A sanctuary you create in your own backyard can nourish your spiritual, emotional, and physical well-being by offering peacefulness, protection from a harsh world, and medicine for body and soul.
CREATING
SANCTUARY
Sacred Garden Spaces, Plant-Based Medicine,
and Daily Practices to Achieve Happiness and Well-Being
by
JESSI BLOOM
with photos by SHAWN LINEHAN
Timber Press Portland, Oregon
I dedicate this book to all of my teachers:
the two-legged, the four-legged, the winged, the rooted,
and my own spirit. I am forever grateful for
the lessons I have learned from my experiences,
and for the wisdom thats been shared.
CONTENTS
I find sanctuary sitting with Wanda, the elder cherry tree in my front yard.
INTRODUCTION
Coming Home to Yourself
Within you, there is a stillness and a sanctuary to
which you can retreat at any time and be yourself.
HERMAN HESSE, SIDDHARTHA
We all need sanctuary. We need a place where we can feel safe, one that rejuvenates and refreshes us, somewhere we feel nourished and loved.
Many of us look for that sweet spot in the wildness of a distant national forest or park, the aisles of a high-priced grocery store, or a trendy exercise class. Often we look to connect to nature anywhere that has more plants than people, more wildlife than domesticated or controlled life. It may be our habit to get into a car and drive somewhere in hopes of becoming ourselves again, especially after a bad day or during a rough period. We acknowledge that when we eat better and exercise we feel good, and that the connections we find in nature help to restore our spirit, but what we overlook is how much of that we can find right in our own backyards. All of us can use our gardens, the earth, and spaces we inhabit as our personal sanctuary. This book is about creating sanctuary, every day, wherever we find ourselves.
Being surrounded by harmonious elements and other life forms can be soothing to our nervous systems.
The busyness of our lives can often distract us from making time to find relaxation or peace, to ground ourselves, and to really evaluate where we are heading. There is cultural pressure to do more, to have more, and to push ourselves too hard. We tell ourselves that the tasks and to-do lists we create are more important than self-care and quiet reflection. We often take care of others needs before our own, at the expense of our health: body, mind, and spirit. We see hardship and challenge all around us, in the news, on social media, in our own neighborhoods. Stress mounts until it consumes us, and then Western medicine encourages us to treat illness with drugs that mask the symptoms so we can resume the same routine that caused the stress in the first place.
How do we change? How do we get out of this rut and practice self-care regularly? How do we effectively create a way of living that allows us to heal, feel restored, and find peace within ourselves? We can do this by incorporating what is good for us into our daily routines and shaping the environments we find ourselves in every day so they inspire us too.
I believe that nature is the best healer. When we remember that we are nature and when we take our place there as one species among countless other species, we feel natures raw energywater, wind, sun, sturdy trees, burgeoning blossomsand are able to forget about our own worries for a little while. The life force that runs through our own bodies can resonate with all of natures energy if we let it. But before we can, most of us have to learn to take care of our nervous systems and not to carry negative energy around in our bodies. By looking to nature, we can find simple ways to keep ourselves healthy. And when we take care of ourselves, our interactions with others improve, too, leading to overall societal well-being.
My intention in this book is to help you transform your life by caring for nature in the space you already have and learning to use its simple, powerful gifts effectively. I hope to
help you find a deeper relationship with and connection to the land you inhabitno matter the sizeand with all of its beings and elements;
share my love of plants and my knowledge of all they can offer us; and
help you find sanctuary every day by incorporating simple, nature-based routines.
My own journey to find sanctuary has been a lifelong adventure. I grew up in a small rural community close to the woods in the foothills of the Cascade Mountains and with a view of the Salish Sea. My home was not always safe, however, nor were many of the people in my neighborhood. I would escape to the forest to find sanctuary, hiding there until I felt protected and whole. There, I could be me. Nature would hold me securely, letting me explore, learn, and feel supported.
My relationship with wild environments only grew stronger as I approached adulthood. My passion for nature expanded in defense of the sacredness I felt there. I wanted to protect and serve the resource that had kept me safe and nourished in those early years of my life. I tended to plants in nurseries, harvested their seeds for ecological restoration, pruned them, loved them, studied them, and ultimately found myself in a successful career as a horticulturalist, environmentalist, and landscape designer. I was drawn to this path because Ive always been able to feel the life force inherent in plants, animals, earth, water, and stone. I often see myself as a connecting point between people and their own environments, an interpreter between humans and nature. My job has been to help people create sanctuary at home by developing and nurturing sacred spaces we shape together in their own gardens.
I have always been able to feel the life force inherent in plants as I have loved and studied them.
Harvesting plant medicine from my garden has been an important part of my own healing.
While my career was taking off, I was running a growing-too-fast business, raising two children, and volunteering in my community and industry to help with awareness and stronger environmental standards. Then came a tipping point. I simply ran out of energy. I had medical problems left and right. My bodys systems were failing me; I had respiratory issues from carbon monoxide poisoning, I needed surgery for my kidneys, and toxic diagnostic scans wreaked havoc on the rest of my body. I saw numerous specialists but eventually realized that underlying these mechanical failures was my failure to nurture my own emotional and spiritual health.
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