Monday, February 1, 2016

3 Lessons From 2 Farmers

The owners of Broadfork Farm came to my neighborhood yesterday to give a presentation on their farm and to make a sales pitch to join their Community Supported Agriculture (CSA) program. Owned and operated by Janet Aardema and Dan Gagnon, Broadfork is a small family farm providing the metro-Richmond area with Certified CNG color logoNaturally Grown vegetables and herbs.

This was the perfect intersection with my life at the perfect time. 

  1. I've been developing a passion for food over the course of my entire life.  What started as a love for cooking made me a cook.  I developed a love for the gourmet - I became a foodie.  My baby daughter showed signs of food allergies before turning one - I turned into a label reader.  Label reading made me question what I was putting into the rest of our bodies - I started getting really opinionated.  Getting sick and tired of being sick and tired led me to try a Whole30 - I became a practitioner and convert.  Listening to TED talks and others made me frightened of what we're doing to our food supply.  I am on the verge of becoming an activist.  I set a goal to have my entire family 100% organic and/or grass fed by 2018... with the subgoal of being able to afford it by then.  I determined I should expand my home garden as much as I can in my opinionated neighborhood - though exactly where the time would come from I do not know.
  2. I've been reading The Miracle Morning by Hal Elrod this week.  I heard about it when I was listening to an unusual podcast on Bigger Pockets (usually solely Real Estate Investing focused), and it completely caught my imagination.  This is why I'm blogging before sunrise - I'm on Day 3 of getting up on PURPOSE, scribing about my goals which I know I will achieve (AFFIRMATION!!).  Hal talks about morning routines to add focus, calmness, productivity, and joy to my life.  This is morning three and it is all coming together.  I am adding an extra affirmation of gratitude for having found Broadfork and that they're coming to my neighborhood.  Previously when I'd looked into them, the delivery options were just flat out inconvenient.
  3. I've also been reading The Four Hour Workweek by Tim Ferris this week, which is one of the books Hal rattled off in the podcast I mentioned.  It's been very eye opening, in terms of (a) pushing me to define the life of my dreams, so I can then (b) go live it!  After reading the first section on dreams, I was motivated to write a bunch of them down.  This included going my organic goal (above), and writing a book (more on this one later).  After reading the chapter on Time Management, I started implementing changes at work, really focusing on my big rocks and getting the sand out of my way.  IT MADE A DIFFERENCE!  On Friday then I read the chapter about outsourcing things that others can do for me - exchanging money for time to make more efficient use of all my resources.
Sitting in Janet and Dan's presentation, I felt like all of my pieces were coming together.  For $25/week, I could get a decent sized box of freshly grown, healthier than average, chemical free, produce delivered to my neighborhood.  I could try new things, (ask the family to do the same), save a little time grocery shopping, and a hella lot of time gardening myself ... without worrying about the deer who insist on chowing down on my strawberry plants.  It was getting me closer to my goal of being 100% organic, investing my money instead of my time.  Supporting the local economy and knowing the produce is local is an extra added bonus.

I so wanted to give Janet a huge bear hug at the end of the info session, which I told her.  Finding multiple solutions to my problems - organic produce at a reasonable price, outsourced and delivered - just made my week.

I signed up.