This is the class blog for Dr. Redick's Wilderness as Sacred Landscape course, spring 2007. Each entry is to be preceded by the name of the writer and the subject.
Friday, April 27, 2007
Jason Parham, Shady spot
Last summer I picked up a job at a construction company and began working the week after I got out of school. As the summer progressed it began to get extremely hot working on bulldozers which beside it just being hot from the sun put off a considerable amount of heat from their engines. As an opportunity to cool off, every lunch I walked up to this shady spot I had found. It was a beautiful spot that overlooked a stream and a lake and seemed to be considerably cooler than any place else on the job site. As the summer went on I came to this place more and more frequently. It soon became almost a sanctuary to me from the troubles of work and the extreme heat, and I began to develop a relationship with the place. It was almost as if it talked to me with every passing breeze or every squirrel that jumped around, and although I didn’t talk back to the place I believed it knew that I enjoyed being there. But one day the boss man informed me that there was to be a house put on that very same spot, and that I needed to take my bulldozer over there and level it. To say the least I was not happy with the news, it was almost as if I had to kill my friend. But I decided it was best for me to do it because if I didn’t do it someone else would and I think since I thought I understood the place I would take on the burden and do the job at least with the little bit of respect I could give it. So I did the job, and it was quite sad. That’s all I have to say about that, sorry this blog was so depressing.
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