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LadyofShalott's avatar

Over 150 years’ ago, one of England’s very greatest writers, Thomas Hardy, wrote of the destructive impact of urbanisation and industrialisation on the lives of the characters in his novels. Like other visionaries such as John Ruskin and William Morris, Hardy feared the rise of ‘the machine’. They saw that, in leaving the land, humans were straying from the lives they should be living. The consequences of losing that connection to the land would be devastating. In 1995, Theodore Kaczynski wrote ‘The Industrial Revolution and its consequences have been a disaster for the human race’. Tending the allotment may be all we have to see us through the next 150 years.

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StG44_itisover's avatar

Two things make a good life, good friends and good work. I see my children in the same vein, tending and weeding, and coaxing to grow, if for a few hours from my "real" job. I know what is way more rewarding. Thank you, Morgoth, for the blessed reminder of this for me.

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