@lzbth A good seed analogy is never a bad thing to be reminded of 🙂. I can’t think of a seed without simultaneously picturing a giant oak.
Though I’m sure that the seed analogy is not foreign to Berry, I don’t recall him using it in this piece. He does talk about gardening, but not, in this case, as an analogy at all but as the best possible activity for an individual to practice which, if done organically,
a. actually improves a piece of the earth,
b. increases a healthy sense of independence as well as a real independence from a waste-driven economy,
c. enlarges the person gardening, the meaning of food, and the pleasure of eating,
d. reduces trash.
He also adds: “If you think I’m wandering off the subject, let me remind you that most of the vegetables necessary for a family of four can be grown on a plot of forty by sixty feet.”
The essay is about much more than gardening — more about stepping back and reclaiming what it is we’re so unsuccessfully trying to implement at scale. A personal garden is just his straight-forward recommendation toward the end of the piece. I’m no gardener myself, but I aspire 👨🌾