Wednesday, February 7, 2007

Bowing Down To My Domestic Goddess(es)


I'm constantly intrigued and a bit surprised by my own pull toward the pleasures of nourishing old-fashioned food and down-home domesticity. I was raised in the heyday of the Women's Lib movement, by a mother who shed her domestic life licketysplit for a high-powered advertising career, and taught me volumes about how to make it in the working world. Her advice did not go unheeded - with my own successful business and fulfilling work, I have never shied away from the challenge of making a damn good career out of what I love to do. It has always been my area of greatest comfort and experience, while the tub went uncleaned for years at a time and the fridge was stocked with Trader Joe's packaging and takeout leftovers.

But I have heard the siren call deep in my belly to slow down and bury my hands in the the soil (and products of the soil). I remember in high school watching "Flashback" with my mother and being inexplicably, psychotically aware of a deep need to bake bread right then and there. Had I ever actually baked bread before, I would have known not to start such a project at 11:30pm (and if my mother knew this secret wisdom she should have told me). But no matter, I mixed and kneaded that bread with fervor, woke by my alarm at 2-hour intervals during the night to punch down the living cushion of dough, and rose at 6am to set my inaugural loaves to the fire. Although the initial product better served as doorstops than sandwiches, I never forgot the primal satisfaction of that experience. It has surfaced again over the years, though my drive to succeed in business has usually taken the front seat while baking, gardening, spring cleaning and homekeeping have been relegated to the trunk.

That is, until recently. Over the last year I have found myself journeying to feed this deep, primal place inside, answering the cry of Hestia, goddess of hearth and home to be expressed through me. She doesn't want to wait any longer, and I feel the time is ripe to embody her more and more. What this looks like, I can't be sure just yet. It does involve more bread-baking (which has improved greatly since 1989) and more...the making of traditional, whole, nourishing foods...the satisfying freshness of sun-dried bedsheets...the addition of homegrown rosemary and thyme, and in the summer, tomatoes and squash...the enjoyment of nurturing our family as it grows...the deepening of my conversations with Gaia (earth), Hestia (home), and Eileithyia (motherhood)...and probably other gifts that I can't even imagine.

All of this, humbly submitted in posts about adventures in homemade marmalade, cat poop in the garden, and tips for how to clean way-overdue bathtub grout. I'm not at all sure how this blog of mine will turn out, but it seems like a fun way to chronicle my journey home. Thanks for witnessing and joining me.

4 comments:

pinkcoyote said...

maggie, these sentiments are so beautiful. sounds like you are conjuring your inner mary jane butters! just before we moved, i received NT and am hoping to snuggle down with it on a rainy day and get as inspired as you sound! connecting with the earth sounds just right.
glad to have you back in the blogosphere! xoxoxo p

Joie said...

I find that I feel so many of the same sentiments. My partner and I bake our own bread every two weeks. It is something that he never did as a child and though my parents baked bread, I had never done it myself. There is a deep satisfaction that comes from eating food that was made by your own hand.

Maggie said...

Pink Coyote: My inner Mary Jane Butters! Haha, I'll have to find out more about her! I love how often our paths seem to cross, and how much wisdom we get to share with each other. So grateful.

Joie: Baking bread is an activity that feels so ancient to me, it's like the mixture of flour and water create a portal to our ancestors beating dough against huge craggy rocks...so deeply satisfying.

Nissa said...

Keep up the good work.