of "Use"

September 2, 2021

If you're wondering if I stopped the car (with the dog in it) in the middle of a huge collection of hard-hatted and neon-vested tree workers to yell over the sound of the chainsaw "can I have that?" and then unabashedly jammed what I can only describe as a full-sized Willow tree (bound for the chipper!! ) into my luggage rack and slowly turned around to take it home, where I then dismantled it into pieces for a (hopefully living!) shade sail post in the yard and materials for basket making, and stuffed them all into a bucket of water next to the piano since it's fire season and we can't keep woody materials close the house outside...


...the answer is, obviously, yes. 


Pro tip: cute dog makes tree workers less annoyed with you for interrupting their streamlined work flow 


Willow is a sacred plant to me for the reason things are often sacred to me...it has so many "uses" which is a rather annoyingly English language way of saying that it's connected to so many ecosystem needs and offers so many "magical" options for interwoven thriving. I believe in the sacredness of "utility" - NOT productivity-burnout-capitalism, not extraction-disposaibility-objectification (objects are sacred everything is a subject and an object) - but rather, to feel so rightly in relationship, to be of use, to be used, to have a place to put my offerings and gifts so they don't pile up into pollution from not being shared.


So when I say I love Willow because of how useful it is, that is a statement of reverence, delight, wonder. Like this plant is asking me to be active, physical relationship with them. In like 47 different ways - Willow bark is an anti-inflammatory pain herb, willows re-root easily and love to have their feet wet and make great erosion-preventers along or even IN streams, willows make beautiful useful baskets, living fences, habitat, and aesthetic and auditory relief in this dry season.


I got home and onto the internet and discovered that of course it's also in my bloodline - a tree particularly sacred in Greece, known for, amongst many other things, both calling in the medicine of, and protecting us as we walk through, the underworld. As we do now.


Tags willow, permaculture, herbs, ecology, sacredness, usefulness
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