Construction Apart from Destruction

Used by permission of author
Scott M. Graves is Founder of M the Media Project and SMGraves Associates. As contributing writer to M, he writes under the series Essays from An Artist andDemocratic Capitalism. He formerly wrote under the additional series Politics, Done Local.
His work at SMGraves Associates focuses on building value in real property by considering the commercial and social ecosystems that play out within our built environments. Community Development that seeks to build pride in place and create economic opportunity for more citizens of our cities and towns.
I recently had the pleasure of presenting then discussing workforce opportunities for the built environment with high schoolers in my adoptive hometown of Rutland, VT. We participated together in Rutland High School’s Global Progress Summit.
The design of my presentation offered a series of questions, considerations really that I wanted to impart on my young audience so they can cultivate their fundamental selves, which I offered to them was the first step before considering the more pragmatic ‘what do I want to do?’
I asked of them to first ask themselves, ‘what kind of person do I want to be’? and ‘what kind of a world do I want to build?’
We began with a quote from the great Wendell Berry. This quote has hung prominently in every business incubator space I’ve ever developed and led.
In the loss of skill, we lose stewardship; in losing stewardship we lose fellowship; we become outcasts from the great neighborhood of Creation. It is possible- as our experience in this good land shows- to exile ourselves from Creation, and to ally ourselves with the principle of destruction- which is, ultimately, the principle of nonentity. It is to be willing in general for being to not-be. And once we have allied ourselves with that principle, we are foolish to think that we can control the result.
(page 303, The Gift of the Good Land) —Wendell Berry The Art of the Commonplace: The Agrarian Essays

We then took the opportunity to break this down.
In the loss of skill, we lose stewardship; in losing stewardship we lose fellowship; we become outcasts from the great neighborhood of Creation.
To have skill is to be able to create, to heal, to rejuvenate, to be a part of what becomes an endless cycle, something bigger than ourselves, like farmers who steward the land for millennium. This brings humans together: fellowship. When we lose this, we lose our connection to that which bore our entire universe in the first place.
It is possible- as our experience in this good land shows- to exile ourselves from Creation, and to ally ourselves with the principle of destruction- which is, ultimately, the principle of nonentity.
To deny ourselves the joy, the love that comes from creation (how many theatre kids here, how many music kids here, poets, writers, how many robotics kids here, (show of hands). Now how many of you consider yourselves to be creative?When we deny ourselves our inherent need to create, we deny ourselves love. We deny ourselves community. We deny our humanity and the humanity of others. In our society, we become simplified, stultified consumers. This is when we become and follow the principle of Nonentity.
It is to be willing in general for being to not-be. And once we have allied ourselves with that principle, we are foolish to think that we can control the result.
To simply consume is to destroy. We have the power to be a member of the earth’s great community and to steward or serve one another with positive creation. Or, we also have the power to consume and to do so at the expense of others. But once we unleash that raw consumption without bounds, we may never be able to control it until it consumes us.
If we embrace the idea that craft and skill relate to fellowship that relates to stewardship; if we agree that the opposite of positive creation or construction is destruction; And if we agree that to construct is to be human while the opposite destruction is inhuman, then we cannot deny we need to pull away from our destructive, consumption obsession.
This destructive mindset is affecting our politics, economy and climate. It is causing a mass mental health crisis with our youth. Young people make up for a lack of life experience or ways to tell themselves whatever they want to hear with intuition. They rely more heavily on their inner voices. They inherently sense when we adults are telling ourselves a load of bullshit just to get through the day.
They know and we know.
It’s time to get creative. To value building a new community, a renewed commonwealth. It is time to build the housing we need. It is time to build the neighborhoods are inner children long for.
It is time for a new construction.
It is time to end destruction.

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