fallowing
by bam
fal·low
/ˈfalō/
adjective
(of farmland) plowed and harrowed but left unsown for a period in order to restore its fertility as part of a crop rotation or to avoid surplus production.
verb
leave (land) fallow.
”fallow the ground for a week or so after digging”
i am fallowing. i am also making up a word (a particular quirk of mine), but a word most apt for i use it here to describe the wide-open plain of time when i see no deadlines peeking from behind trees, nor wide gulleys and ditches to swallow me whole.
after season upon season that taxed me from every which angle, i am all but stringing a wintry hammock between cedar posts in my fir lot and settling in for a long winter’s nap.
i am fallowing. i am, per merriam webster’s instruction and strict definition, leaving my days “unsown for a period in order to restore fertility” of both soul and imagination.
i have been so thirsty for days that unfurl with little to do, for days that meander from daybreak to starshine. i am, per the law of the fallowing land, partaking of those soulful things that stoke my deepest flickering flame: i am reading deep and thick theological treatises; i am making burgundy stews, and sorting through boxes of long-ago treasures; i am reading old letters, and wiping back tears; i am simmering bones into broth and ferrying batches of soups to friends i’ve long wanted to visit. i am even reciting the occasional poem with my mother. at the moment, i am listening to rain, the fallowest thing i might know how to do.
i am not actively worrying.
to fallow is to partake of an otherworldliness, at least when you find yourself born into an age that grows increasingly attention-deficient. when the background noise is incessant. and so little of it sustenant.
sometimes you don’t realize how deeply you need something till it’s suddenly there in your grasp. and then you can’t let it go. or you hope you don’t have to anytime soon.
advent for me is quieting time. advent ushers in the stillness of winter. advent, i’ve written, is the season of anticipation, of awaiting, of holding our breath for spectacular coming.
as the darkening comes minute by minute, day after day, the liturgical calendar, prescriptive in its wisdoms, unfurls the sacred instruction: make the light be from you. deep within you. seize the month. reclaim the days. do not succumb to the noisy distraction.
make your december a blessed one, a quiet one. a stretch of kindled light against the whole cloth of darkness.
this world is aching, is crying, is calling for even one matchstick of light. imagine if we all struck a match, put flame to wick, and allowed it to burn long through the night. my light + your light + your light would = a light that would make ours one glowing orb.
the instructive is this, even in fallowing times: one mere droplet. one bare kilowatt of luminsence to shatter the darkness. it’s ours to kindle, to light, to enflame. day by day, droplet by droplet. might we gather our goodness and bring back a flicker of light to this world?
how and where will you strike your match?


Oh yes Barbara. My sitting still season. Thank you for reminding me to do just that.
I love that: “sitting still season.” You birth big smiles in me. Xox
Oh, my. This has to be one of my favorites from you, and that is saying something.
2019 was my fallowing year (tho if we could have forseen 2020…maybe I’d have waited?). May your time of quiet be filled with all your ❤️needs.
❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️ (I can’t seem to stop when it comes to sweet you❤️)
Loren Eiseley pondered-
“In the days of frost seek a minor sun.”
And so I am, and still it rises- that low arc’d orb…the little light of plenty.
oh my dear darling. how beautiful thou art…..and how heavenly that two of my favorite people quote from eiseley as if he lives on the shelf just beside you.
“little light of plenty…..” sigh.
love to maine from sloppy, rainy here. xox
Fallow away dear bam. The grey brown weather seems to be the right kind of music for at least few days. There are little air pockets in the resting fallow soil, cleared of big roots and growing things. Light gets in more easily. Let us all breathe into it, relish the tiny moments of light. Amen. ♥️ 💫
i love that you know the intricacies of field science. and i will leave into those air pockets. xoxoxox be blessed in your woods. xox
For the radiance that is you, for the wintry hammock you string between cedar posts in newfound fallow time, inviting us to join you: thank you, dear B…. How grateful I am to rest in the knowing that you are free of worry, that you’re settling in for a much-needed, much-deserved, long winter’s nap. xoxoxo
hello, beautiful. yes, puttering about the kitchen is a soulful thing. i haven’t gotten to the hammock yet, but i see it dangling from the trees, awaiting me to climb in….
hope an armchair, perhaps, or a recliner, is bringing you the same sense of filling back up….xox
also find myself rummaging around for ingredients to delicious bites — soups, stews, pot pies, scones — recipes that have been fallowing since last spring — now gentle, comfort cooking returns to accompany the slowing, the meandering, the fallowing
💕💕💕
i wish we could puff our respective kitchen-y smells up our across-the-way chimneys. i will imagine the puffs i see coming up. and you can do the same with mine. what pure blessing to live across the way from someone who would be your friend even if miles or continents and oceans were in the way…..xox
xoxox
I love “fallowing”! “The goal of fallowing is to allow the land to recover and store organic matter while retaining moisture and disrupting pest life cycles and soil borne pathogens by temporarily removing their hosts.” (Wikipedia) Not only restores the health of the soil (or you! or us!), but makes life miserable for the nasties. Cool.
i chuckled at disrupting the pests. if only a little time off could make them all go away. we have so much to learn from the earth. and its healing ways…..i am listening. ear to the ground….xox