Essay by Bradley Carlton
Many of the problems in my life have
been the cause of a poor relationship to money. When I was young I did not learn the value of working hard
for commensurate remuneration (I never had to “earn” anything.) All I had to do
was beg or be stubborn and I would get what I wanted.
Let me say that this set me up for a
significant struggle. When I got in trouble financially I believed that someone
would come along and “bail me out.” I don’t fault my father for this. He was
the 10th child of a very poor coal mining family in Pennsylvania.
All he wanted was to give his children everything he could not afford. He was
very successful in his early business career and the family was perceived by
many to be “rich.” I based my entire self worth on what my family could afford
to lavish on me. This was to become one of my greatest challenges in life.
In my teens I began to hunt and the
first thing I learned was that it didn’t matter how much money my family had,
nature treated everyone equally under the same conditions.
I was 30 years old before the lesson
hunted me down and presented itself in a way that I could no longer ignore. As
they say, “when the student is ready, the teacher will appear.”
My father, through his magnanimously
naïve nature had made several poor business decisions and managed to lose all
the income he had created. He could no longer support the delusions of grandeur
that I had created.
This was to become the starting point for my sacred path. Hunting,
fishing and foraging were to become my teachers. To quote Red Cloud, a late 19th
century Sioux Chief, “…I am poor and naked, but I am the chief of the nation.
We do not want riches but we do want to train our children right. Riches would
do us no good. We could not take them with us to the other world. We do not
want riches. We want peace and love.” This struck me one day as I stood weeping
for my condition. What was it that I wanted? What did I need to feel like I was
worthwhile?
My answer came to me as I hunted.
I thought I was hunting for deer,
squirrels, turkey or rabbits, but what I was unconsciously seeking was my need
to feel as though I had value in the world. Since I had equated “value” with
monetary measures, I did not find what I was looking for externally. I tried
guiding for waterfowl for a little
more than a decade and it seemed that taking money for providing clients with a
chance to shoot a limit of ducks or geese seemed to diminish the value of what
I was striving to exchange. It almost seemed that the birds became a commodity
that had an assigned value that could be purchased with currency. It felt
demeaning after a while.
But during that time I also discovered that what I was searching for
all along was the “meaning” behind what I enjoyed so much. It was the beauty of
a wood drakes’ herringbone patterned flank feathers, the iridescence of a
redlegged drake’s crown, the inimitable cupping of wings of a lone Canada goose
dropping in from the heavens after a long migratory journey. I wanted to share
the love of his lonely her-onk in the moonlight. I felt drawn to communicate
the exquisite aromas of wood smoke, decaying nuts, and the majestic display of
a tom turkey strutting for attention in the early morning light of the spring
woods. I found myself speaking of the impending arrival of fiddleheads, ramps
and wild asparagus as the earth warmed up to 63 degrees in the spring. I
languished over the taste of fresh brook trout with nothing but some lemon and
butter in a pan over an open fire.
More than anything I had known
before, I wanted to share my love and my experiences with others.
As I became aware of what I wanted, I
began to realize that my values were shifting. Away from material possessions
and a consumptive lifestyle. I wanted to, at least, partially support myself
and my wife with food that I had grown, foraged or harvested.
As my values shifted, so did my
self-image. Over time I began to feel wealthy. Rich, even. I was filling my freezer
with nutritious food. I was growing my own vegetables and finding my own
mushrooms. I was eating pure, natural, local food. My household grew to include
chickens to provide us with eggs. I didn’t even eat eggs before I had chickens,
now an omelet starts off my day three mornings a week. When we have guests over
for dinner, it is a production. I cook venison backstraps in a plum pepper
sauce and we celebrate our feast with a good bottle of merlot.
All of this has lead me to the
conclusion that despite my lack of monetary income, I have learned that true
riches, which I believe is better described as “wealth”, comes not from how new
my truck is, nor what cell phone I use, but the abundance of natural elements
in my life and how conscious I am of all that is available to me. With this, my
definition of wealth has changed and my self-image is now based on how much
love and gratitude I have in my life.
So the next time you are feeling poor or are not sure how you define
value in your life, I would propose that you pick up your gun, your fishing rod
or a basket and walk into the woods. Nature provides us with all the riches we
need.
Bradley Carleton is Executive Director of Sacred Hunter.org, a non-profit
organization that is being formed to educate the public on the spiritual
connection of man to nature and raises funds for Traditions Outdoor
Mentoring.org, which mentors at-risk young men in outdoor pursuits.