
โHave patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart.
โRainer Maria Rilke,ย Letters to a Young Poet
โฆlive in the question.โ

โHave patience with everything that remains unsolved in your heart.
โRainer Maria Rilke,ย Letters to a Young Poet
โฆlive in the question.โ
โOnce the seduction of taming and conquering never seen western lands took root, homesteading men mustโve been often blinded by their brave proclamation. The planning of their upcoming adventure, I suspect left little room for dissent of any kind. Homesteading wives just had to get on board, regardless of any fears or sorrow they felt about leaving everything familiar behind. They did what determined women have always done throughout history, they relied on their ability to make something out of nothing.
It seems likely to me, the descendants of homesteaders just might hold some ancestral unsettling, some vague restlessness of that migratory gamble. I know I feel some ancient unsettling myself, and I always have.โ
Excerpt from Personal Homesteadingโa work in progress
Resmaa Menakemโs book My Grandmotherโs Hands has confirmed many feelings Iโve had about generational trauma make sense to me. Iโve often wondered how my ancestorโs emotional landscapes have affected me. I donโt want to be at the mercy of emotions that were never mine in the first placeโand now have lost any appropriate context. Sorry prairie ancestors, itโs time to cut you loose.
โtrauma is also a wordless story our body tells itself about what is safe and what is a threat.โ
โResmaa Menakem, My Grandmotherโs Hands
โAll of this suggests that one of the best things each of us can doโnot only for ourselves, but also for our children and grandchildrenโis to metabolize our pain and heal our trauma. When we heal and make more room for growth in our nervous systems, we have a better chance of spreading our emotional health to our descendants, via healthy DNA expression. In contrast, when we donโt address our trauma, we may pass it on to future generations, along with some of our fear, constriction, and dirty pain.โ
โResmaa Menakem
We all possess some generational trauma to varying degrees. Right now our collective unhealed traumas could be part of whatโs tearing families, communities, and our nation apart. I believe we can heal by learning ways to let trauma move through our bodies (metabolize it) and not keep us in a perpetually hypervigilant, anxious (fearful), and distrustful state of being. Iโm an optimist AND a realist. I believe we can heal AND itโs gonna take a lot of heart, humility, and hard work.