Why The Hippies Are Topical

October 15, 2020 | By | 9 Replies More

Why the Hippies are Topical: How Writing About a Historical Time Can Make a Writer Ask— Can We Really Make a Better World?

By Margaret Ann Spence

The sour dough bread is rising. I’ve captured the yeast myself, a painstaking process. The yoghurt sits fermenting. What am I, a hippie? No. But I have always enjoyed these quiet domestic pursuits, and now in this strange time, I feel connected to the counter-culture of a bygone era. In this pandemic, we all, to one degree or another, have dropped out.

My new novel, Joyous Lies, tells the story of a botanist raised on a commune turned organic farm. Maelle, my protagonist, learned to love nature on that farm. Her Vietnam War-protesting grandparents startled their parents’ generation by committing themselves to living sustainably.

Fifty years ago, society convulsed. An unpopular war aroused protests, and a huge cohort of young people proved a demographic impossible for politicians to ignore. We could ask why, at a time of unprecedented material prosperity, young people in their droves fled to the wilderness. Looking back, the answer seems obvious. These young people saw prosperity won through exploitation, a petroleum and chemical-based unsustainable economy, and a Western world-view warped by the ever–present Cold War.

Today, this question is being asked again. What is the price of prosperity? History doesn’t exactly repeat itself, but it asks the same moral questions.

This is such a quandary. I have no answers. But being of the hippie generation, remembering the reverberations of that time, I feel I’m living in an historical novel. Or perhaps a better word is time-travel. In the first couple of months of the coronavirus pandemic, world-wide lockdowns made the sky blue again, pollution diminished, birdsong could be heard because traffic noise had diminished. This is how the world was, once. We know we must bring it back.

When I started writing Joyous Lies, I wanted to write about plants and science’s new discoveries about their amazing powers. So my main protagonist is Maelle, a botanist. She believes plants communicate. I delved into fascinating research that shows they actually do. But then another figure entered my mind —her grandmother. Johanna, her fingers gnarled from spinning and knitting, from kneading bread and picking vegetables, is my second point-of-view protagonist.

Researching my story, I read many memoirs of Vietnam-era back-to-the-landers. As I read one of these stories, a sense of familiarity came over me. In the nineteen seventies a band of friends composted the acid fields of Cape Rosier in northern Maine and grew crops, ground their own flour, drew water from a well, and lived hand to mouth, dedicated to a goal of total vegetarian self-sufficiency. Today, their leader has risen to prominence as a pioneer of the organic farming movement, his impact immeasurable. 

I never met these people, but at same the time they were living their experiment in back-to-nature farming, my young family spent time nearby. In fact, on the farm next door. We were invited, with a swarm of young couples and their children, to spend long summer weekends at the Cape Rosier compound of our friends, Jack and Ruth.

Our hosts, too, gardened organically, hauled seaweed to compost their own extensive plots, passionate about farming without pesticides. The family cooked on a cast iron stove which cast a welcome warmth in chilly late-summer Maine mornings, and used composting toilets, but unlike the hippies nearby, they had electricity, a telephone, and ate meat. I have such happy memories of that time, when we enjoyed big communal clam bakes, explored the magical islands of the cape, picked blueberries and baked pies, and watched the sun set behind the trees from the beach.

But other memories of that time surface, too. While the alternative community next door struggled to grow enough food to sustain themselves and endured jealousies and stresses that eventually broke them, our group experienced life’s difficulties as well.

A suicide. Divorces, problems in pregnancy, relationships teetering on the brink, tumultuous emotions close to the surface. We sensed that society was on the edge of enormous change. That our generation, the largest age cohort in history, was going to make it better. We believed all that. But human failings got in the way, as they always do.  The arrival of children, those small persons for whom we sacrifice so much, hamper utopia. 

So thinking about how reality gets in the way of dreams, my story developed, and with it the idea that those hippies whose communes survived had to develop a system that worked. What if a young mother had to endure the sight of nubile, athletic young women striding naked through the farm while she felt cast aside, housebound, unable even to smooth her chapped lips with face-cream? My character Johanna, faced with a similar dilemma, comes up with what she thinks is a creative solution. How was it? Ask her children. This dedication to an ideal had a cost.

Human frailties and the desire to live a life of loving abundance do not change through the generations. When I started this novel, I had no idea that a pandemic would spin our Western assumptions, questioning our getting and spending, allowing us time to wonder if a quieter life, closer to the earth, might be better.

When we read novels about other critical times in history, we find in them the same battle to remain true to our best selves. And we read about the cost of doing so. That’s what good historical fiction can do – arouse our compassion about humans who lived before us, and how they struggled with the same questions— the price of authenticity, the price of trying to make a better world. 

My bread has risen. My yogurt is fermenting. Past ideas continue to brew today in a different culture. Something new is being created from timeless ingredients as we struggle to move forward. As the hippies found, the experiment may fail. But aspects will succeed.

JOYOUS LIES

Joyous Lies. Published by The Wild Rose Press, 2021

If plants protect their young, why can’t human beings do the same?

Maelle Woolley, a shy botanist, prefers plants to people. They don’t suddenly disappear. Raised on her grandparents’ commune after her mother’s mysterious death, she follows the commune’s utopian beliefs of love for all. Then she falls for attractive psychiatrist Zachary Kane. When Zachary claims her mother and his father never emerged alive from his father’s medical research lab, Maelle investigates. What she discovers will challenge everything she believes, force her to find strength she never knew she had, and confront the commune’s secrets and lies. What happened to love? And can it survive?

Margaret Ann Spence writes about women, the choices they make, and what happens next.

Her debut novel, Lipstick on the Strawberry, published by the Wild Rose Press in 2017 won the Romantic Elements Category in the First Coast Romance Writers 2015 Beacon Contest. It was a finalist for the 2019 Eric Hoffer Book Award and in the 2019 Next Generation Indie Awards.

Margaret lives in Phoenix, Arizona, where, in abundant sunshine, she can hang her wash on the line and keep an unruly garden. Inspired by her character, Johanna, she recently took up knitting.

www.margaretannspence.com

www.facebook.com/margaret-ann-spence

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Category: On Writing

Comments (9)

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  1. Carol Scholtz says:

    It was wonderful living the life back then and feeling the openness of the forest and waters near by.It was nice to open your mind to so many others and to get to know each other on deeper levels of who we were. I’m still a young hippie at 65, but it hurts to live inside a divided humanity, with so much hate evolving. One thing that really disturbs me is seeing this culture of spending. Lots of us back then loved making our own clothes for ourselves and each other. Today people call themselves Boho’s(bohemian, but not). The market has taken this name from our lives back then and turned our hippie clothing into a multi million dollar business where the types of skirts we made are $225. In there making they polute the enviornment and they exclude people who can’t afford those things. Everybody belonged, but today everyone is separated.I wish that I could go back, but more than that I hope to see good things coming along for everyone. Good thing we still have great concerts that bring all of us old hippies together with the young hippies today. Thanks String Cheese Incident. We all need to take deep breath’s and help this earth 🌎 be a beautiful place again. Thank you so very much for your coming book, I look forward to reading it. It sounds like a walk back to more peaceful times.

    • Thank you so much, Carol, for these kind words.
      It is amazing how older ideas keep on giving – like sustainable farming, cooking without preservatives, herbal medicines etc. I love them all and always did. I agree with everything you say, we need to take a deep breath and help the earth.
      Hopefully the book will come out in January. With a publisher, you don’t exactly know till they give a release date. I will be sure to let Barbara know and have another article in the prep. stages.
      If you’d like to be on my mailing list for my newsletter, please sign up on my website, http://www.margaretannspence.com – I send occasional recipes and other notes from the simple life.
      Are you a writer yourself?
      My best,
      Margaret

  2. Sharon Maas says:

    Well said, and well written.
    My own novels tend to reflect this time and these subjects, and back to the earth has resurfaced, especially in this strange Covid area, as a major goal in my life. Farming and spiritual matters plays a role in all of my novels.

  3. Ray Wild says:

    Actually it’s true about the times back then , vietnam war etc..but the game changer that transcended everything and rose above it all and created the entire “hippy scene” was LSD, what it did to your “mind set” was totally “mystical” taking you to lands , perspectives, perceptions,and planes of reality you never knew before, without LSD there never would been pink floyd, great ful dead, the beatles as you know them, and many more, like Albert Hoffman a scientist in europe who accidently discovered LSD in 1937 and used himself to research it claimed LSD made people the way their suppose to be,however 50 years later sad to say the wisdom and insight and spiritualism ,peace, love and brotherhood that LSD brought out, couldn’t survive in this plane of reality…

    • Sharon Maas says:

      I couldn’t agree more. LSD changed my life. It gave me my first insights into my own spirituality, which I ended up pursuing free of chemical “assistance”. I travelled overland to India in 1973, stayed in a South Indian ashram for 18 months — and the rest is history.

      • Sharon,
        Thank you for your comment. I hope you enjoy Joyous Lies when it is released in the New Year.
        Your comments made me buy your latest book – and I look forward to reading it.
        Margaret

        • Sharon Maas says:

          My next book is also out in January, so we should definitely read each other’s and co-promote! Mine is set in 60’s-70’s Guyana — a brilliant but at the same time very turbulent era.
          Sharon

    • Hi Sharon says:

      Thank you for these comments. Seems like we have much in common. I’d love to read your novels and in fact just purchased the latest.

      I hope you enjoy Joyous Lies when it comes out – in January if we are on track.

    • Hi Ray,
      Yes, those times were amazing. To be young then, despite the war, the oppression, etc. was to feel enormously powerful and free. I think it must have been in part the power of numbers —the demographic power of the baby boomers coming of age. I’ll take your word for the LSD, I never tried it. It is also true that it messed up the minds of some, which I allude to in the novel.

      I hope you enjoy Joyous Lies. It will be released in the New Year.

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