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Title: Rewild Or Die
Subtitle: Revolution and Renaissance at the End of Civilization
Date: 2008, 2016
Source: Uploaded from original source on behalf of author.
Authors: Urban Scout, Peter Bauer
Topics: Anti civ, Rewilding
Published: 2021-07-10 22:51:06Z

Dedication

I dedicate this book to all the living and dead, all the forgotten
things…

…And to all the people trying desperately to remember.

Acknowledgments

I would first and foremost like to acknowledge the largest influences on

my thoughts and work: Daniel Quinn, Tom Brown Jr., Derrick Jensen,

Martín Prechtel, Joseph Campbell, Toby Hemenway, Jean Liedloff, M. Kat

Anderson, Nancy Turner, Jason Godesky, and Willem Larsen. Without their

words I would not understand the workings of civilization or walk the

path of rewilding. I will forever live in debt to them.

Secondly I want to thank my friends Lisa Wells, Nicholas Often, Brandon

Rubesh, Jeff Packard, and Nancy and Matt Fitzgerald (may they rest in

peace). Without their collective support I wouldn’t have become myself

and certainly wouldn’t have made it through my teenage years. I will

forever live in debt to them.

Thirdly I want to thank my family for supporting me and understanding

me. I could not do what I do without their unconditional support and

love. I will forever live in debt to them.

Fourth, I want to send my thanks to the Earth, the water, the fungi and

plants, the insects and animals, the trees, the birds, the wind, the

clouds, the sun, moon, and stars for talking to me even when I stopped

listening. I will forever live in debt to them.

Lastly I want to thank my muse. The invisible force(s?) that makes me do

what I do and whispers ideas in my ear. To the real Urban Scout, I send

my biggest thanks. I will forever live in debt to you.

Special thanks to George Steel, who spent hours nagging me to put

formatting to make it look more professional. Huge thanks to Mindy

Fitch, who copy-edited this second edition.

Foreword

Hi and welcome to the second edition of *Rewild or Die*, Urban Scout’s

anti-civilization manifesto!

At some point I gave up on this project and began a complete rewrite,

but I’m not sure if I’ll ever finish that, as I abandoned the Urban

Scout project in favor of my nonprofit Rewild Portland, which now

consumes the majority of my time and energy. I was also a bit

embarrassed about the quality of *Rewild or Die*, in that it was full of

typos (granted it is also written in an experimental version of

English). But still. I was nervous that my affiliation as Urban Scout (a

bridge-burning asshole, critic, and blogger) would affect my ability to

build relationships that would help Rewild Portland grow. I don’t agree

with everything Urban Scout said or did; in fact I’m not really even

that into his voice anymore. BUT, two words: George Steel. My friend

George Steel just wouldn’t allow me to kill *Rewild or Die*. He demanded

that I keep it up. I told him that if I were to put it back up, it would

need to be seriously copy edited and slightly edited for content. He

said he could do the typeface, but I needed an editor. I’m a broke

environmental educator working three jobs and don’t have the money to

pay a professional copy editor. Luckily I met Mindy Fitch, a

professional copy editor, and was able to convince her to edit my book.

Without those two, I would have let this project continue to fade away.

It’s strange reflecting back on the totality and various iterations of

my Urban Scout project. It’s been years since I donned a loincloth and

took to the streets to light bowdrill fires, years since I wrote an

angry, caffeine-enraged blog. Urban Scout is gone for now. So what

happened? Where did he go? Longtime readers often ask me this question.

In brief I say that Urban Scout was a moniker, a muse, and I’ve moved

on. But this feels unsatisfactory to me, so I’ll go into more detail.

Urban Scout started out as a fictional character created by me and a

friend. He was the protagonist in a short film we made during the summer

of 2003. He became more of an alter ego and muse for me in late 2004 as

the film wrapped up, and from there he turned into a blog and persona.

My blog was originally titled *The Adventures of Urban Scout*. I wrote

that Urban Scout was “part fact/part fiction, part man/part myth.” I

said that I tried “to use the comedic irony and novelty of our situation

as a clever disguise to cloak and spread a truly sustainable worldview,

for a time beyond our own.” The blog and online persona were very active

from about 2006 to 2009. By 2011 I wasn’t writing much anymore, and my

song for Urban Scout. From time to time I hear his voice in my head, and

it feels like I have to hold him back. It’s not really me, but it’s

something deeper that speaks through me from a far-off place. That’s all

I can really say about that.

Looking back now is weird. I had to get my own identity back, learn to

interpret what Urban Scout says and filter it through my own head rather

than just give him the reins. I’m able to take what he says and feels

and translate it into something more broadly “appealing.” However,

that’s not particularly my goal. My goal since 2000 has been to actively

create a rewilding community in Portland, Oregon, through Rewild

Portland. Urban Scout has helped me clarify my own purpose and

understand the power of the muse. I’m too sensitive, though. Urban Scout

doesn’t give a darn what people think, really. But since we share the

same body, or rather because I let him use my body and mind as a

vehicle, I get blamed for his assholery. My heart just can’t take it

anymore. I’m a nice person and I want people to like me. I had to shut

him up because his spirit is one of “truth speaking,” and generally

people don’t want to hear the truth, especially when it comes from an

angry-sounding dude. Now that I don’t give my muse total creative

control (so to speak), I feel much happier, and I’ve made a lot more

headway in creating the kind of life I want to live.

I look back at the Urban Scout years with fondness, but as I read these

chapters I realize I’ll never really be happy with *Rewild or Die*, in

part because I do not feel as though I wrote it. It is Urban Scout’s

book. My new book on the same topic, if I manage to finish it, will be

vastly different from his. I am tentatively calling it *Rewild and

Live*.

Peter Michael Bauer, October 2015

A Quick Preface

I didn’t write this book to change people’s minds about civilization, or

to stand as “the word” of rewilding, or to prove to the civilized that a

horticulturalist or hunter-gatherer way of life works better for people

and the planet than the devastating effects of agricultural civilization

(okay, maybe a little). Many other books exist on those topics, full of

wide-ranging archaeological, historical, ecological, and anthropological

evidence (see my bibliography!). With this book, I intend to clarify the

meaning behind this cultural renaissance we call rewilding. I do this

through sharing my experiences and thoughts on rewilding in an attempt

to shed light on elements of rewilding that some may not have seen.

The thoughts in this book reflect my current level of experience and

collection of evidence as of 2008. My thoughts on these topics will most

likely change over time with new experiences and different pieces of

evidence. Honestly, I don’t agree all that much with some of the things

I’ve written here. But I feel getting the ideas into the world outweighs

any hesitations for publishing this work. I could write a whole Literacy

vs. Rewilding chapter about how the written word, like the verb *to be*

(see “English vs. Rewilding”), plays god by not allowing things to

change the way they did in oral cultures. But maybe I’ll save that for

another book.

Blah, blah, blah. That said, I have gleaned a lot of information and had

countless experiences with rewilding in my life. Though I don’t claim

expertise, I will stake my claim for the experience I do have! This book

works as a tally of my experiences and accumulated thoughts on

rewilding. Love it or leave it.

Rewilding: An Introduction

**Rewild,** *verb*: to return to a more natural or wild state; the
process of undoing domestication

The first time I saw the word *rewilding*, it grabbed me immediately. I

knew that at long last I had a word to describe what I do. For a decade

I had used many words attempting to describe my lifestyle: wilderness

survivalist, primitivist, anti-civilizationist, tracker, naturalist,

permaculturalist, environmentalist, green anarchist,

anarcho-primitivist… The list went on and on. Nothing quite fit until I

found *rewilding*.

No other word I’ve found encompasses the act of abandoning civilization

and its roots in domestication like *rewild*. It also struck me because,

as a verb, it implies an action, a process, rather than an end point. An

obvious premise sits in this word: giving something back its wildness.

But let’s go with =dictionary.com=’s definition:

**Wild,** *adjective*:

1. Living in a state of nature; not tamed or domesticated: a wild
animal: *wild geese*
2. Growing or produced without cultivation or the care of humans, as
plants, flowers, fruit, or honey: *wild cherries*
3. Uncultivated, uninhabited, or waste: *wild country*
4. Uncivilized or barbarous: *wild tribes*

Combine that with:

**Re:** a prefix, occurring originally in loanwords from Latin, used
with the meaning “again” or “again and again” to indicate repetition, or
with the meaning “back” or “backward” to indicate withdrawal or backward
motion: regenerate; refurbish; retype; retrace; revert

Considering these definitions, particularly the first entry for wild

(“living in a state of nature”), it makes sense to define rewilding as a

return to a more natural state.

Why do definitions matter? People must have a shared reality in order to

work together in that reality. I once got into the most insane argument

with a man who refused to share reality with me, claiming that “nothing

is real” and “there is no such thing as facts.” These arguments looked

more like philosophical masturbation than practical thinking that would

lead to taking actions to create a sustainable planet. While I agreed in

the philosophical sense with him, it didn’t help anyone to make choices

about their actions, and to make those actions in the real world. While

I don’t believe in the concept of “facts,” I do believe that we can

agree on *shared observations of reality*. We can observe that

agriculture destroys the soil. If we can’t share that reality, we can’t

work together to change our subsistence strategy to one that builds

soil. Similarly, if we can’t share a reality of what it means to rewild,

the word might as well mean nothing at all. The more clearly we define

an idea, the easier time we will have using it for practical purposes.

In a sense, I will claim ownership of the term rewilding, in that my

life’s work centers around caretaking the idea of what it means to

return to a wild, undomesticated life. That, to me, means a

hunter-gatherer lifestyle *in its wholeness*. I don’t think of rewilding

as some new buzzword or some small scene of people or a just wildlife

conservation tactic. I see it as a complex lens through which I view the

world. This lens helps me to make decisions about how to live my life.

Now, some contention may lie in that I strongly advocate against running

away to the wilderness (which most people assume rewilding implies).

While I strongly advocate against it, I still see it as part of

rewilding. Because my focus lies in fostering as much rewilding as

possible, running away to the wilderness doesn’t effect much change or

create the hunter-gatherer lifestyle in its wholeness. It doesn’t mean

it doesn’t have its own merit: it certainly does! I also advocate for

creating “rewilding havens,” land where people can work together to

rewild. This differs from running away into the wilderness because

people still have an interface with civilization to draw out its

members, rather than shunning all of it and living as a hermit (which I

believe also has its own merit).

When it comes down to it, though, I don’t see one “right” way to rewild.

Everyone has their own limits and passions. I will continue to do what I

can to build a cultural momentum of rewilding, using the fullest extent

and articulation of the practical, shared definition. This shared

definition gives us a clear shared goal to work toward.

The more I talk with people and read and write about rewilding, the more

I find that the above definition appears oversimplified for an average

member of civilization. Most people have preconceived notions of the

words *wild*, *natural*, and *domesticated* that stem from

civilization’s mythology, which means the definitions serve the purpose

of convincing people to believe in civilization. This means that when an

average person reads or hears the above definition they will not

understand what rewilding actually means to someone who has redefined

those concepts (outside of civilization’s propaganda). Therefore, the

definition can obscure more than it reveals unless we simultaneously

redefine several other concepts.

Now you see why I get a headache trying to explain rewilding in a couple

of paragraphs. The definition begs a more complex analysis. For example,

what does a wild state actually look like (compared to what our

civilized mythology tells us)? How do we define natural and unnatural?

How do we define domestic? What causes domestication to begin with? Why

would we want to rewild? Why would you want to undo domestication? What

stands in the way of undoing domestication? How do we surpass these

obstacles that prevent us from rewilding? Without fully understanding

the answers to these questions, the term *rewilding* looks to most

civilized people I’ve encountered like it simply means “getting back to

nature” or “primitive living.”

economic renaissance of humans who use the preexisting social and

economic models of our hunter-gatherer-gardener ancestors to recreate

the sustainable relationship that humans had with their ecosystems and

relatives for millions of years before the recent advent of agriculture,

empire, and civilization. This critique emerged from modern ecological

and anthropological studies that show how civilization, agriculture, and

empire inherently destroy the landbase on which we depend for our

survival. Rather than trying to fix a model built on unstable ground,

rewilding creates a new culture using an ancient recipe.

Rewilders recognize that as long as empire exists, it will force people

into domestication and prevent rewilding from taking place. In order for

rewilding to occur, empire must not exist. This reveals one of the

complexities of rewilding in comparison with, say, the idea of “simple

living” or “getting back to nature.” The collapse and removal of empire

stands as a pivotal topic in rewilding.

In order to accomplish rewilding, rewilders practice a multitude of

skills such as innovative team building, storytelling, martial arts, and

ancient hand crafts like brain-tanning deer skins into buckskins and

making tools from stone, bone, and wood. Because rewilders see rewilding

as part of a transition culture, they do not shun the use of modern

technologies such as computers, guns, and cars, knowing that those

technologies rely on an unsustainable industrial economy and will not

last through the end of empire.

In order to create a holistic culture empathetic to the land and our

other-than-human neighbors, rewilders emphasize storytelling and sensory

exercises that provide experiences in animism. Animism, which lies at

the heart of rewilding, refers to a way of seeing and experiencing the

world and its other-than-human members as beings who demand respect and

not inanimate objects put here for humans to exploit.

Creating and maintaining wild or feral cultures marks the goal of

rewilding. Rewilding does not denote an end point but rather a

continuing cultural process of learning how to relate to the land,

people, and other-than-humans in a sustainable way. Even wild or feral

cultures practice the art of rewilding.

After all this time, I’ve finally come up with a (rather mechanistic)

definition that I think will at least explain a lot more to the average

person, and perhaps pique their interest and let them see rewilding

through a more complex lens than the previous definition:

**Rewild,** *verb*: to foster and maintain a sustainable way of life
through hunter-gatherer-gardener social and economic systems, including
but not limited to the encouragement of social, physical, spiritual,
mental, and environmental biodiversity and the prevention and undoing of
social, physical, spiritual, mental, and environmental domestication and
enslavement

Domestication vs. Rewilding

How do we define *wild*? We now know that “wild” hunter-gatherer

cultures greatly manipulated their environments. Where do we draw the

line between *wild* and *domestic*? Rewilding means undoing

domestication. If we wish to understand what that fully entails, we must

examine the words *wild*, *natural*, *unnatural*, and *domestic* as we

have come to know them in the context of civilization.

household.” Domesticates belong to the household. We could interpret

this in many ways, depending on our own personal perception of “the

household.” If we perceive the whole world as a house that we all

(humans and other-than-humans) belong to, I see no problem with the term

define the word in those terms, but in terms of belonging to the house

of humans. After all, the word has an uncle, *dominion*, which god told

us in Genesis we hold over all things natural. *Dominion* comes from the

Latin *dominionem*, “ownership.” Let’s not forget *dominion*’s nephew,

think back to the terms of a “house,” it means “lord, master of the

house.” *Domestic* refers to all forms of creation that we

(civilization) master over.

The term *master*, as opposed to *collaborator*, demonstrates the basic

differences between wild and domestic relationships: control. The

difference between a wild and free, commensal symbiotic relationship and

a domestic, parasitic one involves the commitment to control or the will

to have power *over* rather than share power *with*.

In *The Culture of Make Believe*, Derrick Jensen defines *natural* and

Any ritual, artifact, process, action is natural to the degree that it
reinforces our understanding of our embeddedness in the natural world,
and any ritual, artifact, process, action is unnatural to the degree
that it does not.

If every living creature has a connection to those it consumes and those

who consume it, the genetics of both will affect both. Domestication

removes all variables concerning the life and genetic changes of an

organism. When we do not allow other animals to eat plants (through

fences, “pest” control, etc.), we remove a variable of genetic strength.

When we breed animals and plants for genetic traits based on living in

an entirely human-manipulated environment, we remove the variables of

dynamic environments and they lose genetic strength in the real world.

Over time this makes them dependent on human culture (specifically

agriculture, factory farming, and civilization). It also feels like a

lot of work for the controller (constant weeding, tilling, fertilizing,

genetic engineering). Domestication ignores our embeddedness in the

natural world and seeks to control it. Using the above definition of

as unnatural.

Controller or controlled, both species breed weakness into their genes,

and in our case culture. Put a civilized human in the “wild” (which to

domestic peoples means “anywhere outside our control”), and they will

have a very difficult time meeting their most basic needs. We have

become so dependent on domesticated species that we have physically and

culturally domesticated ourselves.

A natural relationship breeds mutually beneficial relationships that

build strength in a given and changing environment with variables

outside of human control. As greater environments change through shifts

in climate and other environmental factors, these relationships maintain

a fluctuating baseline. Civilized people believe that in nature you must

“eat others or find yourself eaten.” Yet the reality of nature suggests

that you must caretake the things you eat, or you will die. If five

species eat salmon, all five of those species must caretake the salmon.

If one species caretakes wheat (and prevents anyone else from eating

it), the web of support breaks and both wheat and wheat eater become

weak. With many life forms tending each other, if one species chain

breaks, the other species will not feel as stressed, since many others

tend to them.

Rewilding means returning to a more natural or wild state and reversing

domestication. It means increasing our commensal symbiotic relationships

with humans, and more importantly with other-than-humans. This doesn’t

mean we just “let things grow.” Commensal symbiotic relationships do not

mean “hands off!” It means learning to tend the lives of those we eat,

so that they keep on living and so do we.

Agriculture vs. Rewilding

In order to understand the destructive nature of agriculture, you must

understand the phases of ecological succession. Ecological succession

refers to the phases of growth from barren rock to a climax forest. The

loss of biodiversity that creates a blank slate generally occurs through

a disturbance such as fire, flood, or volcanic eruption.

[[u-s-urban-scout-rewild-or-die-1.png][Ecological succession and subsistence strategies]]

Primary succession refers to the earliest phase of ecological

succession, characterized by the growth of pioneer plants such as fungi,

grasses, and annual wildflowers. These plants love sun, barren rock

and/or disturbed soil, and serve to create quality, life-giving soil

that makes secondary succession possible. Secondary succession refers to

the later phases of ecological succession, marked by the growth of

larger perennials such as shrubs and trees, which need established soil.

These phases work towards creating the final stage of succession, a

stable ecosystem, referred to as a climax forest.

catastrophe (such as burning, flooding, tilling) to inspire annual

pioneer plants, specifically grasses like corn, wheat, and rice. From

its foundation, agriculture causes a loss of biodiversity. Agricultural

subsistence means keeping the land in a fixed state of primary

succession. Agriculturalists have a fondness for monocropping.

Monocropping sets up the perfect environment for insects who love to eat

that particular plant. Slowly but surely, tilling to create continuous

primary succession exposes the soil to wind and rain until it erodes

away entirely—so much so that in order to grow crops, fields require the

importation of mineral resources known as fertilizer.

Ecological succession shows us that plant growth naturally progresses to

climax forests. Agriculture works against, rather than with, this

natural progression. Trying to stop insect populations when you have

provided them the perfect habitat requires a lot of work. Making

fertilizers that you would not need if you followed the flow of

succession requires a lot of work. Not only does this form of

subsistence destroy the environment, it also requires a massive amount

of labor (which characteristically comes in the form of a slave class).

Agriculture creates an extreme vulnerability to crop failure from large

insect infestations, disease, and climate change. This inevitably leads

to famine. If you put all your eggs in the agriculture basket, you die.

In order to combat this, agriculturalists invented food storage, aka the

granary. Initially this looks great—a little more work on their part,

but in the end they don’t starve to death during crop failures.

Unfortunately, food surplus affects the population growth of a species

inspiring it to grow.

Any animal population with a surplus of food grows to match that

surplus, humans included. A population cannot grow without an increase

in food availability, usually through an increase in “efficiency” in

food production. Therefore a population explosion implies more food

production. Full-time agriculturalists with a food surplus create a

positive feedback loop of growing more food to feed an ever-expanding

population. Eventually the soil beneath them degrades and washes away,

and they cease practicing agriculture, as we have seen with many

civilizations; or as in the case of our civilization, they expand into

neighboring forests and keep growing.

Civilization, a way of life characterized by the growth of cities, works

as an ecological phenomenon occurring when agricultural peoples reach a

certain population density due to their food-surplus-induced population

growth positive feedback loop. Though not a catastrophe in the “natural”

sense, as in fires, floods, volcanic eruptions, and comets, in

ecological terms you can literally call civilization a catastrophe.

Perhaps “cultural catastrophe” would serve as the best description.

It feels worth noting that many First Nations peoples and other

indigenous peoples around the world heavily cultivated the lands they

lived with in a manner very different from agriculture. These methods

have many names, but I prefer the term *horticulture*.

perennial shrubs and trees, aka forests. This still involves burning,

selective harvesting, crop rotation, pruning, transplanting, minor

tilling, and weeding. These methods can also lead to population growth,

but they do not lead to overall loss of biodiversity and soil as

agriculture does. This also does not mean to say that horticulturalists

never used agricultural practices, but that agricultural foods never

formed a staple of their diet.

Many people have a difficult time understanding the differences between

horticulture and agriculture. This may occur because some agricultural

strategies cross over into horticultural strategies. Linguistically the

term *agriculture* comes from the Latin *agri* (field) and *cultura*

(cultivation). *Horticulture* combines *hortus* (garden) and *cultura*.

Cultivating a field versus cultivating a garden. We can see the

implications of agriculture’s monocropping primary succession plant

obsession in its very name. We can also understand the implications of

horticulture’s diversity of plants and smaller-scale style through its

name.

We can distinguish between the two by observing the results of how the

strategy affects the land. Does it create more biodiversity or less?

Does it strengthen the biological community or weaken it? It seems like

a good idea to create a list of horticultural and agricultural

strategies and reveal how and why you can use them to create more life,

or misuse them to create less.

Agriculture uses strategies of cultivation such as transplanting,

seeding, tilling, burning, pruning, fertilizing, selective harvesting,

crop rotation, and so on. But the main difference between agriculture

and horticulture involves agriculture’s focus on using these tools to

create one habitat: meadow or field. Horticulture uses the same

strategies of cultivation to promote ecological succession and diversity

of landscapes. Let’s go through and find out for ourselves.

Catastrophe: burning vs. tilling

When I hear the word *tilling*, the classic image of a farmer and his

plow pops into my head. I can see the deep trenches the plow has cut

into the land in pretty rows. I can smell the sweetness of the upturned

earth. Tilling works as an artificial catastrophe. Burning also works as

a catastrophe. Frequent small-scale burns return nutrients to the soil

without killing the roots of desired species. Burning also eliminates

succession and prevents large-scale fires from occurring.

Soil aeration: sticks vs. steel

Gophers and moles dig holes and aerate the soil. Foragers use digging

sticks to forage roots, tubers, and rhizomes. This breaks up the earth,

making it easier for the roots to grow, and aerates the soil. The plow,

on the other hand, goes too deep and destroys the mycorrhizal network of

fungi that distributes nutrients to plants. It also aerates the soil,

but it goes too deep and causes the soil to dry too much, which leads to

soil loss and erosion.

Irrigation: sticks vs. stone

Beavers build small-scale dams with sticks that create flood plains,

wetlands, and marshes that provide habitat for aquatic life. Humans too

have replicated this on a small scale. Civilization builds insanely

large dams of stone that destroy the river’s life by draining too much

water and drying it out.

Seeding

Any squirrel will tell you, if you want to ensure that you have more to

eat year after year, plant a few more seeds than you’ll dig up to eat

during the winter.

Transplanting

Transplanting looks the same as seeding to me. Do you consider a seed a

plant? What about seeds that germinate into plants and then grow through

rhizome? Some willow trees can lose a branch, only to have that branch

drift downstream and grow into a whole new plant! Wait, would you

consider it new if it came from a preexisting tree? Do they share the

same soul? Have I gone too deep for a chapter about horticulture and

agriculture?

Fertilizing: poop vs. petrol

Shit. We all do it. Poop turns into fertilizer. Controlled burns also

work as fertilizer by quickly breaking down dead wood and making their

nutrients bio-available. Agriculturalists just import nutrients from

other areas, and in the case of oil, from under the ground.

Pesticides

Foragers and horticulturalists also used burning to keep down insect

populations. Civilization uses toxic chemicals that poison not only bugs

but also the soil, the water, the birds, and our own bodies.

Pruning and coppicing

Beaver pruning stimulates willows, cottonwood, and aspen to regrow

bushier the next spring. Black bears break branches. Hunter-gatherers

prune trees too, to encourage larger yields and materials for making

tools like baskets.

Monocropping

Horticulturalists don’t use this technique, which exists uniquely to

agriculturalists. Probably the larger symptom of control and

domestication. No weeds in my field!

Selective harvesting: strength vs. weakness

Every animal uses this technique. Wolves thin out the sick and weak

deer. Sometimes you take the weak so the strong survive. Sometimes you

eat the strong so your poop will fertilize the seed. Selective

harvesting shows us that systems evolve to work in cooperation. If we

look closely we can see the outcome of our decisions. Domestication also

works as a form of selective harvesting, only rather than strengthening

the plant or animal, it weakens it. I go more into this aspect in

“Domestication vs. Rewilding.”

Seasonal rotation

Aside from building strength through selective harvesting, seasonal

rotation of lands and food sources, and even yearly rotations, allow an

area to restore itself from the temporary impacts of the harvest.

----

Many people also make the assumption that those who practice

horticulture long enough eventually begin to practice agriculture. I’d

like to suggest that this perceived continuum from foraging to

agriculture does not exist. I’d like to suggest that a continuum between

foragers and horticultural peoples exists, but agriculture appears as a

completely different beast. It works *in opposition to* the fundamental

restorative principles that shape the continuum between foraging and

horticulture. Although it uses mostly intensified horticultural

practices, it disregards the most basic ecological principles.

Foragers, hunter-gatherers, and horticulturalists used (and in some

places, continue to use) the aforementioned methods to build soil and

create varying habitats of succession, creating more ecotones and

increasing biodiversity. If a continuum existed, we would see a decrease

in biodiversity in each new phase of the continuum: hunter-gatherers

would decrease biodiversity more than foragers, and horticulturalists

would decrease biodiversity more than hunter-gatherers. Because we don’t

see this, we can guess that agriculture exists outside of that

subsistence continuum as a completely different beast.

Many people use the term *agriculture* too loosely. Expressions like

origin of the word *agriculture*. *Sustainable agriculture* looks like

an oxymoron. We need to differentiate between agriculture (the field or

monocrop) and horticulture (the garden of forest succession) if we want

to live sustainably.

This doesn’t mean that everything labeled “horticulture” falls under a

sustainable practice. On the contrary, most fruit-bearing trees these

days come in the form of clones—one plant spliced onto the rootstock of

a similar plant and pruned to encourage the graft, a perfect clone of

the original. Generally these plants have no fertility on their own,

which means they rely completely on their human caretakers. I can’t

think of a worse fate nor a better example of domestication.

To take the next step, we must translate this knowledge into practical

use. The question presses: How can we change our subsistence strategies

from agriculturing supermarkets to horticulturing-hunting-gathering

villages? How can we go from stupid-civilized-urban-dweller to

hotshot-rewilding-horticultural-hunter-gatherer?

Keep reading.

At the core of rewilding lies the dismantling and abandonment of

agricultural subsistence, a catastrophic practice to which we all act as

slaves. We must create a new way of life using such ancient techniques

as horticulture and its modern cousin, permaculture, as a transition to

or to supplement a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.

Generalization vs. Rewilding

We know that humans who lived here for millions of years did so in a

sustainable fashion. We know that civilization has caused one of the

largest mass extinctions in only a few thousand. We know that the

thousands of cultures that did not practice agriculture and create

civilizations lived in a sustainable way. We know that a lot of those

cultures had cultural contamination by contact with civilization by the

time anthropologists wrote about them. Fortunately, enough writing on

less-touched cultures exists so that we can estimate how much

civilization contaminated an indigenous culture before anthropologists

wrote about them. For example, when someone argues that rape and spousal

abuse existed in indigenous cultures, we can often link that behavior to

post-contact with civilization. I don’t mean to say that all

hunter-gatherers had a perfect life. Assuredly not. Humans, after all,

belong to the animal kingdom, and environmental pressures can cause any

number of conflicts.

Respecting indigenous traditions and mindful of cultural appropriation,

I approach these cultures from a systems perspective, without fixating

on their particular dogmas or ceremonies. I generalize because I speak

of the overwhelming similarities in their respective systems approaches

to participating with the land and each other. I generalize because the

evidence says I can. Any exception usually reflects some form of

contamination by civilization (as in the example of rape) or a cultural

difference (like group sex, circumcision, warfare) that has nothing to

do with the principles behind rewilding, only working as a straw man to

keep the fundamental unsustainability of civilization from coming to

light. If you have trouble understanding this, please read some modern

anthropology.

This all means to say that when I talk about horticulturalists,

hunter-gatherers, indigenous peoples, primitive peoples, native

cultures, wild peoples, or animist cultures, I generally mean those

cultures that lived for millions of years in a sustainable way and had

little to no contamination from civilized culture. When I use words like

agriculture, agriculturalists, civilizationists, civilized, domestic, or

domesticated, I refer to the current culture that does not live in a

sustainable or desirable way.

Appropriation vs. Rewilding

A few (always white) people have attacked me as a cultural appropriator.

If I learned a Lakota song, recorded it, and sold it to others, you

could call me a cultural appropriator. If I make a fire using a

bow-drill, that doesn’t count as appropriation, because it represents a

piece of technology widely distributed around the world and carries no

dogmatic cultural practice with it. I don’t benefit financially from the

sale of particular indigenous traditional cultural practices. You won’t

see me sell a line of traditional Chanupa pipes.

If I made a traditional Northwest Coast mask, in that particular

artistic style, that would look like cultural appropriation. But I will

talk about how the Northwest Coast cultures encourage biodiversity

through their perception of, and practices with, the land. I will talk

about how we can restore this relationship in our own way using the same

practices. You cannot call that appropriation.

Many indigenous authors and teachers have explained that no one owns

these skills. Now, that doesn’t mean I practice particular,

long-standing traditions of a particular indigenous people (such as the

potlatch), but that I study their systems, and the systems of my own

ancestors, and create my own using the same principles.

For example, my friend Brian and I led a sweat lodge at a summer camp.

That does not count as cultural appropriation because we didn’t use any

particular native culture songs or themes. Cultures from around the

world use sweat lodges. You sit in a little room with hot rocks in the

middle and pour water on them. We also call it a steam bath. The basic

principle here involves sweating out toxins to cleanse yourself. Now if

you dress it with Lakota songs, and have no Lakota ancestry, that works

as appropriation. If you make up your own songs or sing the songs of

your own culture (I like Cat Stevens’ *If You Want to Sing Out*), you

have started to rewild.

This subject evokes a lot of emotion in many parties. Cultural

appropriation has really destroyed and further disrespected indigenous

cultures affected by civilization. Rewilding does not mean appropriating

native cultures. It means helping them thrive again, as we help

ourselves to do the same. We all have native ancestry if we trace back

far enough. Rewilding means respectfully learning from our

hunter-gatherer ancestors as well as from those alive today, honoring

their long-standing traditions so that we can reestablish a sustainable

relationship with the land that benefits all generations of life to

come.

Civilization vs. Rewilding

You might assume that writing a chapter called “Civilization vs.

Rewilding” would come easy since civilization means the exact opposite

of rewilding. Then I got to thinking: *most people don’t know what

civilization means*.

1. An advanced state of intellectual, cultural, and material
development in human society, marked by progress in the arts and
sciences, the extensive use of record-keeping, including writing,
and the appearance of complex political and social institutions
2. The type of culture and society developed by a particular nation or
region or in a particular epoch: *Mayan civilization*; *the
civilization of ancient Rome*
3. The act or process of civilizing or reaching a civilized state
4. Cultural or intellectual refinement; good taste
5. Modern society with its conveniences: *returned to civilization
after camping in the mountains*

These definitions reek of a culture with a superiority complex. I love

how the line “the appearance of complex political and social

institutions” sounds like a glossed-over way of saying *slavery*. In

order to fully grasp what civilization means, let’s go on a little

definition journey. The first path we take will lead us to redefine many

of the words commonly found among mythologists and anthropologists. As

we explore these concepts, they will become tools, not static objects.

Take this definition of a hammer:

A hand tool that has a handle with a perpendicularly attached head of
metal or other heavy rigid material, and is used for striking or
pounding

Notice how the definition describes what makes a hammer: a handle with a

perpendicularly attached head of metal or other heavy rigid material.

Notice also that this definition includes the use of a hammer: striking

or pounding. This shows us an example of a dynamic definition. Most of

the words I use do not include usage in their definitions. The more we

begin to perceive them as tools for rewilding, the greater the need to

include their purpose or use, within their definition. So that we can

communicate on the same page, we’ll start by redefining and refining

definitions of words in the vocabulary of those-who-rewild.

Okay, this may sound strange, but let’s start with *art*. How do we

define this word? *American Heritage Dictionary* gives me this

definition:

1. Human effort to imitate, supplement, alter, or counteract the work
of nature
2. a. The conscious production or arrangement of sounds, colors, forms,
movements, or other elements in a manner that affects the sense
of beauty, specifically the production of the beautiful in a
graphic or plastic medium
b. The study of these activities
c. The product of these activities; human works of beauty considered
as a group

These definitions describe art physically but leave us with no

understanding of why. Why do humans produce conscious arrangement of

sounds, colors, forms, movements? Why do humans make stuff? Something as

seemingly instinctual as art must have a purpose. Humans have a complex

language and live as storytellers; art gives us a way of telling a

story. Whether we use one image or a thousand, a piece of art contains a

story. So the purpose of making art works to tell a story. Maybe we

don’t see this in the dictionary because it serves a subconscious

function? Regardless, this leads to another question: why do we tell

stories?

**Story,** *noun*:

1. An account or recital of an event or a series of events, either true
or fictitious, as:
a. An account or report regarding the facts of an event or group of
events: *The witness changed her story under questioning*
b. An anecdote: *came back from the trip with some good stories*
c. A lie: *told us a story about the dog eating the cookies*
2. a. A usually fictional prose or verse narrative intended to interest
or amuse the hearer or reader; a tale
b. A short story
3. The plot of a narrative or dramatic work
4. A news article or broadcast
5. Something viewed as or providing material for a literary or
journalistic treatment: *“He was colorful**, **he was
charismatic**, **he was controversial**, **he was a good
story” (Terry Ann Knopf)*
6. The background information regarding something: *What’s the story on
these unpaid bills?*
7. Romantic legend or tradition: *a hero known to us in story*

Yeah, yeah. But why? We use a hammer for striking or pounding. What do

we use story for? Why do we tell stories? I have asked many groups this

question and have heard answers like, “So someone won’t make the same

mistakes,” “So we can learn from the past.” These don’t satisfy me.

Maybe we should look at where storytelling came from. The word *myth*

has many connotations, mainly bad ones. Some people hear the word and

equate it to a lie. Others conjure images of ancient Greek or Roman

gods. When I use the word *myth* I mean something very different. In

order to understand civilization and its functions, we need to give

definition:

1. a. A traditional, typically ancient story dealing with supernatural
beings, ancestors, or heroes that serves as a fundamental type in
the worldview of a people, as by explaining aspects of the
natural world or delineating the psychology, customs, or ideals
of society: *the myth of Eros and Psyche*; *a creation myth*
b. Such stories considered as a group: *the realm of myth*
2. A popular belief or story that has become associated with a person,
institution, or occurrence, especially one considered to illustrate
a cultural ideal: *a star whose fame turned her into a myth*; *the
pioneer myth of suburbia*
3. A fiction or half-truth, especially one that forms part of an
ideology
4. A fictitious story, person, or thing: *“German artillery superiority
on the Western Front was a myth” (Leon Wolff)*

Did you notice they made no mention of what people use myths for? I did.

Three definitions above say that a myth means a story. Three include

ideology. Let’s redefine a myth as a story that holds a culture’s

ideology. So then, what purpose do we have in telling a story that holds

a cultural ideology? In *The Power of Myth*, Joseph Campbell said,

The ancient myths were designed to harmonize the mind and the body. The
mind can ramble off in strange ways and want things that the body does
not want. The myths and rites were a means of putting the mind in accord
with the body, and the way of life in accord with the way nature
dictates.

If ancient myths mean to put the human way of life in accord with the

way nature dictates, how do we know “the way nature dictates?” If that

shows us the purpose of the ancient myths, what of the purpose of

current myths? Do we have a general purpose of mythology that spans both

ancient and current?

**Culture:**

a. The totality of socially transmitted behavior patterns, arts,
beliefs, institutions, and all other products of human work and
thought
b. These patterns, traits, and products considered as the expression of
a particular period, class, community, or population: *Edwardian
culture*; *Japanese culture*; *the culture of poverty*
c. These patterns, traits, and products considered with respect to a
particular category, such as a field, subject, or mode of
expression: *religious culture in the Middle Ages*; *musical
culture*; *oral culture*
d. The predominating attitudes and behavior that characterize the
functioning of a group or organization

Again, no description of the purpose or use or function of culture. To

learn the purpose of an opposable thumb, you would study the physical

evolution of the human. Similarly, to understand the purpose of culture

you must study the social evolution of humans. In the preface to *Iron

John*, Robert Bly writes:

The knowledge of how to build a nest in a bare tree, how to fly to the
wintering place, how to perform the mating dance—all of this information
is stored in the reservoirs of the bird’s instinctual brain. But human
beings, sensing how much flexibility they might need in meeting new
situations, decided to store this sort of knowledge outside the
instinctual system; they stored it in stories.

If you have ever gone out animal tracking you’ll find it easy to see how

the human brain developed. The brain takes in information from the

senses, links it together, and forms a story. Say you come across a set

of footprints on the ground. You can consider a million things when

reading it. Who made it? When? Where did they plan to go? Consider the

terrain. A track in the sand ages completely differently from one in

mud, clay, snow, debris, or grass. Once you have considered the terrain,

you must think about weather. Has it felt sunny? Rainy? Windy? All these

factors age the track in different ways, and of course, each terrain

acts differently too. Each animal’s track ages differently depending on

weather and terrain. How can you tell that seven days and three hours

ago a hungry fox traveled east in a hunting-style trot? And what other

information will this tell you about the local environment? Does the fox

hunt here often? If so, what does that tell you about the environment?

To get to the root of what it means to live as humans, we must look at

this question: what happened here? This question separates us from other

animals. We have the ability to question and tell stories in a way other

animals don’t. Other animals tell each other stories too, though. A wolf

out on a scout mission finds something interesting. It rubs its body

onto the scent and travels back to the pack where they greet it and

smell it. The wolf has carried this story in the form of a scent. The

scent can only tell the wolves what lies there, but it cannot give them

any more insight into the ecology or awareness beyond their senses. This

shows us where humans function differently. We evolved to ask, “What

happened here?” We can carry the story beyond the moment. The second

part of tracking requires the ability to communicate the story to others

in order to lead us to shelter, water, fire, and food. The better the

storyteller, the better the chance of survival. Tracking works as the

art of questioning and the telling of the story. Like the hammer,

storytelling functions as a survival tool.

Human culture formed by two simultaneous evolutionary transformations.

The formation of a social organization reveals the first transformation.

Animals evolve into social organizations because cooperation proves

advantageous for the group of cooperators as a whole. Therefore the

purpose of culture becomes obvious: ease of survival. Robert Bly hinted

at the second process: the externalization of instinctual survival into

stories or myths. So you could say that language, art, storytelling, and

myths all function as a means of survival. But wait. Because every

culture differs and varies in survival ideology, myth would not function

as a means for human survival as a species but for a specific culture.

This means that a myth works as a story that holds a specific culture’s

ideology for the purpose of survival. These ideologies serve as

blueprints for a culture, coming to life through mythological enactment

or ritual.

**Ritual:**

1. a. The prescribed order of a religious ceremony
b. The body of ceremonies or rites used in a place of worship
2. a. The prescribed form of conducting a formal secular ceremony: *the
ritual of an inauguration*
b. The body of ceremonies used by a fraternal organization
3. A book of rites or ceremonial forms
4. Rituals:
a. A ceremonial act or a series of such acts
b. The performance of such acts
5. a. A detailed method of procedure faithfully or regularly followed:
*My household chores have become a morning ritual*
b. A state or condition characterized by the presence of established
procedure or routine: *“Prison was a ritual reenacted daily, year
in, year out. Prisoners came and went; generations came and went;
and yet the ritual endured” (William H. Hallahan)*

Because myths hold a “detailed method” of survival, we find ourselves

instinctually programmed to “faithfully or regularly” follow them. When

humans make choices, they enact the mythology of their culture. This

means that every choice we make works as a ritual, and that ritual,

again, serves as a function of survival. This brings up a discussion of

free will and whether such a thing really exists. If all our choices

come conditioned by a mythology, we make no choices without external

influence. I watched a movie about fast cars. I made the unconscious

choice to drive fast. I had enough awareness to consciously realize this

and choose to slow down because of another mythology called Johnny Law.

Both choices I made came from mythology: the story of fun (driving fast)

and the story of consequence (getting a ticket).

behavior patterns.” It refers to a working system of two parts:

mythology and ritual. Kept alive by transmitting its survival ideologies

through mythology. This transmission leads to ritual enactment. Cyclical

ideals and actions.

My definitions thus far:

**Mythology:** A story that holds cultural ideology for the purpose of
survival

**Ritual:** Choices made for the purpose of survival

**Culture:** Socially organized humans enacting an ideology for the
purpose of survival

But now we have a problem. To define a myth as story that contains

survival ideology would mean to ignore that all stories contain

fragments of a culture’s survival ideology. All stories would appear as

myths. Since all art works as a form of telling a story, and considering

that all human interaction means telling stories, you could define a

myth as “human communication.” But this dilutes the definition quite a

bit now. How about that word *meme*?

**Meme:** A unit of cultural information, such as a cultural practice or
idea, that we transmit verbally or by repeated action from one mind to
another

I hate this word. Many people do. It works as an analogy to *gene* but

does not mimic the genetic process in any other way. Many people argue

this and spend their waking hours taking it to the extreme trying to

match it perfectly. But mostly I hate how dry it feels, how scientific

it sounds. Not to mention the way it avoids delineating action from

idea. I hate the word *meme* and don’t use it. I just wanted to let you

know that people have used these other words, *myth* and *ritual*, to

describe memes for a long, long time, and *meme* appears useless, just a

cool analogy to *gene*. But for all you memetic freaks out there, this

just shows another way of looking at it. Let’s break down the definition

of *meme*: a unit of cultural information, such as a cultural practice

or idea (ideologies or worldview), that we transmit verbally (story) or

by repeated action (ritual) from one mind to another.

So where do myths come from? How do we form them? In *The Power of

Myth*, Joseph Campbell and Bill Moyers discuss how myths come from

people responding to their environment. Because myths form a detailed

method of survival, I think we can take this one step further and say

that myths (or memes) come from a culture’s relationship to the

environment. The way a culture interacts with its environment. It makes

sense to say that ancient survival ideologies evolved to work in accord

with “the way nature dictates,” or we wouldn’t stand here today.

In *Never Cry Wolf*, Farley Mowat discovered a connection between the

wolves’ hunting style and the health of the deer population. He found

that wolves only hunt the sick or weak members of a herd. This promotes

healthy genetics for the deer herds, which in turn benefits the wolves

by providing a constant food supply. They give back to the deer by the

method in which they kill them. The better an animal can fit into its

environment, the more success it will have, as will the health of the

entire ecosystem. Author Derrick Jensen calls this “survival of the

fit.” Joseph Campbell called it “the way nature dictates.” Farley Mowat

(and later Daniel Quinn) called it “The Law of Life.”

In other animals we call this behavior instinct. The instinctual

knowledge of “how human culture fits into the environment” describes

what we originally exported into story. Humans mythologized this

relationship and understanding into a worldwide religion known as

animism. Anthropologists of our culture studying indigenous cultures

throughout the world coined the term. It appeared as though every

indigenous culture they came across in their studies believed the

following:

**Animism:**

1. The belief in the existence of individual spirits that inhabit
natural objects and phenomena
2. The belief in the existence of spiritual beings that are separable
or separate from bodies
3. The hypothesis holding that an immaterial force animates the
universe

Coined hundreds of years ago by pretentious, culture-eating

anthropologists, no doubt this definition appears very superficial. It

lacks an understanding of the relationship to the environment that

created the belief system to begin with. It lacks purpose and function.

Animism serves cultures by giving them instructions for living in accord

with their environments.

Looking at this definition of culture, we can see an inherent weakness.

If the story becomes damaged and loses sight of “the way nature

dictates,” the culture and land suffer. How does civilization’s story

differ from animism? How does civilization relate to the environment, in

contrast to hunter-gatherers?

Let’s look again at how good ol’ *American Heritage* defines it:

**Civilization:**

1. An advanced state of intellectual, cultural, and material
development in human society, marked by progress in the arts and
sciences, the extensive use of record-keeping, including writing,
and the appearance of complex political and social institutions
2. The type of culture and society developed by a particular nation or
region or in a particular epoch: *Mayan civilization*; *the
civilization of ancient Rome*
3. The act or process of civilizing or reaching a civilized state
4. Cultural or intellectual refinement; good taste
5. Modern society with its conveniences: *returned to civilization
after camping in the mountains*

Of course, conquerors write history. “An advanced state of

intellectual…blah, blah, blah.” No one ever looks at what makes all this

backslapping and high-fiving possible: the devouring of the world. The

conquerors spend so much time thinking so highly of themselves they have

little time to notice how they fuck up ecosystems. Civilization does not

listen to “the way nature dictates” at all. In fact, in order to support

these “advanced” systems, they not only ignore nature but actually

foster a hatred of the natural world. If we look at all previous

civilizations, we know that full-time agriculture gave rise to their

runaway population growth, and ultimately their death as the soil eroded

beneath them. I define civilization thusly:

A catastrophe created when a human culture practices full-time
agriculture, causing their populations to spiral into a cycle of
exponential growth, social hierarchy, soil depletion, and genocidal
expansion that leads to an eventual collapse of ecosystems, biological
diversity, and culture

Indigenous peoples did (and still do) not live in a culture of

civilization because they did not practice full-time agriculture, nor

grow to live in such density that they required imported, agriculturally

produced grains from a distant country. I hate it so much when I say,

“Native peoples didn’t have a civilization,” and a civilized drone says,

“Yes they did! Your comment sounds so racist! They did too have a

civilization, it just looked different from ours!” I have to calmly say,

“Eh hem. You have no fucking idea what civilization means. They had

complex cultures, sure. Sustainable, beautiful cultures that worked

art and music and language and fashion and everything civilization tries

to claim a monopoly on. But they didn’t build *cities*.

Civilization continues because its cultural blueprints (mythos) and

infrastructure (ritual propagation of dams, tanks, buildings, soldiers,

consumers, etc.) go unchallenged, even in the face of collapse. It

exists in the ethereal realm of mythology and manifests itself in the

physical through monocropped fields, concrete buildings, bulldozers, and

million-men armies. Rewilding presents us with a challenge to civilized

mythology, providing us with a new set of cultural blueprints based on

the ancient, sustainable ones, and in full recognition of civilization’s

inherent unsustainability.

Empire vs. Rewilding

A power system sits in place that keeps the rich richer and the poor

poorer. This power system lies outside most people’s perception because

we grow up in it, never knowing anything different, never seeing it

articulated, but understanding it down to our bones. It feels as natural

to us as drinking a glass of water. This power structure keeps us as

slaves, forced to continue building civilization. Without empire,

civilization could not, would not, exist.

For a long time now I’ve focused myself more with the sustainable living

aspect of rewilding and not so much with the social structures. But with

all the green technology talk I’ve begun to worry. Even though

ecologically it could never happen, let’s pretend for a moment that

civilization became sustainable. Sure, that might feel great

Before the rise of cities that gave us the term *civilization*, empire

and slavery existed. In fact, I would say that cities and civilization

would not have come about without empire (rich elite with an army fueled

by grain production) forcing people (slaves) to build them. What does

empire mean, really, but a hierarchical social structure of masters with

an army to force other humans into slavery? When people advocate for a

“sustainable civilization,” they don’t realize that means they

simultaneously advocate for the continuation of slavery.

A slave means someone forced into labor under the threat of death,

torture, or some other form of abusive violence. It probably started

kind of like this: a sedentary agricultural community had a population

explosion. Something happened here. They went to their neighbors and

said something like, “Give us 10% of your food or we will kill you.”

Several thousand years went by, and now we have taxes, rent, food bills,

water bills, health insurance bills, electricity bills, gas bills, etc.

All of which everyone pays for without question: “Well, of course you

have to pay taxes!” We take in our slavery as we take in the air. Once a

system like this gets going it becomes very hard to stop. If you say no,

they have the power to kill you and steal your land. With an

ever-growing population from grain-based agriculture, they will quickly

fill your land with their ever-growing population of farmer slaves. If

you say yes, you get assimilated and enslaved. If you run, you will have

conflict with your neighbors, and if the expansion continues it will

eventually reach you anyway.

Growing up as an American, I received a flawed, inborn understanding of

how the rest of the world works. I grew up here, with electricity

twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. I grew up with television,

telephones, and sports cars. I grew up with McDonalds, the Gap, Hot

Topic, and so forth. With democracy, free speech, freedom of religion.

My point: although we live as wage slaves and slaves to this culture, we

live in the richest country in the world. Slaves…*with a lot of money*.

Money in this instance translates to “rights.” We have a lot of “rights”

in America because we can afford to buy them from our masters

(temporarily of course). This gives most Americans the illusion of the

power of personal change through making the change in their own lives.

They have the luxury (and delusion) of “buying green.” They have the

luxury of time and money to invest in their home permaculture gardens.

Who else in the world has time or money or access to educational

resources to do that? Maybe a few other first world countries, but not

the majority of enslaved peoples.

I find it funny when I hear people say that our problems occur because

people don’t take personal responsibility. Blame the person, not the

culture, not the system of wealth management and the armies that enforce

it. Since climate change threatens us all, does that mean that a

slave-child sewing soccer balls in Taiwan has a personal responsibility

to stop climate change? Do you think the slaves in the third world have

a personal responsibility to stop climate change? Do you honestly think

they have the power? Where they can’t even afford to buy “rights”? Do

you honestly think us more privileged Americans do?

Of course, when most people I know speak of personal responsibility,

their words carry an unspoken premise that means they *don’t* try to

stop corporations from creating fucked-up products and forcing people to

buy them, but instead figure out ways in which they can learn to live

without the fucked-up products or buy expensive “green” products. This

ignores the entire system of how empire exerts its power. I have the

wealth to buy organic vegetables and free-range meats. Although I pay

rent, I have enough time and money to plant a garden and build a

humanure composting system. But what about your average American wage

slaver with two jobs and a family to feed? They shop at Walmart because

they can’t afford anything else. The majority of people around the world

cannot afford personal change, and those in power do not allow it

anyway. Sure, they still have a responsibility to stop corporations and

those in power from killing the land, because they live on this planet.

But the idea of personal change making a difference comes from

privileged people with money.

Since personal change requires money, it can’t work because the masses

can’t afford it. It also takes accountability away from corporations and

the military, police, and legal systems that protect them. Since those

with money and power don’t want to lose that money and power, they have

no interest in changing this system.

The overwhelming majority of hunter-gatherers had egalitarian cultures.

Sometimes they had hierarchical cultures, but without slavery—sometimes

with what anthropologists have labeled as slavery, but not quite the

same. Regardless, they had, and still have today where they have not

experienced genocide, nonhierarchical social structures based on

cooperation rather than competition.

In the wild, competition among plants and animals happens rarely, and

usually only during times of scarcity. Within agricultural communities,

we see wealth funneled away from the majority towards the few rich

people. If you have to give 10% or more of your own food supply, 10% you

had to toil in the soil for, your own food becomes scarce. If you

destroy the soil using agriculture and ruin your landbase, of course

you’ll have scarce resources. This fear of constant scarcity leads to

intense competition. If people have lived on earth for more than three

million years (as the archeological record shows), we can assume that

they have lived in a cooperative system for the most part, and that

those who didn’t, didn’t stand the test of time. Even though

civilizations seem to outcompete hunter-gatherers during their peak,

they don’t last in the long run.

A rather large emphasis sits on creating nonhierarchical social models

in rewilding. As long as empire exists, civilization will persist

because those who sit atop the pyramid will continue to enslave us.

Because agriculture lies at the heart of civilization’s destructiveness,

and because empire only becomes possible through grain-fueled population

growth, empire will never stop using agriculture. Even if everyone went

“green,” empire would not, could not, stop destroying the *soil*. When

people advocate for a sustainable civilization (which cannot exist),

they generally don’t realize that means they simultaneously advocate for

the continuation of empire, of slavery. This happens because they

haven’t ever articulated what civilization actually means, nor how

civilizations function ecologically or socially. It seems safe to assume

that if someone talks about sustainability without talking about

dismantling civilization and rewilding, they haven’t made this

articulation either.

We cannot rewild as long as empire exists. Those in power will continue

destroying the world whether we help them or not, and they will continue

to do so backed by million-men armies (and soon robot armies—seriously,

youtube that shit), nuclear weapons, and a brain-washed slave class. The

end of empire will happen whether or not we encourage its end. When the

oil runs out, when the soil turns to salt, we will see the end of

empire. Unfortunately we will also see the end of countless species,

including possibly our own. We must do what we can to dismantle empire

if we wish to rewild, if we wish to save some semblance of life here on

this planet.

English vs. Rewilding

Modern English language quite literally comes from no place. No

indigenous people spoke or speak it. It works as a conglomeration of

languages, a mishmash made for one purpose: trade. If languages provide

us with a context with which to perceive the world, then English

programs people to see the living world through the lens of

exploitation: trees as dollar bills, animals as units of meat, humans as

slaves. English tells us from the moment we utter our first word to our

last that the world exists for one purpose: commerce.

By now you may have noticed something weird or different about my

writing style that you can’t quite put your finger on. I’ll let you in

on a little secret. I’ve written this book in E-Prime (or English

Prime), a version of the English language that excludes the use of the

verb “to be.” You heard me right. I do not use *is*, *was*, *am*,

second and write a paragraph or two or three and see if you can write

without using “to be.” Pretty hard, huh? Now just think how hard it

would feel to write a whole book in it!

E-Prime came about because some very clever scientists realized that

B-English (“regular” English, which does not exclude “to be”) creates a

false projection of reality. The world constantly changes, and B-English

interferes with this change by attempting to fix reality in stone. It

seems only natural that a sedentary culture that resists change would

eventually evolve a language that projects our perception of control

into the natural world. We do it with the plow, and we do it with our

words.

While doing who knows what kind of experiments, these nerds discovered

that an electron, when measured with one instrument, appears as a wave

and when measured with a different instrument appears as a particle. We

have a problem here: in Aristotelian B-English, an electron cannot “be”

both a particle and a wave, as surely as a table cannot also “be” a

chair. He realized that by “be-ing,” we label something as it “is,”

fixing it into an unchangeable object.

For example, I cannot simultaneously “be” both stupid and smart. But

what happens when Person A observes with a set of instruments (Person

A’s senses) that I have intelligence, and Person B observes through a

different set of instruments (Person B’s senses) that I say idiotic

things? Our linguistic world eats itself, and arguments ensue. “To be”

prevents us from experiencing a shared reality—something we need in

order to communicate in a sane way. If someone sees something

differently from another, our language prevents us from acknowledging

the other’s point of view by limiting our perception to fixed states.

For example, if I say “*Star Wars* is a shitty movie,” and my friend

says, “*Star Wars* is not a shitty movie!” We have no shared reality,

for in our language, truth lies in only one of our statements, and we

can forever argue these truths until one of us writes a book and has

more authority than the other. If on the other hand I say, “I hated

state a more accurate reality by not claiming that *Star Wars* “is”

anything, as it could “be” anything to anyone. Similarly one could say,

“I’ve seen Urban Scout act like an idiot before,” while another person

could say, “Man, Urban Scout has really made me think. I really

appreciate him.” We have two perceptions that do not contradict one

another but that came about from different perspectives.

“To be” plays god. It attempts to chisel reality in stone and works as

the backbone of the civilized paradigm. Of course it does: its

birthplace lies in the land of economic commerce, not a biological

community. English works to domesticate the world as much as tilling

means to domesticate it. Every element of our culture urges for

domestication, for slavery. If language shapes how we perceive the

world, nothing stands more fundamental (aside from the practice of

agriculture itself) to this process of domestication than our own

language.

Some people believe that language marked the beginning of hierarchy and

we should walk away from language as well. But where do you draw the

line? At vocalization? Birds vocalize. Body language? Every animal uses

body language. Every animal has a language. If I run from a bear it will

chase me. If I stand my ground and avoid eye contact, I let the bear

know I don’t mean harm. The bear will huff and gruff and bluff to test

my stance. Eventually the bear will walk away and let me go. This

confrontation has a language to it. Peaceful confrontations do as well.

Birds use songs, companion calls, and alarms to communicate, to

emphasize their body language.

We know that indigenous peoples lived sustainably with beautiful, poetic

spoken languages. We also know that no indigenous cultures used the verb

“to be.” Knowing that, and understanding what “to be” does to our

perception of reality, it makes sense that the first step to rewilding

the English language should involve eliminating Aristotle’s mistake.

Willem Larsen has taken this concept much further and created

“E-Primitive,” a version of E-Prime that stresses verb-based sentences

(among many other changes). Most indigenous languages based themselves

in verbs rather than nouns. This shows us their focus on a fluid,

ever-changing perception of reality. Our noun-based sentence structure

shows us another symptom of our fixed-reality language.

E-Prime hardly fixes English (pardon the pun!). But it greatly defangs

it. It tears down many of the language’s footholds on control and allows

for a more chaotic, changeable paradigm to fall into place. The more I

write in E-Prime the more I see how “is” takes control of the world and

how fluid English can sound. Of course, I speak B-English and use it in

most of my other writings. I also have no illusions that E-Prime could

ever stop civilization from destroying the planet. Rather, E-Prime works

as a means of reconnecting myself to the wild through language. It

merely helps me to see the world through a more dynamic, accurate

linguistic paradigm.

Stockpiling vs. Rewilding

Hey there Scout,

I am just wondering that, while you are honing your skills to be able to
create new out of the aftermath of civilization while nature is still
intact, what are your thoughts about what to gather from this world
(i.e. ropes, tarps, rations, guns) to facilitate survival during
whatever happens whenever it happens. haha the future is so wonderfully
vague but extremely heavy if you have the proper amount of imagination
and paranoia! also do you have a place to escape to, do you think this
is necessary? a plan on how to get there undetected, other people to
join? i am working on all of these problems right now but my energy and
focus rise and fall like the sun and that quickly and if its a nice day
outside you can guarantee i am not focusing on the warm weather clothing
and wool blankets i will need stowed, mostly working on my tan (vitamin
d), muscles and ability to become nature as to remain undetectable. but
i know there are things that are extremely important that will insure
that the people with the right intentions for nature and the universe
can prevail and that we should have these at the ready just in case
anything happens. its funny because i have gone to some “survival”
website with lists about what to have, they will list “at least a half
gallon of water per day per individual, which does not provide water for
hygiene, so be sure to take breath mints and STRONG DEODORANT” seriously
these people are worried about “hygiene” and its the Apocalypse?!?!? i
guess if they weren’t intending to survive on MRES, which are sure to
putrefy their systems, they wouldn’t smell so foul but come on, if you
even wear deodorant right now i am pretty sure you have a special comet
with your name on it hurling towards the earth this second.

I don’t know how well to say thanks but keep exploring and sharing,

Jessica

Hey Jessica,

Thanks for your questions! (And I appreciate your sense of humor.) I’m

sure you can imagine I get questions like these fairly often. What

supplies should I have for the SHTF (shit-hits-the-fan) scenario?

Unfortunately most people hate my response…because I’m not really one of

the SHTF people…

While you are honing your skills to be able to create new out of the
aftermath of civilization while nature is still intact.

I’d like to say first and foremost that I don’t think of myself as

honing my skills to have the abilities to create new out of the

aftermath of civilization; rather, I work on creating a new world to

live in right now because I don’t like this one. I would do this work

even if I didn’t think of civilization as collapsing. Which I’d also

like to say, started a long time ago. If we see that civilization has

already started collapsing, we can start to see that collapse does not

happen overnight, but rather like a slow and ugly death.

What will it take for people to fight back against civilization’s

destruction of the planet? When the salmon no longer swim upriver to

spawn? When the polar bears no longer walk through the snow? I like to

think of the SHTF scenario in the same way. How do you define your

personal “shit”? When the salmon go, does that represent the shit

hitting the fan? When the ice caps melt? etc.

Collapse works as a process, not an event. We can mark its progress by

larger events, but the process itself happens rather slowly and

painfully, depending on your addictions to civilization. I don’t mean to

say that fucked-up events that happen as a result of collapse can’t

happen overnight. Obviously tipping points (bigger pieces of “shit”)

exist in various systems, like the economy and the environment, and can

bring about quick changes.

What are your thoughts about what to gather from this world (i.e. ropes,
tarps, rations, guns) to facilitate survival during whatever happens
whenever it happens.

I think that the stockpile mentality represents a short-term strategy.

Even if you stockpiled food for seven years, at the end of the seven

years you’d better have a stable food production system in place.

Generally people who spend time stockpiling don’t have a long-term plan,

and if they do it involves seed saving for farming and domestication of

animals. The stockpiling person doesn’t make a long-term plan because

they operate under the belief that civilization will *recover*.

“Survival skills” in the end only keep you alive long enough for

point you think will end at some point. In a total collapse scenario,

civilized economic recovery will not occur. Not to the extent people

will believe it to. So when we look at supplies, we need to imagine what

level of technology, economy, and so forth we will maintain after

collapse.

A stockpile represents a (false) sense of security. People want to feel

that they have their bases covered: “Once I get everything on this list,

I can survive anything!” Unfortunately for those people, that looks like

a delusion. In this culture we teach that monetary wealth and

possessions give us security. In natural systems, however, which will

take precedence in collapse, cooperative relationships form the best way

to maintain long-term security.

Now I can hear you all saying, “Sure, sure, Scout, love your neighbor

and all that…But, uh, what should we stockpile?” It seems no matter how

many times I explain this to people, they *still* want me to give them a

list of supplies. What ends up happening when I do this? People just get

the list of stuff and think that when something terrible happens they’ll

survive without any effort. Let me say it again: nothing you can do or

buy will make you completely safe and secure as collapse intensifies or

during a SHTF event. Who knows? Yes, you can do things and buy items

that will increase your chances, but only in the short term. You need a

long-term plan, and by that I mean you need a long-term relationship

with the land, its other-than-human companions, and with people you can

consider family who also have this relationship with the land and its

other-than-human companions.

Also do you have a place to escape to, do you think this is necessary? A
plan on how to get there undetected, other people to join?

A lot of people have different ideas about this. Some people say you

need to hunker down and stay put, that staying in a familiar place

should sit at the top of your priorities. Again, this plan of “staying

put” can only really mean that you expect a cultural recovery to take

place. If you didn’t expect a recovery, you would want to stay on the

move, because once you (or your group) stay in one place long enough you

will deplete the resources you depend on for survival.

A more long-term strategy would involve getting to know multiple pieces

of land and tending them on a seasonal circuit, the way our

hunter-gatherer ancestors did. Then you won’t have to “escape” from

anywhere, because you’ll live right where you need to. And then we come

back to the idea that rewilding does not imply preparedness, but

re-creating a culture that uses regenerative principles.

But I know there are things that are extremely important that will
insure that the people with the right intentions for nature and the
universe can prevail and that we should have these at the ready just in
case anything happens.

The important things that will ensure the existence of people with the

intention of not fucking up the planet or fucking over anyone, have to

do not with stockpiling products but with stockpiling quality

relationships.

“Okay, okay! Geez, Scout, I get it. But…seriously, what should I put in

my survival kit?” Oh, shit. Fine. I’ll tell you what I’ve got in my

survival backpack!…But only if you promise to shut up about it already.

1. Carving knife

2. Leatherman tool

3. Water purifier

4. Water bottle

5. 12×12 camo tarp

6. Matches (in a waterproof container)

7. Three lighters

8. 100-ft parachute cord (you’ll probably want more)

9. Spool of fishing line

10. Allen wrench set

11. Small crescent wrench

12. Rain jacket

13. Rain leggings

14. Spices/salt

15. Collapsible saw

16. Mini hatchet

17. Medium-sized metal pot (for boiling water/cooking)

18. Mini sewing kit

19. Small waterproof notebook

20. Pens

21. Sleeping bag (in waterproof stuff sack)

22. Road/topo maps

23. Backpacking stove with one extra fuel container

24. Roll of plastic baggies

25. Small battery-free flashlight (the kind you shake to charge)

26. Small Maglite with extra batteries

I think that list covers it. I’d take everything out and catalog it, but

then I’d have to fit it all back in again and that takes fucking

forever. One of the things you will notice about my list: I don’t have

food rations. Why? Because I know enough edible wild plants. I also know

how to kill enough game, assuming of course that any exist in a total

enviro-collapse scenario! But again, you can see that my list has

nonrenewable expendables. Once they break, if I can’t fix them, I’ll

need to know how to make them. To know how to make them, I’ll need to

know what trees serve what purposes. In order to know where the trees

live, I’ll need to have a preexisting relationship with the land. Etc.

etc. etc. So, yeah. That about sums it all up. Don’t rely on the

short-term stockpile mythology. Learn the lay of the land, learn the

plants and animals, and become comfortable as part of that system. Join

the community of life.

“Primitive” Skills vs. Rewilding

I have always used the term *primitive skills* to refer to the creation

of things like handmade tools such as the bow and arrow, social systems

such as tribal organizations, educational systems such as mentoring,

body skills such as heightening senses, or rituals such as giving thanks

to the landbase. After spending several days at Rabbitstick Rendezvous,

the oldest primitive skills gathering in the country, I figured out why

I get a funny feeling when I tell people that I practice “primitive

skills.”

The term *primitive* can come across as racist to indigenous peoples.

Throughout history, civilizationists have used the term as an excuse to

kill, murder, and destroy these cultures. They use it to mean “lesser

than.” Even though most people I know do not use the word in this racist

way, because of its history I feel it necessary to refrain from using

it. For lack of a better term, I use it occasionally for ease among

people who wouldn’t understand what else I might mean. Please know that

when I use it in this book I do not mean “lesser than.”

Most people I know use the term *primitive skills* in reference to the

making of arts and crafts of “stone age” peoples. With a little digging

I determined how this definition came about. Looking through my

“primitive skills” books I see that none of them address

social-political-educational technologies used by indigenous peoples

(except perhaps Tom Brown Jr.). Why? Because most of the authors, like

the creators of Rabbitstick, work as “experimental archeologists”:

scientists who focus on “stone age” handmade tool replication. Not

anthropologists, mythologists, or theologists, but archeologists—those

who study the physical artifacts of primitive peoples. Unfortunately

this definition of primitive skills excludes the social systems that

make indigenous societies uniquely different from civilization. Anyone

can yield “stone age” handmade tools, including “stone age”

civilizationists.

Looking at the diversity of people who attend primitive skills

gatherings, from the dirty, earth-loving hippies to the sexist, racist

homophobes (who care nothing for the ecology of the planet, let alone

their own bioregion), exemplifies how dis-connected from the land these

gatherings can feel. When you start to examine indigenous systems, you

realize the socio-political prejudice that exists within the minds of

civilizationists. For example, if you learn and teach “indigenous

mentoring,” you can’t help but clash with civilization’s compulsory

schooling model. This makes teachers and supporters of modern schooling

(both liberals and conservatives) very upset. If you teach teambuilding

and awareness of the land, you rub civilized people (who perceive the

world as dead or put here for “Man” to consume) the wrong way.

Basically, when you examine social systems it causes a lot of

controversy. A great example of this exists on the paleoplanet forum,

dedicated to discussing the replication of primitive tools. They created

a category called “Primitive Living Experiences,” and the head moderator

shut it down after people began to argue over the how and why.

No one censored me at a gathering when I talked about civilization’s

collapse (in fact, a lot of like-minded folks chimed in). But similarly,

no one will censor the rednecks who voice their hatred of illegal

immigrants. You’ll find the slang word *abo* (short for aboriginal)

thrown around along with stupid caveman jokes. I can’t help but feel sad

and angry as I see some of these archeologists and laymen perpetuating

the racist stereotype of civilization’s caveman mythology: grunting

white people with scraggly hair and badly tailored buckskin clothes

(common in movies such as *Quest for Fire* or *Encino Man*). White

“stone age” cavemen had only bioregional differences from other “stone

age” indigenous peoples such as Native Americans. To make jokes about

how stupid and shabbily our ancestors must have lived implies that all

“stone age” peoples have little intellect. Which obviously shows us why

they all didn’t build civilizations, right? One of my favorite civilized

delusions involves archeologists hypothesizing that “early humans” must

have “discovered fire by accident.” Just as I imagine modern astronauts

must have “accidentally” built a spaceship and flew it to the moon. They

can’t fathom that “stone age” people had the same level of intelligence

that civilized people do.

Since humans make up the systems they live in, when you begin to examine

other systems that work better, you come up against cultural prejudices

and mythologies that those systems have in place to prevent people from

wanting to use another one. Even if you can prove with physical evidence

that the other system works better. “Primitive skills,” when defined as

or encourage any kind of social change.

From a rewilding perspective, the *how* and *why* lie at the heart of

these skills. If you want to live sustainably you cannot separate

tool-making from cultural systems (aka politics) and sense of place (aka

religion). Take away the *how* and *why* and these tools become weapons

of destruction. For example, anyone can harvest anything anywhere at any

time. Know what plants to eat? Great. Eat them. But do you know the most

ecologically beneficial time of year to harvest them? You made a bow and

some arrows? Cool. But do you know which deer to kill to strengthen the

herd? You can’t separate ecology from handmade tools. Do you know the

best places to gather in your area during the right seasons? Do you have

a tribe of people to efficiently gather those plants? Does that group

have songs and customs that make the tedious work of gathering more fun?

Does your group have a system to distribute food equally among the

people? To assume that donning buckskins and making a bow and arrow

makes you a hunter-gatherer shows a great underestimation of the vast

wealth of culture and expert knowledge of indigenous peoples. It also

makes you an asshole.

I have found that many people do not understand how hunter-gatherers

blend into the ecology of their place. Hunting and gathering does not

mean killing whatever, whenever. A lion does not kill just anything

whenever it wants. It does not hunt down the strongest buck; it takes

the sick and the weak. Its instincts tell it to thin the herd. Nomadic

hunter-gatherers did not simply wander the landscape aimlessly in search

of food, taking what they knew they could eat, whenever and however they

pleased. Humans have externalized their instincts of what to take, when

appropriate and why, into cultural mythology and storytelling (aka

spirituality and religion). They moved through the same seasonal

circuits, the same places, year after year, tending them the same way

any other wild animal would. They kept these routines alive through

stories, adapting and changing them with the landscape.

As a bioregional extremist, I feel like primitive skills gatherings work

as nonbioregion-specific handmade-tool gatherings. For those who dream

of a culture of rewilding, primitive skills gatherings feel like a great

starting place. I don’t think of them as “good” or “bad.” They merely

serve a function: a place to learn handmade primitive arts and crafts

from highly skilled practitioners and meet other people who love these

crafts. Sure, you may find a rewilding friend wedged between a Mormon

and a Rainbow Child, but you won’t find the group intention of learning

the skills in the holistic sense and purpose that rewilding encompasses.

For that, we need to start our own bioregion-specific rewilding

gatherings, where we don’t have to waste time arguing with right wing

religious nuts about whether or not civilization will collapse, but can

start building communities of people aware of, and no longer in denial

of, civilization’s inherent unsustainability, who wish to toss the

shackles of domestication for the beautiful systems of living that

promote biodiversity and environmental integrity.

Resistance vs. Rewilding

When I think of “resistance movements,” I envision a small group of

people resisting a much larger and all-powerful militarized machine. If

I think of civilization as an all-powerful death machine, the idea of

resisting it makes me feel small and paralyzed. But when I view

resistance through the eyes of rewilding, it looks and feels very

different to me.

Civilization works as a way of life that attempts to domesticate, to

tame, to make dependent, to enslave the whole world. It fuels its

population growth through the domestication of grains. It cannot exist

without domestication. It also must work constantly to make its

domesticated members so: brainwashing people through television and

schooling, genetically engineering plants, growing meat in petri dishes,

etc. Civilization does so much work to keep the world domesticated

because domestication works as a form of resistance against the natural

flow of the world, which always wants to rewild.

When a tree’s roots slowly tear up concrete, the tree does not resist

the concrete, the concrete resists the tree. The tree just lives its

life the way all wild things do. Plants do what they can with their

resources to keep the world wild. Dams resist the natural flow of a

river. Over many thousands of years, if left alone, the water would

whittle the dam down to nothing. The water never resisted the dam. It

only did what water does to keep the world wild.

Populations of wild plants and animals that wild humans could eat for

food have nearly disappeared through civilization’s domestication. Wild

humans, as elements integral to the landscape, require an undomesticated

land in order to live. If we mean to rewild, it implies that, like the

water and trees doing what they can to rewild the planet, rewilding

humans need to use their unique, inborn abilities to rewild the world.

For example, civilization has domesticated the Columbia River and all

her tributaries, killing nearly all the wild salmon who once lived

there. If Cascadians want to live as wild humans, they will need to

rewild the Columbia River. Of course, the river itself works as fast as

its water can to break away the dam. Unfortunately for the fish and

other members of Cascadia, the water alone cannot work fast enough to

rewild the river. But rewilding humans, whose ability to make tools

comes as naturally as a tree’s ability to grow roots, can work much

faster to undomesticate that river.

In *The Tales of Adam*, Daniel Quinn uses a metaphor about a wounded

lion. If a wounded lion starts killing more than it needs, Adam (a

hunter-gatherer) says he will hunt down the lion and kill it because

“that is a lion gone mad.” Worried the lion would wreak havoc on the

entire ecosystem, he would hunt it and kill it so as to prevent that

from happening. I doubt that hunting lions felt like a favorable task

that any ordinary person would partake in…especially lions gone mad, as

they no doubt have less predictability than sane lions. Such a task

would definitely not look like the tribesman going about his daily

business, but it would fit in with the daily business of maintaining and

caretaking the land.

Like the wounded lion who kills at random and takes more than it needs,

civilization behaves as a culture that has “gone mad.” Like the hunter

who has the guts and the skills to hunt down and kill that lion, for

rewilding humans with the guts and the skills to remove a dam, it would

not look like an ordinary day of pruning a permaculture garden or

checking trap-lines. Yet it would still fit in with the daily business

of maintaining and caretaking the land. Hunting down a lion did not

require a big military operation (though to smaller-scale indigenous

peoples it may have felt like such). But removing a dam may require

something on a grander scale.

I think people will decide such actions by whether their band of

rewilding humans stands at the front lines of civilization’s boundary or

the farther reaches out of civilized control, as well as how far

civilization’s domestication reaches into others’ landbases. For

example, though someone may live in the Canadian Rockies, far from

militarized civilization, as long as those dams on the Columbia River

stay intact, they prevent salmon from getting to the Rockies. This means

that the Rockies still fall under civilization’s control. If the natives

of old had dammed the river and disallowed other natives upriver from

receiving fish, you can bet some shit would have gone down. Similarly,

if humans plan to rewild in the Rockies, they’ll need to think about how

civilization can keep them domesticated from afar. Of course, if we take

into consideration the civilization-induced climate crisis, we see that

civilization will try to keep us domesticated no matter where we rewild…

Many argue over whether actions like blowing up a dam will bring down

civilization or merely strengthen it. To wild humans, an argument like

this makes no sense. Like arguing over whether the tree whose roots tear

up the sidewalk will bring down civilization or strengthen it. Yes, the

tree may get cut down and the street repaved. But civilization will

never have the power to cut them all down, to repave all of those

streets. A dandelion growing in a suburban lawn, a tree ripping apart

the street, an earthquake tearing down buildings, and rewilding humans

dismantling logging equipment seems as natural a process as taking out

the trash feels to the civilized. I see resistance to domestication as

the wildness deep down in our souls bursting forth; a rewilding human

blowing up a dam as the natural world going about its daily

routines…with a little tenacity.

Many proponents who argue against such actions say that “civilization

will just rebuild.” The idea that civilization will go on resisting the

roots of a tree, cut it down, and pave another road, does not stop the

tree from growing roots. Similarly, whether or not civilization will

continue to resist the flow of water and build another dam does not stop

the actions of rewilding humans. The forces of nature at work, whether

we mean trees growing roots, water rushing to the ocean, or wild humans

caretaking the land, will continue to undomesticate the world regardless

of civilization’s growing or diminishing resistance to them.

The mythologists of civilization use the actions of rewilding humans to

further their own destruction and may hunt down and kill rewilding

humans, but they will never kill them all. Deep down we all have the

genetic code to live wild lives, despite the external memetic system of

domestication that most of us currently subscribe to. As civilization

collapses, more people will realize the need to rewild and will have

more and more success rewilding body, mind, river, country, forest,

farm, and city, whether they call it rewilding or not.

Of course, you don’t necessarily need to blow anything up. As long as

you remove civilization and rewild the river. I think it comes down to

scale, bioregion, and in particular, rewilding groups having discussions

about their place. Do Cascadians need to rewild the Columbia to have a

softer crash in Cascadia? If so, how does one rewild the river? How

urgently does this need to happen? How can we do this as quickly and

thoughtfully as possible?

When I turn the term *resistance* on its head and see it as civilization

resisting the powers of nature, I feel more empowered to resist

civilization’s domestication. The more I rewild, the less I see

way a tree’s roots just keep growing and tearing up streets. Sure,

civilization may cut some of us down, but it does not have the power to

resist the flow of the wild world indefinitely. It will fail, and as

rewilding humans, we can help speed that failure up. When we rewild and

join with the other wild forces of the world, we become unstoppable.

Pacifism vs. Rewilding

Philosophically I loathe pacifism. Instinctively I would never even

consider it. Yet reflexively I enact pacifism when attacked, threatened,

or intimidated. I have pacifist values, not because I want or choose to,

but because of my training from early childhood in civilization and

specifically in school. We learn to never fight back or we will receive

worse than the violence we gave. If we wish to fully rewild, we must

rewild our relationship to violence.

In order for things to live they have to eat, which means they have to

kill. Whether you kill a plant or an animal, you use violence to do it.

I don’t judge violence as “good” or “bad” because I see it as a function

of nature. Like it or not, we cannot escape it. No animals live pacifist

lives except domesticated ones (and even then, when given the

opportunity…). I see violence in the wild and it looks beautiful to me.

We must kill to eat. Life implies violence through death. It can look

ugly if you fear death or look beautiful if you embrace it.

The question of violence or no violence bores the shit out of me,

really. I accept violence as a beautiful part of our nature, not some

grotesque animalistic quality that we left behind when we started

building civilization (we just traded in violence for abuse). Do you use

violence in a sustainable way, like that of a wild animal, or do you use

it in an unsustainable way to further civilization’s domestication?

“What?” you say. “You can use violence in a sustainable way?” Yes, you

can. Chew on that for a bit.

I also don’t have a problem with violent communication. When two bucks

bash their racks together, they may act violently towards each other,

but the violence does not look abusive. It looks real and raw and

beautiful. Yes, communication can look violent and not feel abusive.

Really, I think we need to learn nonabusive, violent communication. Our

culture conflates abuse with violence because those in power control us

by using violence or the threat of violence. To live as a domesticated

human means to live by the wishes of rulers or *face the consequences*.

Killing a life differs from torturing a life into submission. We have a

name for that kind of violence: abuse.

If people use violence to take down civilization, it does not work the

same way as civilization using violence to force you to live in

civilization. Civilization will kill this planet if it doesn’t come

down. Civilization attacks the whole world every day. If you

counterattack civilization to bring it down, it works as a defense

mechanism to end domination. *Violence does not beget abuse*. See the

difference?

You cannot live as a pacifist and rewild. Those who wish to rewild

without bringing down civilization do not understand what rewilding

implies. Those who don’t see how rewilding implies bringing down

civilization don’t understand rewilding either. By rewilding, you put

yourself against the forces of civilization that work to domesticate the

planet. If you don’t want to use violence to rewild (I sure don’t! I

swear it!), you might consider how you will meet that violence when it

comes. Without question, visible violence will come knocking at your

door at some point or another. Civilization, the collective group of

people who perpetuate this way of life, will not quietly put down their

weapons and allow you to put a halt to their death wish of

domestication. We need to rewild our relationship to violence,

retraining ourselves to fight back so that when the time comes we won’t

reflexively kneel to our masters and allow them to chop off our heads.

Now go put on that one track from the score to *The* *Last of the

Mohicans* (you know the one), paint your face green and black, and

brainstorm a battle cry: “Freedom!?!” Sorry…mixing too many movies here.

“Primitive” Living vs. Rewilding

So you want to live like a pure, modern, technology-free

hunter-gatherer, huh? In order to do that we need to remove the barriers

civilization has in place to stop us from fully rewilding. If we wish to

remove these barriers, we must first identify them. The following list

shows many of the barriers I have come in contact with. The list feels

incomplete, but it covers much of the basics. It also reflects the

“pure” end of the rewilding spectrum: those who live so far from

civilization (culturally) that they no longer use any industrial-made

tools or interact with the civilized economy at all. The most basic

survival course covers your immediate needs: shelter, water, fire, and

food. We’ll start with how survivalists acquire these skills versus how

the hunter-gatherers of the Northwest Coast acquired them.

Every barrier falls under one of two categories: violence (aka “the

law”) or scarcity. Under the barrier of violence, civilization will

exert physical force on you for breaking their laws. Think of how the

mafia makes businesses pay them for “protection,” which really means

they won’t steal from the business. In the same way, we pay the

government for the same kind of “protection.” We call this payment

“taxes.” If we don’t pay them, or behave the way they tell us to, they

will send the cops to shut us down or throw us in prison. Tell me how

that differs from the mob. Under the barrier of scarcity, the lives

(such as salmon) that we eat in order to live sustainably now have

dwindling populations thanks to civilization’s various forms of violence

to the planet (in the case of salmon, actual concrete barriers called

dams).

Shelter

Materials

If rewilding simply meant “survival,” as so many people think, I could

build a small debris shelter. But where will my family sleep? Where will

my culture sleep? A debris shelter works great for a lone scout who

needs to stay on the move. But for a larger culture of people, who plan

to hang out longer than a few days, we need something more substantial

and homey. Most Northwest Coast Indians slept in thatched huts during

the summer months, but in the winter they lived comfortably in

longhouses made of western red cedar planks that they could remove from

old-growth trees without killing them. This process requires a team of

people, a whole set of primitive tools, including wedges, hammers, and

ladders, and lots of local old-growth cedars. In order to live in

shelters like the natives did here, we would need all of those things.

Unfortunately, I don’t think I’ve ever seen an old-growth cedar large

enough to get even one good plank out of, let alone enough to construct

an entire longhouse. The temperate rainforest of the Northwest rots most

natural materials rather quickly. Cedar lasts because of the antifungal

tannins in the wood.

The precivilized, undomesticated, sustainable economy no longer exists

and will take a long time (at least a few hundred years for cedar trees

to become old enough for sustainable harvesting) to return, if ever. So

much material already exists now; it seems like most houses have one

person living in them. Think of all the wasted space! We don’t have a

rewilding economy, but we do have what we already have here in

civilization. We don’t need to create more industrial products; we can

use the ones already created to hold us over as the economy changes back

to a wild one.

Location

Civilization will not let you set up a shelter just anywhere. You need

to first have land or property, which means you have to pay money for

it. Then you must get a building permit in order to construct your

shelter. If you don’t go through these avenues, civilization feels it

has the right to (and probably will) kick you out of wherever and tear

down your shelter. Most camping laws prohibit people from setting up a

camp for any period of time more than a few weeks, and in some cities,

like Portland, you can’t camp at all. This means you have to stay on the

move, which means you need some form of transportation for your shelter,

unless you plan to build a new one at each site, which again would most

likely break the law of energy conservation.

Storage and Security

Something a survival shelter has little to nothing of. These longhouses

also stored much food, clothing, and other supplies and (most

importantly in the Northwest) kept them dry and rot-free. Oftentimes the

survivalist concept doesn’t include security of possessions (except for

maybe securing minimal food from bears or other animals). Security and

storage of your “stuff” becomes an increasing concern when living in

more densely populated areas, and even more so the smaller the number of

people in your group. For example, if someone always sits watch over the

stuff, you’ve got pretty good security. But if you have to leave items

unwatched in a densely populated area, you may not see those items

again. Usually we don’t think about this because all of our items have

twenty-four-hour security locked away in our homes. But if you don’t

have a home, or you don’t have a lock, security becomes a major issue.

Especially as the more set up you get in terms of tools, dried foods,

and other supplies for an authentic hunter-gatherer culture (and not

some week-long excursion in survival), then you end up acquiring a lot

more stuff to account for. You need the right tool for the right job,

and sustainable hunting/gathering/horticulture, depending on bioregion,

can require lots of different tools. Don’t believe me? Just read Hilary

Stewart’s books *Cedar*, *Indian Fishing*, and *Stone*, *Bone*, *Antler

and Shell*. You don’t want to spend hours and hours grinding down a

stone wedge only to have it disappear!

Water

Purity

Before civilization brought its pestilence of domestication to the

Americas, indigenous peoples could drink water right from streams and

rivers. These days, bacteria live in almost all water sources. Once you

take a drink, it will cause you some serious indigestion, and if

untreated, the water can kill you. Unless you drink from a spring, you

need to boil your water. Boiling, however, does not remove Prozac,

dioxin, estrogen, and the numerous other industrial-made toxic compounds

now found in most water sources. Even the safest water, tap water, often

contains chlorine, fluoride, and/or arsenic. If you live in an urban

environment it makes much more sense to drink tap water due to fire laws

and fuel scarcity, as well as all the other chemicals in the ground in

urban places you can’t boil out. This generally means you have to pay

for water or steal it. Some can find free water in local fountains, but

it limits your ability to move freely as you have to stay in close

proximity to your water source unless you find a way to contain it. I

have, however, also heard of police harassing homeless people for

filling containers with water from public drinking fountains. So the

threat of violence increases by stealing water or drinking from public

fountains.

Transportation

If you must boil water every time you need to drink it, that means

you’ll not only need fuel for a fire, and a fireproof container to boil

the water in, but also a fire-starting device. This means you’ll need a

system where you have multiple fire-making sets and fireproof containers

at various water sources. This increases your security problems as

someone such as a cop, other vagrant, or garbage clean-up crew might

steal, break, or throw away your tools while you’re away. If you decide

to carry your water with you, you’ll need a container like a water

bladder. This goes for all of your tools. Will you carry them with you

to every location? Or will you spend the time making and hiding new ones

for each location?

Fire

Fuel

In the woods this issue doesn’t come up as much, but it can. In the city

organic debris such as branches and twigs that fall to the ground

usually get shipped out and composted somewhere far off. I have tried to

gather all my own firewood for cooking, water purification, and heat,

and it proved very difficult. Unless you want to spend all your time

searching for firewood, which you can’t, you won’t have enough to

sustain yourself in an urban environment. This means you have to use

industrial machines, which means you have to use gas or electricity.

Location

In the woods, again, this issue doesn’t really matter unless a fire ban

exists. But in the city you can’t just start a fire anywhere. If the law

allows you to do it in a park, you usually need a fire pan that sits at

least six inches above the ground. This means another piece of

industrialization you have to carry around. I know some people who have

dug a hole in their backyard, but I don’t know the legality of that.

Even then, if you use a backyard, that means someone pays rent or a

mortgage or property taxes, which means you still support the industrial

economy.

Stealth

Fire makes you high-profile. During the day the sight and smell of

smoke, and during the night the light from the fire, can arise

suspicions from people who will contact “the authorities.” Anything that

attracts more attention to your way of life could mean more interactions

with the authorities, and we don’t want that!

Flora food

Pollution

Many plant foods and medicines contain toxic amounts of metals,

especially those that reside near the roadside or railroad tracks. Many

people use pesticides or chemical fertilizers in their yards, so eating

plants from that source will make you sick.

Subsistence

Many wild edibles do not suffice for plant subsistence; you can’t thrive

eating only dandelion greens. The soil in many areas has so many toxins

and so few nutrients that the plants themselves may not have much. The

native cultures in the Portland area survived mainly off of the wapato

tuber through the wintertime. The wapato used to thrive along the

Willamette River. When the valley’s Indian populations declined almost

90% in the 1830s due to disease, with no one to tend to them and with

the introduction of agriculture and invasive species, the wapato nearly

died out. It still lives in a few places along the river. This story

illustrates that returning to a diet of native plant foods, or even

trying to subsist from wild plant food sources on a cultural scale,

would prove difficult at this time. Anyone interested in this lifestyle

needs to focus on habitat restoration.

Fauna food

Pollution

Toxins, stored in fat, move up the food chain. Animals store more toxins

than plants.

Subsistence

As with our plant brothers and sisters, the main animal eaten here in

the Northwest by native peoples, the salmon, lies on the verge of

extinction.

Permits

In order to hunt and trap most animals, you need to purchase permits.

You also cannot use primitive methods, which means you must buy

industrial-made traps, guns, or arrowheads.

----

We haven’t even covered more advanced, long-term necessities such as

health and hygiene. Where do you shit? What about medicine? What about

bathing? The myth that hunter-gatherers didn’t have a complex economic

system stands as the main barrier here. When you actually sit down and

visualize a complex primitive culture, as opposed to a survival

scenario, you begin to recognize the near impossibility and

undesirability of attempting to live this way under the thumb of

civilization, with the constant threat of violence and painful

exhaustion from expending too much energy to gather what you need in a

100% primitive, truly “off-the-grid” kind of way. At this point it would

not reflect the authentic hunter-gatherer lifestyle we’ve seen, but

rather the suffering lifestyle of the survivalist. We need to look for

ways of leveraging the current civilized economic system against itself,

towards a hunter-gatherer one. We need to invent an entire rewilding

economic system. It really does take a village to rewild! This shows how

concepts like permaculture and the Transition Town movement can really

help us start building rewilding cultures.

Permaculture vs. Rewilding

I know a lot of “permaculturalists.” I’ve seen many “permaculture”

gardens. I have my permaculture design certificate. The problem with my

perception of permaculture stems, I think, from the urbanization of

permaculture and the terminology used in the books. When I open the

books and read phrases like “sustainable agriculture,” I shut the books.

Because in my experience it doesn’t matter how much you teach people

about subsistence practices if you don’t articulate the problems of

civilization simultaneously. Author Toby Hemenway has written the only

permaculture texts I’ve seen that include a critique of civilization.

(More probably exist, but not popularly.)

Most commonly when I see people practicing permaculture in the city I

see people clinging to the false hope that their garden will save

civilization. It’s not that I lack knowledge of permaculture or need to

read more. The language in the reading says volumes.

In permaculture, *sectors* refers to external influences on your

permaculture land. This includes weather, topography, and cultural

systems such as laws. Because most permaculturalists do not understand

or articulate the sectors of civilization, hierarchy, class, wealth,

race, and empire, they don’t understand what prevents people from using

permaculture to “save humanity.”

If, by itself, permaculture examined the unspoken assumptions and

unarticulated toxic mythology of civilization, pro-civilization

permaculturalists would not exist. Rewilding differs from permaculture

in that it refers to a context of ecological principles that challenge

the mythology of civilization. Without that context of ecological

principles, the skills take on the dominant culture’s mythological

context and therefore have little to do with rewilding. And if the

skills have little to do with undoing domestication, they have

everything to do with continuing domestication.

Permaculture works great for a rewilder. Someone can use permaculture as

a tool for rewilding, but permaculture itself doesn’t reach outside the

framework of civilization. If it did, all permaculturalists would

understand how civilization controls us. Because most permacultural

texts and culture have more to do with design and lack the articulation

of how and why civilization kills the planet, civilized people easily

miss the implications.

I have had a hard time understanding what permaculture aims to do

because of the terminology used in the books and the actions of the

people within the subculture. The words used to describe permaculture

often obfuscate its real intentions, and further confuse the civilized

and rewilders alike. Aside from the general

pro-civilization/pro-agriculture language, the subculture of urban

permaculturalists has also given rise to my own misinterpretation. At

the permaculture events I have attended in the metropolis where I live,

I have seen little discussion of walking away from or tearing down

civilization and much discussion about how permaculture can save

civilization (for example, the widely known and cherished City Repair

Project, which bills itself as “Permaculture for Urban Spaces”).

If people say that you can have permaculture in urban spaces, either

permaculture doesn’t mean what I think it does, or those people don’t

understand permaculture. If we could see permaculture as a design

science for creating horticultural villages, we would know you cannot

permaculture cities. Cities have a fundamentally unsustainable quality:

nothing will make cities sustainable. If permaculture means to render

the land sustainable, how would anyone get the idea that you can

permaculture a city? Probably because of quotes from local Portland

papers like this one:

A reformed Nordstrom addict, Van Dyke, 56, now teaches
“permaculture”—which, practically speaking, means forgoing the lawn in
favor of a big, messy garden.

— *Willamette Week*, August 13, 2008

A couple of fruit trees in your yard and a small garden of self-seeding

annuals will not feed you and your hungry neighbors (though it will

soften the crash of civilization slightly). The population density of a

city far exceeds its carrying capacity, even if every yard has a messy

garden instead of a lawn. While you can use the *design principles* of

permaculture to plan your urban garden, this misses the point and

obscures the intentions of permaculture (if the intention means to

create a horticultural-hunter-gatherer culture). If you can’t fully feed

yourself with your urban permaculture garden, you still require the

importation of resources from the countryside. If every farm became a

permaculture farm, we could not sustain the populations in the city

because permaculture doesn’t create excess (grain) food production that

makes cities possible. This means that cities would collapse. *If

everyone took permaculture to its intention*, *civilization would

collapse*.

Civilized people have lived for thousands of years, forced by a military

to farm monocropped grains. Those in power will not allow real

permaculture (meaning the full extent of permaculture’s intentions to

create horticultural-hunter-gatherer cultures) even though permaculture

does a great job of reframing indigenous horticulture and making it

appealing to the masses who still think hunter-gatherers spent their

lives hungry and in constant search for food. As long as civilization

holds a monopoly on violence, it owns you and your permaculture farm,

and requires the calories of grain production to keep its force. When

the time comes, that excess you had for trade will go to the military so

that they can kick your ass and hold you captive. I don’t see these

issues addressed by permaculturalists or in permaculture literature.

Some people say, “Don’t listen to what the books say. Look at what

people do.” But when I look at what the people who make permaculture

popular among urban people do, I see people clinging to civilization and

calling it permaculture. While I think permaculture design attempts to

abandon civilization as a subsistence strategy, without articulating in

its own literature the systems that keep us stuck here, permaculture

brings civilization along for the ride, and civilization kills the idea

before it has the chance to break free.

Rewilding refers to the process of undomesticating ourselves so that

ideas like permaculture can and will live up to their potential:

creating biologically diverse landbase, seasonally maintained by

horticultural-hunter-gatherers, free of civilization. Rewilding offers a

kind of sector analysis to describe the culture that understands the

power of unarticulated abuse and domination from civilization. It seeks

to understand these invisible and visible shackles outright. Once we

articulate the problems and control mechanisms of civilization,

permaculture becomes one of our strongest allies. But as long as

permaculture remains a design science without articulating civilization,

it will continue to lose meaning through the urban people who use it to

perpetuate false hopes.

Veganism vs. Rewilding

Most recently I’ve seen this notion that we can change the world by

changing our diet, specifically to a vegan diet. I have found that many

vegans throw their dietary ethics at others the way Christians throw

their spiritual ideology. If you want to eat only veggies, fine. But why

the attitude? Why the hate? If you think you have an ethically pure

diet, think again. In fact, your diet may worsen the environment.

Some vegans claim they like how they feel on the diet. Others simply say

they don’t like the taste of meat. But most vegans I know eat that way

because of ethics more than for health benefits or personal taste. For

this reason, veganism generally falls into an ideological “right” vs.

“wrong” category for living, causing most members of the vegan military

to demand that everyone else stop their “evil” ways and adopt vegan

values. But where do these values come from? And do these espoused

values actually make a change in the ways they intend?

Animist peoples experience plants as having feelings too. Just because

you don’t hear their screams, and can’t look into their eyes when you

cut them, doesn’t mean plants don’t feel pain and bleed in a way outside

of our perception. The idea that plants somehow have lesser value than

animals comes from a nonanimistic view of the world: a civilized,

hierarchical view. They don’t look like us, they don’t grow like us, and

therefore they get cast to the bottom of the spiritual hierarchy (at the

top of which sits the brains of white men).

I feel terrible for domesticated animals (pets included here). I feel

equally terrible for domesticated plants. I feel terrible for anything

domesticated (rocks, clouds, air, ideas, etc.). Domesticated crops

require domesticated bees for pollination. This implies that vegans

consider bugs lower on their spiritual hierarchy. Farmers routinely kill

animals like rabbits, crows, and coyotes who enter their fields. Crops

kill wild animals too, and force bees into domestication.

In response to this, many vegans might say, “Well, I have chosen

veganism to protest factory farming, which causes a lot more degradation

to the environment than growing crops. You don’t need meat to survive.”

It appears to me that population growth lies at the “root” of

environmental degradation. “Development” wouldn’t happen if we had fewer

people. The destructive scale of factory farming would not exist if our

population did not grow exponentially. So we need to look at what makes

our population grow.

As a teenager I worked at an organic food store and ate a vegan diet. I

remember seeing a vegan product that boasted, “Eating vegan helps save

food resources for seven people a day.” How they calculated that I’ll

never know, or believe. While most people would see that label and

believe their purchase helped the “fight against hunger,” I look at it

and see that they’ve only just made seven more hungry mouths to feed.

Domestication of both plants and animals requires deforestation. But the

population explosions that form civilizations come from the

domestication of grains, not livestock. The Incas had quinoa, the Aztecs

had amaranth, the Mayans had corn, the Chinese had rice, and Whitey had

wheat (and now soy). Grain-based diets cause exponential population

growth. Population growth increases the scale of everything, turning

small ranches into factory farms, turning the local market into a

McDonalds. Grain-based diets make factory farms possible. They make

“development” possible. They make civilization possible. If everyone

switched to a vegan diet, our population would grow that much faster,

the destruction that much worse. Vegans constantly say, “You don’t need

meat to survive.” I never hear them follow up with, “Only through

agricultural globalization does this become possible.”

If you live in North America (or anywhere outside of the jungle), you

need meat to survive outside of the grain-based diet of civilization.

And so what? Humans have eaten meat for a long time and found

sustainable ways to kill that honored the animals, the same as any other

predator. Along with sustainable ways to kill plants that honored their

lives. Along with sustainable ways to honor stones, weather, and all the

other elements of the community. I think the comment “You don’t need

meat to survive” includes both points I have made: civilization fuels

itself on wheat, not meat, and (most) vegans perceive animals as higher

on a spiritual hierarchy of suffering.

Want a diet based on anti-civilization ethics? Want to stop supporting

the destructive culture? Want to stop population growth? Stop buying

processed food at the supermarket. Hunt, gather, garden, buy or trade

locally. Give back to the land and quit eating the very thing that makes

all of this possible: *grains*.

Personally I eat mostly “paleo,” and I don’t care if you or anyone else

does. My diet works for me, but I don’t think that I have found the “one

right diet” for all to eat. Though I perceive them, I haven’t chosen my

diet for ethical reasons. I’ve chosen it because I feel good eating this

way. I understand that just because I feel good eating this way, not

everyone else will, as each of us has a particular body with particular

needs. If veganism makes you feel good, by all means. But please stop

promoting veganism based on false ethics of ceasing the destruction

inherent in grain-based diets. I bought into it in my teens (I ate a

vegan diet for two years) and won’t fall for the mythology again.

As you may imagine, I received many e-mails from pissed-off vegans after

posting “Civilization Found in Vegan Ethics.” One person just couldn’t

understand the fundamental connection between grain diets and population

growth. Others, like the ones I responded to here, live in denial that

plants have feelings too. I would like to say that some very nice

nonfundamentalist vegans and I had a good dialogue, too—thank you, guys!

Dear Scout,

How can plants feel pain? They have no nervous system. The reason that
you can’t hear their screams is because they have no mouths, vocal
cords, etc. For me, I place bugs lower on my hierarchy because they have
many less neural connections than, say, a chicken or pig. So, I would
think that there is less “substance” to them. I mean, come on man, what
kind of thinking is it to think that an oak tree can feel pain? I’m all
for stopping industrial civilization, as I believe you are, but to
advocate a philosophy such as animism is as foolish as believing that
some guy named Jesus who lived 2,000 years ago is going to take you to
some fairy land called heaven. You also said, “crops kill wild animals
too.” If you cared about wild animals why would anyone eat raised
animals? The amount of grain, mostly corn, to feed them causes more land
to be plowed (thereby causing more deaths of wild animals) than if you
just ate lower on the food chain. Just to make it clear, I do think that
the Paleolithic diet is a good thing, relative to most diets. I know and
realize that veganism is part of the industrial food system. That is why
I try to dumpster dive as much of my food as possible thereby giving
less $ to the industrial food suppliers.

And this one:

Dear Scout,

I’m glad you have empathy for plants. But here’s the difference between
plants and animals: plants are cut down, and we eat them. Now here’s the
thing: whether it’s because god made them that way, or evolution has
created it, or whatever you believe: when you cut a plant down, it does
not struggle. It falls, and you eat it. That’s the difference. When you
kill an animal, it fights for its life. It defends its existence. That’s
the difference.

You know, the BBC reported a few years back that fish can actually (oh

my god, get ready) *feel pain*. Listen to this:

The first conclusive evidence of pain perception in fish is said to have
been found by UK scientists. This complements earlier findings that both
birds and mammals can feel pain, and challenges assertions that fish are
impervious to it. The scientists found sites in the heads of rainbow
trout that responded to damaging stimuli. They also found the fish
showed marked reactions when exposed to harmful substances. The argument
over whether fish feel pain has long been a subject of dispute between
anglers and animal rights activists.

This, of course, makes no fucking sense. Anyone who has ever gone

fishing can see the fear in the fish’s eyes and notice that it wriggles

uncomfortably, in obvious physical pain as it dangles from a hook. Did

we really need to have scientists cut up fish and test them with

machines to know they feel pain? Does anyone else see the insanity? We

can’t trust our bodies, only machines made by our brains. Or more

specifically machines made by the brains of white men.

Some of us don’t need scientific instruments to understand and feel

empathy towards fish and, further, plants. If you can tune in with your

sense of empathy, you can “hear” the screams of plants and feel their

kind of pain. Furthermore you can do this with rocks, wind, clouds,

mountains, the moon, etc.

It all comes down to observation and empathy (the sixth sense we must

dull to live in civilization). Animism does not refer to something you

“believe” in that you cannot experience or see directly. It refers to

observations made using all of your senses (including the sense of

empathy) while living in an animate world, about an animate world. It

works as a way of perceiving the world based on direct experiences with

it. I cannot observe Jesus, his teachings, or a heaven, but I can

observe the world around me and its happenings. My perception of animate

plants does not come from faith but from direct sensory experience. I’ll

give you one example:

I sat in my backyard for one hour a day for several months, in the same

spot under the dogwood tree with the robin’s nest. Every day I would sit

and practice a sensory meditation, clear my thoughts and relax and watch

the natural world of an urban yard unfold before me. Much like watching

television, I merely observed and did not interact, though I had a deep

sense of wanting to belong. After several months of this I began to

wonder if I would ever feel like I belonged. Then one day I sat down and

began to enter into the mental space of the sensory meditation.

Immediately I felt different. I could sense something completely new. I

can’t tell you which sense experienced this feeling, but it felt like I

had finally become part of the family. I could feel the plants. I could

feel the water pulsing up their stalks, and I could feel the energy

feeding them from the sun. It felt like they had put their arms around

me. I hate using the term *oneness* to describe anything, but it really

did feel as though they had let me in on a secret. It felt more like

The next moment I began to feel afraid. I could feel they felt scared

too. Then the neighbor came outside. Somehow I just knew what would

happen next. I wanted to run. But I heard something say, “We can’t run!”

At that point I knew they wanted me to stay. So I stayed there with them

as my neighbor weed-whacked his yard, and I cried. Imagine your legs

buried in cement and someone begins to cut them off. You can’t run, you

can’t do anything but watch. Imagine your family members stand next to

you, and you can do nothing for them. At least animals can run and

fight. Actually some plants can too. Thorns, anyone? Poison? But even

then, so what if one can run and one can’t. I don’t discriminate against

one more than the other because one has legs and one has roots.

That experience only speaks to me, since I experienced it alone. I trust

this experience because nature has no agenda. Of course, my own cultural

views can get in the way, but even then I think some sensory experiences

can break through cultural worldviews. I know many people who have

shared similar experiences with plants (and rocks and trees and wind and

everything else). Why then do scientists spend so much time cutting up

and torturing fish, and cutting up and torturing plants, looking for

hard-core factual, measurable data proving that these things experience

pain, when our own bodies, if listened to, can actually communicate with

these other-than-humans?

I don’t *believe* in animism, I *experience* it, and share my

experiences in hopes of inspiring others to seek out similar

experiences. We must make animism sound childish in order to see the

world as dead.

As for the other comments:

You also said, “crops kill wild animals too.” If you cared about wild
animals why would anyone eat raised animals? The amount of grain, mostly
corn, to feed them causes more land to be plowed (thereby causing more
deaths of wild animals) than if you just ate lower on the food chain.

Again, if the corn, soy, and other grains that currently feed cattle

turned into fields for human consumption, that would provide *more* food

in the food supply for humans, which means *more* humans. Which means

they would bulldoze even more wild lands for grains and houses, cars,

oil, and so forth.

I don’t claim an ethically pure diet here. I buy most of my food from

the store. When I can afford it, I buy local, grass-fed, free-range,

hormone-free, etc. Portland has many of those stores, so I don’t find

that difficult. In order to escape civilization and rewild, we need to

figure out how to “unlock the food” from civilization. I want to hunt

and gather and garden all my own food. I can’t, because I don’t know

how, and it feels extra hard because no one else does either (at least

in this country). Not to mention that civilization has destroyed much of

the wild food! No one lives a 100% primitive, wild lifestyle anymore.

Just to make it clear, I do think that the Paleolithic diet is a good
thing, relative to most diets. I know and realize that veganism is part
of the industrial food system. That is why I try to dumpster dive as
much of my food as possible thereby giving less $ to the industrial food
suppliers.

As far as dumpster diving goes, I don’t really do much of that either. I

dumpster fruit and that’s about it. Most of the food I find contains

wheat and sugar, which poison my body. I don’t eat grains, not because I

want to protest the civilized economy but because they totally fuck up

my body and make me feel like shit. I don’t think of the paleo diet as

good, I think of it as the most nourishing food I can put in my body.

Other people may experience a different feeling.

A while back a friend of mine came across an article about Natalie

Portman, the greenie of the moment. According to the article, Portman

enjoys traveling the world and spreading goodness on the off-season,

wishes she could ride a bike everywhere, and eats a vegetarian diet.

This doesn’t sound that strange or new to me. The insanity begins in

that every article in every kind of publication lately seems to focus

around “green” issues and “green” celebrities. You can’t look anywhere

without seeing the green bullshit.

One morning I sat down for breakfast and started reading one of the

local papers, *Willamette Week*. The feature article that week focused

on the ten-year anniversary of the Kyoto Protocol and how, geez, the

U.S. sure acts crazy not signing it, you know?! (Snoooore.) Anyway, the

article quotes a local vegan storeowner who said:

I think that people are aware [that veganism is touted as a solution to
global warming]. That’s not my motivating factor for being a vegan, but
a lot of big groups are using that as an emphasis point right now, when
people are giving a shit about their carbon footprint and all that.
“Look, it’s not just a bunch of animal-rights people! It’s the U.N.!” I
think for the most part, it’s not the people I know’s main reason for
doing it. It’s just kind of an added bonus.

I got angry, shut the paper, sat there seething in animosity, sipping my

Earl Grey tea and thinking, “We are totally and completely fucked.” Then

a young woman sat down at the table next to me. A waitress came up and

took her order. The waitress asked her, “Are you a vegan? Because our

pesto has dairy in it.” “Um. Yeah, *I’m vegan*,” replied the girl,

proudly and smugly, as though the waitress had just asked if she starred

in the summer blockbuster or played in some famous band. “Yeah. I have a

band. *I’m cool*.*”* “Yeah. *I’m vegan*. I’m doing my part to stop

global warming.”

The rage I feel at a “solution” that looks worse than the current system

suffocates me. I feel like bursting into tears, and I do, but the rage

often feels too strong. As I said in “Agriculture vs. Rewilding,”

grain-based diets stimulate a population growth feedback loop. That

should look like enough proof that a vegan diet supports population

explosion, deforestation, desertification, and overall ecological

collapse. The second largest reason the Amazon rainforest experiences

clear-cuts involves the growing of soybeans, a vegan staple. Trees,

specifically old-growth forests, act as the largest carbon-sink in the

world. The Amazon rainforest itself does more to prevent climate change

than anything people can do.

Now some vegans argue that those soybeans actually feed cattle and not

humans. What do you think McDonalds would do if everyone turned vegan?

Do you think they’d call it quits? Fuck no. Instead of feeding soy to

bovine cattle for Big Macs, they’d make a McNasty Soy Burger for human

cattle. Veganism as a solution to global warming looks as insane to me

as corn ethanol does for a solution to peak oil. These do not work as

solutions. They work like trying to put out a fire with gasoline.

Agriculture has caused all of our problems. So what do we come up with

as a solution? More agriculture! Fucking genius. Veganism just cuts out

the middleman of meat. Why feed grain directly to cows when you could

feed it directly to an ever-growing population of humans? Yes, factory

farms fuck shit up. But agricultural farms fuck shit up more and form

the foundations for factory farms.

My friend showed me a different article in the same local paper where

they interview a vegan “animal rights activist.” I couldn’t believe it

when I read the following line of questioning:

**WW:** While hunting may seem cruel in America, because it’s not
necessary for most people’s survival, what happens in a culture where
people must hunt to survive? Do animals still have the same rights?

**Vegan:** Animals are not on this planet for us to use. There needs to
be respect for the fact that they are individual living beings. If
people can live without using animals, they should do that.

What about plants? Plants live as individual beings. Do they not deserve

respect? How about having respect for the land and not clear-cutting the

Amazon to grow your soy or corn monocrop? People can only live without

eating animals within the agricultural economy. If people can live

without plants or animals or water or air, they should to that too. That

sounds like a complete lack of understanding of how whole systems work

together. If that sounds dissociative enough, then she drops this bomb:

**WW:** What about the Inuit in Canada, who help support themselves by
hunting?

**Vegan:** I’m not an expert on the Inuit. But if they can mine and sell
gas, diamonds, gold, and heavy metals, they can certainly ship in some
tofu. If everyone had as much respect for animals and the sacrifice they
make for humans as [they do] for native cultures, this world would be a
much better place.

“Ship in some tofu?” Okay, okay…I may not have some fancy-shmancy

“environmental studies” degree like she does, but I can smell bullshit.

Her comment sounds completely racist, because she puts the blame of

animal torture on native peoples and their way of life. Let me translate

her comment: “If they can have their entire culture destroyed by

civilization, then have their landbase destroyed at the hands of the

gas, diamonds, gold, and heavy metals corporations, they can certainly

eat something that has nothing to do with their lives whatsoever.”

Native cultures don’t “ship in” food because they live as natives.

Native *meaning* “belonging to a particular landbase.” We call them

natives precisely because they don’t ship in food from other lands.

Native hunting and gathering cultures did not create factory farming,

animal testing, or domesticated animals. These cultures do not “use”

animals, they *eat* them. After living sustainably in this way for

thousands of years and then having their culture and land destroyed by

civilization in a few hundred, now here comes a vegan missionary from

civilization telling them they need to stop living from their own

landbase and eat tofu made from soy, grown by civilizationists in the

deforested region of the Amazon basin, no doubt. All in the name of

animal rights? Someone needs to get their priorities straight.

Seriously.

Her comment demonstrates no understanding of indigenous philosophy or

compassion for their broken and destroyed cultures. That she would even

suggest that they import food shows she has no understanding of how

their cultures interact with the planet in a sustainable and ethical

way. That she would say that indigenous cultures receive more respect

than animals sounds just as insane. If you respected indigenous

cultures, you would not insult them by telling them they should live the

way you do. That sounds like cultural genocide, something they have

experienced the world over. Vegetarian and vegan mythology has no real

connection to place, nor an understanding of ecological principles of

food subsistence and sustainability. Here’s another great example:

The day before I last brought author Derrick Jensen to Portland, I got a

phone call. It went something like this:

**Lady:** Hi. I’m calling because I have some questions about the
Derrick Jensen talk tomorrow.

**Scout:** Okay, great. How can I help you?

**L:** Well, I’m trying to decide if I should go or not. I’m just
curious if Derrick Jensen is vegan or has ever mentioned veganism.

**S:** No. I know he is not a vegan, and I think he has written a little
bit about that. I’m sure he’d answer your questions about it if you came
tomorrow.

**L:** Well, I don’t know if I would have time to say everything now.
You see, global warming is a serious problem, and it’s caused by factory
farming. If everyone turned to a vegan diet, we would—

**S:** I’m sorry, I disagree with you. But I am not Derrick. If you’d
like to ask him about it, I’m sure you can do that tomorrow at the talk.

**L:** Well, I’m curious what part you disagree with.

(I hesitate, but feel a little vivacious, so I bite.)

**S:** Well, civilization is fueled through grain-based diets. I am
totally against factory farming, but civilization is only possible
through the domestication of grains, not animals. If everyone turned
vegan it would only fuel more desertification and population growth,
which means more consumption of everything.

**L:** But don’t you think that…

(The conversation goes on for about twenty minutes. I tell her that I
support animal rights but have nothing against killing animals. She says
she doesn’t have a problem with people killing animals either, but keeps
arguing that somehow veganism will help, even though I’ve described how
it can’t. Then she says something about meat being poison, and I say…)

**S:** Humans have been eating meat for three million years.

**L:** Well, they’ve also had slavery for three million years, so just
because—

**S:** That’s not true. Slavery only exists within civilizations.

**L:** Well, just because something has been happening for a long time
doesn’t mean we shouldn’t change it. Women weren’t allowed to vote at
one time, but that doesn’t mean they shouldn’t just because they
haven’t.

**S:** That has nothing to do with what we’re talking about. You just
said that meat is poison. We’re talking about evolution. Humans have
evolved to eat meat.

**L:** Then I guess you have never read the blah blah blah about how
meat does blah blah blah and is poison!

**S:** Actually, I have read a bunch of that, and it doesn’t make any
difference, because if it were poison I wouldn’t be talking to you right
now because we wouldn’t have lived for three million years eating it.
But that’s all beside the point anyway. The point is that humans have
eaten meat for three million years and lived in a sustainable, *ethical*
way (outside of civilization).

**L:** Well, humans have also lived as vegans for three million years!

**S:** No, they haven’t.

**L:** Yes, yes they have! In a *parallel dimension*.

**S:** ?!?

**L:** …

**S:** This conversation…is over.

(Click.)

I seriously couldn’t make this shit up. Even if a vegan dimension exists

(giving her the benefit of the doubt here), what the fuck does that have

to do with *this* dimension? I don’t think she came to the Q and A. I

made up my own little Q and A for your entertainment, though. It goes

like this:

**Q:** What do you get when you remove people from their connection to
their landbase, make them practice agricultural subsistence, put them in
a hierarchical social structure, and wait 10,000 years?

**A:** Racist vegans from Dimension X.

I support animal rights activism insofar as it recognizes the rest of

the world too. I support *animist* rights activism. I think all things,

humans and other-than-humans, deserve lives free of torture and

exploitation: animals, plants, insects, rocks, water, wind, and stars.

Of course, activism only becomes necessary when you have a culture that

does not recognize that those other-than-humans require respect.

“Rights” only become an issue when someone fucks you over and you can do

little about it.

Dieting vs. Rewilding

Most of us rewilding people do not yet have the skills or the land to

hunt and gather or practice horticulture fulltime, or the culture to

help us out. And yet undomesticating the food we eat seems at the very

heart of rewilding, since the very heart of domestication involves

growing our food: the domestication of food spawned the domestication of

everything. Converting to a domestic-free diet may prove difficult for

many, especially overnight. Lucky for us, ways exist to limit the amount

of domestication and the terms of the domestication of the food that we

eat without us having to hunt and gather or grow it all ourselves right

away. Hunter-gatherer-gardeners eat very different diets than those who

practice agriculture. Though diets vary drastically from bioregion to

bioregion, basic principles exist to put them into different categories.

Eating a wild diet reduces population growth factors and deforestation

Our modern diets come from practicing agriculture as a means for

subsistence. Agriculture refers to a method of growing food that

requires simulated catastrophe to inspire first-phase succession plants,

specifically grasses like wheat and corn but also other grains, legumes,

and some starchy tubers. You cannot grow grasses and grains inside a

forest, so people must create a catastrophe (fires, floods, clear-cuts)

to clear the forest to plant grass. Without human hands the area would

naturally recover over time. This requires constant catastrophe to keep

the field from turning back into a forest. When you change the land to

grow a monocrop of grains for human consumption, you increase the food

capacity of that land for human growth. This in turn causes the

population of humans to artificially inflate beyond what the forest

would support.

Monocropping creates all kinds of problems. Aside from the extraneous

amount of work (constant tilling) it takes to keep the land from turning

into a forest, monocropping depletes nutrients in soils and provides the

perfect environment for “pests” and disease. Because monocropping has

such fragility, people who use this method of cultivation must devise

solutions to live through poor yields. *Enter the food surplus*.

In order to combat the ills of agriculture, people invent prolonged food

storage, which leads to rampant population growth, which leads to more

cutting of forests to grow more grains for food storage, which leads to

more population growth, which leads to *civili-fucking-zation*. A

positive feedback loop of *grain fetishization* and *baby booming*.

Not all food planted in the ground can provide people with the protein

that causes population growth. You cannot feed a large population with

leafy greens. By choosing not to eat grains, you make the choice to stop

supporting the plants that make population explosion and deforestation

happen. Notably, a lot of deforestation these days involves cutting

forests down to graze cattle. However, cattle themselves take up land

that could otherwise feed more people if they grew grains on the land

instead, not to mention the grains they must feed the cattle themselves.

Animal domestication does not inspire population growth. Even the vegans

say that (=vegan.org=):

In a time when population pressures have become an increasing stress on
the environment, there are additional arguments for a vegan diet. The
United Nations has reported that a vegan diet can feed many more people
than an animal-based diet. For instance, projections have estimated that
the 1992 food supply could have fed about 6.3 billion people on a purely
vegetarian diet, 4.2 billion people on an 85% vegetarian diet, or 3.2
billion people on a 75% vegetarian diet.

Whoever wrote this does not understand the connection between population

growth and grain production. Veganism, while addressing many of the

terrible problems with animal cruelty and polluting factory farms, does

not address the larger force that drives population growth. In fact the

diet simply adds more *fuel* to the population growth *diet*. By taking

grains out of your diet you support another way of food subsistence and

limit population growth. I don’t want anyone to think that eating

differently will “save the world” or “bring down civilization.” Changing

your diet alone will not help that. It may simply lessen the destruction

you contribute as an individual person in civilization, and perhaps make

you feel better and healthier when the collapse does occur and most

people suffer grain withdrawal.

Eating a wild diet decreases waste products

By eating wild you reduce packaging and plastics. Produce and meat don’t

generally have a lot of wrappers, and wild foods have none at all.

“Yeah, I’ve got a landfill in my backyard: my compost pile, bitch.”

Eating a wild diet probably reduces carbon emissions (buzzword of the year!)

By buying locally you reduce the distance that the food needs to travel.

By buying produce and meat (wrapped in paper) you reduce the plastics

and energy used to package and preserve foods. Also, wild plant foods

rarely need cooking, so you save some energy there too. “I don’t do no

good at the math.” But I can make an educated guess here, no?

Eating a wild diet increases your health?

Let’s put our anti-civ ethics aside and just talk about our selfish

desire to feel great. Don’t get me wrong. I love pizza, cake, and ice

cream as much as the next kid. But I also have a wheat allergy (who

doesn’t, really?) and a lactose intolerance (again, who doesn’t?). I

love the taste of pizza and the satisfaction of eating it very much, so

much that I don’t mind the sloppy diarrhea that keeps me up half the

night when I eat it. I love it so much I don’t mind the constant sinus

infections and immune disorder. I don’t mind the sore knee joints and

itchy skin and swollen lymph nodes and stinky armpits and stomach

cramps…“Hmm. Can you put extra whipped cream on my 16 oz bacon and

peanut butter milkshake?”

Eating a wild diet makes you…wild!

Eating a wild diet frees you from the civilized economy and reconnects

you to your landbase.

And other dietary babble…

Some people theorize that agriculture came about as humans became

addicts to the doping effects of grains. Civilization, a culture of drug

addicts? Others theorize that the pathogenic, grain-loving microflora

that live in our bodies made us crave the grains, which made us practice

agriculture. So maybe the microflora controls us. Aaaaaah!

Raw foodists argue that meat also contains poisons that our bodies do

not digest well. I don’t necessarily disagree with them, so much

that…Who fucking cares? The bottom line here does not look like toxins

but ecological implications. Humans evolved to digest meat more smoothly

long ago. They also evolved to live in “equilibrium” with their

particular bioregions that require meat as a protein source…without

destroying their ecosystem. So eating meat, toxin or no, has no ill

effect on ecosystems. Some people have also developed less sensitivity

to grains. However, grain-based cultures must use agriculture to grow

those grains, and agriculture causes desertification of the planet.

Soooooo what does that tell us?

We should not confuse foods with their production methods. You can grow

a few grains in your horticulture garden and eat them occasionally, but

when you cut down the whole forest to grow your monocrop of corn, you

will begin to experience serious problems.

Your diet will not stop civilization

While we can all dream that simply changing our diet will solve all of

the problems we created, unfortunately it won’t.

Money vs. Rewilding

I don’t consider money the root of all evil, but I fucking hate it. Not

because I don’t have it, but because people fear living without it.

People don’t know how to live without it. People don’t know what living

looks like without it. People feel afraid of losing it. They would

rather have money than a community. They would rather live alone and

rich than hungry and surrounded by friends. Why?

The million-dollar question: *What replaces money in rewilding?* Money

works as a medium of exchange. =Dictionary.com= tells us that an

exchange means “to give up something for something else; part with for

some equivalence; change for another.” Money symbolizes this exchange.

It works as a stored exchange.

What do you need in order to eat in civilization? Money. What do you

need to clothe and shelter yourself in civilization? Money. What do you

need to entertain yourself in civilization? Money. What do you need to

get this money? If you don’t have independent wealth, you need a job. In

civilization, money equals support.

What does an exchange look like? Giving someone something for something

else. Giving something and getting something in return. A trade. Trade

seems like a funny word. It means both an exchange and what you do for

your livelihood. What do we do for money but trade our bodies and

services? To make my money I chop vegetables for other people to eat. I

then use the money to pay other people to chop vegetables for me to eat.

And why do I buy food at the grocery store? Because I don’t know how to

get it for myself. We trade our lives for services we cannot provide for

ourselves.

An exchange can’t happen without people providing a service or a product

(which really just means the service of making the product). What does

this service represent, really, but the actual person who performs it?

Without that person there, you have no service. The person exchanges

their time and skills. They exchange hours of their life that they will

never see again, to give something of themselves for something in

return. The exchange happens not for the product but for the person who

made it. An exchange involves people giving support to one another for

support they cannot receive by themselves. Neither the product nor the

services have any real value. The real value lies in the person who

provides the product or service.

This describes the essence of the tribal system that Daniel Quinn

articulates in his books: *give support*, *get support*. In tribal

cultures people relied on each other for the basic necessities of life.

Each person contributed their time, and in return found all of their

needs met. This may reveal why indigenous cultures found wealth in their

people, not in the material items they produced.

Money works as a symbolic representation of people, of tribe. We even

put pictures of people on our money. In civilization, people do not give

you support: money does. That demonstrates how money, although a

symbolic representation of people, holds more value than the people

making it. It reveals to us why people of our culture seek money more

adamantly than they seek actual friendships, and feel more willing to

abandon a friendship if it means getting more money. Psychologically,

If money serves as the foundation of your support, you will do whatever

you can to keep that money or get more. People fear living without it,

so they fight to keep it. I have participated in many tribal ventures

that have failed. I believe they failed because we could not see the

value of people over money. You can take the human out of civilization,

but you can’t take the civilization out of the human. None of these

tribal ventures attempted to operate without money; all of them existed

in fear of not making enough. When people feel afraid of not getting

enough money, they try to control the money. At that point the

hierarchical tendencies of civilized people infiltrate and destroy the

group.

I don’t mean to say that you can’t have a tribe and participate in the

monetary economy. If you look to people for support, or geese or salal

berries, you will do whatever you can to maintain those relationships

and create more. Gypsies use money, but I don’t think they value the

money they use more than their band. They do not feel afraid of going

hungry together, and from what I have read they have no social pressure

to become billionaires.

I believe that part of rewilding involves abandoning the value of money

over relationships. What do you replace money with? I think the more

appropriate question looks like this: what did people have before money?

They had a *tribe*. Money feels like a poor, unfulfilling replacement

for real people and real relationships. I want to live without money not

because I consider myself a “primitivist” but because I would rather

have a tribe. Plus, if we can prove to other people that we can do it,

hopefully their fear of living without money will dissipate and we will

have even more friends to hunt and gather with.

Video Games vs. Rewilding

While cleaning out his room, my buddy Willem found an old USB universal

game controller. Basically it looks and works like a PlayStation

controller but plugs into your computer. He said it used to belong to

his brother and asked if I wanted it. God help me, I said yes.

As a kid I played video games quite often. I did other things too. I

wouldn’t describe myself as your classic video game nerd or anything,

just a nerd who played video games. People have always known me to binge

on things. When I drink, I can’t have just one. I’ll drink until I pass

out, piss on someone’s couch, or convince someone to punch me in the

face (this describes why I no longer drink much at all!). Video games

have felt no different. I used to binge on one game and play it for

hours. The list, I think, goes like this: *Super Mario Bros*., *The

Legend of Zelda*, *Super Mario Bros*. *3*, *Super Mario World*, *Zelda*:

few others. I didn’t play a shitload of games, just a small amount very

often. At some point I decided it would work best if I just didn’t play

video games at all, just as I most recently decided that drinking and

smoking don’t work for me either.

A few years back when I began to formulate my understanding of the power

of mythology and story, I often conversed on the Joseph Campbell

Foundation forum. One day someone brought up video games as a newer

medium for mythology. A man argued heavily against this, saying, “Video

games are nothing but pure escapism. Something such as entertainment

that allows one to escape from their ordinary or unpleasant reality for

a time.”

The existence of the word *escapism* indicates another symptom of a

culture that does not meet our needs: escapism, the need to escape,

requires that one experiences reality as undesirable or unpleasant. No

wonder civilized people came up with the term. According to the mythos

of civilization, the world lies dead and we as farmers must suffer in

this life to go to heaven in the next. Who wouldn’t want to escape the

abuse this culture tells us we must experience?

This brings to mind the great, lengthy stories told by indigenous

peoples around the world, the stories that often take several weeks to

tell. Do these stories represent escapism or something else? Does a

difference exist between listening to a nine-day-long indigenous myth

and watching a twenty-four-hour marathon of *X-Files* episodes? I would

argue that they have a similar function—to spread and maintain a

culture’s myths (or memes)—but differ in their opposing value systems.

Indigenous stories connect people to physical reality, enriching the

physical world around them, while civilization’s stories continue to

take people further away from physical reality. *X-Files* taught me

nothing about the physical land I live on, nor how to live on it in a

sustainable way. Rather the show focuses on characters and places

“alien” to the planet. And while *X-Files* may have actually had

myths that put stock in a heaven and a god as alien to the earth as the

“grays.” Contrast this with the songlines of the Australian indigenous

peoples, which taught them how to move about real places in their land,

honor the gods of those places, and participate in a sustainable way

with the other-than-human “characters” they met on their travels.

I initially disagreed with the notion that video games work as pure

escapism, but the more I think about civilization’s mythology, the more

I realize how most of it involves escaping our perceived reality.

Whether you call yourself a scientist working to find another planet to

live on after we trash this one, a Christian who follows the Ten

Commandments and goes to church every Sunday in hopes of someday

escaping to heaven, or a *World of Warcraft* addict who spends your life

in a manmade virtual world, you spend your life trying to escape the

physical reality that indigenous peoples and nonhumans seem to love so

much. Entertainment works hard at escapism, in addition to drugs,

science, and religion. Video games merely act as the newest spokesman

for civilization’s escapist mythology.

Some civilized people attempt to destroy the myth that this world hates

us and that we must suffer in it. Old animist myths sometimes grow above

the invasive blackberry thicket of civilization’s religions, reminding

us the world has a life, a heart that cares and longs for us to remember

it back into existence. Ironically, much of the animist mythology that

came to me as a child came in the form of video games. Animism still has

a presence in modern Japanese culture, and Japanese culture produces a

large amount of games. While the physical act of playing video games may

take us out of physical reality, some games actually can and do teach or

inspire us to connect with the land and defend it against civilization.

Therefore, though video games come from civilization (which aims to

escape or dominate what it perceives as a cruel and wild world), not all

of the video games we play propagate those lies.

This does not negate that civilization created video games, and that it

takes an inherently unsustainable, industrial economy to make them.

Still, when I look back on my formative years I find that video games

had a much deeper impact on the foundations of the choices I make now

than I formerly realized.

Merry Christmas Mario

At the age of five I received a Nintendo Entertainment System on the

celebration of the Christ’s birth. On that day I witnessed the birth of

a newer, cooler spiritual leader who came with many faces: Super Mario,

Zelda, Donkey Kong. When I turned eleven I received another gift: the

life-changing myth they call *Final Fantasy 2*.

*Final Fantasy 2* (American Release)

your king’s motives for invading a neighboring community. You thereby

lose your rank as the leader of the army. The king gives the task of

delivering a small package to a nearby village of summoners (those with

the ability to summon earthly creatures). Upon arrival, the package

(rigged with a spell) explodes in flame and destroys the entire village.

During the fires you only have the ability to help one survivor, a

little girl who has just witnessed her whole family and village

destroyed by the demons in the package, delivered by you, by order of

the king. At this time you realize the king has gone mad and must die.

Rydia, the young “caller,” joins your newly formed resistance group for

the next big chunk of the game. Just when you think everything has

worked out, your boat sinks and everyone on your team drowns, including

the little girl. You wake up alone, stranded on a distant island.

They called her Rydia, my first love, and when she died I mourned for

her. For some reason I sympathized with her so much. Maybe because I

felt responsible for killing all her people. Maybe because I related to

feeling alone in the world. Maybe because she had cool green hair. Maybe

because she befriended the gods. When I lost her, I cried, heartbroken.

People say that this “is just a game.” I disagree. How do you perceive

games? Why do we tell stories? If mythology works as vehicles for

understanding spiritual archetypes, certainly games can have much more

power than people give them credit for. Rydia felt alive and real, the

innocence of the green flowering earth, who summons the elements and

converses with gods, and whose people (friends of gods) died by a

murderous holocaust that I unknowingly brought upon them by simply doing

what those in power told me to. I can’t think of a greater metaphor for

my role in civilization.

Although not by intention but by my relation to a diseased and jealous

king, I still understood it my moral obligation to look after her in an

attempt to undue, at the very least, a fraction of the injustice that I,

and my culture of kings, had done to her. I didn’t cry because a bunch

of pixels stopped appearing on the TV screen. I cried because my own

spirit died at the hands of my own culture, because I did what those in

power told me to do. The loss of her and what she represents in us all:

that part of us that still remembers the secret language of the gods. I

cried also because the story does not end there. Always we have more

story to uncover, more life to live. The world does not die with her but

weepily continues. We still have time to save what little life we have

left in the world from the greedy evil empire of civilization. I still

remember that on my eleventh birthday I saved the world from those who

wished to destroy it.

Sid Meier’s *Civilization*

I first played *Civilization* over at the Johnsons’ house. The Johnsons’

house always had wonderful clutter, with all kinds of interesting toys

and gismos and contained many distinct aromas that I have never smelled

anywhere else. The father carved wood into salmon, and up from the

basement always wafted the sweet smell of cedar filling the kitchen

where the computer sat. During summer, no matter the time or day of the

week, the computer had six or seven neighborhood kids surrounding it,

all engaged in feeding our young, curious intellects. Of all the games

we played in that house, I remember *Civilization* the most, because it

gave me a fundamental understanding of how civilization works: one wins

the game by either becoming the first civilization to colonize Alpha

Centauri (the closest solar system) or by destroying every other culture

on the planet. Your choice: colonization or genocide (two prongs on the

same pitchfork). While the game never said anything that goes against

civilization, it brought the unspoken premises of our culture to light

early on. This created the perfect primer for perspectives I later

discovered in reading Daniel Quinn, Derrick Jensen, Martín Prechtel, and

others.

*Diablo*

At fourteen I went to a local store, picked this game off the shelf, and

walked out the front door. The buzzers even went off. I kept walking,

expecting middle-aged rent-a-cops to bury me in a pig pile any second. I

took the long, scenic way home in case someone followed me. A strange

form of thievery paranoia I had never felt before came over me, even

though I had shoplifted many times before. It felt as though someone (or

some**thing**) had come with me from the store. I cradled the box

to my chest and hurried on, winding this way and that through the

neighborhood streets. When I got home I closed the blinds and watched

out the window for hours, unable to shake the feeling that something

watched me. A feeling that didn’t stop me from sitting down at my

computer and installing the game…

Six months later I sat in front of my computer and opened my eyes. I had

sacrificed much for this game: what little social life I had, beautiful

sunny afternoons spent inside. I suffered as an addict (or escapist).

You know that old saying, “You don’t smoke cigarettes, cigarettes smoke

you.” Well, *Diablo* definitely smoked me. At the time I didn’t think

about the mythic proportions of devils stalking and possessing me. I

felt weak from atrophied muscles, looked pale from lack of sunlight, and

felt depressed from not having real, physical friends. Then something

happened. Maybe I’d had enough, or maybe an angel came to rescue me from

the devil. As I fought in a battle deep within the fifteenth level of

hell, my left hand lifted from the keyboard and down to the eject button

on the CD-ROM. The CD tray slid out in slow motion, like the stone

monolith in *2001*: *A Space Odyssey*. I lifted the CD from its shrine

and bent the dense plastic until it snapped into two pieces, one in each

hand. I felt something warm trickle down my arm. I had sliced my hand

open, and now fresh blood flowed down my left arm onto the CD shard that

had given me the wound. I understood what had happened immediately: “If

I can’t have you, no one can.” The last lunge of a dying beast. The

ritual scarification of sacrifice. I squeezed my hand and ceremonially

bled on the now inanimate, unusable, transformed blades in my hands.

“You have no power over me,” I whispered, quoting Jennifer Connelly in

masters, albeit a mythological master comprised of ones and zeroes.

*Final Fantasy 7*

After *Diablo* I swore off video games. But then *Final Fantasy 7* came

out, and maybe the memories of Rydia told me to break my rule to play

this one. Just this one. Derrick Jensen mentioned a movie coming out in

which anarchists poison the world’s water supply and the government must

stop them. He said it would look more realistic if in the movie

group of *anarchists* had to stop them. This would threaten

civilization’s mythological system, however, so games, movies, and other

media with those stories rarely make it past the drawing board.

Somehow *Final Fantasy 7* slipped through the cracks. The quest begins

with Cloud (the character you play), hired as a mercenary to help a

terrorist group blow up a reactor. This reactor (an obvious metaphor for

a nuclear reactor) steals the earth’s life force (called Mako) for the

purpose of powering industrial civilization. After the corporations kill

innocent people (and blame the terrorists), your character becomes

morally involved with the terrorist group. The rest of the game includes

a number of great anti-civilization bits, like courting and befriending

indigenous people and rescuing an endangered species from an animal

testing lab. Squaresoft created this game before the term eco-terrorist

became popular. Years before the Green Scare. When I finished the game I

had logged over 100 hours working to take down this make-believe

civilization. At fifteen I saved the world all over again, from another

civilization. But after the credits rolled, the world I live in still

sat waiting for someone to rise up and save it. After having taken down

several civilizations, psychologically, perhaps that prepared me to do

it for real.

At nineteen I swore off video games (again!) after playing a game called

for about three hours. During the first three levels, you kill Asian

mobsters. When I say “Asian” I don’t really mean Asian, but iconic

representations of “Asian” facial features. You have to sneak up behind

them and kill them. The computer has artificial intelligence that makes

them look over their shoulders for you. I spent three adrenaline-fueled

hours as the main character, who looks like a white male with a shaved

head, killing computer-generated Asians. The next day as I walked in

downtown Portland, the crosswalk turned red before I got there. As I

approached the corner a man stood waiting. He happened to look over his

shoulder at me in a way very similar to the computer-generated

characters in the game. He looked Asian. I felt my hand reflexively

reaching for a gun to kill him with.

What. The. Fuck!? Anyone who plays down the brain-programming of video

games has no idea. Of course the military knows this; you can download a

similar game from =goarmy.com=.

So when Willem gave me the video game controller, I thought it may lead

to my end. But for the last several days I have played *The Secret of

Mana*, a game similar in plot to *Final Fantasy 7*, and have felt

disinterested. I asked myself why I didn’t enjoy playing games so much

anymore, and I realize I no longer feel the need to escape reality. I

love this reality, this planet. Nothing artificial or manmade could

rival the beauty of the real world. I enact a real story that happens

right here, right now, in *this* place.

I no longer play a hero. I live as one.

Robots vs. Rewilding

Everyone knows that I hate robots. I have hated them for as long as I

can remember. They give me the chills and cause me to go into fits of

anger. I never really understood it. I guess I just chalked it up to

them representing everything I hate about civilization: technology,

control over life, consumerism, hipster-novelty…on and on.

At the Daft Punk Alive 2007 tour, standing in a crowd of people, facing

a stage where two men danced in robot suits, in the middle of a giant

pyramid, I realized just why I hate robots so much: they symbolize the

future. I mean, obviously not the *actual* future, but civilization’s

1923, from English translation of 1920 play “R.U.R.” (“Rossum’s
Universal Robots”), by Karel Čapek (1890–1938), from Czech robotnik
“slave,” from robota “forced labor, drudgery,” from robotiti “to work,
drudge,” from an Old Czech source akin to Old Church Slavonic rabota
“servitude,” from rabu “slave” (see orphan), from a Slavic stem related
to German Arbeit “work” (Old High German arabeit)

class system means hierarchy. Here we have Daft Punk, two guys dressed

as robots standing inside a giant pyramid. Two symbols of hierarchy with

tens of thousands of worshippers. Perhaps two wrongs make a right?

One classic motif of robot mythology that I find fascinating involves a

robot seeking to feel human emotion. I can think of several examples:

Alive!”), *Star Trek*: *The Next Generation* (Data’s constant quest),

the reimagined *Battlestar Galactica* (Cylons have feelings too), and

trying to become human. We can trace all of these back to Pinocchio, the

marionette who wanted to live as a real boy. Perhaps the robot quest

alludes to animist mythology, that even inanimate objects can have

feelings. Or maybe the robot quest symbolizes the slave class of

civilization trying to reclaim their humanity. But I have another

theory.

The real myth of any robot quest looks like this: in the future robots

will have feelings too. I identify several premises here. First, the

future will have robots. Second, robots do not currently have feelings.

This reflects two fundamental myths of civilization: that civilization

will go on despite its inherent environmental destruction, and that

other-than-humans (whether rocks, animals, plants, or wind) do not have

feelings, do not have life, but like the robots we build, exist solely

for our exploitation.

Now you might ask, “Why the hell would you, Urban Scout, go to a Daft

Punk show?!? You hate robots! They give you the chills!” Well, you got

me there. Despite their robot costumes and pyramids, I love their music

and my friend got me in for free. Oh, the hypocrisy! I know. What can I

say? I made the trip to Seattle from Portland to see these robots

perform live, and what a show. I felt blown away by the amazing light

show they put on.

In an interview called “Pyramid Schemers,” Daft Punk’s Thomas Bangalter

says,

It’s definitely fun to invent characters and to play around with them.
It’s almost this older concept of superheroes in comic books, where you
have a line between fiction and reality, or between a regular and an
animus character, and some kind of frantic image of another
alter-ego—which are those robots.

I think a lot of the things we’ve been doing since we evolved into
robots is really the concept of technology versus humanity. The science
fiction is fun and entertaining, but in a very humble way this whole
robot thing is only a metaphor for technology and its place today in the
world, and in music. That’s the whole idea behind the show.

In a funny way, the Daft Punk robots symbolize the exact opposite of

what I do. They dress up like their vision of the future (the

technological complexity of robots), and I dress up like my vision of

the future (the technological simplicity and elegance of the

hunter-gatherer). In my mind their future projection has no legs in the

real world. It takes an industrial economy to build machines. It takes a

civilization to have an industrial economy, and it takes agricultural

practices to build a civilization. Since we know that agriculture

destroys biodiversity, any sustainable future necessarily excludes

robots.

I only hope that as time goes on, my work will inspire 10,000 people to

come together to rewild and walk away from robots, pyramids, and

slavery.

Superheroes vs. Rewilding

I often find myself rooting for the villains in the movies I watch these

days. Most of civilization’s superheroes act as police officers with

special powers. Take Spider-Man: a cop who can climb buildings.

Superman: a cop who can fly and shoot lasers out of his eyes. The Jedi:

cops with glowing swords who can move things with their minds (no, they

fight the Evil Empire, right? right?!). Batman: the vigilante guardian

of civilization. They all succeed where the cops fail.

None of these heroes ever attack those who do the real damage:

polluters, dictators, death squad soldiers, logging companies, dam

builders, and a million other groups fucking up the planet. Okay, maybe

Captain Planet. But how long did that lame show last? Who attacks those

things in civilized mythology? The villains. Sometimes the villains just

act as people even more power-hungry than those in power. These villains

who want to “take over the world” only become villains because they have

challenged the unspoken power relationship in civilization. You cannot

do harm to those above you on the hierarchy. Even if you simply wish to

climb the hierarchy. You must do it the way the state approves: through

slave labor. Exploitation proves the only way to move up the pyramid, as

moving up implies you stand above others.

The hero serves an important role in mythology. Our heroes show us how

to behave. In civilized context, they show us “right” and “wrong” with

their actions. They teach us to protect and serve civilization,

specifically the rich and powerful. So what does a rewilding,

anti-civilization hero look like?

I like the villains who just want to tear the whole system down. Like

Batman’s arch-nemesis, the Joker. And of course, no other historical or

mythological figure makes guerrilla warfare look cooler than Robin Hood.

Living in the wild and stealing from the rich to give to the poor? If

only Robin Hood and the Joker could join forces!

A rewilding hero would stand as a “bioregional patriot.” They would move

us from the paradigm of identification with a nation, with civilization,

to identification with the land. People who protect and serve the land

they live on, outside of civilization’s control. Living in and with the

wilds, pushing the rewild frontier in on civilization. While those in

urban environments experience the worst of a collapsing monolith, those

out in the wild will live freer lives, just as Robin Hood did. For

rewilding to catch on, we need role models. We need heroes. Real or

imagined. And we need them now.

Ageism vs. Rewilding

In our culture, the young and the elderly receive the worst prejudice

and abuse. We force children into schooling where the system coerces

them to do what those in power tell them. Then when people reach a

certain age they get dumped into nursing homes and forgotten. Oppression

of the young and old happens so consistently it looks normal to us, and

most people don’t see it as oppression. In fact most people don’t see it

at all. As you age you see a positive progression up the hierarchy. As

an adult you forget the oppression suffered as a child while accepting

the benefits that come with growing older. Once you reach a certain age,

people no longer perceive you as “productive” or “useful,” and once

again you plummet to the bottom of the pyramid.

Civilizationists like to project hierarchy onto nonhierarchical

structures. This happens when we look at an indigenous culture’s system

of information dispersal and transformation. One of the elements of

culture commonly discussed in rewilding involves the notion of “elders,”

specifically their purpose in an indigenous context. The concept of

elders has not evaded civilized cultures entirely, although civilized

“elders” transmit a very different structure than those of indigenous

peoples.

In indigenous cultures, elders help keep their communities intact by

teaching the young about the ways of nature. We know that a tactic of

white civilizationists, used to assimilate Native Americans, involved

estranging the young from their elders. An elder from a native’s

perspective does not look like someone with generic “wisdom” but someone

with a special kind of wisdom that relates to living closely with their

particular landbase.

To call an elder simply *an* *old person with wisdom* does little

justice to the wisdom traditional elders actually hold about their

place. “Wisdom” varies from worldview to worldview. In a world based on

direct experiences in a particular landbase, elders would have logged

the most time observing that land. It makes sense that they would hold

the key to cultural transmission. Elders occur more organically in that

kind of system. They do not force their knowledge or perception of the

land on younger people. The younger people recognize that these older

people can give them insights into how to live on that particular piece

of land, in that particular way. In a culture that continually destroys

its landbase, we can rest assured that our “elders” have no land-based

wisdom. Noticing that the elderly people in civilization do not have

special, landbase-wise qualities, and do not act as keepers of a

sustainable culture, some people have made the distinction between these

civilized *olders* and native *elders*.

I find it funny when older people use the phrase, “You act childish.”

Children have a nature of their own, for sure, but mostly they mimic the

adults and culture around them. So they act out how they see their

parents act. They reenact their parents. Therefore children don’t act

childish, they act adultish. And as American children have proven time

and time again, most adults act like crazy, controlling assholes.

I have seen many wilderness-style programs mistakenly refer to elders as

“the over fifty crowd,” as though the age of fifty signifies something.

Perhaps in real, intact indigenous cultures the elders have aged over

fifty years, but this distinction does not apply to civilization’s

olders. What happens when you take a bunch of crazy, controlling,

asshole-ish olders and tell them they need to live as elders? All hell

breaks loose. I have noticed that within a culture based on domination

it seems all too easy to simply project domination onto an egalitarian

system and call it egalitarian. This methodology has spawned many

vampiric olders who seek nothing but a power-over relationship with

youth, which I have experienced firsthand. Without fully articulating an

elder’s social position, we see a bunch of olders who now think of

themselves as elders. I only know one word to describe such a person:

fraudulent.

It seems many older people feel entitled to praise and respect from

youth, despite their potential lack of experience or wisdom. I see

olders adultishly attempt to assert themselves as elders the way nerdy

children in middle school flounder while trying to act “cool” (myself

included there). Rather than have comfort with themselves, olders want

to have something they don’t. They can fake it for a while, but

eventually the younger people expose the deception by the olders and

take their friendship away. Rich, childless olders seem the most common.

They can’t even hold a conversation with a younger person without

pointing out their age. To olders, people within a domination-based

civilization, an elder looks like someone in a position of power. Power

the older never had. And when young people buy into that…disaster

ensues.

We define both olders and elders by age and yet age does not indicate

experience. Experience indicates experience. Age *relates* to experience

because the more you age, the more experience you have. However, the

kinds of experiences you have determine what you know, how you know, and

what you have learned from your experience. A particular set of

experiences gives someone a particular kind of wisdom.

Experience forms the foundation of wisdom, and indigenous cultures

worked well at regulating experiences through yearly rituals. It makes

sense that they would have a group of people who had reached a certain

age and gone through all the same rituals and rites and shared similar

experiences that the youth had yet to go through. The group we refer to

as elders became members of that group not because they aged, but

because they went through similar rituals together on a particular piece

of land and undertook the facilitation of those rituals on behalf of

younger people.

If we understand that an elder means someone who has gone through many

rites and rituals, it makes sense that they would know and feel things

beyond our recognition. Civilization breeds experiences that destroy our

relationship to the land. While a high school diploma may serve as a

rite to many of us, how many high school graduates know how to live

sustainably? How many indigenous eighteen-year-olds do? Civilization’s

elders, or olders, carry the wisdom of denial, distraction, and

escapism.

If we see how age creates an elder in this kind of indigenous culture,

and how age relates to power within civilization, we can easily see how

a civilized person would project their worldview onto another. The term

the top of which elders sit. If elders get some sort of special

treatment, it involves their dependency on the younger. I don’t get an

elder a plate of food because they have a special status in a hierarchy

but because they have trouble walking. It almost seems as if their

powerlessness in physicality has given them power in sociality or

spirituality. This leads to another quality of an elder: humility. It

seems that elders carry humility, not only because of years of learning

from nature but also because, like children, they require help from

people stronger and healthier than they.

If *elder* refers to someone with humility who has gone through

experiences I want to go through, who has rewilded in my particular

bioregion and has wisdom of living with it over a long period of time,

well…none exist. Not within my culture anyway. Bits and pieces of wisdom

exist here and there in different native people and in books. I use

those to cobble together my future. This shows another example the

importance of honoring living native communities and allying with them.

Perhaps someday we’ll have elders again, but it will probably happen

without anyone noticing the change. The key to having a successful

culture does not involve mimicking what we see natives doing, but truly

understanding how their cultures function. A highly functional culture

produces elders who teach the young how to have a highly functional

culture. In a culture without elders, rewilding humans need not try to

act like them. We need to learn how to live with the land. Those who

experiment in living with the land, regardless of their age, reveal the

people that I have something to learn from. And when these people have

aged with the land and gained much knowledge and experience, young

people will naturally want to know how to follow in their footsteps.

School vs. Rewilding

Indigenous cultures do not have schools. In fact in three million years

of human history, we’ve only had schools for a few hundred. What does

that tell you? People did fine without schools, lived sustainably

without schools. In spite of all its rhetoric of education, civilization

continues to destroy the planet at an accelerating rate. Not only did we

do fine without schools, we did better.

I always hated school. No wait, I mean, I always *fucking* hated school.

In fact I dropped out five times from four schools. Four of the programs

I actually chose to go into myself. The fifth, compulsory schooling, no

one ever gave me a choice. As soon as I realized I had a choice, I left.

Even those who claim to have loved school can’t possibly honestly mean

it. My friend Willem loves it when people say, “I liked school.” He

simply replies, “So you stayed inside and cried during all of your snow

days?” Unless they liked school in the Stockholm syndrome sense (also

called trauma-bonding), in which people become sympathetic and loyal to

their captors or abusers.

Schooling not only destroys our passion for life, it also never allows

us to know it exists. As children we have no choice but to place trust

in our culture to meet our needs. We do what it dictates, expecting to

learn how to live in the world. Placed in school, with a

one-size-fits-all curriculum, we do not learn to follow the things in

life that interest us and give us power as individuals. The hierarchy of

school falls into place quite easily because some kids do really well in

school. This puts all the kids who don’t do well lower on the pyramid.

Of course the ones who do well in school enjoy it because they reap the

benefits of sitting higher on the hierarchy. Those who do what teachers

ask of them (homework, raising their hand to speak, asking to use the

restroom), those who have no difficulty tossing out their

individuality—their soul—reap the benefits: pizza parties, good grades,

honor role, the elitism and pride that come from thinking you have more

smarts than your fellow classmates.

I hated school. But that doesn’t mean that I hated all of my teachers.

On the contrary, I think that teachers themselves simply serve as

captives of a larger system. I had some really great teachers who shaped

my life, and some real assholes too. Most teachers don’t realize this

and think they can change the system or work the system. Unfortunately

the system itself does the teaching, and you cannot change a flawed

system. It doesn’t matter what subjects you learn or teach, the system

(or structure) teaches you the real lessons: watch the clock, follow

instructions, fear those in power and your peers, and understand that

those in power determine your intelligence and self-worth.

In elementary school my teachers loved me. They raved to my parents

about my creativity and imagination. They placed me in the TAG (Talented

and Gifted) program in kindergarten. I believed I had more smarts than

those not in the program because I had more “talent” and more “gifts,”

which led to an elitist attitude. Conversely, those who didn’t go to TAG

felt like they did not have the same intelligence, which filled them

with self-loathing.

In my first year of middle school I attended Outdoor School, a public

school program for children to learn about nature. By the time I went to

Outdoor School I had participated in Boy Scouts for about one year. At

my Boy Scout camps I could wander off for hours into the woods as long

as I had a buddy, a watch, a compass, and told people which direction I

started in and when I planned to arrive back in camp. This allowed all

the freedom a young child could ask to explore the beauty of nature

without interference. We could simply experience nature without any

the sight of an adult and had to constantly take notes in a mindless,

boring way with industrial-made instruments. How do you make the natural

world totally fucking boring and alienating? Projectile vomit the

compulsory schooling structure onto it, and voila: Outdoor School. Of

course, the only way you could get funding to put school kids outside at

all would involve tainting the experience through the same old schooling

process.

All week the counselors spoke of a “Plant Village” that we would

experience on Thursday. They really built it up. All week we heard the

hype. I remember thinking at twelve years old, “Hell, with all this

hype, at least Plant Village will be pretty cool.” On the

long-anticipated morning of Plant Village, we met in a large circle. It

went something like this:

**Counselor:** All right, now the moment you’ve waited all week for…
Does everyone feel ready for PLANT VILLAGE?!?

**Campers:** YEEEEEEEAAAAHHHH!!!

**Counselor:** Awesome! You won’t believe your eyes when you see it!

*(pause)*

**Counselor:** But! Before we go to plant village we’ve selected a
*special* group of kids who get to go on a special, *super cool* hike to
an old growth forest… instead!

*(Pause… all the kids look around confused. I think to myself, “Why the
hell would anyone want to go to an old growth forest after all this hype
over plant village?”)*

**Counselor:** Okay, if I read out your name come stand over here.

The counselor began to call out names. The first three names called

belonged to the three loudest *African American* kids in my class, and

it became painfully obvious what the teachers had done (not to mention

the unarticulated connection between class and race and hierarchy). They

dreamed up this bullshit hike in order to get the “troublemakers” as far

away from Plant Village as possible so that it would run smoothly. Then

they called a few other names of some obnoxious white kids, and it

confirmed my theory. I felt so embarrassed for those kids. Then the most

shocking, transformative, eye-opening thing happened to me: *they called

my fucking name!*

The psychological pain felt intense. This story still makes me tear up

with rage as I recall it. I couldn’t quite talk at first. I felt winded.

“*Am* I a troublemaker?” I thought in B-English. “They think I *am* a

troublemaker?” This confused me all to hell. Just a year before, my

teachers thought of me as the clever, creative genius. I remember

thinking, “Oh. You think I belong with the troublemakers? Okay. Fine.

I’ll give you what you want. *I’ll make some fucking trouble*.” I looked

at Marcus, someone who acted like such an asshole to me (threatening me

with a knife several times that year), and for the first time I felt

such sympathy towards him and all the others in this group. I got it. If

they had mislabeled me, they had mislabeled all of us, and in doing so

gave us permission to make trouble. If those in power tell you what you

“are,” then you must give them what they want. At that point I stopped

doing homework and completely lost interest in school. I didn’t really

do much “troublemaking” because I didn’t have the energy for it. I fell

into a suicidal depression that year that lasted until I transferred to

an alternative arts high school for my sophomore year (which I later

dropped out of).

I never fucking asked about Plant Village, but it probably sucked balls.

Because of my decline in interest, my freshman year of high school the

counselors placed me in “intermediate math,” aka math for allegedly

not-so-smart kids. I had the wits to read through the lines and see the

hierarchy of “intelligence”: Advanced Math (smart kids), Algebra 1

(normal kids), and Intermediate Math (dumb kids). Of course, none of the

kids in any of those classes had more smarts than anyone else; these

classes merely reflected the arbitrary one-size-fits-all curriculum. I

demanded my counselor change me to normal math. But the time I spent in

intermediate math made me realize that those kids had about as much

interest in school as I did, and it had nothing to do with their actual

intelligence.

By experiencing the full spectrum of the intellectual hierarchy, from

smart TAG kid to stupid math kid, I understood the hierarchy in a way

none of my peers did. Especially because I fell down the ladder of

hierarchy rather than climbing it. I lost benefits and saw the results

instead of gaining benefits and losing sight of previous psychological

abuse. Those who do well all through school or those who do better later

do not see or forget what it feels like to sit at the bottom. While

those who suffer at the bottom, like cattle raised in cages for meat,

never get a taste of the benefits; they don’t know anything better.

Looking back now, I can’t imagine a better way of killing the souls of

children and preparing them for slavery. It looks rather genius and

sinister, and it should. The same great minds who facilitated the Great

Depression and the creation of the Federal Reserve—J. P. Morgan,

Rockefeller, Woodrow Wilson, and others—brought us compulsory schooling

because, as Woodrow Wilson said, “We want one class to have a liberal

education. We want another class, a very much larger class of necessity,

to forgo the privilege of a liberal education and fit themselves to

perform specific difficult manual tasks.” The first class, who would

receive “a liberal education,” obviously included the rich, those who at

the time attended private colleges (before they came up with the genius

idea of trapping poor people in debt by enticing them to pay for this

“liberal education”).

By dropping out of high school (to teach myself wilderness survival), I

faced the wrath of mythology pertaining to “drop-outs”: having to flip

burgers and pump gas for the rest of my life. Funny, in the real world

you realize just how much a high school diploma, and yes, even a college

degree, will get you: not a damn thing but thousands of dollars in debt.

From age sixteen to nineteen, I worked at coffee shops as the youngest

employee with no “education.” I made the same amount and performed the

same tasks as the twenty- to thirty-somethings who all held not just

high school diplomas but college degrees as well.

In a hierarchical economy, only a few people actually work the job they

wanted, and only a few get paid to do what they went to school for. But

more importantly, to work at the bottom of the pyramid, you don’t have

to have shit for a degree, and since most people get degrees these days

(or try) it means a whole lot of slaves in a whole lot of debt, just to

have a piece of paper that they didn’t need to work the job they do. The

only perk the piece of paper has amounts to the feeling of

self-satisfaction for having attained the paper. Anyway, if you think

you need a degree to get a job, you can always just lie. I’ve never

heard of anyone actually checking.

The smugness with which many high school and college grads refer to

their “education” makes me want to vomit. Most people get what they call

an education, and yet they don’t even know anything about reality. I

mean, about the physical reality of this planet and its workings and its

other-than-human community. For example, how many people, specifically

urban people, know five native plants? Their medicinal uses? How to

process them to make them most effective? We have no knowledge of

self-sufficiency outside of civilization’s economy. We do not know how

to get food, except from the handouts of our masters as we perform

physical and psychological slavery while exploiting the planet for them.

If forced schooling didn’t fuck you up enough, how about making you pay

to have your mind inculcated into a civilized paradigm, then believing

it made you all the better?

College strengthens our resolve in hierarchical structures by making us

invest finances in civilized mythology. As children we never really had

a choice: our parents made us go to school. Later in life they made us

choose (and pay) to go, further solidifying our belief in these systems.

This only deepens the denial of college grads; if we spent all that time

and money for nothing, we would have to face the reality of our way of

life and admit that civilization duped us.

You only need a resume for one reason: to work for someone you don’t

know. All my life in school we learn that we need to have a diploma so

that we can write it on our resume. But why do we need a resume? What

does a degree really mean? If you have a large social network, you don’t

need a resume because people know you and they know what qualifies you

to have a particular job. You don’t need a resume to start your own

business. You don’t need degrees to start your own business. A resume

stands in for lack of relationships with people. A degree says, you

don’t know this person, but they have had this particular training that

you believe qualifies them for this job. Again, you can always lie.

I—and nearly everyone I have spoken to—have lied plenty of times! To

live as an entrepreneur, you simply need *street cred*. We all know that

most of the things we learn in school we won’t use or we forget after

the test. This means that if you actually have earned street cred, you

did so through using information (meaning you won’t forget it because it

has a purpose beyond an arbitrary test) and doing things you’ll continue

to do.

Just because the system of schooling further ingrains our dependency on

the hierarchy doesn’t mean you can’t derive value from schooling; it

just comes at the cost of training your brain in a systemic way. We need

a new system of education that works against hierarchy, against creating

slaves dependent on the system to provide their needs in exchange for

painfully laborious, soul-sucking work.

We need to rewild the way we see education. *School ≠ education*. I can

hear you say, but what about schools that teach rewilding skills? If I

want to live as a hunter-gather and have no need for money, then

spending time running classes to get money looks hypocritical. What if I

spent that time hunting and gathering with friends instead? Then I

wouldn’t need money. It works as a paradox. Of course, we all have to

start somewhere, and the schools that teach rewilding skills work as a

great place to meet people interested in rewilding. This paradox can do

more harm than good if you get caught in its pitfalls.

I have noticed that many students of these programs (myself included at

one time) become dependent on them. Rather than seeking out

relationships with people who practice rewilding near our homes, we pay

people money to teach us, without having to build a relationship with

them. It doesn’t help you build a relationship that will last. These

schools don’t build friendships, or culture, which works as the real

teacher. You still pay the person money to hang out with them.

I often justify teaching rewilding skills for money as a means of

escaping wage slavery. And yet I have come across many rewilding

programs that can never make that much money, so you spend so much time

trying to get students and marketing your classes that you don’t have

much time for hunting and gathering. Again, it becomes a paradox.

Not everyone wants a community. Some people want to learn these skills

and take them back to their community, and that works well for people

like me who love to teach but feel a little guilty and lame for not

spending more time working on building my own community. If I can help

individual communities by exchanging my skills for some cash, I feel no

guilt. This shows the real value in schools. A community with no skills

sends a member to go learn them at a school and return to share them.

At a seven-day primitive skills school I went to, the celebrity teacher

told everyone that if they couldn’t survive it meant their “skills

sucked.” That kind of attitude can make you feel guilty about not living

100% wild. Fuck that. We don’t have a wild culture to provide for us for

twelve years while we learn to rewild, and we don’t have time to feel

guilty about it. But we do have modern technology and resources that we

can leverage to our benefit. We can use them to replicate the support of

the culture we don’t have, while we build it.

This school also claimed that you would have all the skills to “survive

lavishly” by the end of the week. A nice fantasy, but in reality you

cannot learn to rewild in seven days. I find it funny when I ask Joe

Blow if he thinks he could survive the collapse of civilization and he

says, “No problem.” Of all the time I have spent rewilding, I would

never make such a claim. At this point I don’t really concern myself

with surviving the collapse as much as I feel concerned with breaking

out of the prison of civilization. Indigenous peoples don’t “survive in

the woods.” They practice ancient, streamlined, seasonal routines that

provided comfort, enjoyment, and sustainability. Because of their

routines they live(d) in an environment *teeming* with wild foods now

decimated by civilization. So tell me, if civilization collapsed

tonight, could you live that way tomorrow? The next day? Six months from

now? Five years from now? Five hundred years from now? How long does it

take to build that kind of culture? How long did it take to build the

Amazon? How long does it take to die of thirst or hypothermia or the flu

(without antibiotics)? How many people could our ravaged lands support?

Would you still answer, “No problem?”

I appreciate these programs, workshops, and schools for what they teach,

but I believe you can’t really learn or truly know something by reading

about it in a book or listening about it at a lecture at a school. I

like to use the example of learning foreign languages. You can learn it

in a class or you can immerse yourself in a place where you can only

speak the one language. I can take classes or read books about

participating in nature, or I can go out and immerse myself in a

primitive lifestyle. Similarly, most Americans learn Spanish with the

intent to *visit* Mexico, but how many of them learn Spanish so they can

speak. We need to create rewilding cultures immersion-style.

By using these civilized forms of information hoarding, rewilding skills

remain under lock and key by forcing people to participate in the

economy of civilization for access to the information, while continuing

to spread the alienation and lack of culture that promotes this way of

life. As long as this remains true, we will never have what it takes to

form these rewilding cultures. I do not mean to devalue schools that

teach rewilding skills, I only point out that if you use money in place

of real relationships, civilization owns you. Schools that teach

rewilding can work as a great first step, but if we yearn to move beyond

civilization and truly rewild, if we wish to get the knowledge that will

allow us to unlock the food, we must work to unlock the knowledge and

skills of rewilding. We need to change our strategies for sharing this

information.

Current strategies

The field guide, web information

Books cost money. Some may perceive this as trading and not as hoarding:

exchanging money for information. Information stored in books generally

remains under lock and key. In a field guide, the knowledge of skills

remains locked in a book. Copyright laws prohibit an individual from

dispersing the information. Also, books seal information in a fixed

state; once written down, the information cannot change. This makes

books themselves a kind of false guide, as rewilding bases itself on an

ever-changing landscape.

Primitive skills schools

By their nature, schools form hierarchical relationships. Information

flows one way, from the minority (of instructors) to the majority (of

students). By paying an “expert” to teach you about skills, or as an

instructor, you become obligated to give the students their “money’s

worth.” Information at primitive schools remains under lock and key. In

order for primitive skills schools to stay in business, free access to

primitive skills information and communities must not exist. The schools

themselves represent the lock and money represents the key to this

knowledge. Ideologically those who start wilderness schools generally

don’t have the intention of training people to rewild.

Primitive skills rendezvous

The rendezvous represents the closest format of information sharing to

Open Space Technology. You must pay money to attend, and you must seek

the approval of the organizers in order to hold a class. Some rendezvous

do not cost money and some do.

Emphasis on artifacts

Most of these sources emphasize physical skills and crafts such as

flint-knapping, basketry, and hide tanning. How many “primitive skills”

books, schools, and rendezvous teach invisible social technologies such

as childrearing, storytelling, clear communication, group meetings, oral

ecology, hunter-gatherer land management practices, etc.? Not many.

Unlocking rewilding knowledge

Community-building skill-shares

By running a public skill-share (such as a rewild camp) you can attract

more people to rewilding and promote awareness for it while learning

skills from others in the community. You can also run a private

skill-share for family and friends. The purpose of the skill-share comes

back to the idea of building relationships and forming real cultures

that hunt and gather together. I believe in exchanges and trading, and

the skill-share does exactly that. You share your skills and learn from

others who share theirs. You exchange your talents and knowledge instead

of money.

----

If we wish to unlock the food, but in order to do that we must first

have the knowledge of how to procure food, it follows that we must

unlock this information. Rewild.info and community-building skill-shares

attempt to make the primitive skills school, field guide, and old-school

rendezvous nearly obsolete (in terms of function). I believe it would

behoove us to borrow the hacker philosophy of freedom of information and

start spreading it as fast as we can.

Voting vs. Rewilding

Voting—the last bastion of mind control that civilization holds over

many of us anti-civilizationists. I mean, why not vote? Just scribble in

a few bubbles and drop the paper in a box. Voting can’t hurt, right?

…Wrong!

We all know, even those of us who continue to vote, that voting does not

change anything. It merely absorbs your energy and keeps you

psychologically invested in the outcome of a broken system that your

vote cannot fix. Voting works as another form of denial: believing that

we can have a quick fix. Denial that if we just change people, not the

system itself, things will work out. Even though we all know things

won’t change much.

Now, you may say, “If it doesn’t really matter, who cares if I vote or

not?”

Like telling Canadians to vote in the American election, rewilding

involves the creation of a new system. We don’t want to change the

leaders of our culture, we want to create a new culture altogether. By

voting you only prove that you still have a psychological investment in

denial. The idea that it doesn’t matter, doesn’t mean, “So do it

anyway.” It takes time to think about who to vote for, what laws to vote

for, and then the disappointment and heartache you feel the day of the

election when even though the dipshit you voted for wins the popular

vote, some other asshole steals the election anyway. WTF? Voting takes a

lot more energy and investment than filling out a sheet of paper and

dropping it in a slot. That investment of your energy goes right to the

evildoers of civilization. “Ha ha! We got them to vote another time!”

“I’ll stop voting when I have a feral culture to join.” This argument

for voting makes more sense to me. And yet, to that I would respond:

only one way exists to create a feral culture, and that involves walking

away from civilization. We can have a foot in both worlds, sure, but

voting doesn’t show your active involvement in lessening damage (voting

for the lesser of two evils), it merely shows you still want to remain

in denial. Walk away. Walk away. Let it go.

Of course, we also hear that real change doesn’t happen with voting in

politics but when we “vote with our dollars.” Fuck that. “Voting with

dollars” means the same thing as voting: investing in civilization.

Whether physically with money or psychologically with a ballot. Buying

“green” light bulbs will not save the planet, and the more time we spend

believing that technology will save us rather than learning to abandon

those technologies, the more time we commit to destroying the planet.

One may argue that one leader will do “less damage” than another, but it

comes back to your investment of energy. When you vote, you feed the

system. Deciding who to vote for, reading up on issues, and all that

crap takes time away from rewilding and programs your brain to actually

care about the outcome. When the bigger asshole wins (or more accurately

steals) the election, you find yourself caring a lot. And for what?

Now I like the idea of the slogan “Vote with bullets, not ballots,”

because it brings more attention to how real change could come about: by

eliminating the state’s monopoly on violence and allowing people, local

communities to choose how to behave. Though I still think “Vote with

bullets, not ballots” implies revolution within the hierarchy, not the

dismantling of it, because hey, if you still think in terms of voting,

you still think in terms of changing the system. Whether you vote with

ballots or bullets, the system remains.

Now I could say, “Vote with your feet and walk away,” but by using the

term *vote*, we still operate on the language (and therefore culture) of

the abuser. I think saying, “Don’t vote, walk away,” sounds more like a

cowardly hunger strike. “I’ll walk away until you decide to change your

ways!” It makes no sense either. Don’t vote at all.

Now comes the part where I tell you that I actually do vote, and no, not

just in *Dancing with the Stars* and myspace polls, but yes, I admit

that despite everything I just said, I vote in politics too! Well, sort

of. I vote for local issues that will protect wild areas. I vote for

schools to receive less money (*fuck ’em*). I vote for the lesser of two

evils because I know that a third party will not change the system any

more than my lesser evil, but at least we can do lesser evil, while in

the meantime we continue to dismantle civilization and rewild.

I guess it comes down to knowing that investing your time and energy in

voting means remaining in denial that voting doesn’t matter, and

thinking that civilization will change. It doesn’t look like denial as

long as you know that voting may (but most likely will not) protect the

environment for a bit longer and that we need to spend more time

dismantling civilization than volunteering for a political campaign

(NADER 2000, yo!).

Bureaucracy vs. Rewilding

Federal officials have called for killing about 30 sea lions near
Bonneville Dam each year to keep them from gobbling a rising share of
Northwest salmon that the government spends millions of dollars to
protect.

— *The Oregonian*, January 18, 2008

Dear salmon. I have a confession to make. While working as a production

assistant for television commercials, a friend called me for a job…on a

political campaign advertisement.

The conversation went like this:

“Hey, Peter. I’ve got a job for you if you want it.”

“Yeah, sure. I need some work right now.”

“Great. Well, how do you feel about political ads?”

I think for a second and ask, “Does the person belong to the Democratic
or Republican party?”

He pauses. “Does it matter?”

I laugh. “…Nope.”

“Let’s just say the guy doesn’t look pretty.”

The job felt about as horrible as you might imagine. We drove around the

state for two days shooting the local political candidate (some

billionaire business tycoon) “talk” with “people” about issues. Of

course, he didn’t really talk about anything because the footage would

serve as B-roll for the voiceover and text that would narrate the

commercial. We drove to Molalla where he had some farmer buddies to show

him talking with farmers. We went to a shipping room for one of his

business clients to show that he cares about businesses (that business

happened to have all kinds of plaques on the wall in honor of their

donations to anti-abortion organizations).

At lunch the topic of politics came up. Some people agreed that Al Gore

lost the election because his posture felt too stiff. I wanted to say,

“Actually, he won the election. Bush stole it, remember?” But then I

remembered that I didn’t give a shit who “won” or stole anything. It all

looks like a sham to me anyway (I voted for Nader, ha!). I had worked on

many commercials at this point. Never had the crew eaten in complete

silence like this, with only an occasional glance of recognition between

us to acknowledge that the people talking sounded insane.

As the tension built on that shoot, things just grew more and more

sinister. We traveled to the political candidate’s mansion for the last

location for the shoot. His backyard had a vineyard that ended at his

own personal dock on the Willamette River in yuppieville Lake Oswego.

When we got to the house he said, “I really only intended it to reach

4,000 square feet, but I just couldn’t stop building! (*Yuck yuck!*) All

together now I think it stands at 11,000 square feet.”

Out back we set up some gear for the shoot on his dock. Two of his

fishing buddies showed up for part of the video of him talking with

fishermen. The producer felt like they needed a third person, so he

hired an old Asian man with a long white beard who had coincidentally

come to the house to clean the guy’s pool.

Down on the dock, tensions grew. Not just because the sun would soon set

and we raced the daylight, but because of all the bullshit we had seen

and experienced in the previous hours. They began shooting B-roll of the

political candidate talking to the fishermen. The director suggested the

man talk about fishing policy, even though they wouldn’t actually record

it, just to “set the mood.” So off he went. He began by saying that the

endangered sea lions who hunt the salmon held the responsibility for the

depleted runs of salmon. He suggested killing sea lions, *endangered sea

lions*, as a solution to declining salmon populations. He argued that

environmentalists, by protecting sea lions, indirectly held

responsibility for declining salmon populations.

Wait a minute. We all know that dams kill salmon by not letting salmon

return to their spawning grounds. A few years (depending on the life

span of the particular salmon) without a fish ladder and you have no

more salmon runs upriver from the dam. Dams killed the salmon. We all

know that logging killed the eggs of those salmon who did make it past

the dams by silt run-off from clear-cuts burying the eggs and by

removing trees that shaded the river, making it hotter than the

temperature that salmon eggs need to mature. We know that those salmon

who survived to make it back out to the ocean died in fishing nets from

commercial fishing companies.

At that point I turned away from the crew and started to cry. I thought

about a discussion I had with Derrick Jensen. He said that when you kill

something you make an agreement that you will take responsibility for

the continuation of that species. This political commercial paid me $200

a day for two days, a grand total of $400. During the Nuremberg trials,

they sentenced Julius Streicher, editor of the weekly Nazi newspaper, to

death. What about the writers of the paper? What about the paper boys

(and girls)? They all played a part as good Germans. I stood on that

dock, keeping my mouth shut and playing the part of the good civilian.

I couldn’t escape the fact that in some way, my work contributed to the

success of bullshit politicians and the continuation of a civilized

system of programmed environmental devastation. Whether Republican or

Democrat, whether the guy won the election or not. The simple fact that

two years later “federal officials” have called for the death of sea

lions shows that it doesn’t matter which person takes office: the

momentum of civilization’s destruction always wins out.

I knelt down and looked into the murky waters of the Willamette, wiping

the tears from my eyes. I began speaking to the salmon. “I promise you,

I will do whatever I can, use the tools I have, to help your species

survive. Please hold on. Please.”

A few weeks earlier another article came out about the death of salmon

at the hands of the good citizens.

Salmon survived massive dams and fishing fleets, but now they’re feeling
the heat of global warming—and it’s likely to hammer them as hard as
anything they’ve faced.

— *The Oregonian*, January 6, 2008

Salmon did not survive the dams and fishing fleets, as the moronic

cancer: you don’t know if they will survive or not. The salmon

populations would not have declined to near extinction without the

logging and dams and overfishing.

I have a genius idea. Let’s pour thousands of tons of concrete across a

river and stop the fish who spawn in it from having the ability to come

back next year. After a few years, most will no longer live. Dams (a

product of civilization) decimated the salmon. Logging (a product of

civilization) kicked them while they lay on the ground. And now,

mysterious global warming (influenced heavily by civilization) lifts a

club to the sky threatening the final blow and taking credit away from

civilized dams and logging. How convenient for the hydro-timber

industries. Then when fishermen complain, we blame the deaths of the

salmon on the endangered sea lions (who became endangered when the dams

killed their main food supply, the salmon) and kill them. Who fucking

came up with this idea? No, seriously. Who fucking came up with this

shit?!?

Humans lived in the northwest coast of this continent for (at least)

8,000 years in a sustainable manner as

hunter-gatherer-horticulturalists. Civilization has occupied (after

stealing) this land for a mere 200 years. How many more do you think it

will take to destroy every life here? How long do you think before

civilization puts humans on the endangered species list? Do you honestly

think corporations will allow the government (with all its bullshit laws

and loopholes) to dismantle the dams?

How long before the rest of the oceans have no more life in them? Oh

yeah…forty years.

Unless humans act now, seafood may disappear by 2048, concludes the lead
author of a new study that paints a grim picture for ocean and human
health.

— *National Geographic*, November 2,
2006

I saw a wanted poster with a fish on it on a paper in a rack at my

favorite taco joint and had to pick it up. It made me so fucking angry,

as papers do (which shows you why I don’t read them), that I had to

rewrite the article here for you to see, along with my commentary. The

title of the article? “Wanted Dead or Alive: The Pikeminnow.”

Ravenous trash fish prey on baby salmon. Traps don’t work. Poison
doesn’t work. It’s up to the Bounty Hunters.

Okay, you had me at “ravenous trash fish,” hook, line, and sinker.

On a recent cloudy Friday, perched in a black low-slung fishing boat
stained by guts and bait, Nikolay Zaremskiy pulled a steady stream of
money from the Columbia River in the form of muscular, slimy bills.

These wriggling prizes are not the usual stuff of anglers’
daydreams—rainbow trout or glittering steelhead. Far from it. These are
northern pikeminnows, ravenous predators that prey on helpless young
salmon smolt as they migrate downstream from their spawning grounds to
the Pacific.

“Ravenous predators.” Right off the bat we have this statement made

twice already. Maybe if the writer says it over and over again it will

make it true. They don’t even try to hide their propaganda anymore.

Well, shit. They don’t even have to. Most of the stupid fucks out there

read that and think, “Those fucking ravenous fish! Let’s fucking kill

them all!”

Pikeminnows devour millions of salmon and steelhead every year. So
voracious is their appetite, in fact, that experts think they kill as
many as all the Columbia River’s massive hydroelectric dams combined.

What the fuck. Read that a few times. Can you see the irony there? The

dams kill millions of salmon every year. They said it, not me. And yet,

who takes the wrap? First the sea lions, now the pikeminnow!?! Anyone

but us! I love how “experts” think that. What experts? Who “thinks”

that? I “think” a lot of things. Not all of them stand true. Okay, but

get this:

Pikeminnows thrive in reservoirs, so the construction of hydroelectric
dams on the Columbia River triggered a massive increase in population.

So you admit the pikeminnow “problem” wouldn’t exist if the dams didn’t

exist? So not only do the dams themselves kill “millions of salmon,” but

their mere existence creates habitat for one of the salmon’s natural

predators to kill “millions” more. And as a response, civ blames the

fish?…Uh, cool. Oh snap, check out this editorial response from the

Civilizationists devour millions of salmon and steelhead every year. So
voracious is their appetite, in fact, that expert pikeminnows think they
kill as many as all we pikeminnows eat! Yeah, and they call us ravenous
predators! Ha! They brought the salmon populations down to only 1% from
where they stood 100 years ago, and created the perfect habitat for our
species…And now they want to call us ravenous predators?!! FUCK YOU,
CIVILIZATIONISTS! You made us! Your dams killed the salmon! You did
this! YOU!!!!

Yeah. I totally agree with that pikeminnow. Fuck you guys. Back to the

terrible article:

In an effort to put a lid on this relentless slaughter, the Pacific
States Marine Fisheries Commission has tried methods from trapping to
netting—and even considered poison. None of it seemed like a good fix.

“Relentless slaughter.” I seriously didn’t make this up. These people

are fucking insane. Just fucking insane. Just. Remove. The. Fucking.

Dams.

In the end, the agency settled on a time-tested approach from the outlaw
days of the Old West. Declaring the species a menace to society it put a
bounty on the fish’s head, attracting a small but ruthless armada of
anglers like Zaremskiy who share a single passion—preying on the
predator at eight bucks a pop.

I declare that this civilization stands as a menace to all species. In

response I say we hire Nature’s Bounty Hunters, those who work for the

bounty of nature itself to do some real work around here. According to

the rest of this fish-hate piece of propaganda, this guy has made

$50,000 so far this season and “will single-handedly save at least

160,000 salmon from being swallowed into oblivion.”

In order for the salmon to survive they need to make it to the ocean,

and back up the river to spawn when they mature. The dams need to go. In

order for salmon to spawn they need cool and silt-free places to do so.

Logging needs to stop. In order for the mature salmon to make it back to

the ocean, we need commercial fishing to stop. The amount of paperwork

and lobbying and funding and time needed to do that adds up to an

impossibility. It feels hard enough just to get a couple of friends to

agree on what movie to go see. Bureaucratic means will not save the

salmon. They take too long and the salmon don’t have the time. A marine

biologist in *The Oregonian* actually gave the best (and possibly only)

way to save the salmon:

“We want to be very careful to be very sure we are removing the right
animals,” said Garth Griffin, a marine biologist with the fisheries
service in Portland.

— *The Oregonian*, January 18, 2008

Don’t you find it funny that I actually agree with this biologist!? I

think we need to think very carefully and make sure we remove the right

animals. If by removing the “right” animals they mean removing those

animals who destroy the most salmon and by removing them we will see the

most impact on improving the restoration of salmon populations.

Following this line of thinking…sea lions don’t come to my mind when I

think about the “right” animals to remove.

I have a better idea. How about people dismantle thirty of the real

salmon gobblers, the dams, logging and fishing industries, every year?

Thirty of those salmon gobblers a year. Of course, this may prove

difficult to use bureaucratic means…We’ll have to think up some new

ideas, outside of civilization’s box…if you know what I mean. I wonder

how many more salmon you could save by taking that fifty grand and

investing it in a few well-placed explosives?

Say it with me:

CIVILIZATION OUT OF CASCADIA NOW!

Fuck it. CIVILIZATION OUT OF THIS PLANET NOW!

Ethics vs. Rewilding

Since its inception, civilization has created a value system of good vs.

evil. The concept of good and evil (or the more scientific “right” and

“wrong”) seems to permeate much of our thought and actions, and we have

projected this concept onto indigenous mythologies as well. “Surely the

notion of good and evil comes from human nature, not culture!” But if we

look deeper, we see that this notion lives and dies with a culture of

destruction.

Some people think the Pope creates good. Some people think the Pope

creates evil. Good and evil exist as subjective, cultural perspectives.

Some believe that clear-cutting forests creates good by providing people

with jobs and lumber. Others say that clear-cutting forests creates evil

by destroying a landbase. Good and evil, a dichotomy different from

night and day—night and day may change slightly depending on longitude

but do not exist as a cultural meme that can morph within a people.

Night and day exist outside our control, as do hot and cold (to the

extent that we cannot alter them indefinitely). But we can control our

perception of good and evil quite easily, and that makes for a very

dangerous cultural meme.

It should not surprise anyone that the notion of *good* in civilization

generally equates to an action based on an individual’s ability to do

extra work. “Do a good turn daily,” says the Boy Scout motto. “Do unto

others…” Helping an old lady across the street, volunteering for a

cause, giving away your hard-earned money: all involve going out of your

way. It makes perfect sense, then, that the noble savage myth came

about. Civilized people could not understand how indigenous peoples

experienced such ease with activities like sharing. *They must have

better qualities than us*, reasoned our civilized ancestors.

The best example of this I find in modern culture involves the nonprofit

sector of environmental education, a mass of organizations struggling to

make ends meet in order to teach children about nature. Most employees

work forty- to eighty-hour weeks and receive very little money for this

work. It makes me cry just thinking about it. These people feel the

destruction so deeply that they sacrifice themselves to keep alive a

spark of love for the landbase. To people living close to the land, the

idea of a nature camp would seem ludicrous. Teaching children about

ecology simply works as part of their culture, not as an extra element

that parents pay for. And what do these camps do but keep a spark alive?

They don’t change civilization; they merely work to keep children

inspired to do something. What that something involves, who knows? I

haven’t seen any results even remotely close to what the planet needs to

survive at this point.

Rewilding usurps the notion of good and evil, right and wrong, by

eliminating the cultural variable and thinking in terms of environmental

systems, of the physical world. If you do damage to the environment, you

will experience the consequences. *Right* and *wrong*, *good* and *evil*

have little bearing on that.

Indigenous cultures do not separate their religion from the land they

live on. This means their religion comes from their relationship to the

land, not from the “spirit,” unless they mean the same thing. At Art of

Mentoring gatherings, Jon Young tells how one of his Lakota mentors

explained that the word people have commonly translated as *sacred*

actually means “inspired by or promoting life.” What our English

translators have taken to mean “holy” or “revered for its spiritual

significance” actually means something much more. It seems a lot less

“wu-wu” when the word has real world application and not just some

mystical quality. A “sacred” ceremony or ritual creates more life, and

not just human life but other-than-human life as well. As my good friend

Willem puts it, “*Sacred* means survival.”

An interesting perspective on the Mayans comes from Martín Prechtel, who

lived with Mayans (500 years post-collapse) for fifteen years. He speaks

of the Mayan spiritual concept of original debt:

In the Mayan worldview, we are all born owing a spiritual debt to the
other world for having created us, for having sung us into existence. It
must be fed; otherwise, it’s going to take its payment out of our
lives…You have to give a gift to that which gives you life. It’s an
actual payment in kind. That’s the spiritual economy of a village.

A knife, for instance, is a very minimal, almost primitive tool to
people in a modern industrial society…But for the Mayan people, the
spiritual debt that must be paid for the creation of such a tool is
great…So, just to get the iron, the shaman has to pay for the ore, the
fire, the wind, and so on—not in dollars and cents, but in ritual
activity equal to what’s been given…All of those ritual gifts make the
knife enormously “expensive,” and make the process quite involved and
time-consuming. The need for ritual makes some things too spiritually
expensive to bother with…That’s why the Mayans didn’t invent space
shuttles or shopping malls or backhoes.

Civilization would feel too spiritually expensive in this paradigm, a

paradigm that came about after the culture collapsed and yet that

reflects many of the spiritual beliefs of never-approaching-civilization

cultures that practiced intensification of food production. The more

anthropologists discover about indigenous intensification of food

production, the more they come to the conclusion that it does not

reflect a one-way path to agriculture and civilization, but that

indigenous peoples can exist in larger densities without exploiting the

land and becoming agriculturalists. Values and ethics largely shape a

culture’s decision-making and practices.

Rewilding our ethics looks like working to make the web of life tighter.

Rather than promoting ungrounded, changeable ideas of good and evil, it

stems from cause and reaction in the real world: if you do damage to the

environment, you do damage to your culture; if you strengthen the

environment, you strengthen your culture. Let’s get rid of the right and

wrong, good and evil dichotomy and ask ourselves: Will it kill us? Does

it meet the needs of the environment? Will it meet the needs of future

generations? We need a healthy physical world to continue living.

Indigenous ethics base themselves on the needs of the physical world,

whereas civilization has become so far removed it doesn’t even recognize

a physical world. Rewilding buries right and wrong back in the land

where they belong.

Religion vs. Rewilding

Do hunter-gatherers have religion? That question makes about as much

sense as asking if hunter-gatherers have language, science, or art. Of

course they do. But their religions look vastly different from the

religions (and science and art) we find in civilization.

Like any cultural descriptor, the word *religion* evokes all kinds of

emotions and images. When I think of religion I see a cross, cathedrals,

a man with a long white beard sitting on a throne in the clouds, looking

down with a scrutinizing eye. I remember going to church as a child and

never really understanding just what the fuck people did there. I hated

singing the songs in church because I couldn’t read them out of the

hymnal because I couldn’t read. So I would rock back and forth in the

pews and move around like a lion in a cage until my mom would ask me to

sit still. The words the preacher said made no sense and sounded totally

boring. Not to mention the stink of the mold in the old churches.

Eventually I would get a headache and begin to hate my life. I never

believed in god.

As with everything civilization creates, the more recent the creation,

the more destructive. Science, the latest, greatest religion, follows

this thread. Science claims to distinguish itself from religion by

basing itself on observation of the natural world rather than mythology.

I loved science. In school I always did well in science. I didn’t learn

until later that the institution of science also bases itself in the

same mythological roots as any other civilized religion. Sciences that

actually project a more accurate perception of reality (the ones that

articulate a living world) get put in a box called “quantum physics” or

“pseudoscience” and find themselves placed high on a shelf where we can

forget about them.

Funding for science (which really means investing in building more

machines that can measure things we don’t trust our own senses to

measure, on account of their inherent subjectivity) only goes to

projects that further the civilizational paradigm. Though science

masquerades as “objective inquiry,” you can only fund scientific

projects that somehow further the progression of civilization, and

therefore the extraction of more “resources” and more interesting ways

of killing people. *Science* refers to the funded exploration of the

world through the belief that the world has no life, that everything

exists for our exploitation.

A few sciences, like quantum physics, reveal some of the gaps in

previous scientific thought. We can use these gaps to change the minds

of those who believe the mythology of science. Similarly, I’ll bet we

could find verses in the Bible to support rewilding and the dismantling

of civilization, as opposed to using the Bible to justify devouring the

earth, as mainstream Christians do. (After all, the very first chapter

describes humans as superior to other animals and the earth—a myth

mainstream scientists use, too, to torture monkeys and build atom

bombs.) Trying to rewild the institution of organized religion proves

just as difficult as trying to rewild the institution of science, since

both came about through civilization. We cannot rewild civilization

since it never had wildness to begin with. We use the words *religion*

and *science* to describe phenomena that civilization has twisted for

its own purposes. We *can* rewild these things.

In order to rewild religion we have to see what myths civilization uses

to domesticate it members. Salvation and sky-based god(s) only exist in

civilized cultures, or in cultures already assimilated into

civilization. Civilized religions demand that we struggle in this life

so that god will reward us with eternal bliss in the afterlife. I can’t

think of a better way of stopping a slave class from revolting.

(Um…aside from convincing people that a slave class no longer exists.)

world. In a general sense it refers to all religions which believe that

everything (even inanimate objects) has a spirit. Using a blanket term

to describe thousands of religions sounds rather obnoxious to me, though

it does say something about the evolutionary value of religion. It would

make sense that in order to survive in the long run, people must treat

everything in the world as sacred. What more sacred way of living in the

world than “seeing” spirit in everything? If you don’t value life, or

what we commonly refer to as “inanimate” objects, you will generally

consume rather than respect it.

From an animist perspective, gods live among us, not above us. They live

as our parents, not hierarchical rulers. They make up an extension of

our family. Some gods live as parents (Father Sun), others as siblings

(Sister Corn). Living in this world, in this time, experiencing this

place, not disassociating from it or anticipating an afterlife.

The literalism with which modern civilized people experience mythology

astounds me. Most Christians actually believe that Adam and Eve lived as

real people. In the same way, scientists can worship “facts” (or even

perceive theories as laws). This probably stems from speaking English

for a thousand years, a language with no built-in metaphor, layering of

archetypes, or fluidity.

I generally refer to these two perceptions as *animist religions* and

just how religion and science share the same mythology. We need a

blanket term for religions that see things as inanimate. A word like

spirit, *inanimism* refers to the belief that only humans have a spirit.

Many people conflate the institution of science with the inquiry called

to refer to an animist form of inquiry. I hardly think of animism as a

religion in the institutional way we typically think of religions. I

define it more as a way of perceiving the world: “spiritual, not

religious.” Tracking connects you to spirit, whereas civilized science

dissociates people from spirit and offers the world of “meatspace.” The

civilized have an easier time devouring the world when they can convince

themselves it never had its own life. This shows us why a subjective

science (one that does not see *inanimate objects* but *living spirits*)

came about through millions of years of human evolution.

I have heard many people refer to the physical world as “meatspace,” as

though you can split reality into two parts, a physical one and a

spiritual one. I can only see one point in doing this, and that involves

objectifying something in the physical world. If I can take the spirit

out of something, it doesn’t feel as bad when I objectify it. I feel

highly offended when I hear the term “meatspace.” I never really put my

finger on it until my friend Willem said that it reminded him of the

objectifying slang term “meat curtains” (referring to a woman’s vagina).

Meat, a piece of flesh that no longer resembles the animal it came from,

quite literally has no more spirit, because the animal that it came from

no longer lives. From an animist’s perspective, flesh and spirit do not

exist as a duality but as one. Meat still holds the spirit of the animal

and becomes part of your spirit when you eat it, just as the flesh

becomes part of your flesh.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has offered a

one-million-dollar reward for the first scientist who can clone meat.

Apparently meat grown in a petri dish has no nerve endings and no way to

scream (and obviously in PETA’s eyes no soul), and therefore growing

meat in a petri dish and eating meat from a petri dish does not violate

animal ethics. Though the petri-meat may carry the label “cruelty free,”

the worldview and culture that would even consider inventing such a

thing cannot and will not stop abusing the planet. The complete

disconnection from reality, the complete disconnection from taking

responsibility for and honoring the beings who die so that we may live,

looks completely and utterly insane. I wish I could offer a

one-million-dollar reward for the first person to bring me *the head* of

the first scientist who clones meat.

How long before some perverted scientist clones a vagina in order to

have sex with it? Does it count as rape if the vagina has no connection

to a brain or mouth and cannot scream? If we say that cloned meat has no

life, do we define having sex with a cloned vagina as necrophilia? Does

a cloned vagina count as dead, or something else? This example shows

exactly the kind of psychotic disassociation from reality that feeds

science and projects the duality of flesh and spirit. You don’t learn to

live in the world through objectifying it; you learn by subjecting

yourself to its terms.

Furthermore, I don’t define science as “objective inquiry” because *no

such thing exists*. If you remove variables, you get false information:

beings do not have isolated essences but define themselves through their

environment and interactions. Even if people could remove their own

perceptions (which frame all inquiries and make them subjective) we

would still receive false information because our perceptions define how

we interact with the environment, which defines us. Even if we built a

robot with no heart, it would still give us false information because

the framing of its heartlessness still has subjectivity of

so that they feel nothing when building nukes or torturing lab rats)

subjectively perceive the world in a false light, or at least in a light

that does not serve life. Objectivity involves seeing things as

inanimate, apart from what gives them life.

If we remove our senses, experiences, and perceptions as humans *shaped

by the environment*, we remove the very things that *make us human*. We

amputate our humanity, rendering useless all information pertaining to

the experience of living as humans. When we no longer trust our own

bodies, senses, and experiences as a measure for what we perceive as

“real,” we have nothing “real” at all.

For some people (myself included), rewilding religion may look like

walking away from any and all inanimist religions and starting over with

animism. Since I have never participated in a culture of civilized

religion or science, I find it easier to build something new than fix

something old and falling apart that I don’t understand. For those who

rewilding those religions will look like rewilding the English language:

it will happen very slowly over time…and those who don’t change their

perception will die. Animism shows us religions that stand the test of

evolution. Civilization’s religions will die along with civilization

unless they fundamentally change through re-animating. You will need to

act as a “re-animator” (just like the movie!).

Religions (whether science, Christianity, Judaism, Hinduism, Buddhism,

Scientology, inanimism, or animism) dictate our choices as a culture.

These religions give us justification for the way we interact with the

world. Civilization uses the perception of the world as a dead thing to

justify its destruction. Animism sees the world as alive and treats it

accordingly. Whether or not you personally believe in spirits, in order

to create a new way of life that does not destroy the planet, we need to

at least pretend, with sincerity, as though everything has a spirit.

Cities vs. Rewilding

I can’t help but feel like many people still hold purist values when it

comes time to understand rewilding. I often hear people say, “If you

want to rewild, shouldn’t you go live out in the wilderness?” Rewilding

means undoing domestication. Cities mark the most domesticated places in

the world. Rewilding in the city has no contradictory values; it just

means more work in some ways, less in others.

Cities represent the apex of civilization; they give civilization its

name. Everything in the city comes from the country and wilderness. Most

pollution and disease exists in these densely populated areas.

Undomesticating yourself in a city looks at times like taking a walk on

the interstate: defying the break-neck speed and momentum of the

culture. Thinking in terms of collapse, cities will not open up for

rewilding quickly, and may mark the last places we will undomesticate.

The notion of *wilderness* as an untouched place does not accurately

represent reality. I still see a large division between what we commonly

call wilderness (a more wild place) and urban space (a nearly completely

domesticated place). But we must acknowledge that civilization has

tainted every place on this earth, some places much more than others.

“Wild” places have a larger opportunity for rewilding because they sit

the farthest from the centers of civilization.

Waging a war against civilization while living in a city doesn’t look

like the smartest strategy for those who wish to survive collapse.

Trouble lies around every corner, whether you call trouble a mugger, a

rapist, a cop, a car, a drunk, your boss, or toxic air. I don’t mean to

say that those dangers don’t exist in the country, just that they exist

<verbatim>Country = civilization ÷ 10.</verbatim> Less-civilized people,

less-civilized problems. We’ve all heard the statistics that your

chances of attack while wandering alone in the wilderness have no

comparison to wandering alone in the city. Predators don’t go to the

middle of nowhere to find prey, they go to where they will have an easy

time catching them: densely populated areas.

A city’s greatest weakness—population density, which requires the

importation of resources—can also work as its greatest strength to those

who rewild. Cities work as large social networks. Most people in cities

have much more open “education” than those in rural areas. Large-scale

cultural change happens in cities and filters out. This contrasts with

the country, where neighbors who used to get the news from word of mouth

now get it from Fox News via satellite TV. This may change as more

people and media find their way onto the Internet, but having a

solar-powered satellite Internet hook-up out in the boonies doesn’t look

sustainable either. Face-to-face social networking and information

exchange may prove the most valuable resource a city can provide to

those who rewild.

If we see the city as a resource for social networking, we can use it to

our advantage, leveraging social connections to build rewilding cultures

outside the city. For example, we can use the larger market of Portland

to promote Rewild Camps in order to reach more people, then hold classes

where the wild things live and eventually buy land out there. In a funny

way, rewilding functions the opposite way a city does: it exports people

and social “resources” out of the city and into the wild.

In the city we consume the resources brought from the country. In the

country we watch the extraction of resources, the devouring of life:

countless clear-cuts, imprisoned and tortured animals, poisoned crops

burning through the soil. This feels to me like the worst part of living

in the country. In the city, you can buy meat without noticing how the

animal suffered, and the wood used to build your house doesn’t look like

a logging truck carrying the corpses of freshly murdered forests. You

can’t have the satisfaction of disassociation in the country. This makes

it harder psychologically (in some ways) to live in the country, though

at least you can see where the “resources” come from and bear witness to

the destruction. When I spend time living in the country, I see exactly

what the city does to the land. And what the city offers up as a

resource—diversity of people and perspectives—the country lacks. Fox

News plays on every bar television screen. I see “Jesus Saves” and

“American Pride” bumper stickers everywhere I turn. But in the end, at

this point, the pros outweigh the cons.

My early times in Molalla

Over the past month and a half I have experienced city withdrawal. I

have experienced nostalgia for the years I spent drinking and sleeping

around and experiencing the “night life” of the city, even though I

hated those years while I lived them. I have felt completely

uncomfortable and felt “bearingless,” without a 3D neurological map

corresponding to the physical places in my life. I have felt afraid of

not looking “right” (or “too gay”) to prejudiced country folk and

getting beat up. I have argued with Penny Scout over our decision to

move out here. The painful withdrawal reached its climax last week when

I found out that most fruit you buy at the store comes from the same

“mother tree” that we have cloned over and over again for hundreds of

years through a perverse method called grafting. The same shocking

feeling came to me that I experienced at five when I found out my burger

came from a cow.

Four key elements have allowed me to make it through city withdrawal: 1)

My family lives here now. 2) I have a girlfriend who lives and rewilds

with me. 3) I have a large yard to learn gardening and permaculture. 4)

I have a job at an awesome company that does its best to promote food

self-sufficiency (in civilized terms).

My addiction finally broke this week when my buddy Billy came out and we

tromped through the foothills of the Cascades. We didn’t do anything

special other than express our natural curiosity for living wild, and

had a grand adventure I will never forget. We tracked bobcat, raccoon,

and aplodontia, foraged fresh greens, met never-before-seen plants and

secret waterfalls, all without any more effort than simply rolling out

of bed and taking a walk. Out here in the woods I don’t need to make up

an adventure: adventure finds me. In ten minutes I can drive to one of

the largest wild places in Oregon. I can ride my bike there in

forty-five minutes. In thirty minutes I can drive where no one will ever

find me. I can ride my bike there in a few hours. In the country I can

spend tons of time alone, learning plants, breathing fresh air, and

avoiding cops, robbers, and hippies. This week I finally feel

comfortable, at home in Molalla. Now that I have settled in here, I do

not feel alone. I do not crave the city nor its neon-bright addictive

culture. I have a foothold and can start importing my friends from the

city. Who will come with me? Show me the money!

“Green” vs. Rewilding

I recently saw a comic (thanks, Anthropik!) that inspired me to

articulate some things about the notion of *greenwashing*, and other

terms floating around in Mother Culture’s myth-space or meme-pool. The

cartoon showed a logger using an electric chainsaw.

At the illustrator’s site, this comment ran alongside his drawing:

This cartoon idea sprang fully formed from a *New York Times* piece on
the ridiculous lengths that some brands are going to be considered for
the Home Depot Eco Options promotion (including, yes, a brand of
electric chainsaw). It’s a good example of some of the outlandish
greenwashing we’re all starting to see. And, how the issue is not as
white and black as the old treehugger/lumberjack dynamic.

I thought about this for several minutes and posted this response:

This cartoon feels very funny and also very sad…To think that destroying
more habitat (aka biodiversity) and the very life forms that filter the
carbon out of the air appears “okay” simply because the technology we
use to do it…functions differently. It still took an oil economy and oil
energy to build the chainsaw, and it still damages the environment by
cutting down the trees and destroying more habitat for civilization’s
expansion. It still looks just as cut and dry to me, only it may feel
harder to see that with all the mythology out there.

I didn’t feel satisfied with this response, though. I thought about not

just the concept of greenwashing but the actual meaning of the term

“environmentally friendly” and “sustainable” and treat them as synonyms.

If the true meaning of sustainability involves giving back more than you

take from the land, then nothing that takes more from the land than it

returns can define itself as sustainable. “Less destructive” does not

mean “more sustainable.” I think “more sustainable” would mean giving

even more back and not simply taking less.

If *green* does not include the real definition of sustainability but

just means “less destructive,” then it must mean the same thing as

to have sustainability to begin with. To say that hybrid cars have more

sustainability than Hummers makes no sense. They cause less destruction

(in theory). You want to know the real meaning of “environmentally

friendly,” “green,” and “eco?” It means that civilization leaves its

rape victim alive when it finishes taking what it wants, rather than

outright murdering her.

As I stood pissing in the bathroom of a movie theater, I read a small

plaque above the urinal that said something like, “This urinal does not

use water; you just helped conserve 40,000 gallons of water a year.” I

couldn’t help but think, “You mean I just allocated 40,000 more gallons

of water for corporations to use at their will.” We live in a culture

and economy of constant growth. *Conservation* either means saving for

later consumption, as with national forests, or redistributing to other

(most likely industrial) consumers. I mentioned this also in my chapter

about how the vegan diet actually does more damage, as it allocates more

land for grains, which produce more people than cattle, adding to the

overall population growth problem and therefore more deforestation.

Conservation does not amount to cultural vision change. As long as

civilization continues to grow, conservation does not really exist. That

doesn’t mean we shouldn’t try to conserve what we have left of the

environment, but we must also see through the bullshit mythology.

Conservation does nothing if civilization continues to grow and exploit

every last “resource” it can as it collapses.

I find myself becoming angry at these words and concepts, as

civilization appropriates our words and ideals before we even have the

chance to articulate them. “Finally people will know the truth about

global warming. Finally they will know we must abandon ship…Wait, what

did you say? Um…Buy light bulbs?” I mean, sure, buy less destructive

stuff, but know that it continues to destroy us.

To frame our unsustainable civilization in terms of its “sustainability”

creates false hope for those just discovering the problems we face, or

acts as a form of denial for those who simply can’t imagine a world

without civilization. Eco chainsaws do not exist. Green energy does not

exist. *Get it through your fucking heads*. We’ve reached the end of the

line.

Engineered Crisis vs. Rewilding

I keep hearing people say we’ve got an energy crisis. This carries a few

bullshit premises. The most obvious premise here: that we need “energy.”

Why do we need energy? What does it do that’s so fucking important?

Humans lived for millions of years without electricity. Indigenous

hunter-gatherers had no need to create it. It requires an entire

industrial economy that inherently destroys the land in order to create

it. It does not make humans’ lives easier; it simply gives the rich more

power and more destructive tools. How many people in the world even have

electricity? We don’t need energy. At least not in the way they mean it.

The energy crisis, as well as the economic crisis, really means that

rich people continue to lose power, and they have so brainwashed us that

we believe we need to do our part to keep the pyramid strong, maintain

our slavery. Civilization uses energy to take even more than we could

without it. The less energy civilization has, the more limits it has to

grow. That seems pretty fucking fantastic to me.

Nature provides all the energy we need in a sustainable way, as proven

by three million years of human hunter-gatherers living on this planet

without fucking it up. Think about the energy hunter-gatherers use: seal

blubber candle vs. light bulbs, wood cooking fire vs. gas stove. Not

only do hunter-gatherers have smaller-scale societies (because they

don’t have agriculture-induced population growth problems) but their

energy usage comes from “renewable” sources. They use the sun to dry

food and wood to generate heat in the cold. This burning helps to break

down the nutrients and minerals in the wood and make them readily

available to fungi and bacteria. It also prevents the insanely

destructive, large-scale forest fires we see so often today.

Without cheap oil or coal to generate electricity and machinery, the

industrial economy cannot exist. They call it “industrial” because

machines (slaves, drones, robots) make it up, not people. Before

industrial machinery, those in power used people. But it takes a slave

with a stick a lot more time and energy to till a field than a farmer on

his tractor. This excess of energy created the urban class of people, to

manage the wealth (for the wealthy) created by these new machines. Real

renewable energy does not mean a solar-powered industrial economy. It

means small-scale societies using handmade tools (crafted from

nonindustrial materials) to encourage more biodiversity.

I don’t mean to say that everyone “should” stop using electricity and

gas and everything—as long as you recognize you won’t have it forever,

and as long as you use that excess energy to bring down civilization and

promote cultures of rewilding. I use a computer, cell phone, car, and

all sorts of technology to educate people on how to live without them,

and encourage people to stop these systems from destroying the planet.

Remember, *green* technology doesn’t mean “more sustainable” but “less

destructive.” And more often it really means “We’ve reframed our

marketing to pull the focus away from what we destroy, to point out what

we don’t destroy, so that you’ll forget that we continue to fuck shit

up.”

People have barked up my tree over this whole economic crisis as well.

You know what? I don’t give a shit! We’ve seen economic collapses

before. In fact they work as a normal function of civilization; and like

clockwork, they merely end with the creation of a worse slave system

than before. One world currency, one world culture. America has amassed

a lot of fake wealth, weapons, and technology. But why go to the third

world for labor when you can bring the third world to you? I don’t see

economic collapse as the end of civilization but as a reorganization of

wealth that will end with a stronger pyramid: more people on the bottom

and fewer people on top. Like the climate and energy crises, the

economic collapse has not triggered anyone to actually stop

civilization, walk away, or rewild. It appears that it will simply mean

more people working longer hours for less money in shittier jobs than

before.

I refer to these crises that we really have going on as the “bullshit

crisis.” Everyone listens to this civilized bullshit and takes it in

without question, and the world continues to suffer. That looks like the

real fucking crisis to me. The *ecological crisis*. This crisis only

exists because we *have* an “economy” and “energy.” The economic crisis

means the end of growth, which means the end of excessive consumption,

which means the beginning of the end of the ecological crisis. Fuck

industrial energy, fuck the hierarchical economy, fuck this bullshit.

Guilt vs. Rewilding

Guilt refers to the feeling we have when we make decisions that go

against personal, cultural, and mythological pressures. It feels like

not doing what you “should” do. It works as one of the most powerful

tools of social and cultural maintenance. I do not think of guilt as a

“bad” thing. I see it as a tool we need to understand. Rewilding goes

against all of our lifelong civilized programming. Anything we do to

rewild could make us feel guilty. Of course, the culture of rewilding

creates a new paradigm in which continuing to live in civilization would

make us feel guilty since we know that civilization destroys

biodiversity. In a sense, rewilding involves crossing a threshold into

two worlds. This creates a split cultural psyche, leaving us with weird

schizophrenic emotions: feeling guilty for leaving civilization as well

as for not having left enough. For example, one might experience guilt

for not going to college and simultaneously for using gasoline.

It works like this. We learn that civilization destroys the planet, our

senses, and a million other things. We learn that indigenous peoples had

their needs met without destroying the planet. This gets most people

thinking that all humans should abandon the nonworking model of

civilization and live sustainably like the indigenous peoples we read

about—that we have to, or we will die! Though urgent and emotionally

true, to think that we can merely abandon civilization and build a

sustainable culture with this awareness ignores the context in which

these cultures formed: via the *needs* of a hunter-gatherer culture. The

culture of civilization, in which we all live as captives, makes it

extremely difficult to exist with even a shred of freedom.

In rewilding, these indigenous cultures represent human potential. They

remind us that life doesn’t have to feel like slavery. And yet we can’t

just throw on buckskin clothes, make a bow and arrow, and live as they

did. Without a physical, cultural, social, and emotional need for

creating a rewilding culture, it exists only as something we can try to

live up to. Our cultural momentum carries us towards domestication. Why

learn to hunt and gather when you can just get a job and buy food at the

store? You don’t need to know much more than how to use a cash register

and how to microwave your Cup-a-Soup to get by. Yet we know we must defy

civilization and its economy of death if we wish to save the world. This

leaves us with one foot shackled to civilization as the other foot gains

footing in the wild.

Rewilding creates two opposing systems of perception in our heads and

hearts. One says we need to buy flat-screen TVs to see the quality of

HDTV; the other says we need to sit in a forest for an hour each day to

connect more with nature. One of these systems kills the planet. We

can’t simply reprogram our brains. Every day the brain rewires itself.

Every cultural element tells us what to think (or continue thinking),

from our newspaper to our TV shows, to whatever we hear while

eavesdropping on the bus, and even to the buildings that surround us.

Our minds reflect our environment, and vice versa. We can’t just read a

book on rewilding and change how we see the world. We need to change

Guilt only works to make the journey from civilized to wild harder. My

strongest experience with this guilt came from trying to replicate an

indigenous cultural ritual known as the sit spot. I had trouble making

this routine for two main reasons. First, sitting in the woods may have

given hunter-gatherers skills and awareness essential to their survival,

but it does not relate to subsistence within a civilizational context.

Your secret spot does not give you an edge if you work in a coffee shop.

Generally speaking, having a sit spot will not make you more money, the

way it would yield better food results for hunter-gatherers.

As civilization destroys more and more of the wild environment, we have

seen our internal environments, those of the mind and heart, suffer as

well. Some people may have trouble functioning psychologically and need

a more natural setting to calm their minds. Unfortunately, seeking the

wilderness seems to appear as taboo, and the vast majority of people

(behaving the way the culture of civilization designed us to behave)

choose an easier way to alleviate their minds with the use of drugs, TV,

video games, and everything else.

It takes will power to go against the grain and choose the harder path

to sanity, especially when sanity doesn’t show up on the list of

requirements to live and work in civilization. In fact, I would say that

insanity seems like a requirement for those who continue to destroy the

land from which they live. Therefore indigenous practices like the sit

spot become a ritual for the pure, which can feel more difficult to

choose than the available alternatives. If having a sit spot gives you

more empathy towards the earth, which it did for me, it may in fact have

the reverse effect of subsistence within civilization, where you have to

shut off connection to nature in order to function in the city. In

short, it may make you hate your job, hate your current life, and in

turn lead to you making less money.

Because rewilding works against subsistence in a civilizational context,

and takes more effort than simply taking drugs (Prozac, cigarettes,

television, video games, etc.), it will always fall into the category of

self-help. This means that during any kind of increase in level of

stress, routines unnecessary to subsistence will get placed on the back

burner. For example, if you need to work more hours at your job, that

means less time rewilding. This shows how trapped we become in

civilization. This feeling of entrapment feels even worse once

compounded with guilt.

The guilt one feels at “choosing the easy way out” appears the worst

part of the self-help category. Although choosing the easy way out or

the path of least resistance feels like a normal human response, we feel

a kind of failure when we make this “choice.” Because we want awareness

and the gifts that come with it, because of the mythology that surrounds

this awareness and lifestyle (that it represents our birth right, that

it reveals how the gods meant us to live, and so forth), when we follow

our instincts that say “Follow the path of least resistance,” we feel a

kind of guilt similar to what I imagine Christians must feel when they

commit a sin.

This guilt made me hate the sit spot routine and rewilding in general.

For several years the books, journals, and field guides filling up a

large bookshelf in the center of my room collected dust. I wanted the

awareness and knowledge, but I, like most people, had no cultural

context for rewilding. I blamed myself for following what civilization

programmed me to do. Every time I looked at the books I felt guilty. I

had built a shrine of guilt in the center of my own room. “Why don’t I

like rewilding anymore?” I would ask myself.

One day during a moment of clarity and transition in my life, I burned

my sit spot journals and sold my entire field guide library to a local

bookstore. It felt like taking a huge dump after being constipated for

years; I felt a release and a great weight lifted. When I arrived home

on that clear winter evening, the sun had just begun to set and the sky

looked a beautiful reddish-purple hue. I felt so light and happy that I

actually wanted to go to my sit spot: the burden of becoming a

super-indigenous, hyper-aware human had gone. When I finished I looked

again to the sky. At that moment a red-tailed hawk gracefully and

quietly snatched a pigeon out of the air, not five feet above my head.

The hawk landed in my neighbor’s yard and began to tear the pigeon to

pieces. I watched in total awe. I think of it as nature’s gift to a

guilt-free heart.

I have always loved this quote by Joseph Campbell:

If you follow your bliss, you put yourself on a kind of track that has
been there all the while, waiting for you, and the life that you ought
to be living is the one you are living. Wherever you are—if you are
following your bliss, you are enjoying that refreshment, that life
within you, all the time.

What makes suffering different from torture? Even when suffering you

still have that refreshment Campbell speaks of to keep you going. In

fact, sometimes that feeling of passion feels strongest during more

difficult moments. But if you have no passion, suffering becomes

torture. Torture looks like suffering for the sake of suffering, without

any of the “refreshment” Campbell speaks of. I remember another quote in

the same vein from Martín Prechtel:

There are two kinds of suffering, one that creates beauty and one that
creates more suffering.

Guilt, in the context of rewilding, only creates more suffering by

distracting people from the important things. Who cares if I watch

that every day, but everyone needs a break (or two or three) from

“saving the world.” I do not believe in purity and therefore feel no

guilt from indulging in civilization every once in a while. (I would

like to add, though, that addiction works differently from indulgence

and needs a different kind of attention.)

I still experience this schizophrenic guilt every day. Right now, even

as I type this, I feel guilty for not going outside. As long as we feel

guilty for not having the tools or culture to break the shackles that

chain us here, we strengthen civilization’s hold on us.

Science vs. Rewilding

I remember feeling ill at the thought of libraries (full of books

containing knowledge gained through science) burning down during the

collapse of civilization. All that knowledge—lost forever. I used to

believe that, despite all the terrible things civilization has created.

Science felt worth saving. For some reason I saw science as something

“pure” that even civilization’s mythology could not ruin. I don’t feel

that way anymore. These days a wry smile forms on my face, and my eyes

begin to sparkle when I envision a world without science.

Did science exist before civilization? Well, that depends on your

definition of science. According to the *American Heritage Science

Dictionary*, the word *science* means:

The investigation of natural phenomena through observation, theoretical
explanation, and experimentation, or the knowledge produced by such
investigation. Science makes use of the scientific method, which
includes the careful observation of natural phenomena, the formulation
of a hypothesis, the conducting of one or more experiments to test the
hypothesis, and the drawing of a conclusion that confirms or modifies
the hypothesis

We know now that the modern human has not evolved substantially in at

least 100,000 years. Our modern brains have no significant difference

from our hunter-gatherer ancestors. But our lineage of hunting goes much

further than that. Evolution occurs mostly through the methods animals

use to acquire food, water, and shelter: natural selection. Hunting and

gathering has long had an impact on hominid evolution. Since animal

tracking forms the critical aspect of hunting, the ability to track

animals most likely shaped the modern mind.

According to Louis Liebenberg, author of *The Art of Tracking: The

Origin of Science*,

Speculative tracking involves the creation of a working hypothesis on
the basis of initial interpretation of signs, a knowledge of animal
behavior and a knowledge of the terrain. Having built a hypothetical
reconstruction of the animal’s activities in their mind, the trackers
then look for signs where they expect to find them.

In contrast to simple and systematic tracking (following clear prints,
such as in sand or snow), speculative tracking is based on
hypothetico-deductive reasoning, and involves a fundamentally new way of
thinking.

Liebenberg’s description of tracking falls quite nicely into the

definition of science we see above. The term *tracking* generally refers

to following animal tracks. But to most indigenous peoples I have

studied, the concept of tracking includes much more than following

animal prints. According to Tom Brown Jr., the Apache did not

differentiate between *tracking* and *awareness*. Martín Prechtel has

said that in his indigenous Guatemalan village they referred to their

shamans as *trackers*. In the film *The Great Dance*: *A Hunter’s

Story*, we learn that the Kalahari Bushmen’s word for tracking means the

same thing as dancing.

More Liebenberg:

I would argue that the differences between the art of tracking and
modern science are mainly technological and sociological. Fundamentally
they involve the same reasoning processes and require the same
intellectual abilities. The modern scientist may know much more than the
tracker, but he/she does not necessarily understand nature any better
than the intelligent hunter-gatherer. What the expert tracker lacks in
quantity of knowledge (compared to modern scientists), he/she may well
make up for in subtlety and refinement. The intelligent hunter-gatherer
may be just as rational in his/her understanding of nature as the
intelligent modern scientist. Conversely, the intelligent modern
scientist may be just as irrational as the intelligent hunter-gatherer.
One of the paradoxes of progress is that, contrary to expectation, the
growth of our knowledge about nature has not made it easier to reach
rational decisions.

Despite “progress” in science and technology, the people of civilization

have never slowed their destruction of the planet. That strikes me as a

very strange paradox indeed. For such a great culture of rationalists,

it seems extremely irrational to destroy the land on which we all depend

for survival. Why have hunter-gatherers thrived for hundreds of

thousands of years, while civilization has decimated the entire planet

after only ten thousand? It seems the “technological and sociological”

differences might have a much more fundamental weight than Liebenberg

presumes.

By looking at the sociological differences between agricultural

subsistence versus hunter-gatherer subsistence we see just how different

science and tracking really manifest.

Hunting and gathering by its nature demands participation in the ebb and

flow of life. You have no more control over your food supply than any

other animal. That doesn’t mean that you do not encourage the

biodiversity of your area, it just means that you don’t spend all your

time tilling a monocropped field. Sometimes the gods grace you with

food, other times not. But rarely do you go hungry. Hunter-gatherers do

not have to work at having a deep relationship with nature; the

relationship simply shapes how they behave. Tracking shapes their

reality, deepening their connection to the land with every track they

read.

The first track is the end of a string. At the far end, a being is
moving; a mystery, dropping a hint about itself every so many feet,
telling you more about itself until you can almost see it, even before
you come to it. The mystery reveals itself slowly, track by track,
giving its genealogy early to coax you in. Further on, it will tell you
the intimate details of its life and work, until you know the maker of
the track like a lifelong friend.

— Tom Brown Jr., *The Tracker*

Ultimately, tracking an animal makes us sensitive to it—a bond is
formed, an intimacy develops. We begin to realize that what is happening
to the animals and to the planet is actually happening to us. We are all
one. Tracking and reading sign help us to learn not only about the
animals that walk around in the forest—what they are doing and where
they are going—but also about ourselves. For me, this interconnection is
survival knowledge and the true value of tracking an animal.

— Paul Rezendes, *Tracking and the
Art of Seeing*

When you track an animal—you must become the animal. Tracking is like
dancing, because your body is happy—you can feel it in the dance and
then you know that the hunting will be good. When you are doing these
things you are talking with God.

— !Nqate Xqamxebe, *The Great
Dance*: *A Hunter’s Story*

Tracking requires empathy for that which you track. Many anthropologists

like to use the word *anthropomorphize*. They say that trackers project

their own feelings onto the animals, thereby identifying with them both

psychologically and emotionally. This helps the tracker speculate the

animal’s next move. I reject the ideology that hunter-gatherer trackers

project their emotions onto animals. They open themselves to the

animal’s feelings, the same way one lets in the sounds of music.

Different kinds of music evoke different kinds of feelings in the

listener. You can’t say that I have projected my feelings onto a sensory

experience like hearing a sound. But rather I have ears that can

perceive sounds. Sounds enter my ears and teach me things about how I

feel. When you step on a dog’s foot and hear it whimper and then feel

bad for the dog, you have not projected feelings of pain onto the dog;

you have observed a dog in obvious pain and have opened your sense of

empathy for the dog’s feelings. Or maybe you don’t care. Maybe you cut

their vocal chords in preparation for a vivisection.

Tracking requires humility, not just toward the animals you track but

also toward the gods who provide you with food. Hunter-gatherers must

have humility. The word *humble* comes from *humus*, which means “close

to the earth.” Empathy helps you to realize we all live together in the

same space (plants, animals, rocks, clouds, etc.) as a big family. The

realization that we all live as a family gives us humility as a small

part of a large creation. You must have humility when your life rests in

the hands of this natural community.

Liebenberg wrote something else I thought sounded interesting:

Religious belief is so fundamental to the hunters’ way of thinking that
it cannot be separated from hunting itself. At the end of the day, if
they have had no luck in tracking down an animal, !XO hunters will say
that the greater god did not “give” them an animal that day. If, on the
other hand, they have had a successful hunt, they will say that the
greater god was good to them.

Agricultural societies (civilizations), on the other hand, attempt to

exert control over food supply by growing it themselves. While every

other living creature leaves their food supply in the hands of fate, or

the gods, or nature, agricultural people remove themselves from fate. A

separation from the community of life must happen so that farmers can

turn biodiverse forests into monocrop for human consumption. This

violates the fundamental law in nature that no living thing takes more

than it needs to survive. In order to maintain this kind of controlling

relationship to the land, agricultural people must separate themselves

from it psychologically and emotionally. Willem Larsen at The College of

Mythic Cartography also spoke of this in his essay *Vivisecting ‘The

Flesh,’ and the Cult of Science*:

Our Science has propelled an immense productivity in scientific
knowledge precisely because it does not consider the universe alive; it
proceeds at a meteoric pace, because it need never ask permission of a
dead universe, it need never pause in its breakneck progress. Because of
this, it will also never know certain things, and actually will
perpetuate a blindness of other relationships. The Scientific process
actually acts as a ceremony that further inculcates the worldview of a
dead universe.

Control lies at the heart of civilization. Control over food supply

means control over the earth. This culture, by its very nature, lacks

humility towards the earth. You cannot show empathy towards those you

dominate.

Let’s play with Liebenberg’s quote and flip it around on itself:

Religious belief is so fundamental to the scientists’
(civilizationists’) way of thinking that it cannot be separated from
science (civilization) itself.

At the end of the day, if the greater god has not “given” the

civilizationists food, they will ignore the god and “take” whatever they

want. I think this shows us what Liebenberg meant when he said modern

scientists could behave irrationally too. This means that information

gathered by scientists has lacked empathy and humility, two fundamental

aspects of our evolution as tracking hunter-gatherers. It also means

scientists will not use the information with empathy and humility. How

could they?

Tracking connects us to oneness and humility. Science separates us from

that which gives us life. Although the mechanics of tracking and science

seem similar, the cultural values behind the processes (humility vs.

control) create very different results.

What does this mean for those who rewild? It means that, most likely,

the knowledge forcefully stolen from nature by civilization’s scientists

will have little use, if any, to hunter-gatherer-horticulturalists. And

further, that information taken (not received) without humility and

empathy will in fact have deadly results in the real world.

It also means that gaining knowledge through tracking may work as one of

the most important adventures in rewilding.

Image vs. Rewilding

Most birds cannot “choose” a different plumage to attract a mate. But

not all birds. The bowerbird provides a rather interesting example of a

bird that has externalized its image as a way of attracting a mate. This

bird builds a bower with as many shiny blue things as he can find,

including manmade plastic and glass. He has such a particularity about

the aesthetic of his bower that he will restore the bower to his exact

specifications should it become disturbed. The female chooses whether to

mate with the male based on the aesthetic of the bower. The bower serves

no other purpose; they abandon it and move elsewhere to make their nest.

Other animals evolved an image that would detract predators: camouflage.

Brown birds have brown feathers because they live close to the ground.

Some birds, such as the red-winged blackbird, can hide their bright

plumage to appear more inconspicuous. They use their image to both hide

from predators and attract a mate. This shows us the purpose of image,

whether externalized or embedded: to attract or deter something.

Humans wear the clothes of a subculture to attract those of like mind

and turn away others. I get made fun of for looking like a hipster all

the time. I care a lot about my image, and I feel no guilt or lack of

purity for feeling that way. I take showers, I shave, I dress in clothes

that I think look cool and match the aesthetic I see as “hip.” Of

course, any group of culture or subculture has their specific way of

dressing that allows people to recognize which culture or subculture

they belong to. Each of these subcultures has their own “hip” as well.

I’ve noticed many people (including myself) become wrapped up in the

idea that because many indigenous cultures had sustainable subsistence

strategies that means all of their customs will work for everyone.

Though I’ve found it easy to jump to this conclusion as I rewild, I have

also found it more and more limiting: just because native cultures did

it, doesn’t mean it will work for people who rewild.

I can hear the conversation with my mom in my head. It goes like this:

“Peter, why do you wear that loin cloth? You just look ridiculous in
it!”

“Mooooom! I told you, when I wear the loin cloth call me Urban Scout!
You’ll embarrass me!”

“Oh, oh…Sorry, honey.”

“I wear it because primitive peoples do, and I want to live like them.”

“Okay, ‘Scout,’ and if primitive people jumped off a bridge…? I mean
what do you plan to practice next, cannibalism?!?”

“Of course not!” And then, under my breath, “I mean, not *yet*.”

“What did you say?”

“Huh?”

“That last part. Did you say something else?”

“What? Oh, I just mean, yeah, totally. No, what?”

“Huh? Oh, not. Nothing. I thought you said something.”

“Nope.”

“Okay, but do you see what I mean? Just because some primitive people
wore a loin cloth doesn’t mean you have to, too.”

But seriously, I see this everywhere. It seems many people have begun to

generalize indigenous customs (“Indigenous peoples did X”) to justify

their own level of hip. I even found this when I recently read the

Crimethinc *Hunter-Gatherer* zine. Don’t get me wrong: I love

Crimethinc, and I enjoyed most of the zine. But I couldn’t help but feel

irritated with the following text:

**One Million Years of d.i.y. punk!**

For over 50,000 years, our ancestors didn’t shave their legs or armpits
or wear deodorant. They scavenged food like modern trash-pickers do,
traveled like hitchhikers riding rivers and hopping ocean currents
around the world, celebrated life with folk music made by their friends,
passed down culture they devised. You bet some of them had dreadlocks,
some homemade tattoos and scarification, some patches proclaiming their
allegiances. There used to be as many humans as there are punk rockers,
now.

“See how cool we…look. See our dreads? Smell our BO? See how we ‘forage’

in dumpsters? Don’t we just act sooo indigenous/primitive?”…Hey,

Crimethinc, you forgot to say 50,000 years of DIY man/boy love! Check

this out:

Gilbert Herdt (1981, 1984a, 1987, 1990) and other anthropologists have
reported on a pederastic puberty ritual shared by 30 to 50 Melanesian
and New Guinea cultures that may be historically related to similar
practices that developed among aboriginal Australians some 10,000 years
ago. The focus of intense speculation by anthropologists and fierce
opposition from Western governments and missionaries, these ritualized
homosexual relationships are a necessary part of the coming-of-age
training for boys. Their basis is the belief that boys do not produce
their own semen and must get it from older men by “drinking semen,”
i.e., playing the recipient role in oral-genital sex or anal sex before
puberty and during adolescence. This is the opposite of the traditional
Western view in which the recipient (insertee) of anal or oral sex is
robbed of his manhood.

Oh my god. NAMBLA (North American Man/Boy Association) acts sooo much

more indigenous than punk rockers! Since the members of NAMBLA have

drank “man’s milk” and I have not (well, I did taste my own once), does

that mean they should have a blog about rewilding and I should shut up?

That makes no fucking sense at all. People all around the world,

civilized and not, practice a multitude of customs and dogmas.

Why does this paragraph from Crimethinc frustrate me so much? Two

reasons.

The first statement, “For over 50,000 years, our ancestors didn’t shave

their legs or armpits or wear deodorant,” implies that no indigenous

cultures had beautification rituals involving hair removal and body

scenting. That doesn’t hold true at all. Many cultures, such as the

Iroquois, plucked all of their body hair using clamshells. And we know

that indigenous people scented themselves with things like lavender,

rosemary, and other herbs. I guess Crimethinc’s statement does hold true

in one sense: indigenous people didn’t use the industrially produced

Mach3 razor or Teen Spirit. But the passage I quoted makes it clear that

the author wants to justify why so many DIY punk kids smell like shit

and have scraggly hair all over their bodies.

You know the kids with the hippie “natural” look? In reality it has

nothing to do with looking natural, since we know that many “natural”

human cultures had highly maintained beautification. It really

translates to the no-maintenance look. They stink and have unkempt

beards or leg hair, shaggy, nappy hair, with raggedy clothes hanging off

their bodies by a thread. They might live on the anarcho-punk end of the

spectrum or the pacifist-hippie end; they may wear all black, with dirt

smears on their face and have steel-toed boots (how did they pay for

those?!?), or they may have patchy, colorful cords with overly large

tie-dye shirts and hemp sandals.

The funniest part to me about the no-maintenance look involves how much

maintenance it actually takes! Seriously, I know because I dressed that

way for a time. It takes a lot of work to look like you don’t care.

Looking like you don’t care exemplifies your own cultural hipness, and

you use an inaccurate perception of indigenous people to back it up.

The second reason I feel frustrated comes from this misinformation

presenting a superficial reason for rewilding. It distracts us from the

important reasons we yearn for the indigenous lifestyle: meeting the

needs of the environment, culture, and individual. What makes the

indigenous lifestyle attractive in the most general sense does not

involve particular rituals, style of dress, level of cleanliness, sexual

practices, or other customs. By contaminating the mythology and taking

us away from the subsistence strategies of indigenous people, to the

more superficial layer of image, we find ourselves never fully getting

what we need. No number of sweat lodges, dreadlocks, or homemade folk

songs will give us the subsistence strategy of hunting and gathering

that meets the needs of all three elements mentioned above. They may

keep those strategies alive once practiced, but they don’t act as the

strategies themselves.

While picking trash carries the same spirit as indigenous foragers, it

does not serve the same function in terms of meeting the needs of the

environment: picking trash does not make the ecosystem healthier,

because the mechanisms that create the trash in the first place come

from the larger destructive culture. While it may feel better than

working as a slave in the pyramid, it does not help the ecosystem the

way a hunter-gatherer culture would.

Both of these misrepresentations of indigenous culture fuel a

radder-than-thou personification of those in the

anarcho-primitivist-punk scene. “We act sooo much more primitive than

you do, with your clean-shaven face, pressed slacks, and pop music

collection.” Basically it amounts to scenester trash. It only serves to

alienate other people to the true ideology of indigenous living because

of its falsified, superficial layer of image.

Wearing buckskin clothes or a loin cloth doesn’t make you a native.

Wearing all black and dreadlocks doesn’t make you more

anarcho-primitivist than wearing American Apparel. Rewilding refers to

an action like running or climbing, it does not have a specific image.

Anyone, from any subculture, can rewild. It works as a cross-cultural

activity, like reading, cooking, or talking. Therefore it may look

completely different to one culture or subculture to the next. Don’t get

lost in image. Keep your eye on the prize: living wild and free and

creating more biodiversity.

Hipsters vs. Rewilding

Can everyone shut the fuck up about hipsters already? I feel so fucking

sick of that word. The whole subject seriously bores the shit out of me,

and yet I constantly have to defend myself from people who call me that

as though it suddenly makes everything I have done to further rewilding

insincere or fake. I usually shrug it off, but I recently surfed to the

Adbusters website only to see an entire feature article from last summer

where they just talk all kinds of shit about hipsters, and now I feel I

need to say something.

I got called a hipster for the first time while walking into a burrito

place on Belmont Street. As I walked through the door this big

biker-looking dude ushered out his four-year-old son. He said to his son

with disgust, “Watch out for the hipster.” I remember feeling angry at

first, thinking, “I’m not a fucking hipster.” But of course I fit the

description. I had on a vintage Ferrari T-shirt, tight black polyester

Wranglers, black Ray-Ban sunglasses, black Converse, and I had a mullet.

This occurred in 2003.

While growing up I saw Portland as just another quiet, small, boring

city on the West Coast, always living in the shadow of Seattle and San

Francisco. Thanks to former mayor Vera Katz (who hated homeless people

and loved money), art galleries and fancy restaurants now litter the

city. Five years ago Portland suddenly became an up-and-coming arts

town, with super affordable rent, cheap beer, everyone under thirty

playing in a rock band…and no one had ever heard of myspace or youtube.

I dropped out of high school at sixteen to rewild. I took classes and

spent most of my time in the woods, the library, or at my wage-slave

job. I didn’t care much for the way I dressed. I wore mostly oversized

military surplus wool clothes. I didn’t really care much about aesthetic

at that point in my life because I had no culture. For the most part I

lived like a loner. I quit doing anything artistic (including

filmmaking) because I didn’t think that would help me learn to rewild. I

lived this way until I came across Joseph Campbell. Then I really began

to see a purpose in my passion for art and cultural creativity. He said:

The function of the artist is the mythologization of the environment.

I realized that my artistic talents in filmmaking and other mediums

could actually help create a cultural movement of rewilding by using art

to spread the mythology of it. Lonely at nineteen, with no culture of

rewilders, never having had a girlfriend before, I began to spend more

time with people. I realized if I wanted to create a culture of

rewilding, I would need to blend in with the other artists in town, and

subversively spread animism and rewilding from within the arts scene.

Luckily I had some really cool coworker friends at Coffee People to show

me the ropes. We went to the Goodwill bins and I got a new wardrobe in

two hours for $5. This happened back when the bins only charged 39¢ a

pound and before the overpriced “vintage” thrift stores began sending

their employees there to pick out all the good stuff so that they could

then up-sell it. I would dig through the troughs of clothes, hold up a

shirt for my friend Dave to see, and he would explain whether it would

work and why. It felt like taking a class on how to “see” cool. Dave

loves clothes, and talking about aesthetics and his excitement and

knowledge spilled over into me. With Dave’s wardrobe help, I found my

first girlfriend, a seamstress and clothing designer who took me a few

steps further, showing me how to dress for my particular body. Her

classic motto at the time: “It works if you work it.” With both of their

help, I became a hipster fashionista practically overnight.

I can hear you all saying, “What a poseur!” Let’s talk about that for a

second. In high school I remember this one time walking by the most

gothic kid in our school and overhearing him saying, “Then this guy was

like, ‘Get outta my way, you goth!’ and I was like…Oh my god! I’m not

gothic!” I remember thinking, “What the fuck is that guy talking about?

He is obviously gothic.” I knew immediately why he said it that way; it

doesn’t seem cool to “try” to look gothic. To label yourself as gothic

would mean you went out of your way to dress like that. For some reason

that breaks the rules of cool. Probably because it shows that you care,

and caring about things—showing any kind of sincerity—doesn’t mean cool

in our dead, heartless culture.

I recently pointed out to a green anarchist who claimed to dress however

he wanted that he wore all the right green anarchist scenester clothes

topped off with their iconic dreadlocks. By admitting that I choose to

dress this way—as a hipster—I no longer look cool because you don’t look

cool if you “follow the crowd.” If dressing punk or gothic or hipster or

anarchist supposedly means an attempt at rebelling against the

mainstream, then admitting the label of hipster implies that you follow

a fashion trend, which means you admit to not having your own creative

individuality. Let’s get real. No one dresses like an individual. No one

accidentally dresses like a gutter punk, hipster, hippie, yuppie, normal

core, or whatever. Everyone *chooses* their subcultural identity. You

cannot wear clothes (or not wear clothes) that will not lump you in with

some kind of crowd, because every way of dress implies a subculture.

Subcultures create aesthetics. Your individuality comes out of how you

express yourself in that particular subculture. If you dress like a

gutter punk, you’ll obviously have a studded jacket, but the placement

of studs or the words you write on the jacket will express your own

individuality within that culture.

In the years that followed I made a lot of friends, partied my ass off,

and forgot all about why I became part of that subculture. At the time

of this writing (2008), Portland feels like Seattle’s formerly cooler

punk rock cousin who finally had to get a job. In other words, the party

ended. Rent costs much more, beer costs much more, and barista jobs for

starving artists have disappeared. I’ve seen the small town turn into a

huge, strung-out city practically overnight. I’ve lived through,

identified with, and learned a tremendous amount about the rise of

hipster culture. I will risk my coolness and admit that I dress like a

hipster, whatever that even means.

I find it interesting that “critiques” of hipster culture never come

from the hipster community speaking for itself (of course it can’t if no

one admits to dressing as one!) but always from an outsider talking

about something they live apart from and don’t understand, because they

appear too old, jealous, or more self-conscious than the hipsters they

attack. I rarely hear the friends I would label as hipsters talking shit

about people for the way they dress or the music they listen to. I talk

more shit than anyone I know, hipster or not! I’ve probably heard a

dozen or more people who I don’t consider hipsters say, “Look at those

fucking hipsters over there. They think they’re so fucking cool.” You

know what? I bet those hipsters didn’t even notice you. Why the fuck do

you care? Why do you go out of your way to point them out?

Critics claim that hipsters steal symbols and styles from previous

cultures but without the authenticity or sincerity of those cultures.

Firstly, every new subculture steals from an older one and changes its

meaning. Old people say this every time a new subculture rises. “They’re

stealing from us!” Generally because the old people don’t feel

appreciated or acknowledged for “creating” (even though they stole it

from someone else!) that particular style. Secondly, in terms of lack of

authenticity or sincerity, every culture adapts and alters an old style

and gives it a new meaning. People complain about hipsters’ lack of

sincerity and meaning, but that just reflects our “new” twist.

Urban people’s lives have no point. We exist as the human waste product

of agriculture. We have no integrated purpose in the context of the

real, wild world. We have no relationship with our landbase except blind

exploitation. We exist only to serve coffee to those in power, to enter

data into spreadsheets for those in power, or to operate machinery for

those in power. We simply shift wealth around so that we feel like we

have some worth, even though we don’t. Though we drown ourselves in

culture, none of it has any meaning beyond its initial consumption.

We’ve made our entire culture disposable. We’ve made our lives

disposable.

Some have made claims that we hipsters, unlike previous countercultures,

do not rebel against previous generations. This seems like a lazy

analysis to me. Hipsters *have* rebelled against previous generations;

we have rebelled against *meaning*. The people of my generation have all

seen what those in power do to people with feelings and ideas. We’ve

seen the gamut of “revolutions,” and we have seen that they mean nothing

in the end. Civilization continues to kill all life on this planet no

matter who sits in charge. No matter how much we protest, this culture

wins and the earth dies. No matter what we do, we live as slaves to it.

They’ve programmed us with pacifism from birth. Rather than look foolish

like our “revolutionary” predecessors, we just stopped caring and

accepted our slavery to find happiness in novelty, irony, drugs, sex,

and music. Hipsters do not look lame for acting apathetic: civilization

destroyed our lives, our hearts, and our landbase.

If meaninglessness looks cool now, it will not look cool tomorrow. I

want to break the shackles of this hierarchy and create a living world.

I feel determined to make rewilding more than just the next

counterculture.

Sarcasm vs. Rewilding

Humans have a long history of teaching social taboos through jokes,

irony, sarcasm, and mockery, showing us what we do not find as

acceptable behavior. Such comic geniuses as Jerry Seinfeld and Larry

David know this too well, their narcissistic characters always breaking

social taboos and looking like assholes. In Farley Mowat’s *People of

the Deer* I recall a moment in which he drew a picture of a deer smoking

a pipe, and the Inuits laughed hysterically. I think this kind of

ridiculousness encapsulates the humor in irony, sarcasm, and mockery. It

has a kind of innocence to it; it looks silly for a deer to do human

things, just as it looks silly for a human to do deer things. We laugh

at the ridiculousness of the situation, whether we see a deer smoking a

pipe or Larry David not bringing a gift to Ben Stiller’s birthday party.

After several seasons of mimicking racist stereotypes under the guise of

bringing the idiocy of racism to light, Dave Chappelle changed his mind

about using this kind of humor. While shooting a sketch, he noticed a

white man laugh a little too hard at a racist joke, and it made him

uncomfortable. Dave could tell from the way he laughed that this white

guy did not get the joke. He told *TIME* magazine that he realized the

irony of his racism didn’t translate, so he quit the show and went on

vacation.

It seems that the line between sarcasm and sincerity has a lot to do

with context. If I make a joke with my friends, from the perspective of

someone living a lifestyle I find abusive, they’ll laugh because they’ll

understand the sarcasm: I would never sincerely make those comments. But

if I make the same joke to people who actually have the perspective I

mock, they won’t get the sarcasm. Instead they will hear the joke as

reinforcement for the abusive perspective.

A few years ago I heard Janis Joplin’s ironic song “Mercedes Benz” in a

Mercedes Benz television commercial. Oh lord, won’t you buy me an AK47;

my friends all have sold out—I must make amends. I can feel Janis

rolling over in her grave: an anti-consumerist song used to sell

consumption. (Of course, she did drive a Porsche, so maybe not.) An

adbuster used as an advertisement. Ironic, don’t you think? Change or

remove the context of an adbuster, and it just looks like an

advertisement.

I watched Steve Colbert “roast” the President of the United States for

thirty minutes nonstop. Of course I laughed. But remember, the court

jester had permission to insult the king. You have to ask why? If

sarcasm and mockery really threatened those in power, would they allow

it? Do jokes motivate you to stop injustice? Does laughter make you want

to put an end to racism? Fascism? Civilization?

Most ironic and sarcastic jokes of this ilk appear to me as a kind of

psychological *gallows humor*. Gallows humor refers to ironic or

sarcastic jokes made by those who face the gallows in order to keep

their spirits up—people who have no more options to fight back. Gallows

humor works as a last resort to hold onto dignity in the face of abuse.

Our domestication causes us to see our fate as slaves to civilization as

something inevitable and inescapable, just as a death row inmate will

inevitably sit in the electric chair. The civilized have accepted this

programmed fate and do not fight it. “We can’t stop our destructive

culture from killing the planet, but we don’t have to let it kill our

morale.”

While gallows humor can have a spiritually liberating quality, it

doesn’t physically liberate you from the noose. It merely makes living

with abuse more tolerable. The question becomes, does having a higher

level of morale motivate you to fight back or cause you to remain

apathetic and accept your fate?

Think back to the question, “Why did the king allow the jester to insult

him?” Sure, you can laugh all you want, vote all you want, petition all

you want, protest all you want (as long as you stay in the designated

protest area), blog all you want, and say all you want. You can even own

a gun or two or three. So long as you don’t actually *do* anything that

threatens those in power or the progress of civilization.

If *gallows humor* refers only to the abused, *executioner’s humor*

refers to ironic or sarcastic jokes made by those who run the gallows in

order to distance themselves from the guilt of murder. Executioner’s

humor says, “We refuse to change our cycle of abuse, and we will make

jokes to distance ourselves from the guilt we feel when we abuse you.” I

can make fun of how much gas my SUV consumes because it distances me

from feeling bad about it, and I don’t have to change my life. I can

joke about slavery in a foreign country because it makes me feel better

about buying clothes from the Gap. I can make a joke about staying

inside on a sunny day to watch TV because it will make me feel less

guilty.

If no press equals bad press, then even making fun of abusive behaviors

promotes them regardless of context, whether gallows or executioner’s

humor. By joking about atrocities, we promote them. By having a serious

discussion about them, we allow them to continue. Perhaps we just

shouldn’t joke about some things. If gallows humor only works to

distance ourselves from pain, then sincerely examining our situation

moves us closer to the pain. Perhaps we need to acknowledge the pain in

order to truly figure out what to do next.

I can’t help but think of my generation of sarcastic cynics, mavens of

irony, and worshipers of novelty (*I have a huge rare LP collection*, *I

can go on for hours about obscure B-movies from the sixties*, *I have a

mullet and wear a trucker hat even though I don’t live in the country*).

After witnessing our parents’ generation become beaten, broken, and

manipulated after trying so desperately to change the world, it makes

perfect sense that my generation would end up broken and shattered and

distant from meaning. The far-out hippies of yore gave birth to the

cynical hipsters of today. When we can’t stop devouring the world, who

wants to look at the world we live in? Who wants to acknowledge the

pain? We have given up. We have no hope for change nor the urge to

create it. Why should we? Instead of tearing down civilization, we make

sarcastic jokes about our predicament, further inculcating our apathy.

Meaninglessness vs. Rewilding

My mom asked today if I always feel either up or down or if I ever feel

just a normal “humdrum.” I told her that I never feel good if I don’t

follow my heart, that when I have to do something boring that I hate,

over a long period of time, I always get depressed. Since I rarely have

the opportunity to follow my heart in that way, I almost always feel

depressed. She said that working a job she didn’t like felt humdrum to

her. I said it feels like terrible to me.

At the moment, I miss most of my friends in Portland. I miss drinking,

club-hopping, dressing up, bumping into friends at bars, dancing, and

feeling like part of something bigger. I wonder how much of all that

filled sincere social needs or just worked to distract me from my

deep-seated depression. The last time I felt this depressed, I ate a

healthy paleo diet, exercised a ton, and didn’t do any drugs. I did work

at a shitty coffee shop wage-slave job while working my ass off trying

to create a nonprofit that went nowhere.

I often have thoughts about suicide. It seems a lot easier than existing

sometimes. I probably would have done it at age eleven (thinking of all

those times I fell asleep with a knife at my wrist, eyes red and tired

from crying myself to sleep) if I didn’t feel a stronger need to save

the world. I hate this feeling of meaninglessness. Hopelessness.

Despair. The regular, all-too-familiar bouts of anxiety that feel like a

knife up under the sternum and lungs full of water, drowning in grief. I

think about all the factors: moving out of the inner city, losing

frequent contact with my best friends, working a wage-slave job that

doesn’t use my best talents (even though I respect the company and

support what they do), not speaking with my dad for seven months now.

Add to all of that the weight of the world and the grief gets too heavy

to carry. I slip and fall, and I have trouble standing back up.

I often say that I come to rewilding regardless of collapse, and I do. I

also come to it because I strongly believe that it works to stop

environmental destruction and restore it. I rewild because it works as a

means to an end, whether that end means surviving collapse or creating a

better way to live or both. But when I read about ice caps melting and

methane and positive feedback loops of climate change, and that we can’t

change things now—that it will all melt and release methane that will

heat up the planet and kill us all, wild or domestic—it makes me feel a

kind of hopelessness and despair that I can barely articulate. While I

no longer freak out about the apocalypse, I still have a ton of anxiety

about the future. You won’t find me screaming on the street corner, but

you’ll find me having trouble putting my clothes on in the morning. No

matter how good or complete my life gets, no matter how much fun I have

rewilding, I still struggle with a huge sense of impending doom and a

feeling of meaninglessness.

On a large enough timeline, everything happening in this moment has no

relevance to the whole of time. Some day the earth will merge with the

sun, and everything alive today will have died long before. Does that

make my life meaningless? If we look at life in a linear fashion, yes,

it looks rather meaningless. If the methane heat apocalypse happens in

twenty years, does that make this moment meaningless? In a linear sense,

yes.

Civilizationists find purpose in progress, which they see as endless

growth and expansion. We measure this progress with linear time, from

“stone age” to “space age.” I find meaning and purpose in maintaining

quality relationships with humans and other-than-humans. Ironically I

also perceive this purpose through linear time: from “domestic” to the

eventual “wild.” Most of the time rewilding still feels like a kind of

progress to me. When I hear that I may never live a wild life because

methane gas will make the planet so hot that we will all die, and that

any “progress” towards creating cultures of rewilding will come to

nothing, it feels meaningless.

Wild, animistic hunter-gatherers do not experience the maintaining of

quality relationships in a linear fashion but in a cyclical one. This

way of perceiving linear time vs. cyclical time feels to me like a

crucial part of rewilding. If I don’t see rewilding as a kind of

progress, but rather the making and maintaining of relationships, it

doesn’t matter whether everyone burns up. Of course, that would suck and

carries its own grief, but it doesn’t lead to meaninglessness because

life (depending on your definition of life), matter and energy, will

continue. It feels difficult to see rewilding as nonprogressive, since

we feel so strongly the chains of domestication, and moving away from

that feels like progress towards an end goal of living wild. I would say

that rewilding means maintenance and not progress. Even indigenous

peoples spent their lives “rewilding,” renewing their landscapes and

psyches.

Animism, because it seeks to relate and converse with the world, rather
than to define and control it, always renews itself. It wakes up every
morning fresh and alive, and every evening it tucks itself to bed to
dream again for the very first time. Since animism involves a
relationship with the world, a living being that exists in the now, the
present moment, what more relevant perspective could you find?

— Willem Larsen, *The College of
Mythic Cartography*

These thoughts help me with meaninglessness as a concept, but they don’t

help me in the moment, because I still have to get up and carry the

grief of civilization’s devastation with me to my wage-slave job. I see

few mourning for the collapse of salmon populations, though I spend

hours sobbing over it, too sad or scared, frustrated, and hopeless to

take action, legal or otherwise. Honestly I don’t know how people make

it through this fucked-up culture. I just don’t. A best friend’s death I

can handle (for the most part). The death of the world? The threat of

the death of the world? I don’t think humans come into the world

equipped to handle this kind of grief. That any of us wake up and

continue to live should show us our beautiful inherent resilience (or

our great ability to deny reality!).

I wish I knew how to get over depression, how to process all this grief.

I wish sweat lodges, tinctures, Prozac, massages, acupuncture, alcohol,

video games, television dramas, diets, and blogging did more than

temporarily relieve me from the pain. I mean, I know that if I got paid

to rewild I wouldn’t feel as depressed. But I don’t know how to get paid

to rewild, aside from what I do now. Of course, not having to pay for

clean water, a place to live and store things, and all of my food would

kick ass too. I think this grief and depression will just exist until

civilization comes down and the stress of this system no longer locks us

into jobs we hate. I don’t know.

Denial vs. Rewilding

Who can live with a light heart while participating in a global
slaughter that makes the Nazi holocaust look like a limbering-up
exercise?

— Daniel Quinn, *Providence*

The more time I spend at my job, the easier it becomes to ignore my

pain. I can shut it off and let my body function. I can remove all

external thought and simply become part of the machine, pushing a button

over and over and over again, lulling my heart back to sleep with

rhythmic clockwork.

I have heard that the key to meditation involves a repetitive motion,

word, or phrase. I wonder if they mean something like this catchy little

jingle from my early teens: “Hi, this is Peter with Moore Information, a

public opinion research company. Could you spend a few moments on the

phone with me to discuss some issues in your state?” Meditation helps

you “transcend” your body, senses, and emotions (meaning it removes your

humanity) so that you won’t rise up to crush the system crushing you.

After days, weeks, months of this, I can simply forget about Urban

Scout, collapse, and rewilding. I can bump my schedule up to five days a

week. I can find “comfort” and “relaxation” in television shows like

for $20) at the local video store. I can even have a couple beers or

smoke a bowl. Then I can go to bed and get up the next morning and do it

all over again. Let myself slide a little more. Focus on pushing the

button, pulling the lever. Yes, sir. No, sir. Click, clack, click. If

all I have to do involves pushing this little button, and I learn to

focus on the button (a sort of meditation, if you will), then I can

ignore my own pain. I can bury it.

I can wake up every morning and read the paper and believe that

technology, the government, the scientists, or god will save us. I can

bury the feeling deep down that any of this Urban Scout stuff ever

happened. I could chalk it up to my more “radical” days as I sip on a

can of cheap beer around the summer barbecue with the guys. “Ha ha,

remember the ideological twenties?” On weekends I could work around the

house, go fishing, go on a hike. Take my girl to dinner, the movies, and

a bar. I could work on that novel, write some more music, play a few

hours of the latest *Grand Theft Auto*, and plan what colors to paint

the nursery. I could sell all those philosophical and anthropological

books and field guides and download pop music MP3s to fill their place.

I could forget their contents and fill the void with music loud enough

to drown out any reminder of life before. I could read my voter’s guide

thoroughly and happily send in my ballot and believe in this culture

again. I could make believe that things will work out. It wouldn’t

particularly feel that difficult…I’ve done this for most of my life. We

all have.

I could pretend again that civilization and humanity mean the same

thing. I could turn away from the horrors, slaves, and environmental

decimation. I could forget that all the beauty civilization creates

comes at the cost of destroying the world. I could forget about the

thousands of indigenous human cultures that created beauty, music, art,

and culture and lived sustainably.

If ignorance equals bliss, then denial means feigning ignorance in order

to feel blissful again.

I actually do watch *Dancing with the Stars* and *Battlestar Galactica*

religiously. I play video games from time to time, go to the movies,

take my girl out to dinner, and listen to punk rock at maximum volume. I

have my vices and use them to relax from time to time, to escape when

the pain feels beyond manageable. I also struggle with indulging the

vices too much. Everyone has limits; everyone has a different level of

support. I don’t judge those who remain in denial, or who lose

themselves in their addiction to civilization. I lose myself sometimes,

so how can I judge those who don’t have the support (we all need) to

rewild? I use the support that I have to help support others. If this

all works out, it will work because we have created a culture that

supports rewilding. I grieve for those who remain in denial, who do not

have the support to break the addiction, and I do my best to create a

more supportive culture for people to break free. I also recognize that

some people will die defending civilization. While I don’t judge them, I

still have no problem stopping them from destroying the planet.

But so too must we understand that the way of life that affords this

kind of denial has already begun to unravel. Soon I won’t have the

choice to deny what our culture has done to this planet. No one will.

Instead of remaining in denial, I can continue to recognize that the way

I live threatens every living thing on the planet, and the longer my

civilized lifestyle lasts, the worse time we will all have in the coming

years. I can acknowledge that civilization will not stop killing the

planet. Call it what you want to call it: extraction of resources,

progress, economic growth, manifest destiny, the holocaust, genocide. We

all know the end product looks like the desert wasteland of the

no-longer-fertile-crescent. I can allow myself to feel the pain rather

than repress it into cancers, random acts of violence, alcoholism, and

whatever else unmetabolized grief becomes.

You want the truth? I prefer grief to denial. At least grief

acknowledges the horrors. I would rather contemplate suicide than blow

away the truth in a hazy cloud of reefer smoke and video games. I don’t

see denial as the way out of grief. I don’t see suicide as the way out

of grief (though it seems easy when depressed). I live with depression

from time to time and move through it with honesty, clarity, and

solidarity with those who understand what civilization has done to us

and feel it too. I welcome the grief with open arms.

People say I should focus on the more beautiful things in the world in

order to feel better. But when I see a beautiful world, I also see our

civilization destroying it. I have a loyal, supportive family and group

of friends, and I also see civilization enslaving them. I have so many

things to live for and feel great about, and I feel great about those

things, and yet I also see the larger oppressive forces at work. None of

these beautiful, amazing things will rescue me, and the rest of the

world, from the clutches of civilization. When people in denial say

“Focus on beautiful things,” they really mean “Ignore the destruction.”

So while I have a lot to feel thankful for, I more often think about

stopping the destruction and escaping slavery.

This helps me remember that I live as a slave, which reminds me that I

don’t enjoy living as a slave, which makes me not really enjoy life all

that much in a general sense. I focus on the pain because you can only

stop it by looking at it and figuring out what causes it. You don’t fix

your car engine by disconnecting the check engine light. Pain exists in

order to motivate us to change our behavior, because the behavior

threatens our survival. We need to look deeper. We need to see the

beauty and recognize the destruction, simultaneously. Sometimes we need

to escape and only look at the beauty, and sometimes we need to feel,

full force, the horrors of civilization.

I feel like a pendulum, swinging back and forth from the horrors to the

beauty to the horrors to the beauty. I have moments of despair and

moments of escapism, and I try to strike enough balance to remove

civilization from this planet. Eventually the pendulum stops swinging,

becomes a balance beam—an edge.

Pessimism vs. Rewilding

For the most part I consider myself an optimist. I find it funny that a

lot of people label me a pessimist because I advocate for the collapse

of civilization. When I point out that civilization will collapse no

matter what we do, rather than see that as an opportunity for something

new, they file it away under doom and gloom. I think these people have

it all backwards.

I have spent hours in fear of the collapse and imagining all the horrors

of the apocalypse. But the more I study civilization, the more I realize

that as long as it continues to grow, it will continue to devour the

planet. As soon as it stops growing and begins to descend, life will

reclaim and rewild the planet. In fact I can’t think of a better set of

descriptive words to refer to civilization than *doom and gloom*. The

collapse signals *the end* of the doom and gloom caused by civilization

and the rebirth of something sustainable.

You want to know what the apocalypse looks like? Go outside and look

around. The apocalypse looks like alienation from your neighbors and

family. It looks like eating food sprayed with toxins and then shipped

3,000 miles to the store. It looks like slaving your life away for mere

pennies so you can afford another drink at the bar or puff on your pipe

to forget about your slaving. Oh god, let’s not put an end to any of

that!

Martín Prechtel, a native who lived with post-civilization Mayans,

explained that in his indigenous Mayan village the elders understood

that the buildings in the village didn’t make the community, the need

for the buildings in the village created the community. For this reason,

every year they would take their village down; when you have nothing,

you need community. People helped each other rebuild their houses and in

doing so strengthened their communities. They didn’t build their houses

to last because then they would have no reason, no need for their

community. Martín saw his community shattered when the government forced

people to build houses that would last. Nomadic people constantly broke

down and dismantled their village and rebuilt it elsewhere. The end of

civilization, the collapse, means the end of alienation and the rebirth

of community. Geez, I feel like such a pessimist right now.

Fear of collapse works as a myth created by civilization in order to

allow people to remain in denial and cling to the system. Civilization

wants you to think you need structure, satellite TV, and loose-fit

jeans, and that any life where you actually have to participate in the

world will feel worse than the depression you currently struggle with.

You want doom and gloom? The apocalypse came a long time ago. It just

happened so slowly we didn’t even notice.

I’ve seen a bumper sticker around town that says “No Farms, No Food.”

This just goes to show how people in civilization perceive subsistence.

gather, share, and trade with your neighbors. It may feel like more work

than sitting at a laptop all day (like me right now), but it will feel

great because your body expects and can easily handle that work.

This doom-and-gloom existential perception of collapse really only takes

hold of people in “more developed” countries (meaning the countries that

steal from everyone else). Rich people will no longer have the ability

to steal from poor people. Doesn’t that make you feel sooo sorry for

those rich people?!? They won’t have cheap IKEA crap filling their

previously air-conditioned McMansion built by Mexicans. I can guarantee

you that people in third world countries do not fear the collapse of

civilization. Those at the bottom of the pyramid, the tortured slaves

who make our affluent, luxurious American life possible, will no longer

experience our oppression and will live more comfortable lives,

restoring their connection to their landbase.

The horrors of civilized devastation and oppression will immediately

lessen in most areas after the collapse. The rich will have the most

difficulty coping, as will those who live in densely populated areas.

Those in power, those used to living in McMansions and ordering take-out

on their cell phones—those who sit at the top of the pyramid have the

farthest to fall. They will feel discomfort as they adjust to a more

normal, less decadent, less luxurious (at least in the civilized sense)

life.

Call me a dreamer, but believing we can encourage collapse and rewild a

dying planet feels like optimism to me.

Urban Scout vs. Rewilding

People have called me many names:

Self-serving new-age nihilistic
pseudo-hippie/yuppie
quack-opportunist poseur-hipster-douche-bag green-capitalist-bastard
egotistical-celebrity-anarchist tool that gives everyone douchechills
with a BS agenda, a trust fund from granny, and an obsession with
publicity.

A poster of Meta-filter once asked, “Urban Scout, sincere crusader for

sustainability or poseur-hipster-douchebag?”

Much of what I do involves performance art, so you could label me a

poseur. I dress in (what I think look like) hip clothes, so you could

call me a hipster. I often make egotistical jokes about myself and

others, and I could see why someone would call me a douchebag. On top of

that I sincerely teach rewilding skills to people and educate people on

the ills of agriculture. My life revolves around teaching

sustainability. So you could call me a sincere crusader for

sustainability. Can’t I have all of these qualities simultaneously? This

“one or the other” mentality reflects back to Aristotle’s “is” of

identity; you can only “be” A or B, not both. So you can just go ahead

and call me a poseur-hipster-douchebag, sincerely crusading for

sustainability.

This question, though intellectually incoherent, haunts me because of

the sheer number of people who attack me using this Aristotelian logic.

Most often people say that I “talk” more than I “walk” without thinking

about the importance and need for talking about things. People need to

understand this stuff. I get off on thinking about this stuff and

writing about it. I don’t think of myself as a martyr sacrificing myself

for the greater good or carrying some burden. It really upsets me when

people don’t see the value of talking about things. I keep talking

because of the shit I see in the media projecting a fucked-up worldview.

George Bush Jr. said during his 2008 State of the Union Address:

America is leading the fight against global hunger. Today, more than
half the world’s food aid comes from the United States. And tonight, I
ask Congress to support an innovative proposal to provide food
assistance by purchasing crops directly from farmers in the developing
world, so we can *build up local agriculture and help break the cycle of
famine.* (Audience applause.) [Emphasis added.]

If we really want to “fight” third world hunger we would leave them the

fuck alone, not teach/force them to practice the very pestilence that

brought their culture and landbase to its knees to begin with. If

Americans really wanted to stop population growth they would not provide

“food aid” but landbase rejuvenation. Not to mention that initiatives to

buy food from 3,000 miles away in third world countries make us more

dependent on foreign food sources. So much for the “locavore” movement!

I can’t help but think, doesn’t everyone know that agriculture *causes*

famine? As time passes and things get worse, I keep forgetting the

complete lack of even the simplest ecological understanding making its

way up the pyramid. This doesn’t look good for the planet…

The February 2008 *National Geographic* contains a cover story on the

“Black Pharaohs of Egypt.” Throughout the article we see the scary

desertscape of Egypt: sand without soil. Does anyone ever wonder why?

No, because we would rather talk about “Black Pharaohs” than ecological

genocide. Then we would have to face what we currently do to the planet.

Doesn’t discussing the race of past civilizations’ rulers sound so much

more interesting? I mean, imagine a ruler in your head. Now imagine they

have black skin. Crazy, right?!? Have I ever mentioned how much I hate

this culture?

On one page we see an advertisement for a special *National Geographic*

television program on “climate change.” The following page contains an

advertisement for chips. It depicts three rows of crops: potatoes, corn,

and wheat.

Next to eat crop we see a particular bag of chips made from the crop.

The tag line: “The best snacks on earth.” Do you see the irony here? An

advertisement for agricultural crops that cause deforestation and

desertification wedged between photographs of desert landscapes devoid

of life created by older civilizations and a special television program

on the problems we face because of climate change, which we contributed

to through deforesting the planet. No doubt many people sit in horror as

they watch the ice caps melt before their eyes and the last polar bear

drown on their televisions, all the while snacking on a bag of Sun

Chips.

No one has any fucking idea why civilization causes a loss of

biodiversity, desertification, and climate change. They don’t even think

about food subsistence. They believe that humans practice agriculture

just like we breathe the air. We cannot question it because we can’t see

the link. Our ability to see through civilization’s agricultural

propaganda and rewild will determine whether we survive the collapse as

individuals, communities, and as a species.

What, no applause?

If we want to rewild the planet and create sustainable cultures, we need

people spreading the ideology of rewilding in order to offset the

effects of civilization. Marketing the sustainable worldview of

rewilding fills probably 95% of what I do. If rewilding meant running

away to the wilderness—which it doesn’t—it wouldn’t have much of an

impact on many people. The more people turned on to rewilding, the

softer the crash, because it means more people focused on dismantling

civilization and restoring the biodiversity of their bioregion.

Though marketing rewilding fills most of my time, this doesn’t mean I

don’t walk my talk, since cultures have many members who serve different

functions. Just because I don’t focus on medicinal plants doesn’t mean I

don’t walk my talk. Just because some people-who-rewild don’t care to

know how to tan hides or build bow-drill fires doesn’t mean they don’t

walk their talk. It takes a village. It takes people promoting and

tending to the culture. It takes people building the boat for the

rewilding culture to sail in. Whether you call it ideology, mythology,

propaganda, marketing, or worldview, those elements form the frame of

the cultural rewilding boat. Understanding ways of living that promote

biodiversity (and ways of living that don’t) forms the foundation of

rewilding cultures. You can’t build cultural foundations with your

hands; you build with your words, observations, and stories.

Some people work as frame builders for the boat; others learn to

navigate the oceans once in the boat. Most people focus on one thing but

do a little of everything. If you really understand how talking fits

into culture building, thinking of people as talkers and walkers makes

no sense: talkers and walkers do not exist. People serve different

functions, all talkers, all walkers.

We can’t have culture without stories. If we want a new culture, we need

lots of stories. Hundreds. Thousands. Millions. We need to outcompete

civilization’s propaganda. When I see hundreds of thousands of people

rewilding, telling their own stories, I’ll know that I have done my job

well. When I have hundreds of friends rewilding in my bioregion, serving

their own roles in the culture, I’ll know that I have done my job well

and will feel happy that I have a culture to support me. Hopefully

they’ll recognize all of the foundational work that I have done to make

the culture happen.

Everything vs. Rewilding

Rewilding doesn’t refer to a way of dressing, or a cool new diet, or a

sustainable product you can use to fuel your car, or voting with

dollars, or any of that. It refers to a way of living that requires an

entirely new way of looking at the world. Before you can physically

rewild, you need to see the world through the eyes of the wild, which

means seeing it in contrast to that which domesticates: civilization.

When most people have no awareness of their own domestication, have

never viewed their civilized lives in relation to wild ones, they will

not understand rewilding and will simply replicate civilization with

more primitive tools than we use today.

Once we understand the fundamental picture of civilization, we can hold

up rewilding next to anything and see the civilization in it. Once we

see the civilization in something, we can rewild it. Civilization does

not have a monopoly on music, art, language, violence, or irony. We can

use those tools, too, through the lens of rewilding. My friend Chris

thought of a good metaphor for it:

There’s a Huge Pink Elephant in the room that no one seems to talk
about, and it’s (what’s the quote from *Princess Mononoke*?) a Big Huge
Slimy Life-Sucking Monster of Death called Civilization. I love
permaculture and regenerative design, and those are the folks I’ll talk
to when I want to figure out how to garden my yard, or how to inhabit my
land with my community more sustainably. But what about that little
problem of civilization? Seventy-five species a day—gone. Ninety
thousand acres of forest a day—gone. Thirteen and a half million tons of
CO2 a day into the atmosphere—fuck! That’s civilization. What
I hear Scout saying is simply, “But let’s talk about that too!” And
specifically—in what ways does not directly addressing that elephant’s
presence influence us when we get into our permaculture design, or
regenerative design, or ecovillage planning, or re-souling work, or
whatever? For me, it’s pretty significant to look around and think, “We
really can’t do this good stuff for real with all this here. With all of
us here. Only a small amount of what’s here now can be here and have
this work.” I would rather not notice that, and feel good about buying
my heritage seeds and my commercially produced organic compost. But the
more I take an interest in the long view—“How is this really going to
play out and work out?”—the more I see that elephant sitting there,
shitting on everything (no offense to elephants), and there’s just not
enough room. I like the “vs.” to the extent that it gets us to look up
from what we’re doing (regardless of how friendly that activity might be
to rewilding) and ask, “Yeah, and how exactly are we addressing the
elephant as we do this?”

Rewilding means much more than simply “undoing domestication.” But we

need to see how civilization domesticates us in order to rewild. We need

to see the elephant so that we can make sure to kill it. (Sorry, Dumbo.)

Rewilding begins with seeing the civilization, the empire, the systems

of domination in everything that we do, so that we can uncivilize it

together.

Rewilding vs. Rewilding

I have to say that by now, after spending years philosophizing about the

word *rewilding*…I fucking hate it. I know that sounds ridiculous. I’ve

thought a lot about the errors in choosing the word to describe what I

do. Two things in particular come to mind:

1. The misconception of *wild*. No matter how hard I try, it seems

2. The preexisting scientific definition. Scientists have their own

From the beginning, *rewilding* already had several uses. Trying to get

people to rally behind a concept or idea using a preexisting term with

several definitions doesn’t make it easy to catch on and causes lots of

confusion along the way. Whoops!

Anytime you give an idea a name, you simultaneously give it power and

kill its ability to change. It becomes a term, set in stone. The term

itself can catch on, grow a bigger following. But the evolution of the

idea that created the term stops. Once you have a doctrine, a written

concept, it feels increasingly difficult to change. We see this with

languages. As soon as a language has a dictionary, it becomes set in

stone and ceases to have any fluidity. The book becomes the overall

authority on a subject instead of the people speaking the language. This

happened to rewilding the moment it became a word. Of course, to get

people up to speed, you must talk about it. Spread it. And thus the

power in giving it a name. Eventually it will become obsolete, and

someone else will give a name to what rises in its place. And so on.

For the last year I have debated with myself whether or not to publish

this work. For as soon as my current thoughts sit on this page, they

seem to represent a kind of permanence that I don’t feel I can shake.

Ten years from now I will not agree with a lot of the things I wrote

here. I know this. More experiences, deeper levels of connection, will

make me eat my own words. I know this, but does the reader know? The

reader may read this and see it as a representation of what I believe

currently, ten years after print, twenty years after print. Forty years

from now someone might say, “Urban Scout believes X,” when in fact I

don’t. Things change. I want to make it clear that everything in this

book I hold up in the air, in a space that I can change and probably

will in time.

Similarly, in the future I may not think of what I do as “rewilding” as

described in this book. Whatever I do, whether I call it rewilding now

and snugufunpoling in ten years, doesn’t matter. What I have hoped to

convey in this book doesn’t represent a word but a trajectory. So what

does that mean? It means…fuck rewilding. Fuck this book. Stay true to

the fluidity of the trajectory behind the word. If *rewilding*, the

word, changes to mean something other than this trajectory I have

described, then most certainly I would not identify with it. I identify

with the trajectory: a non-appropriated, authentic, regenerative,

indigenous life.

The Rewild Frontier

No one knows what the future will bring, but this we know: civilizations

destroy the land. Our civilization won’t last much longer. A movement

known as rewilding has started against civilization. This movement has a

frontier, and we live on it.

We generally refer to forces of nature as forces out of human control.

We cannot control which direction the wind blows, we cannot stop fields

from turning into forests, we cannot stop the earth from spinning around

the sun. I believe that culture functions in a homologous manner: a

force of nature out of our control.

Often we hear the debate over whether human behavior comes more from our

nature or our nurture. But I never hear people say that no difference

exists between the two. That these elements have separate names gives

rise to a meaningless discussion that only serves to keep us from

understanding how we can relate to the world. If we believe that

nurturing somehow exists separately from our nature, we believe that we

have some amount of control over our own nature. This means that the

term *nurture* describes the systems we have in place to control

behavior, where our nature looks like something outside our system of

control. I believe that these systems of control come from our nature.

If systems for controlling behavior come from our nature as socially

organized animals, our nature involves nurturing and our nurturing does

not separate itself from our nature. Our nature involves nurturing. Got

it?

I don’t think many people (besides genetic engineers) would argue if I

said that our nature lies out of our hands. Humans have characteristics

brought about through evolution. Our behavior varies from strategy to

strategy of living with this nature. We could say that the culture (our

real “nurturer”) controls us, that myths or memes dictate how we behave

and what decisions we make. But above culture, above nurture, lies

nature, the environment, and the natural laws of the planet. Although

our nature involves nurturing, our strategies for how we nurture, how we

create cultural behavior, dictate themselves through the environment in

which we live. We have no control over the forces, or systems of nature,

only strategies for living with them. Those strategies shape themselves

according to environmental systems. Because we have no control over

environmental systems, in a sense we have no control over the cultural

systems that adapt to them. We only have the power to adapt to

environmental changes: the ability to change with the environment, not

change the environment to live with us. People must respond to

environmental changes or they will die.

I refer to this process as “the power of need.” Needs make the world go

round. People need food to live, so they hunt and gather. People need

sex to proliferate, create culture, and feel good, so they have sex.

Needs can feel physical, like the need to eat or sleep. Needs can feel

emotional, like the need to feel supported. Needs can feel mythological

or spiritual, like the need to go to heaven or the need to feel useful

to a greater group. None of these needs have the same immediacy as the

need for water. A friend of mine refers to this phenomenon (force of

nature) as “the brown water effect,” meaning people will not take up

arms until they have brown water pouring out their faucets. When the

culture cannot meet the direct survival needs of its people, you cannot

have a culture. We need clean water to live. Duh!

When Rachel Carson wrote *Silent Spring*, she began a cultural movement

of environmentalists who foresaw the coming brown water. At this point

most people (in America at least) have clean tap water, aside from

chlorine, chloramine, fluoride, arsenic, etc. (uh, never mind…I guess

they have water that looks and tastes clean). Even though they have seen

the film *An Inconvenient Truth* and have an awareness of the “climate

crisis,” they still have clean tap water, air-conditioning, Internet

access, cell phones, SUVs, McDonalds, Saturday morning cartoons, happy

hour specials, and HBO. As long as this culture continues to provide

these privileged distractions, only a subculture of people with the wits

to see and the heart to feel will look for alternative strategies like

rewilding.

Rewilding doesn’t just mean learning about edible plants and how to make

buckskin. I can stand around here all I want and identify plants and

tell stories and have babies, and still the world will die at the hands

of the civilized. Still civilization will meet me with outward violence

as it collapses. As long as civilization holds its monopoly on violence

and control, as long as the wildfire has fuel to burn, abandoning the

system of civilization for something else remains a problem. Many laws

exist to prevent people from rewilding: hunting and gathering and

gardening fees, regulations, restrictions, and taxes that make

self-sufficiency through rewilding a hard game to play, especially for a

family. Breaking the law (civilization’s threat of violence) works as an

inevitable step in creating a rewilding culture and surviving the

collapse of civilization. Rewilding also means fighting back. With fuel

to burn, a wildfire will gain in momentum and appear unstoppable.

However, it becomes very easy to put out a wildfire after it passes the

point of diminishing returns. With no more fuel to burn, it begins to

die.

In order to fight back against civilization, we need to have lives worth

fighting for. Indigenous peoples who fought against civilization had

something we civilized people don’t: a connection to land and family

worth fighting for, worth killing for. Hunter-gatherers fought for the

land and lifestyle and culture that they had for millions of years,

because it gave them life. They had a system that worked and that they

defended. They fought side by side with their brothers and sisters and

uncles and cousins and grandfathers and grandmothers, both humans and

other-than-human. We have nothing like that: no familial, supportive,

life-giving culture to fight for nor to care for us as we succeed in

bringing down civilization. Unless we simply feel suicidal, we need

lives worth fighting for. Rewilding means reclaiming a life worth living

and defending it against those who wish to domesticate it.

Often we hear *lifeboat* used to describe these plans for surviving

through collapse. I prefer not to use that word, as lifeboats merely

suggest a temporary safe place. We want to abandon the ship for a new

one, better than the one we left, not something small and temporary.

Noah didn’t build his ark as a lifeboat; he built it as a boat big

enough for every living thing in the world. Rewilding cultures should

have no less space.

In the story of rewilding we have three acts: early collapse, deep in

collapse, and after collapse. In the first act we need to develop an

escape plan from the barriers that hold us captive to civilization. The

second act involves living a life worth fighting for as we hold our

ground and encourage the collapse along. In the third act we will

celebrate the end of civilization and continue to rewild all of the

places that civilization has domesticated. I see a whole cast of

characters working here. I see people rewilding outside of

civilization’s control, holding their own. I see people on the borders

of the rewild frontier, pushing civilization into retreat where its weak

spots exist. I see people in the lion’s den, rewilding right in the

middle of civilization. I see an “underground rewild-road” of sorts,

helping those in civilization escape to wild areas.

Of course, rewilding doesn’t mean that you have to confront civilization

head on. Not everyone in a culture takes the role of the warrior. We

need nurturers and healers and mothers and fathers and everything else.

Just have clarity about whether you’ve chosen a different role based on

fear of living as a warrior, and don’t disguise that fear as pacifist

ideology or condemn those who have no fear and live as front-line

warriors. As a warrior, remember not to let the fight against

civilization get in the way of living—make it part of a whole life of

rewilding. What else do we have to fight for but our loved ones, human

and other-than-human? To fight back, I need a life worth living, and to

me that means having children and growing a family and learning to hunt

and gather and give back to the land and kicking civilization’s ass for

my family and rewilding cultures.

The rewild frontier looks similar to the civilized frontier, only

backward: we will see people stop tilling the soil, stop farming, and

start encouraging succession. We will see violence as the civilized try

to resist those-who-rewild. Rather than see the wild retreat from

civilization, we will see civilization retreat from the wild until one

day we will see civilization no more.

Go out there and start rewilding now. Plant an orchard. Protect wild

lands. Teach your children that “weeds” don’t exist. Talk with

other-than-humans. Talk with humans. Shut down the grid. Learn to hunt

and trap without modern tools. Take out roads. Make a family. Turn a

deerskin into buckskin. Hold your ground. Make friends. Discover

enemies. Reclaim land from civilization. Get really fucking angry.

Relax. Cry. Laugh. Follow your heart, follow your heart, follow your

heart, and live a life worth living, worth remembering, worth

mythologizing until the sun engulfs the planet.

You have a choice: rewild or die.

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About the Author

I consider myself a multi-disciplinary artist and environmental

educator. I’m a fourth-generation Portlander. My first merit badge in

the Boy Scouts was for basketry. From there I went on to receive the

esteemed rank of Eagle Scout. It was during my years camping with the

scouts that I began to yearn for a deeper connection to place. At the

age of sixteen, inspired by Daniel Quinn’s *Ishmael*, I dropped out of

high school and ran away from home to travel across the United States

and attend Tom Brown Jr.’s Tracking, Nature Observation and Wilderness

Survival School in New Jersey. After that I went to Wilderness Awareness

School in Washington State, where I attended several Art of Mentoring

workshops led by Jon Young. I have been heavily influenced by the works

of Joseph Campbell, Derrick Jensen, Nancy Turner, Douglas Deur, M. Kat

Anderson, Finisia Medrano, and Martín Prechtel. I began blogging about

rewilding under the moniker Urban Scout in 2004. Between 2004 and 2008,

I received local press in *The Oregonian*, *Portland Mercury*, and

press in **Positive Living **(UK) and *Chain Reaction* (AU) for my

efforts to create and promote the culture of rewilding.

In 2007 I created =rewild.com=, an international online forum dedicated

to discussions about rewilding. In 2008 I published a collection of my

blogs in the first edition of *Rewild or Die*. In 2009, after dedicating

so much time to writing and managing =rewild.com=, I founded Rewild

Portland, a nonprofit organization with the mission of creating cultural

and environmental resilience through the education of earth-based arts,

traditions, and technologies. I love basketry, I play the banjo, and I

am a fluent speaker of Chinuk Wawa (aka Chinook Jargon), the Native

trade language of the Pacific Northwest and heritage language of the

Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. During the summer of 2012 I attended

Lynx Vilden’s Stone Age immersion program. I’ve been an environmental

educator since the early 2000s, working with local organizations like

Cascadia Wild, Friends of Tryon Creek, Audubon Society, Portland Waldorf

School, Shining Star Waldorf School, and Cleveland High School, and I

currently serve as executive director of Rewild Portland.

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