The Road of Technology and the Path of Spirit

By RedWolfReturns

"Traditional people of Indian nations have interpreted the two roads
that face the light-skinned race as the road to technology and the road
to spirituality. We feel that the road to technology.... has led modern
society to a damaged and seared earth. Could it be that the road to
technology represents a rush to destruction, and that the road to
spirituality represents the slower path that the traditional native
people have traveled and are now seeking again? The earth is not
scorched on this trail. The grass is still growing there."
-William
Commanda, Mamiwinini, Canada, 1991

Many years ago I was in need of some money, and a local farmer had
a job for me. He had neglected some of his fields for over a decade,
and so the land had been allowed to go free for awhile. While the
average farm is clear-cut & plowed every single year to ensure that
nothing wild returns to the land, this particular farmer had not been
farming, and so the fields had grown up with brush. Aspens and
willows had come to re-inhabit large areas, and some of them were
nearly fifteen feet tall. I was to be paid nine dollars an hour to
repossess these fields for agriculture. The tool I was given for the task
was a large tractor pulling an industrial-strength lawnmower known
as a "brush-hog". It was nine feet wide and had steel blades an inch
thick. It could mow down and lay waste to any brush or trees small
enough for the tractor to plow through, and the tractor was big
enough to plow through some pretty large trees. The tractor had a
sound-proofed, air-conditioned cab with a cassette player inside. I
was grateful for this, since the work I was faced with would certainly
be hot, dusty, and dull. However, neither the air conditioner nor the
cassette player worked all that well.

I spent the next two weeks sitting 16 hours per day in a bumpy,
stuffy, & diesel smelling luke-warm box listening to scratchy rock and
roll and the dull drone of the tractor's diesel engine. I did this while
the world puttered by at a constant four miles an hour, and my mind
wandered off searching for any and every fantasy I could conjure to
cope with the boredom of my situation. In front of me was a "tangle"
of brush and small trees. Behind me was a wasteland of shredded
wood and desiccated plant matter. I turned the former into the latter at
the steady, constant rate of about 30 acres per day. Each evening at
10pm I would stop, shut down the tractor, clear the accumulated
plant-debris off the top of the brush-hog, and go home to catch some
sleep. In the morning I would be back at dawn (6am) to grease the
brush-hog, fire up the tractor, and start again. By the end of the ninth
day of all this, I was starting to feel more than just a little stir-crazy.

On the morning of the tenth day, I approached the brush-hog with
my grease gun in the early dawn mist and realized I had forgotten to
clear away the plant-debris the night before. Nearly a foot of grass,
sticks, and "weeds" were tangled on top of that piece of equipment,
and as I bent down to start clearing it off, I noticed something.

My attention was caught by a delicate spider's web that had been
built the night before on the brush-hog's steel frame, and now
glistened with morning dew. The spider who had built it was like
none I had seen before. Her colors and markings were magnificent. I
felt myself drawn in, and as I looked closer, I noticed more spiders-at
first dozens, then hundreds, and finally thousands-of all shapes,
colors, markings and sizes. At the same time, I noticed the insects they
were feeding upon, and many thousand more tiny individual lives
entered my awareness. There were little bright green jumping bugs
and larger brown-green grasshoppers. There were tiny red spiders
and large brown ones, long-legged ones, fat hairy ones, and skinny
striped ones. There were bugs caught in webs and web-casting
spiders wrapping them in silk. There were wolf spiders stalking and
pouncing on prey. There was life and there was death. I became lost
in it all-completely mesmerized as if in a dream. Time lost hold on me.
The details & dramas of this tiny world absorbed my consciousness
completely.

Finally I stepped back and surveyed the entire scene before me. I
realized that on the surface of the little nine-foot by six-foot platform
that was the top of the brush-hog, there currently survived a number
of tiny souls in excess of a hundred thousand-and all of them going
about their lives. These were but a small portion of the refugees of the
30 acres I had laid waste to the day before-these were just the ones
who had happened to come to rest on top of the very same machine
which had devastated their home. My mind & emotions reeled at the
thought of how much life I had impacted while droning by each and
every one of those previous nine days in a senseless stupor, stuck
inside the cab of that droning machine.

I'd like to be able to write that my next move was to walk away from
the brush-hog, the tractor and the job, never to return again. I'd like to
write that I walked off that farm field and into the wilderness then
and there, and that I've been living off cattails and venison ever since.
But things are rarely so dramatic or simple. I still needed money and I
didn't know what else to do, so I took that experience and planted it
deep inside my heart where I knew it could slowly begin to grow.
Then I finished clearing off and greasing the brush-hog, got back
inside the tractor and traded another day's worth of life for little green
papers.

Half a decade later, I was living with a group of newfound friends in
a primitive camp surrounded by National Forest and on the edge of
Wilderness. We were learning, slowly but surely, the hard lessons
connected to coming together to live the Old Ways and rediscover
what it means to be human. On this particular day however, a buddy
and I had had enough of the hard lessons, and were speeding along
in his jeep toward town to have breakfast at a local diner.

As we rounded a curve, we spotted a deer in the middle of the road
lying in a spatter of her own blood. We stopped. The vehicle that had
hit her must have left the scene just moments before. She was badly
wounded, but still alive and struggling. Her hind legs had been
shattered, and she was gasping for breath in the hot mid-morning
sun. At first my buddy and I didn't know what to do, but we soon
realized we were being asked to help ease her passing. We pulled her
to the side of the road, and my friend held her down while I slit her
throat with my knife. As we did this my friend spoke softly to her
words of comfort, and I asked forgiveness for the careless suffering
my people were causing. Our eyes met, and I felt tears well up in
mine. I whispered "thank you", and she bled out and died soon after,
there in the ditch by the side of the road.

We placed her body in the back of the jeep and took her back to our
primitive camp. She became the freshest, most delicious meat we had
had in months. That night we celebrated, and had a joyful feast in her
honor. Nearly every one of us mentioned at some point how thankful
we were for such good venison. I had carefully skinned her, and had
placed her hide in a rack to be tanned. Later in the summer I would
carefully transform her hide into soft buckskin, which would be used
to make sleeves for a shirt. To this day, every time I wear that shirt the
sleeves talk to me, reminding me of the gifts she gave me, not just in
terms of meat and skin, but also in terms of life's lessons.

I sometimes compare the clear voice of that buckskin shirt to the
muffled sounds I hear from the shirts I get at the thrift store-the ones
with labels that say vague things like "Made in Mexico" or "Made in
Indonesia". The ones assembled in factories half a world away by
nameless, faceless people out of cotton cut by machines being pulled
by tractors over unknown farm fields. And I wonder if somewhere in
those fields, webs are being spun by Spiders…