Remembering Sidney
Here you will find a collection of multi-media celebrating and remembering Sidney
If you have a memory or story—written or recorded, photos, or brief video that you would like to share here, please use the “Get Involved” form or email to learnmv.org (@) gmail.com.
We’ve added some stuff!
Scroll down for written memories.
Click here for new photo memories!
and Click HERE to see some of Sidney’s YouTube library
*You can click on the three images below to watch a few brief videos not on YouTube - the first one is Sidney’s choreography that Kaila mentioned in her intro of the children’s performance of Ode to Joy at the celebration for Sidney.
More to come—please check back soon!
Note from Lily: One of the young people Sidney was celebrating in his last days, was my cousin, Zoe Jung. I read one of Zoe’s poems at the celebration for my dad, and I’m sharing it here, with Zoe’s permission. To preserve the poem’s formatting, I am sharing a photo of the poem from Zoe’s recently published collection of poetry, Navigance Manifest.
IN MY HANDS,
SOMETHING DEAD
by Zoe Jung
Memories of Sidney
a collection of written tributes
~
Sidney
By Margaret Knight, Sidney’s wife
When Sidney and I first got together, people would ask us if we were brother and sister; we both had the same light coloring and wore wire rim glasses. Our friends’ little daughter called us Sidney Margaret — both of us the same name. Back then I think I was confused as to whether we were the same person. We were both passionate about changing the education system, we loved animals, exploring dirt roads on Sidney’s BMW motorcycle, traveling in his vw van fitted out for camping, and being self-sufficient and living a simple alternative life-style.
Over the years it became more and more apparent that we weren’t the same person. Sidney was a people person who would be the last to leave the party if he could. He was a night owl who could work all night to finish a project. For him, just because an old beloved vehicle didn’t always start or stop was no reason to get rid of it.
Because of Sidney, I had many experiences that I wouldn’t necessarily have chosen but that I came to appreciate over time, like keeping goats and having adventurous sailing expeditions. Because of him I learned to be more adaptable, to find my own path, to live more in the present, and with him we had two amazing children and built a house that held us for fifty years.
Sidney loved animals, especially dogs, goats, and oxen. He loved helping people, especially children, to find out what they wanted to learn or do, and then help them figure out how. He was a natural at languages, dancing, skating, anything to do with music, soothing babies, and figuring out how things worked. He loved to build things, and wasn’t fazed by wires and pipes and machines that didn’t work, by computers and lost passwords.
Sidney had big ideas. His dream for a cooperative community learning center, called Eggshells when I first met him, went through many incarnations, some expressed in the world, like Meetinghouse that became Featherstone, Vineyard Voyagers, the Chappaquiddick Community Center, the Charter School, and the Wander Bus, and others that were still incubating, like LearnMV, a structure to connect learners to mentors. Sidney had a way of speaking about these projects that got other people believing in them. He was excited about them, and he passed that on. If there was something that he wasn’t so excited about, he usually found a way to fit it into a bigger scheme that was always evolving in his head.
The director of our School of Ed program at UMass once said about Sidney that he was a tree standing alone in the woods. Sidney had big vision and a big heart.
I am so grateful to all the people who helped make Sidney’s last year of life so full and varied despite all taking place in one bed in one room. You were a comfort to me and you brought life to Sidney when he couldn’t go out to live it, so that he really could live fully to the end.
Sid as a Kid
by Sidney’s sister, Virginia “Ginio” Morris
“From the beginning. Sid was very lovable, but since tony was almost 7 and I was almost 5, we didn’t play with him until he was a little older. When he was three, Mother started a summer Day Camp on the farm for kids from the suburbs. Sid and Tony both went to the camp, and I went a little distance away, the next few summers, to a riding camp—to ride Welsh ponies with my friends. Sid had a lot of time with the other kids, and they rode on the hay wagon, did crafts in the barn, and swam in the pond.
Tony and I thought Sid had a lot more freedom than we did: mother let him stay up much later than we used to.
The summer my dad died, we had stopped in Newport, Rhode Island on the way to Maine. Dad had to go into the little local hospital for a minor surgery on a boil on his neck. The surgery was successful, but apparently Dad was left too long on a stretcher in a hallway and contracted pneumonia, from which he died unexpectedly. When he was still alive but suffering from pleurisy, we went to see him in the hospital. Several mornings later, mother came in the front door of Aunt Emily’s house, and looked up at the second floor mezzanine balcony railing, where I was standing. And I could see, in her face, what she was going to say: he was gone.
She was too overwhelmed to take me and Sid to Philadelphia to plan Dad’s funeral, so she only took Tony, who was just thirteen. Sid and I stayed behind.
What we two remembered from that time mother was away with Tony for the funeral was that a Norwich terrier of ours named Ginger jumped off the cliff walk, high above the Atlantic, and was rescued by a tree surgeon—he was lowered down on a rope, in a harness contraption, to rescue little Ginger.
Sid told me, summer before last, he really didn’t remember Dad. So I told him what I could and we decided to hold our own funeral ceremony for Dad. In the middle of my visit, on Chappy, he and I held an informal memorial, in Sid’s bedroom, where we both spoke out loud to Dad’s spirit.
When Dad died, mother bought a house in Chestnut Hill, after she sold the farm. I remember that when I was in eighth grade, I went to the Friday evenings formal dance class, and came home afterwards and taught Sid to dance—the foxtrot and the waltz. And once, when my friends came over for a sleepover, we dressed him up in a curly wig and called him Robin McGregor, and let him dance with us all, as one of us!
He always gave me credit for teaching him how to dance. This past year, when we talked on Facetime almost every week, he taught me how to teach. “Listen to the kids. Let it come from them; encourage them to do what interests them.”
He is with me still.”
Sid moves to Pittsburgh
by Sidney’s sister, Mary Moorhead
A piece written by Sid’s step-sister, Mary Moorhead, about the time after he moved to Pittsburgh, PA to live with her and her siblings when Sidney’s mother married Mary’s father.
I have many wonderful memories of Sidney, starting when his mother married my father and l had just turned 9 and he was already 10. Most of them were home based because l attended an all girls school and he attended an all boys school. He moved from Chestnut Hill PA-near Philadelphia-to Pittsburgh PA where we lived and my Father worked. I remember being told Sid was very excited to have a Father who was the Treasurer of the Gulf Oil Corporation. Mostly l think he was quite pleased to have a Father!
One of the ways we started to get to know each other was by listening to records and giving each other backrubs. He was much more generous than l was and l always got the longest massage. He also played records that l had not heard before and l always enjoyed. One was the South African singer Miriam Makeba. I still remember her lovely voice.
During these 4-5 years before we were both sent to boarding school, he met some of my friends and in particular my best girlfriend who lived on the other side of the block. She said Sid was her favorite brother of a friend to visit because he was so kind and never ever even considered hitting us or being unkind. She also said she remembers a visit to our house when we lay on the beds in the only air conditioned room, on a hot humid summer evening, and just laughed and giggled for the entire evening.
This reminds me that a lot of the brothers had b-b guns and a tendency to shoot squirrels and threaten their sisters and their friends, but Sid never ever had a gun nor considered anything unkind like that. He was gentle and creative.
When the boarding school years arrived at ages 14-18, he invited me up to Andover for a weekend with a blind date. I still have a very clear memory of, not the date so much, but of the fantastic Saturday night dance. I remember the incredible music, strobe lights, and exciting decorations.
When the college years came, l had originally been sent to an all girls junior college which l immediately detested. It was just like being in boarding school again. One day when l was complaining to Sid, he, who had recently visited California, said “Why don’t you go out there, you might like it.” And so l applied to the University of California at Berkeley, was luckily accepted, and out here l came. This was actually fairly radical for the time because it was considered a public school and everyone in my family attended private schools only. Plus it was during the free-speech movement and the Vietnam War protests. However l loved both The city of Berkeley and the great enormous university.
I still live in Berkeley, married a Japanese American student, and we raised two extremely successful children who have children of their own now. All thanks to Sid!
Finally, Sid and Margaret visited us in Berkeley several times. We always had fun. And two memories stand out. I didn’t think he knew my neighborhood very well but as you know Sid is a quick study. Before l was up, he had gone down to the shopping area near our house and bought a variety of bagels, cream cheese and lox for all of us. We had a fun breakfast together. Also l was worried that city life would be too noisy for him and Margaret since they were accustomed to lovely peaceful Martha’s Vineyard. But at breakfast they both said, “it’s so nice here-it’s so quiet and calm.” And Margaret said she hadn’t expected it.
Finally coming up to the present, when Sid was ill, l texted him several times with a few of these memories as well as a question that neither of us could answer. I vaguely remember listening to Arlo Guthrie play “ Alice’s Restaurant”
In Cambridge, with Sid. And l think it was in a tiny cafe in Cambridge. So l am deciding that we definitely heard Arlo play that great song and l know that Sid arranged it.
Thanks Sid, for everything,
And sending you love wherever you are.
Sister Mary
Sidney as media artist & “tech guy”
thoughts from Margaret’s cousin, Marianne Jones
As I sit at Wasque Farm looking out at the barn remembering [Sidney], there are so many memories, and especially of how much love Sidney had for the world, and friends, family, his favorite dogs, you all...
We had a lot of fun at the farm when we were here in the 70's and 80's--and beyond of course, but especially then. One of the events Sidney put on for the Chappy people was a huge production media show of his travels through Africa. At that time, the production effort was next level, none of us even knew anyone who could put on this type of media, with slides, multiple slide projectors, special fades, synched music--it was what we had experienced at a mainstream museum event, but not on the farm! We had a huge white sheet where the barn doors are, a media hub connected by extension cords and we sat on the lawn and watched the show. It was amazing. We were awestruck. It was inspiring and moving. We all feel really lucky to know Sidney, but we sure knew it that night.
I learned a lot from Sidney, like how to live life and take the world in stride. I will miss him, but I am so grateful for the decades we had with his spirit and soul, now that all of that spirit and soul are somewhere in the universe, at peace.
Words from the community
shared by friends, neighbors, and colleagues of Sidney
“Sidney and Margaret were among the first people we met and welcomed us at a pot-luck at the Community Center when Susan and I moved to Chappy in 2014. As I became more involved in the CCC, I realized what a role Sidney had played as a founder of the community center in the mid-80’s and construction of the center’s fine building. Sidney always remained committed to the CCC. I remember sitting with him on the deck outside the library around 2021 discussing the idea of a solar installation which delighted him given his strong concerns about the environment. He would have been happy to see the CCC become energy-independent with installation of a federally-funded 10 kW system with batteries on 9/30/24. Thank you, Sidney, for your years of activism on the Vineyard, amazing vision and, above all, your unforgettable personality.” — Paul O’Donnell
Knowing Sidney since the Fall of 1967 in Rochester, and then throughout the many years since, I can only say what an amazing gift he has been to so many creatures--human and other--and what a difference he made in the world during his time here! Margaret, Lily, and Elliot--I'm glad that Ethel and I got to visit with you all right about this time last year, and I strongly suspect that Sid is still among us in non-corporeal form, doing the work and sharing the love which surrounded him and all who were dear to him.
Much love,
Andy Bernstein
“Immense gratitude for my time with Sidney through mutual ties to the Vineyard Vision Fellowship. I admired his infectious curiosity, unique character, and passion for positive change. I'm hopeful we can each carry on some of his legacy of blue sky mentorship.” — Ryan Bushey
Memories of Sidney at The Farm Institute: “Sidney came into my life at a time when I didn't realize I needed a new experience but once I was in it, it was perfect. After a two week vacation (during which I went to work with Emily at TFI), I brazenly applied for a job, interviewed, got hired, and moved to MV within the span of about 3 weeks. Never before had I been so spontaneous but something about that place, and Sidney, spoke to me. I spent the summer and fall learning, experiencing, and taking it all in. Sidney took a chance on a city person for the summer and truly showed me what can be accomplished when one listens to their heart and soul. It was wonderful to create programs (from someone with little knowledge in that area) driven by what interested me and, subsequently, the children. It was a life I had never known but felt instantly connected with. As the summer ended and fall came, I tried my best to continue learning and growing with Sidney - truly a beacon of self-driving education. Though my full stay on MV was brief in comparison I have so many fond memories of our accidental LL Bean uniform of matching flannel shirts, lots of binders, and learning how to sail Mabel. You will truly be missed by this once-city, once-MV, lifelong fan.” — Nell Plumfield
“Sidney made life joyful and interesting. I loved watching him dance by himself and with Margaret; we shimmied on the WTLibrary porch at the Tuesday free for all. Our closing music was "Stayin' Alive"!Also enjoyed many conversations , thoughtful and humorfull. Thank you Sidney for your warmth and compassion.”
— Gail Tipton
What people are saying.
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"To say I learned a lot from Sidney Morris would be a gross understatement. Without intending to he taught me how to teach. His natural curiosity and constant dreaming kept us all on our toes at The Farm Institute. The wanderer, the dreamer, the inspirer. The creator and solver of many dilemmas and crises of farm summer camp." 
— Chrissy Kinsman
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“I mostly saw Sidney over the years as I was working retail. He was so much more than one of my favorite customers. We shared about life and connected sometimes without words. Whatever he said was heartfelt. A lovely, gentle and kind spirit he was, a beautiful soul. I’ll also remember his unique twinkle toes dancing on Tuesdays at the West Tisbury Library. I’m so grateful for our shared experiences.”
— Mark Ripa
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“Sidney is one of the people that inspired me the most to follow a life path in education, a mentor, an open heart and mind. He surely has inspired a full legacy of education change-makers!”
— David Caballero Pradas
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"May his memory be a blessing. He was a light in the world. His smile was a comfort as well and sign of his eternal optimism."
— Sam Berlow
Memories of Sidney
by Ted Box
Sidney, my friend and brother. You were a priceless gift to my sons, as the teacher who participated in their discoveries, rather than presuming years and education made you superior. Your patience and love, sense of wonder and kindness affected all the students lucky enough to have your undiluted knowledge.
The first day of the Sant Bani School, Sidney sat among a group of young children at the Nathan Mayhew building we rented for the purpose. The kids ran around in the chaos of childhood rambunctiousness. This went on for several hours until one of the would be students, trying to make sense out of the riot, asked Sidney how they were going to learn.
Sidney answered that he was there to help them, but it was there job to create the school, that it would be their school and they would learn according to their individual desires.
They built the curriculum based on that premise, and Sidney never hijacked the process.
Both my sons were there that day.
That was Sidney.
Ted, in response to Kaila’s writing (see below):
I loved Sidney. How agile he was in the moment.
One day, Pat Brown and myself were asked by Sidney to build a greenhouse addition on the south wall of a building at the Farm Institute. Of course, Sidney took the opportunity to make it a teaching moment. Pat and I honed our carpentry skills to a level few have reached. There are definitely others on island with similar abilities. Pat and I weren’t there to participate in a drawn out process. We decided to put on a seminar of irreducible efficiency. A teaching moment that would educate the students on what’s possible at the high end of woodworking skills. We had been working together for twenty years by then, and were in our prime.
Sidney immediately caught on to our intentions and changed the curriculum from patiently explaining each step, to identifying the passion and expertise that enabled the construction to be completed in a matter of hours.
During the process, Sidney interacted with the students in an organic manner, choreographing our activity with knowledge the students already possessed, in a teaching adventure that felt inclusive, everyone walking away richer and recognized by the interaction.
Reflections by Kaila Allen-Posin
*Note from Lily: A week after my dad died, our dear friend Kaila (Binney) Allen-Posin spoke this piece at a https://acupofkarma.com/the-empty-cup event here on Martha’s Vineyard Island, and she generously said, "of course!" to my request to share it with all of you.
Kaila writes: "There is this terrible saying, “Those who can, do; those who cannot, teach.” Turns out it was George Bernard Shaw in 1903. We could unpack that idiom for eons to come, but instead I would simply suggest that what I have learned as the child of educators and as an educator myself, is that it is quite possible that it is not until we teach that we truly understand whatever it is we are doing. The teaching doesn’t have to be in a classroom - in fact I have a pretty strong aversion to traditional classrooms - but the process requires that we demystify a particular subject matter and allow it to be accessed from a new perspective.
My introduction to agriculture came by way of teaching. It was a roundabout way to get there, but today it all makes sense. In my twenties I had studied and did research abroad in ecovillages (in Senegal, India, Israel and Scotland), and a term kept coming up with which I was unfamiliar - the term was “permaculture”. If agriculture, or farming, hadn’t drawn me in yet, permaculture did - it was defined to me as a theory developed in 1980 as a conscious reaction to industrial agriculture and consumer society. Permaculture is a design science through which we can create closed-loop, self-sustaining living systems. From homestead to ecovillage to green cities, it offers us ways to envision and implement hope amidst what can feel like an overwhelming amount of environmental and societal challenges.
While I was living and researching in India, I was asked by one of the ecovillage founders if I could come back to teach a permaculture course. “I’ve never taken even taken one!”, I replied. Nobody seemed to care. I was fascinated and inspired by the idea and I came home to the Vineyard that summer to discover there was a man teaching the first ever permaculture course here on the island. He was teaching out of the youth hostel, and most of the course seemed to be visiting various sites on the island that modeled aspects of this design science. The island, I soon discovered, was like permaculture heaven.
On the first day I walked into the youth hostel to see my 6th grade teacher, Sidney Morris, in the kitchen. He had been my advisor during the first two years of the Charter School’s existence, and from this moment on he would continue to be my advisor throughout my life. Those first years at the Charter School were wild, and inspiring. Sidney, and the staff, shared an experience of what school could look like if it were created for children and not for efficiency. Spending two years of middle school there made quite an impact, though the full extent of that impact had not yet surfaced when I ran into Sidney that day.
It had been at least a decade, if not more, since we had seen each other and we spent some time catching up. I shared how surprised I was that given the abundance of resilient agriculture systems on the island there had not been a permaculture course offered here until now. This teacher came all the way fromTexas!
Sidney looked at me and said, “You should teach it.” Again, I hadn’t even taken the permaculture course itself let alone a permaculture teaching certificate class. I told him I thought that was a bit crazy, but I do think there should be someone local teaching the course given the focus on observing and understanding the patterns of a specific geographical location. “Think about it", said Sidney, and smiled in the way he did when he knew a bit more than he was giving away.
Sidney, it turned out, was helping the Texan permaculture teacher by connecting him to various people and places around the island, helping to steer the ship. This tended to be one of his many roles on the island - a connector. The spider that spins the web, that sees the unseen and brings it towards the center. He was crucial to the spread of this agricultural concept.
The course allowed me to see the island, my home, through this new perspective, and for that it was invaluable. But to be frank, I felt like it could have been so much more - I was left with wanting more. I still had so much to learn about resilient agricultural systems. So I started researching permaculture teaching courses, found one at the Esalen Institute in Big Sur later in the year, and I signed up.
After another ten days of learning all that I don’t know, I was heading back to India, to that same community, to teach. It was my first experience teaching, and it was one of the most challenging experiences of my life. I doubted myself the entire time, and questioned this path as a teacher. When the course was over I almost stayed in India indefinitely- not to teach, but to keep learning all that I felt I didn’t know. But there was something pulling me back home, so I returned and quickly started putting some pieces together for permaculture courses.
As I tread through the path of those years in my twenties when “purpose” felt like a never-ending search, I continued on this path of education. The Martha’s Vineyard Vision Fellowship was still in its early years, and as I sought ways to pursue my own education with the intention to bring it back to the island, I met its goal. At the same moment I fell back in love with my high school sweetheart, who also happened to be a farmer. I knew our lives would keep us here forever, and my educational path would only help support my future here.
At this time, Sidney was now the Education Director at the Farm Institute, and I asked him to be my mentor through the Vision Fellowship. We met many times through the winter of 2009 while I applied to a Masters program at Antioch New England - the program was called Education for Sustainability. As Sidney and I worked through our ideas, he would always guide me back to what I ultimately wanted to do - connect myself and others to the land, the animals, the systems we depend upon and that depend on us.
I started an Adult Education Program at The Farm Institute that summer as my Masters Practicum, and taught various pieces of the larger permaculture curriculum to adults - natural building, compost systems, animal husbandry. I was offered this wide open space by Sidney, just as I had been offered at the Charter School, to simply explore. I explored what it felt like to be a teacher, what it felt like to learn so deeply through teaching, and what it felt like to connect to this island as a “grown up.”
I moved from teaching adults, to then establishing a teen program with Sidney, to working with children, and ultimately following the path all the way down to toddlers. My sister and I had both pursued a Masters in Education, feeling called to continue the legacy of our parents in the public school system. But as we started raising our own children our perspective on the education system widened, and we were challenged by what felt like endless limitations. We also realized how much we wanted to be with our children as they grew, how important we felt it was for them to know their island, their community, and keep them connected to the world outside of concrete school walls.
My years at the Charter School with Sidney resurfaced, sometimes daily, as I envisioned a dream education for my children. I remembered walking into his room at 12 years old, sitting down with him at a round table, and being asked what I wanted to learn. He handed me paper, and I was able to make up my entire schedule. That year, I created a complex written language with my friend, walked to Scott Campbell’s pottery studio through the woods every week to create art, and sat on cozy couches speaking French with Sidney’s daughter Lily and our teacher Sylvie Delauney. We played hours and hours of jacks on the floor of the school, learned how to freeze Arizona Ice Teas in the kitchen freezer, hiked and camped in the Vermont winter.
One day, a few months in, I thought to myself, “I think I should learn math.” I remember this moment because it was my choice, an opportunity I sought, and Sidney was there to guide me. He pointed me in the direction of Jeannie, a small, round British woman with white hair that matched her white lab coat she wore every day. “She’ll teach you math,” he said. She handed me a packet of algebra problems, and Lily sat with me to explain how to solve for “x”. This was my introduction to math, and to this day it is my favorite subject. I joke that Calculus was the best part of high school - but it is not really a joke.
When I envision learning, these are the experiences I see, and what I want for my children. So as my sister and I dreamed, I reached out to Sidney to be the first of our “council of elders” as we developed our school (or “unschool” as we have called it). For the next 8 years he remained a council of one, because he was really all we needed. He was there to remind us, when we were challenged by friends and family and the world around us, what we were creating, and why we were creating it. He wove a web around us - connecting us to people in the community, places to visit, the land, the sea - and the children were held by this web. They still are. At the center of the web is our farm.
The farm guides us through the seasons: the rhythms of our days, our weeks, and our years are all in alignment with the paths of the wind, the water, the creatures that flow across our site, our needs and the needs of the animals we tend to. There have been moments when I wonder, as my children grow, what if this isn’t enough? What if I am not enough? What if the farm is not enough? Sidney remained our guide, our mentor. He visited us every few weeks to say “thank you.” After having established multiple alternative schools on the island, it was so deeply fulfilling for him to see this unschool in the woods on the farm continue to thrive. I would laugh and thank him - for without him my feet would not be rooted on this island, or on this farm.
The greatest gift the farm offers is the opportunity to witness the cycle of life, on a daily basis. I remember the first time I was with a group of my students during lambing and a stillborn was lying in the hay next to its twin, who was happily nursing from its mother. My first reaction was to cover it up with hay and come back to it later, alone. I remember Sidney always reminding me of the profound wisdom of the children - “Let them guide you”, he said, “Let them lead.” The children saw the dead lamb immediately and their instinct was not fear, but love. They wanted to go to it, to hold it, to name it, and to give it a ceremonial burial. So we did, and we continue to do this with each animal we witness dying on the farm.
With Sidney, there were always new boundaries to cross - personal, societal, emotional - and this became even more profoundly clear over the past year. In June of 2023, Sidney’s physical pain had reached a place where he needed to pause and be home, mostly in bed. He was on a healing journey, which he named as such, and was exploring what this next moment in his life offered him. He asked that people come see him, because he refused to take any pain medication. He said that people were his pain remediation. Their stories, their presence, were all he needed.
He was challenged by this approach to his healing journey, just as he had been challenged in every one of his new ideas and creations in life. And yet even in this moment of what by most could have been considered his weakest, he shared his overwhelming strength and wisdom, and his wildest innovation yet - death as something completely new and different. As he approached his own mortality, he inspired others to wonder about life. He welcomed me and my children, among many others, into his home, to sit with him, and engage in the wonderment of life. Just as he did when he was out in the community, in his van, in his Wanderbus: connecting and building his web.
He spent over a year in his bed, and I was able to visit him frequently, sometimes weekly, sharing what we were witnessing in the world outside. A world he helped create. It felt like he had started an entirely new life there, it was magical to be with him, enlightening of course, but also so fun. I was still learning so much from him, sharing ideas about school on the farm, getting more book recommendations from him. The children would draw and paint. We would sing. It began to feel like a party, an ongoing celebration of life.
A little over a week ago, he died. And I followed the waves of all of the emotions that came along with losing him. I wanted to just cover it up, like the lamb, and pretend it didn’t happen, coming back to it when I was ready. And yet there were the children, coming from their place of love, not fear. They wanted to wonder about him, and go to him, and be in this mysterious space of loss. For me, farming is all of what Sidney guided me towards - the exploration of the things we don’t know, the never-ending cycle of learning, and teaching, and ultimately the space of loss. And where loss takes us is where farming takes us - to new life. So thank you, Sidney, for guiding me here, and for wherever this takes me."