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Health in the Workplace: The Farm
Health in our workplace, a small farm, abounds with contradictions.
Webster's dictionary ambiguously defines health as physical and mental
well-being. With its many meanings, ironies and interconnections, this
influential concept pervades society as an elusive goal, from
corporate misnomers such as "health care" to my own
bewildering biodynamic impulses. A healthy animal or plant is never
the same, but in continual fluctuation, as a trip around the farm
finds my understanding of health to be also.
In the Agriculture Course, Steiner introduces us to "compost,
which is sometimes even despised," before extolling its
health-giving virtues. Compost is the key to healthy farming, but the
word has different connotations for me, too. My family kept a
"compost" bucket in the kitchen, an unhealthy-looking
putrefying place for food scraps. Taking the compost out was a stinky
chore, made even worse by procrastination. On the other end, though,
after rotting with leaves, manure and soil, I knew compost to be the
building block of healthy humus and gorgeous gardens.
I'm a manure connoisseur. When out standing in my field, countless cow
pies and a trampled pasture please me. Although it may not look well
now, it'll be healthier than ever after a few weeks rest without
animals.
A healthy vegetable plant goes down hill soon after fruiting, and its
quick assimilation into the soil is a sign of healthy microbial
activity. The garden is deemed healthy when full of healthy bugs and
diseases, along with even healthier insect predators and
disease-suppressing organisms.
Colds and fevers which run a short course through the children build
immunity and are naturally healthy, as is my own runny nose if I'm
splitting firewood in freezing weather. That nose gets stuck up high
in the air, sniffing fresh farm fragrances and feeling proud of our
produce, but I try to keep it below the tractor's exhaust
pipe. Respiratory systems also don't appreciate the foul fumes while
refueling, nor the dusty job of spreading wood ashes and lime to bring
health to acid soils.
Diversity is another sign of health, and the five acres of mixed up
vegetables certainly has a wide variety of weeds. The farm's livestock
is not so diverse. It's just cattle, unless you count as replacements
for our lack of chickens and goats the wild turkeys and deer, who got
healthy this summer decimating our sweet corn path. A healthy
diversity of plant species appears in the meadows as an unplanned
consequence of my erratic mowing schedule.
I wonder how healthy soils deal with the inevitable leaky carburetor,
or the excess of grease which healthy farm equipment requires. My
hands are often well greased, too, along with everything I touch on
the way to the sink and soap, whose strength is probably inverse to
the grease's biodegradability.
Those hands ache after tedious transplanting, and a healthy day's work
can temporarily hurt. Stretching backwards occasionally helps offset
lower lumbar tightness, but I'm often reminded of the saying
"What a man needs in gardening is a cast-iron back, with a hinge
on it."
Laying my not-so-well body down at night, my overly busy mind finally
rests. Insomnia is not a farmer's problem. By morning the body is
well, but the mind soon swells with 64,000 thoughts, feelings and
things to do, many regarding the inherently enigmatic concept of
health in the workplace, the well-being of the farm.
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