Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Earth Day 2026


Celebrate the Earth
every day as a matter
of personal habit

Make composting your practice
to insure the continued health
of our beloved planet




That's the gist of it, really. Earth Day shouldn't be viewed as a one and done thing.  It's good we set today aside to celebrate but what's far more important is what we do and how we live all the other days of the year.  And that's where Compost Mentis comes in. Composting is a daily practice. And it's relatively easy.  It takes only a few seconds to show our enduring love for Mother Earth by removing the label from the banana peel before dropping it in the compost bin.     
 

* * * * *

As a form of spiritual practice, composting deviates somewhat from the Buddhist tradition of the Eightfold Path, in which practitioners first learn to cultivate awareness and intention, which in turn leads to profound changes in behavior.  The practice of composting generally works the other way around -- we change behavior first, simply by starting to collect our kitchen scraps in a separate bin, and from that relatively small change in behavior, consistently performed, a whole new awareness begins to take form.  We become Compost Mentis.  Transformation ensues.  

* * * * *

Was invited to give a composting presentation at the Ketcham Inn as part of their Earth Day program.  I plan to write a blog post summarizing my talk in the next week or so but in the meantime here's a link where you can see the deck:


And many thanks to Daniel Ricci of the NYS DEC from whose deck I have borrowed liberally.












Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Compost Mentis: all about the mix



On Easter Sunday
I napped and gardened awhile

and thought about Colman

an old friend who had just died.

 

Death comes and goes swiftly

whereas decay happens slowly

everywhere all the time.


Decay is part of life

in a way that death is not

and never can be. Without decay

there can be no new growth.


That's why decay and composting provide a sound

basis on which to build in life.  You can use compost

to enrich your garden soil. You can write poems about it

You can make a career out of it, driving around in a beat up

old van and picking up food scraps from your neighbor's

doorstep. 


You can even use compost to build your personal philosophy.  

Compost Mentis is the working title for my next book, which

I hope will turn out to be a seminal work in the field of

compost studies.   True to the composting ideal, the book will

be a mix of things, a real hodgepodge of poetry and prose,

natural science and philosophy, with a bit of economics and

self-help thrown in for good measure. 


Compost Mentis. We live in a decadent age so it's all for the

best that we learn to to make the most of things as they're

falling apart. In short, by way of reply to WB Yeats, here is

the prelude to my new book:


Things fall apart
And thank God they do
The center won't hold
The periphery goes too
But the more things decay
It’s undeniably true

We end up with compost

And the cosmos renewed






Wednesday, April 1, 2026

When in Doubt Start to Blog

When in doubt, start to blog because writing is literally manual labor, which permits one to think more clearly, to more fully grasp an idea.  So that’s what I’m doing in resuming this blog.  It’s time to get back to the compost pile, which forever needs turning, with either pen or shovel in hand.

Hand and mind move in tandem, much like moon and the tide.  Diurnal rhythms must now be resumed.  Once again, it's time to turn and return to the pile.



Earth Day 2026

Celebrate the Earth every day as a matter of personal habit Make composting your practice to insure the continued health of our beloved plan...