Practices of Care and Relationship-Building: A Qualitative Analysis of Urban Agriculture’s Impacts on Black People’s Agency and Wellbeing in Philadelphia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Theoretical Framework: Collective Agency and Community Resilience (CACR)
1.2. Collective Agency
1.3. Constructive Resistance
2. Methods and Analysis
2.1. Research Design Overview
2.2. Recruitment Process
2.3. Participant Selection
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Community Care and Relationship-Building
I feel like it’s one of the only things that people in my family…will come to me for advice about, even though I studied science for a long time, and I worked in neuroscience and literally grew brain cells, and I grew brains in a dish. Like nobody really respects that, but people want to hear how to keep their tomatoes alive, like that’s cool. I like feeling respected.
As my daughters…start to grow up, I always found myself sharing more recipes. We cook everything from Southern food to gourmet food. My dad was a chef, so I feel the best of both worlds. I moved away but am beginning to share more about some of the Southern food recipes and things that I remember…my mom died in ‘16. And they used to spend a lot of time with her. So now they’re young ladies…and they’ve spent more time going back down to what I call The Family Plot. There’s relatives that live in like six houses in the area. So really getting to know their cousins and things like that and being curious about history.
I think the reason why I grow food is because I believe that it helps your mental and it helps your body and once you start healing yourself, your family slowly follows you. Because they see, “Oh, like, I’ve seen this person down and off, but now they’re healing,” and you just see flowers as they walk past. Now I’m starting to see my family slowly but surely get in on that path. So I think I farm for my future self and for generations to come in my lineage. So that’s why I do it.
And being on the land…men are able to have conversations and…work next to somebody who’s coming from a different background, eat food, share stories. I feel like there are very few other things in this world that can hold the container for that. And I also want to be part of like, I selfishly love doing it.
Gardening is this intersection of communities in a way that most other places aren’t so intergenerational, interracial, inter socio-economic, I mean, I feel like I have friends and colleagues and deep long like 30-year long relationships with people who I never would come across, or know if it wasn’t for my, my life as a gardener, as a garden educator, as a random volunteer, at a random thing.(Allison)
I want to second, what you were saying that you quickly get into community with people that you wouldn’t have an opportunity to be in community with without the garden connection. And I really value that. And I really like meeting people I wouldn’t meet in my little pass that I go through, and at the garden, it’s a common denominator.(Mary)
It’s a way of meeting and greeting people and also getting back to the development and preserving of space. It’s a good way to connect with people that you can work with. You got to have folks to join you in the fight or whatever it is that you need. So we get to share, build that community around gardening.
It’s made me have such a stronger sense of self and identity and connection. And understanding that, like, myself isn’t just me, it’s not an individual. I’m in this community, myself, and the work that I do doesn’t just belong to me, it belongs to my community.
3.2. Growing Food Facilitates Body–Mind Wellness
The gardening, especially this year, and last year, I’d say more so I was not quarantined. I was in that garden. That garden saved me. It helped me with my sanity because I got out there. That was my escape.
I think especially during the pandemic, mental health was definitely on an all-time low. There wasn’t much to do, but like going out and tending to my garden gave me a real sense of purpose.
My mom passed away when I was seven. My mom loved sunflowers. So it’s like whenever I look at sunflowers or if I’m going through something, when I was going through something, I came outside and all the dragonflies was flying around—the energy. It’s like my mom. I think about my mom…I don’t know how that happened in my life. Something happened to my life…whereas I was able to connect the dragonfly with my mom. When I’m going through something, I’ll start talking to her next thing you know, here comes a dragonfly and here comes the sunflowers.
I have been in therapy for a lot of my life. I tried different medications for mental health issues. And some things helped at different points in my life, but nothing was impactful for my mental health as much as being outside and working in the soil.
…but like the other ingredients that have a whole lot of different chemicals in there. And I needed, I wanted to give my organs a break. I wanted time to detox and to heal, rejuvenate, regenerate, whatever it was that I could do to help myself in small steps. And then I got my children into that. So that we all started taking classes as a family. And of course, I was out there a bit more aggressive because I really wanted to begin to control what I was using for my personal healing, and for my children as well.
3.3. Land-Based Spirituality and Interdependence
I guess I always had this relationship with other species or other life forms and working with them and building relations with them. And I don’t think it’s all that different with plants. I think just working with other living things that aren’t humans. I was thinking about that when you guys were talking about making mistakes because it’s like not all entirely in your hands. Like even if you plant too many, tomatoes are still going to produce tomatoes, maybe not like optimal amounts, but I like things like that. It’s like a collaboration. And I think that that makes me more aware of like more of a collective existence and less of an individualist like getting caught up in myself, in my own problems and what I’m experiencing more like, witnessing, and collaborating with other species. Yeah, it makes me feel less isolated, I guess.
When I first started farming, I actually didn’t want nobody to know that I was farming. And I say that to say, because, like, the things that the plants were telling me, it just seemed like it’s something, the things that I was learning in that process, it just seemed like it was something that was just so sacred. Like, it felt like, I don’t really want to use this word, but I’m going to use it felt like alchemy. It felt like I was doing magic with the soil by just knowing that I can plant a seed and it could come up.
I realized that like, I don’t think I knew who I was until I started doing this work. And there’s both this like mental health and spiritual component. Because doing this work, like I mentioned earlier, I feel like I found my ancestors, and there’s this undeniable connection and communication that happens. That has just given me like this sense of belonging and knowing. And as soon as I started farming, it just felt like, this is where I’m supposed to belong. This is what I’m supposed to be doing. And there’s this joy, this absolute joy that this work brings me. Part of it is like the symbiotic connection of just being on the land. And doing that work and being part of the rituals of weeding and hoeing and prepping rows and planting. And then also being in community, and just getting to meet so many people that are about this work, or who want to be about this work.
The secret Is in the garden and people just don’t understand. You just literally have to go in the garden to visit God. And God just starts talking to you and you just start connecting with the soil and your spirit is being cleansed by just touching the soil and that energy…is just like going into the soil and coming back up your legs. And when you walk out, it’s like, I’m in power.
I was getting chills hearing about it, because sometimes I feel like you will be having all of these things happening that I feel like only Black people can understand. It’s like a spiritual, it’s a rooted experience. Like, what you’re saying people will be like, “Nah, that’s something that you hear on a movie”. But like my people really be going through these real lived experiences that you just can’t explain.
3.4. Growing Food as a Demonstration of Agency and Power
For me, growing food, I talked a little bit about this, it gives you some agency over your health. And to me…that’s powerful and the work that I do, and the conversations that I have with folks in the community…It feels like, I can make these decisions. And this is something that I can control, whenever we think about our health and what happens, what’s going on in our bodies, there’s a lot of things that’s out of our depth of knowledge. And so it encourages you to, like, seek.
We need to know how to be self-sufficient. And know how to do for ourselves. So that’s also one of my goals is to teach people about backyard chickens and how to raise them, how to handle things, how to grow, how to plant and plant raised with garden beds. So that’s it for me.
And I feel like my strategy for that is to refuse and resist those people as much as possible, and to get on they nerves until they answer the phone. Because I’m done participating and trying to do things in a way that like our White supremacist society prescribes us to do. It isn’t a solution for the issues that we have in our community. We got to move on our own time. So that’s how I feel about it.
It’s a way of meeting and greeting people. And also getting back to the development and preserving space, it’s a good way to connect with people that you can work with, you got to have folks to join you in the fight or whatever it is that you need. So we get to share, build that community around gardening.
But I also, like, want to be part of a larger movement for justice.(Tom)
The first time you plant a seed, and then eat something that comes from it, it’s just like a realization that you could be connected to your food and the earth and in a way that certain systems try to keep you from. So in that way, it feels a lot like resistance to me too.(Quinn)
And I’m really interested in farming and growing one’s own food and food for the community as a form of resistance. Active resistance against forces that try to keep people separate from their ways, their ancestral foodways and their present foodways and try to put as much space between communities and source of food as possible as a way of controlling them and keeping them oppressed. I’m really interested in people learning how to grow food for themselves and their community.(Quinn)
I’m also very young and all this, I feel a lot of pressure of also feeling like we’re living in Octavia Butler Novel and feeling like a lot of doom and gloom, currently where we’re at, with the environment and social political landscape, and disease on and on. So I think that like, this is critical, resistance is critical.(Quinn)
I think there’s also like an aspect I mean, I feel like we are increasingly living in in Octavia Butler Novel and so it feels like this really important skill for the future. I mean for right now, and I feel like it might continue to get worse. It will continue to get worse. And so, I don’t want to be dependent on food that is being trucked in from far away.(Danielle)
And I think there’s also an aspect of taking yourself out of capitalism when you’re doing it…You’re not part of the pressure of like buying and consuming. It’s really just like, “Okay, well I’m going to see what I can grow.”
I think there is room under a sort of a capitalist system for growing food to also be detrimental, especially when you consider, a lot of the food system is supported by migrant workers and the conditions they work under is like so exploitative. I don’t know, just that negative physical impact.
I just have…this need to be productive and need to produce and make this garden so big. And I was just going to talk about the negative side of that also, like seeing other people build their gardens much bigger and having capitalism weigh down on us and force us to think that we always need to be productive and doing the most and making the most of our time and our spaces like, “Alright, that was a lot. Let’s dial it back a little bit.”
Yeah, responding to that…for my work that last year [I] was on a 50-acre production farm and it was motivated by money and yield. And the farm I work at now is less than six acres, technically less than five because one of them is an orchard acre. And the whole approach is different. Yields and efficiency and profit aren’t the main drivers.
4. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gripper, A.B. Practices of Care and Relationship-Building: A Qualitative Analysis of Urban Agriculture’s Impacts on Black People’s Agency and Wellbeing in Philadelphia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 4831. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064831
Gripper AB. Practices of Care and Relationship-Building: A Qualitative Analysis of Urban Agriculture’s Impacts on Black People’s Agency and Wellbeing in Philadelphia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(6):4831. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064831
Chicago/Turabian StyleGripper, Ashley B. 2023. "Practices of Care and Relationship-Building: A Qualitative Analysis of Urban Agriculture’s Impacts on Black People’s Agency and Wellbeing in Philadelphia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 6: 4831. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064831
APA StyleGripper, A. B. (2023). Practices of Care and Relationship-Building: A Qualitative Analysis of Urban Agriculture’s Impacts on Black People’s Agency and Wellbeing in Philadelphia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(6), 4831. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064831