You can study all you want and discover the past in order to rediscover the future. — Cedric Bixler-Zavala
PART 1: A Walk into the Past
For more than a year already, I have been traveling quite a lot. I've been into places and spoke in different languages within the country. |
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One place is where people speak fluently in science and mathematics and another in a language about languages. One place speaks in nation-building and another speaks in history.
And in my journey across seas, mountains, and distant cities, I have somehow mapped my path back to home.
I learned how to delineate borders using satellites, GPS, and codes. Even with the modern world, we can use borders to discover a lost knowledge from the past.
As I was connecting lines from one coordinate to another, it can't help but notice that existing villages used to be one, it just broke into independent communities slowly forgetting their past. Then I drew more lines, cutting across roads and houses, but these geopolitical borders that divide homes are not just imaginary at at all!
These borders divide people, these borders divide behaviors, and divide opportunities.
Out of the seven zones, two faced the sea. Their lives depended on it, mostly. They both speak the language of the past and the future. There, they fish and swim. They live and exist.
One was called Tinago, which literally means hidden—but this is not yet the secret village at all! Tinago is a secluded place but with vibrant people. They speak the language of the present. Then, in the heart of all borders is a closed-knit neighborhood speaking the language of their forefathers and being within feels warm and safe.
Into the east is the agricultural lands with sparse homes, they speak the language of mountain and fields. They have mastered the sun and rain. |
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Deeper into the mountainside, along the riverbanks is a diverse community. They speak the language of migrants who found a good place they can call home.
But downstream, is the secret village, only accessible through a travel in time. When the clock hits four, I arrived there. I arrived through overgrown dirt paths and along derelict structures. There they spoke in the language of their time.
In my travels through time and the hearts of people, I have discovered that language binds communities together, but as languages shifts, a portion of their past fade away too.
PART 2: A Step Back to Sustainability
If you've been with Hive for long, you may have skimmed once through my frustrations about this chaotic era we are in.
But with dreams sown into earth, I know our world leaders can't save us all. So, we must work through the economic and social disruptions, to be able to thrive and be sustainable.
Luckily, I am just walking the path of my father.
Continuing his sustainability goals, I built a permaculture dream.
Although these abundance is not my works, my goal is to grow more trees, so I can build more sustainability through the years.
Looking through my past expenditures since I started living alone, I can't help but compare how the same money has little value now. So, being able to harvest fruits and vegetables from the farm surely helps us extend our budget.
Maybe these things are not the world wants, but with the skyrocketing cost of living, these little things feel like luxury at times. |
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The weight of our bodies as we climb through trees and the weight of the sacks to carry our harvest back to the lowland may not be compensated enough with the low prices, but we are still grateful that we have something to exchange for cash.
Probably one of the most low-maintenance crops are coconuts and bananas, these are our regular source of income. So, it's always a good idea to grow more into the currently unused areas.
We don't know when they will drop bombs and pull our children to fight their wars, but for now, let's make our own sideplots away from the main arc.
In the world where only a few decides the future of the world, it feels good to be able to decide for ourselves while we still can.
Though, I still hope for a better world.
PINNED POSTS
A Sustainability Review of the Year 2022 Starting from January, let's have a trip down the highlights of my journey in self-sufficiency and sustainability. | |
Clearing the Damage After the Storm Instead of falling into anxiety, I took time to make use of what the storm had given. | |
Building Abundance with More Fruit Trees Amid the Economic Turmoil This year, I planned to initially plant 100 trees wherever possible until the year ends. | |
Using Saltwater and Fire to Heal a Permaculture Garden Plant debris becomes natural mulch and organic matter. | |
Harvesting Cucumbers After a Year of Labor As crops mature, harvest season began as well. | |
Fermenting Fish Amino Acid for the Garden Crops It would be a sin to throw away such things, even the food scraps I turn it to compost now. |
About Me
@oniemaniego is a software developer, but outside work, he experiments in the kitchen, writes poetry and fiction, paints his heart out, or toils under the hot sun.
Onie Maniego / Loy Bukid was born in rural Leyte. He often visits his family orchards during the summers and weekends, which greatly influenced his works. |
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these images are so beautiful! I am reminded of traveling in central America and living in different communities there. I really do miss the fruit. Now life has led me to a secluded land in a temperate forest where we are trying our best to build a sustainable life for ourselves.