Unlearn, Rewild: Earth Skills, Ideas and Inspiration for the Future Primitive
R**)
A sacred search for integrity
Are you glowing with inner peace? Is your journey healthy, balanced, and joyful? Do you believe that the world is close to perfection because of technological progress? None of the above?Miles Olson is a young man with an old soul. He has never felt at home in modern society, even in childhood. The only people who made sense to him were the Native Americans, because they lived with respect and reverence for all things. When he was 17, he spent the summer living alone on a remote island. Solitude in wildness is powerful medicine. In a week or so, he could barely remember his name.He struggled to find his life's vision and calling. There was no integrity in pursuing a career that injured the family of life. There was no integrity in eating food produced in an atrocious manner. There was no integrity in devoting his life to robotic consumption. The "normal" mode was wacko.The proper way to live in industrial civilization was to plug into the system, obey the rules, and never ask questions. But this was not a path with integrity, and Olson refused to submit to a dishonorable life. So, he commenced thinking. If the system was destroying the future, then the system was insane. If the system was insane, then so were its rules. Therefore, the virtuous choice was to disregard the rules, listen to his heart, and purse a life of integrity, by any means necessary. He did just that.He's been squatting for almost a decade on the fringe of a large unnamed city in British Columbia. He hunts, traps, forages, and gardens. He gets profound satisfaction from reducing his dependence on the machine, and reducing the harm he causes. He wrote Unlearn, Rewild to describe his life as an outlaw with high principles. (Well, he's an outlaw to the system, but consumers are outlaws to nature, and nature bats last.)Unlearning is a process of throwing civilized illusions overboard, of cleaning our minds. Rewilding means "to return to a more natural or wild state; the process of undoing domestication" -- to become uncivilized, to reconnect to place. The bottom line is that "without genuine, raw connection to wild nature we, as creatures, go insane."All of us have hunter-gatherer genes. When we were born, our souls expected to spend life as wild and free creatures in a sacred world. What went wrong? Olson sees domestication, agriculture, and civilization as being catastrophic mistakes in our journey."Sustainability" has become a meaningless word, hijacked and disemboweled by greedheads, nutters, universities, and shameless marketing hucksters. Nothing is unsustainable anymore. Our world is totally awesome. We just need to burn a bit less fossil fuel, make a few minor tweaks, and our way of life will become utopia. Olson disagrees. He's become a revivalist who preaches a fiery message about "radical sustainability" -- good old-fashioned fundamentalist sustainability, the genuine article, the most important word in our language today.One of his sermons illuminated the grave misconceptions that torment vegans and vegetarians, and lead them down a dark path into the valley of malnutrition, impaired health, and prickly self-righteousness. He was once a vegan, until he saw the light, and returned to the normal omnivorous diet that everyone's ancestors had enjoyed for a million years.Yes, of course industrial meat production was abominable, cruel, and ecologically foolish. The dim-witted domesticated livestock and poultry certainly suffer for it. But why does no one grieve for the thousands of wild creatures murdered by every pass of the plow and combine? Why do we ignore the blood gushing from our tofu stir fry? "There are precious few humans that hear the screams of the Earth...."Olson recommended that we stop feeding grain to animals, and use it to feed hungry folks. But this would require continued soil mining to produce the grain. Instead, in the spirit of big dreaming, I would suggest that we cease growing grain for animal feed, and convert that cropland back to grassland, restore the soil to good health, and give it back to the indigenous wild life -- let it heal.He wondered if hunting with firearms was ethical. How much technology is too much? When the Cree replaced bows with guns, they killed more caribou. But "...the ones truly being victimized by this technology were not the caribou. The caribou were still free, the people had entered a trap." This chapter began with a Ran Prieur quote: "Every technology begins as a key and ends as a cage." Well said.Obviously, the turd in the swimming pool is the way we think -- our insane culture. If our civilization burned to the ground today, we'd start rebuilding it at dawn tomorrow. "If humans had clean minds, like grasses and thistles, we would return to a state of balance when the forces of domestication ceased."It is at this point that the two sacred verbs "unlearn" and "rewild" summon immense power. Are we capable of firing up our brains and envisioning humankind living in balance with the rest of life? Yes, if we try. Are we capable of escaping from our cage? Yes, with patience and determination. Is it possible that sanity is contagious? Let's find out! Olson concludes that we would be wise to make some effort to evolve. It will take generations to create cultures that win the Radical Sustainability seal of approval, but all we have to lose is an insane way of life.The book has two parts: ideas and endangered skills. The ideas section describes his philosophy of life. The skills section is a sampler of essential knowledge for squatters: making traps and snares, skinning and gutting game, medicinal plants, food preservation, sex without pregnancy, tips for cooking earthworms, slugs, and maggots, and so on.I learned some new tricks here, but this is not the last book you'll need to read. Chestnuts are good food, but horse chestnuts are toxic. How do you tell the difference? Camas is good food, but death camas, which looks the same at harvest time, is not mentioned. Why is it called death camas?Olson doesn't write like a dusty scholar surrounded by piles of musty books. He writes like a cheerful outlaw who has created a rewarding career in harvesting roadkill, foraging for nuts, roasting grasshoppers, and feasting on dandelions. It's a loose and feisty tome with strong opinions and a strong sense of hope and enthusiasm. It's not flawless and polished -- it has some squeaks, leaks, and rattles -- but it still works.Olson has not given us "The Solution" here. Obviously, this week is an inconvenient time for seven-point-something billion to become squatters. But the rising cost and scarcity of energy may turn us all into squatters before long, ready or not. Nevertheless, he is fully engaged in the most important work of our era -- finding the path to genuine sustainability. Truly, every week is a perfect opportunity for unlearning, rewilding, thinking, and living with greater integrity.Richard Adrian ReeseAuthor of What Is Sustainable
K**K
Couldn’t finish it, not well written
By page 25 I had come across so many inaccuracies that I couldn’t go further. The writing style is not very good. I’m honestly sad because this book was so hyped up, not really sure why or how.If you’re going to write about native people, please take the time to learn their name. “Iroquois” was the colonizer’s term for the Haudenosaunee people.I’m sad that the return period has ended. At least I still have the abortion recipe... but honestly, considering the author’s grasp on the other concepts, I don’t know if I’d ever trust my health to it.The book is very “SOYBEANS ARE TURNING MEN INTO GIRLS!”
T**L
review of Unlearn, Rewild
Unique in the literature on sustainability, Unlearn, Rewild is difficult to pin down. I doubt Mr. Olsen intended for this book to be the sole informative resource on ecologically sustainable lifestyles, or survival skills, for that matter. Instead, he attempts to bridge both topics by providing a synthesis of his views on sustainability, combined with an overview of indigenous survival skills that are being forgotten.He begins with a critique of the foundations of contemporary society, including a re-assessment of the value of agriculture. He doesn't stop for long to dwell on arguments over whether a societal collapse is imminent or not, instead he assumes that the society of the future will be post-industrial. He then offers some survival tips and resources for further research to prepare for this possible future. The survival tips encourage a hunting gathering lifestyle, and includes information on hunting and trapping, skinning and dressing game, medicinal plants, food preservation, starting a fire as well as other informative tidbits on recovering the 'primitive'.As a reader I wish Mr. Olsen had included more on his years in the woods. I think that would have added to the value of this book to hear more first hand experience of what it is really like to be living the lifestyle that Mr. Olsen advocates.Also, as I read, I felt like Mr. Olsen jumped from topic to topic some. For instance in one chapter I am reading about undressing game, then there is a chapter on contraception, and then I am back to reading about techniques on preserving skins used for clothing. I feel it would have been more logical for the chapter on preserving skin to follow the chapter on undressing game.Furthermore, a reader should not depend on this book as their sole resource on survival skills. It does however, make a nice companion book to some of the other survival literature out there as well as providing a different perspective on sustainability.Finally, I admit, I had difficulty chewing on some ideas that Mr. Olsen offered. Maybe it is my culture, but I do find eating maggots to be unappetizing! Still, Mr. Olsen provides some fresh perspectives on post-industrial living that anyone concerned about the fate of society should not pass up.
V**V
Engaging combo of wild skills and the philosophy behind rewilding, some issues
Great first hand account of ditching mainstream living to live as much as possible off the wilds and off the things wasted by mainstream cities. He starts off with a passionate discussion of why he did it and what there is to be gained from his lifestyle, then later the book covers some of the skills he's learned. This is not about living off the land in the sense of eco agriculture/permaculture and that sort of thing, but even more "wild" than that - hunting, foraging, scavenging, using natural forms of medicine and very simple shelter and cooking. Some of this information is not for the squeamish.I find his passion for the wild and for seeking a more authentic life inspiring, and for connecting to nature in a way that you are a part of it, not seperate from it. We need more people showing how fulfilling this can be.My main issues are that sometimes I think his philosophy feeds some of his assertions (some of which need backing up with proof) and there are a lot of things he doesn't mention that come to mind with this lifestyle - for example, wild forms of birth control don't protect from STDs and I doubt most women would be happy spending most of their lives either celibate or pregnant/breastfeeding. And the sad truth is that there is not enough wilderness left to sustain very many people anymore. If everybody went "wild" like him there wouldn't be any animals left pretty quickly.There are still gems to be found in the skills section and I think we should all keep some old skills alive and learn to enjoy a simple, authentic life, however I think realistically it will have to include growing plants to live off of, changes to our economic and political systems, and whatnot.
S**E
Don't hesitate to buy this one.
If you're looking for a book to open your eyes to a whole new world of possibilities - this is the book for you.Thought provoking, controvisity causing and mind stimulating, you're left reevaluating everything and anything like never before.A book I will cherish and read again and again and again. I highly reccommend.
A**S
Five Stars
awesome
U**D
Interesting philosophy / practical fieldcraft but..
Miles Olsen displays a talent for writing, given his self-confessed lack of higher education.His points are valid and he makes them well but sadly like many students of life, (self included), he cannot offer a viable solution to the main problems with human being- self interest, apathy and wilful ignorance.The only reason any solution (and there are some) can never work is that most people 'know that something is very wrong but they are too busy trying to win an impossible game (programmed life) to actually do anything about it!'Well worth a read and maybe help us all wake up...
P**L
Loved it!
I haven't been that thrilled about a book in a long time. Miles Olson's point of view is lucid, refreshing and just spot on. I saw some comments about him being radical, I guess he is for modern civilization that radically reject nature. I mean, to people who lived on asphalt and concrete, living in harmony with nature (aka our natural habitat) seems scary and radical. But if you have any inclination toward a more natural and sustainable life style, you will love this book. And to me, the best part is that he has hands on knowledge about the topic, he has lived it, and research it. I can't say enough good about it.
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