He lives in a tree, doesn’t wear shoes, and brushes his teeth with a pinecone
In the first story, Dodge’s mission is to scatter his late father’s ashes up in the mountains — if he can recall where he stashed them. “My family has perfected the art of dodging civilizations for hundreds of years. All I have to do is follow my feet,” says the backwoods philosopher. He’s a memorably quirky character with a unique take on life, as this interview illuminates.
MNN: What was your life like before you moved to the woods? Did you have a job? Did you get an education?
Mick Dodge: Yes, as a heavy equipment mechanic. I have also dug ditches, chopped wood, washed dishes, and taught the Earth Gym practices.
I graduated Kubasaki High School in Okinawa, Japan. Never been to
college, but like to read books. If the book makes sense and has value
for the earth, I plant a tree and share the book. If the book does not
make sense, I plant a tree for it and use it as [toilet] paper or fire
starter. My life was about the same as it is now, learning the ways to
walk and explore physical exercise and how to create a physical practice
that finds the middle ground between the wild and tame, between the
gated wild and the walls of modern domestication. However, I must add
that I have no feet pain, back pain and my heart is strong [since] I
became a barefoot nomad.
What prompted you to go to the forest in the first place?
What prompted you to go to the forest in the first place?
My feet hurt. I had hammertoes, plantar fasciitis,
deformed feet. They hurt so bad that I could barely walk and I had
always used my walk and run to handle the stress of modern living, make
sense of the modern world story that I was living in, and the Hoh is
home for me. So I went home to heal my feet.
In following my feet I found myself stepping out of the insulation of the modern world and landing in the earth. The results came quickly. Not only were my feet healing, but my back pain, neck pain and most of all my heart pain disappeared, and in no time at all I was back into a dead run, stepping out of the sedentary, stressed, sedated and secured living of the modern world. I was muscling my mind into the heart of the matter. I was dancing as the fire, running as the wind, strengthening as the stone and flowing as the water within, by the simple act of touching with my bare soles and allowing the Earth to teach. It is a simple matter to follow your feet, but is does not come easy. The Earth will eat you if you are not paying attention.
Is there anything you miss about modern civilization?
In following my feet I found myself stepping out of the insulation of the modern world and landing in the earth. The results came quickly. Not only were my feet healing, but my back pain, neck pain and most of all my heart pain disappeared, and in no time at all I was back into a dead run, stepping out of the sedentary, stressed, sedated and secured living of the modern world. I was muscling my mind into the heart of the matter. I was dancing as the fire, running as the wind, strengthening as the stone and flowing as the water within, by the simple act of touching with my bare soles and allowing the Earth to teach. It is a simple matter to follow your feet, but is does not come easy. The Earth will eat you if you are not paying attention.
Is there anything you miss about modern civilization?
I don’t miss it. There is no way to get away from it. So I developed a
physical fitness practice in how to step in and out of it, stepping out
of the walls, machines, electronics, social babble for awhile, ground
back into the natural flow of the land, and then go back in.
Going barefoot, did you ever injure your feet?
Going barefoot, did you ever injure your feet?
On one of my long running quests in my bare soles into
the highlands of the Olympics, I was taught a lesson by the mountain.
It was early winter. The snows came and I almost lost my toes. I had no
footwear with me. It was a 30-mile walk out. So I cut up my moose hide
jacket and had to make a set of mukluks to protect my feet. It was then
that I realized that … I better shift my attitude and vow about bare
footing. It was a powerful teaching. I learned the meaning and wisdom of
the old saying of my elders. “Don’t throw the baby out with the bath
water.”
How difficult are the winters for you, with diminished resources?
How difficult are the winters for you, with diminished resources?
It is not difficult at all. It is an adventure and I have never had
to deal with diminished food sources. I just follow my feet. There is
not much that I do not eat. I am an omnivore, able to eat a wide variety
of food, which also means that I learned how to become a scavenger and
allowed the hunger in my belly to guide me into discovering all kinds of
food. For example, I would come upon an elk killed by a cougar. When a
cougar kills an elk, the entire forest moves in to eat. So I do the
same. I often come upon road kill. Many people are scared of such food
and yet they eat jerky … and jerky is nothing more than sun-dried meat.
So what I eat during a normal week changes depending upon which one of
the three terrains that I am footing my way through. But there is one
highly spiritual food that I try to maintain in my stashes and storage
places and that is chocolate-chip cookies. My grandmothers got me hooked on them.
Have you had any close call animal encounters?
Have you had any close call animal encounters?
I was footing my way along the road headed for my home camp, when
some idiot talking on a cellphone, doing at least 80 miles per hour,
almost hit a deer and then me. The most dangerous encounters that I have
ever had in the gated wild, walls of the city and in the open fenced
lands are with two footed creatures.
What do you do if you get sick? Have you ever had an emergency situation?
What do you do if you get sick? Have you ever had an emergency situation?
Fire is one of the elements of the forest that I have learned to
develop a relationship to use in healing. Another key element in healing
is water. After all, we are all walking sacks of water. I found during
those times when I had been around people from the city, I would catch
some kind of cold or flu. I would enter back into the Hoh and drink the
water and soak my entire body in the glacial water. My grandfather
called it “kissing the foot of the glacier.” There are all kinds of
mushrooms, herbs, etc. to be used for healing,
and I keep a close relationship with those in the Earth communities
that master the healing and herbal arts, such as my friend Doc Gare, who
is introduced in the series.
Does this lifestyle give you a heightened appreciation of Mother Nature?
Does this lifestyle give you a heightened appreciation of Mother Nature?
Appreciation is such a weak word to express what I feel for the Earth
and the transitions that I have gone through and am still going
through. Hell, I am just getting started. One of the ways that was
taught to me on one of my long gated wild quests was to break free of
the polarization of the modern world. People always trying to put you in
box. By getting some distance from the comforts, habits, physical
structures like shoes, machines, walls, electronics, I find myself
seeking out what makes sense, what fits, and integration of the wild and
tame make sense. So l learned to hunt and track the middle path, the
middle way. It is not easy at times figuring out the middle way between
the modern world and the Earth. But it is fun and adventure.
What’s the best and worst part of this lifestyle?
What’s the best and worst part of this lifestyle?
Wherever there is good there is bad. That is the game of life. My
passion in life is to explore, engage, challenge and balance whatever
comes in the three terrains that I run through.
I don’t imagine there are many mountain women out there. Do you get lonely?
I don’t imagine there are many mountain women out there. Do you get lonely?
On my journey, I have formed so many wonderful connections with
women, formed strong brother-and-sister relationships with them. I may
not be able to figure out what they are always talking about. But if
their soles are touching the Earth, I am more able to figure it out. A
few years ago my path wandered into the Cedar Woman. We share a common
vision of these Olympic Mountains and a deep musing of the lands, and in
order for a vision to manifest from the Earth it takes a mission — a
mission brings it to a physical reality. Cedar, along with others,
created the Olympic Mountain Earth Wisdom Circle. Our lives are guided
by the musings that come from living in a deep connection with the
Earth, and Cedar holds the feminine wisdom fire of our hearth, which I
keep coming back to, what I call the base camp.
Why did you agree to do a TV series?
I have three passions in life: the first one is my teacher, the Hoh
river in these lands of the Olympic Mountains, and I wanted show what
the Hoh has taught me about training and living. My second love and
passion is my community, my clan that is spread out all through the
three terrains. And my third passion is a calling and vision that I have
been pursuing and running as long as I can remember, and that is to
train and share a physical practice in the Earth Gym.
I’m guessing you don’t have a television. But how do you feel about being famous and people possibly coming to look for you, invading your privacy and solitude?
I’m guessing you don’t have a television. But how do you feel about being famous and people possibly coming to look for you, invading your privacy and solitude?
The last time I watched television, I was very young and it bored me.
I have looked at some clips of what the crew shot. I love the scenery. I
love seeing my brothers. But I will not watch them, mainly because I
cannot stand to see myself on television or hear my voice, and I am not a
legend. The land is the legend. Fame is a snare used by the modern to
trap and confine the spirit. Fame is one of those ways of the modern
world that always comes with blame and shame. I will run from it, dodge
it. After all, I am a Dodge. If any one comes looking for me, I will be
out to steal their shoes, hand them a stick and rope, show them the
stones and how to sack a practice in the Earth Gym.
What do you think people will make of the show? Will they think you’re crazy or be secretly envious?
What do you think people will make of the show? Will they think you’re crazy or be secretly envious?
I have no idea and don’t give a s**t. You will have to ask them. When
I began bare-footing, I discovered a wonderful way to explore our
common cultural story. I would foot my way into the city, enter into a
store barefoot. I found some liked it and would begin to reflect upon
times when they walked barefoot. Others hated it, mocked it and even
became angry. What was interesting to me is that they were even looking
at my feet. I mean, all of us are two-footed animals. It is what has
made our species. I don’t have the time or desire to figure out what
people think. It was once said that this is the “land of the free and
the home of the brave.” It is becoming more like the “land of the free
and the home of the caged.” I don’t know what people think. But I wish
they would just think about not screwing up the land that we walk in.
What else would you like audiences to know?
Just stand up, step out of your shoebox and walk around through your
habitat, your local area. When you do perhaps you will begin to notice
some simple things. What will happen when you begin to follow your feet?
I have no idea, no one does. I only know my own story. But I also know
this: all of us are storytellers, so I hope people step out long enough
to feel into the remembering, develop a practice of recovery and begin
restoring their footing with the earth.What else would you like audiences to know?
This article was originally featured on:
Mother Nature Network:
http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/stories/he-lives-in-a-tree-doesnt-wear-shoes-and-brushes-his
Mother Nature Network:
http://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/wilderness-resources/stories/he-lives-in-a-tree-doesnt-wear-shoes-and-brushes-his
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