Terry Tempest Williams Quote

Last night, I spoke at one of the Circle Meetings of the Baptist Church. Afterward, a Kenyan friend, Wangari Waigwa-Stone, and I spoke about darkness and stars. I was raised under an African sky, she said. Darkness was never something I was afraid of. The clarity, definition, and profusion of stars became maps as to how one navigates at night. I always knew where I was simply by looking up. She paused. My sons do not have these guides. They have no relationship to darkness, nothing in their imagination tells them there are pathways in the night they can move through. I have a Norwegian friend who says, ‘City lights are a conspiracy against higher thought,’ I added. Indeed, Wangari said, smiling, her rich, deep voice resonating. I am Kikuyu. My people believe if you are close to the Earth, you are close to people. How so? I asked. What an African woman nurtures in the soil will eventually feed her family. Likewise, what she nurtures in her relations will ultimately nurture her community. It is a matter of living the circle. Because we have forgotten our kinship with the land, she continued, our kinship with each other has become pale. We shy away from accountability and involvement. We choose to be occupied, which is quite different from being engaged. In America, time is money. In Kenya, time is relationship. We look at investments differently.

Terry Tempest Williams

Last night, I spoke at one of the Circle Meetings of the Baptist Church. Afterward, a Kenyan friend, Wangari Waigwa-Stone, and I spoke about darkness and stars. I was raised under an African sky, she said. Darkness was never something I was afraid of. The clarity, definition, and profusion of stars became maps as to how one navigates at night. I always knew where I was simply by looking up. She paused. My sons do not have these guides. They have no relationship to darkness, nothing in their imagination tells them there are pathways in the night they can move through. I have a Norwegian friend who says, ‘City lights are a conspiracy against higher thought,’ I added. Indeed, Wangari said, smiling, her rich, deep voice resonating. I am Kikuyu. My people believe if you are close to the Earth, you are close to people. How so? I asked. What an African woman nurtures in the soil will eventually feed her family. Likewise, what she nurtures in her relations will ultimately nurture her community. It is a matter of living the circle. Because we have forgotten our kinship with the land, she continued, our kinship with each other has become pale. We shy away from accountability and involvement. We choose to be occupied, which is quite different from being engaged. In America, time is money. In Kenya, time is relationship. We look at investments differently.

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About Terry Tempest Williams

Terry Tempest Williams (born September 8, 1955) is an American writer, educator, conservationist, and activist. Williams' writing is rooted in the American West and has been significantly influenced by the arid landscape of Utah. Her work focuses on social and environmental justice ranging from issues of ecology and the protection of public lands and wildness, to women's health, to exploring humanity's relationship to culture and nature. She writes in the genre of creative nonfiction and the lyrical essay.