SMOKE

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Today I must write. I’m not sure that I’ll find the words, but here we go…..

I cannot see the mountains. 

I am surrounded by them, but the smoke is too thick. 
Daily temps are soaring beyond 110. 
115 yesterday. 114 in this moment.
I’m off-grid, and not even the rays of the mighty sun can penetrate this smoke.  
So, no AC.  

These are strange times….

California is on fire. Again. But this time it’s different. 
This time it’s the 2020 version, and it’s more suffocating somehow. 
This time we cannot ignore the pain, the loss, the utter devastation all around us.  It’s just too thick. The air quality in Northern San Luis Obispo County is ranking amidst the worst in the world.  
We are choking.

The wildfires currently raging here are some of the largest in our state’s history. My uncle and my beloved (and quite ancient) grandfather are being evacuated from their home in Santa Cruz. My dear friends in Big Sur are fearing the worst. Farmers & Ranchers I know and love in Sonoma County & beyond are evacuating their livestock and praying. And there are too many other fires & too much more loss to list. It’s breaking my heart wide open.  I cannot begin to imagine what these times are like for our first responders.  From the depths of my being, THANK YOU.  

It sounds like Hurricane Genevieve has some leftovers to share, and soon …
There’s a flash flood watch today for the Cuyama & Santa Barbara mountains, just to the southwest of me. Over burn areas from previous fires, presenting unique hazards. Thunderstorm & dry lightning warnings for the Bay Area & Central Coast, through Monday. The lightning is of particular concern. More lightning means more fire.  

If I’m perfectly honest, when you stack a pandemic, a heat wave, and raging wildfires, all on top of each other, it feels like a bizarre game of Apocalypse-Jenga.  Like someone just removed the wrong block, and we have front-row seats, as the whole tower tumbles.

For those of us who have been working in the climate sphere, this is the “perfect storm” we’ve seen coming. This is the “perfect storm” we’ve been hoping to avoid.  And by “perfect” I mean terrible, devastating, unforeseen, and unimaginable.

The man in the white house says we Californians need to rake the leaves in the forest, and that will solve all our fire problems.  (please excuse me while I throw up in my mouth).  The man in the white house also believes that climate change isn’t real.  He has no idea what he’s doing, on so many levels, and the time to vote him out, gone, goodbye, is near. 

As the world burns, I continue, in the spaces in between, to plug away on my life’s largest project, a feature-length documentary film, titled, aptly, “Where There Once Was Water”.  It’s a story, as you might imagine, about California.  A few people have asked me recently for an update.  Although I do try my best to provide somewhat regular updates – via email, Kickstarter, blog, social, etc. – the request for an update is totally fair.  It’s been a VERY long road - a much longer road than I expected - and if you’ve supported this project in any way, and you feel you’ve been left in the dark regarding updates & progress, I offer you, today, my most sincere apologies. Truly.

I’ll be honest. I expected, in my naivety, to have the film done in 2017. It’s now, quite loudly, 2020… a year we will never forget. That difference in expected completion dates is, admittedly, significant.  And frustrating.  It has caused some bouts of guilt, on my part - as an Artist & Storyteller, as a certifiable Type A personality, and importantly, as someone in whom you’ve invested your money and your trust.  I promise that I will not let you down.  But I’ll admit, at times I’ve wondered if you already feel that I have.  My hope is that you still believe in me, after this long and winding road.  The light at the end of the tunnel is near, and in fact, is brighter every day.  We are so close, my friends.  We are not there yet, but we are very, very, close. 

If you’re hungry for details of what that all means… here it is. The VO is locked. The script is locked.  Multiple rounds of feedback, from a diverse audience, have been solicited, collected & incorporated.  The final substantial round of edit notes is in the hands of my trusty & steadfast editor, Garrett Russell.  The musical score is being composed & produced by the very-talented & generous Brandon Maahs.  The steps that remain are all about polish ... so that we may send this baby out into the world, all shiny and beautiful, sounding clean, looking clean, and formatted appropriately for the Film Festival audiences that await (whatever that may look like, all things 2020 considered). At this point, it feels really good, and necessary, to say earnestly… we are very, very close.

And for some important perspective, and gratitude…
I have 474 Kickstarter backers, whose generosity, way back in 2015, (!!!), made this project possible. Their support literally birthed this film into existence.  They believed in me from the very beginning, which, as a newbie filmmaker, is a HUGE thing. If you are one of these humans, THANK YOU. 

I have hundreds more people – friends, colleagues, businesses, family members, strangers, friends of friends, neighbors, farmers, ranchers, clients, podcasters, media peeps – who have contributed in some way since the inception of the project, whose generosity has kept this project alive and moving forward, even after all the Kickstarter funds ran out. If you are one of these humans, THANK YOU.

It’s been five years. And although 2020 is far behind the completion-date I imagined, I have to trust that the Universe does indeed work in mysterious ways. Because, in all honesty, 2020 seems like *just the right time* to release a film about water, restoration, and importantly, about hope.  A film about healing our relationship with the natural world, through the water & soil that gives us life. Many of the folks I met and interviewed for my film are working, day in and day out, on solutions.  On healing.  On restoration.  And I cannot wait to share their stories, their ideas, and their work, with you, through this film.

As this project has unfolded, slowly, achingly, I realize… I have never loved a project so deeply.  I have never felt such exhaustion and overwhelm.  I have never grown so rapidly, so broadly.  

And as this strange year unfolds, I realize, I have never felt this many goosebumps, this much heartache, this much tenderness & terror, and also, this much deep knowing, that somehow, through all this pain we are feeling, through all this loss, through all this grief that is bubbling to the surface, that there is a better version of us yet.  One that we may find, through the endless heartbreak, the endless smoke, tears, grief, and un-knowing.  A version of us that we may create, anew, that serves each other and our Mother in ways that are needed now more than ever.   

“I have never… “ feels like the feeling of our times.  
I hope we can lean into the hard lessons being presented to us right now.  
I hope we can continue to lean on each other….  
To offer support when we’re able.  
To ask for support when we need it.

 And ultimately, on the other side of all of this, I hope we can say…. 
“I have never… seen a world so beautifully transformed” 

It’s hard to see through the smoke.  I’ll admit.
Right now it just feels like survival.
But as the smoke clears, from the ashes of 2020, may we become Love. 
Love for each other. For ourselves. For our planet. And for our future generations.

I love you friends.  I hope you’re okay out there.
As always, thank you for YOU, and thank you for listening.


“Let there be room left in your heart for the unimaginable – serendipity has a way of showing itself just when you feel like giving up.”
— Nikki Rowe

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HUMILITY

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I shot out of bed at 5 am to the sound of coyotes. The sky was not yet turning rainbow, but it would soon enough. The cool 55 degrees I feel on my skin, if today follows the course of yesterday, will double to 110 by lunchtime. The coyotes were closer and in greater number than normal. Hence my response. From deep slumber to dressed & ready, in a matter of moments.
 
I am becoming. 
Heartache. Frustration. Loss. Wonder. Silence. Growth. Confusion. Gratitude.
I am stretching my wings and feeling them bound. 
Ablaze and unheard.
Mystified by the ignorance of so many.
Consoled by the hearts of a few.
It is a time of contrasts.
 
All of the shit is about to hit all of the fans, and it seems that most humans are just-kinda-tired-of-it-all, and so therefore are choosing to kinda-sorta-get-back-to-normal, to kinda-sorta-prentend-this-all-isnt-happening-anymore, to kinda-sorta-get-together-with-friends-and-family-to-celebrate (and speed up, *cough*) the dispersal of said shit, from said fans.
 
Most of you know that I appreciate a special blend of science and woo. And right now, the science and the woo are joining forces to suggest that the second half of 2020 might just make the first half look like Kindergarten. The stars (and by that I mean the sparkly ones in the sky) don’t tend to be wrong (that's the woo), and the scientists do tend to know better than the politicians, when it comes to matters of science. So, umm… fasten your seatbelts? And... be smart? Please?
 
It’s been some time since I’ve known what to say. And I’m still not sure that I do. So instead I’ve been listening. Listening to the resident barn owls as I fall asleep each night, and the birdsong at sunrise. I listened as air-tankers and helicopters and ground crews battled a wildland fire that threatened my home. I listened when a pair of pronghorn peacefully approached me on my way to Nanny’s service – she’s at peace - they said. I listen to the crops I’m trying to grow – too much salt in the water – they say. I listen to this land, this place, this time that we are in. It seems there is much to learn, if I am indeed willing to listen.
 
Beyond the immediacy of my microcosm, I am listening. To the pain of generations that is bubbling to the surface. To the cries for equality and justice that have been there for so long – that we cannot, and should not, ignore any longer.
 
Like you, I have only ever lived my own experience. In my world, my mom had snacks ready when we got home from school. Nan & Pops took us on road trips. For the most part, life was good and easy. Dad remarried. Mom remarried. I grew up as the oldest of seven – all boys - until my one & only baby sister came along.
 
Looking back, I realize now, I always felt safe. I never questioned it – it just was. As I grew up, I was always able to find a job that paid the bills, even if the living was simple. I traveled. I went to community college. Studied art. Started a photography business. Got married. Got divorced.
 
I bought a tiny little off grid home on 2.5 acres of alkaline grassland. I am raising ducks, grazing sheep, doing my best to move with grace through the overwhelm of 2020. And as I listen, as I humbly open my ears to perspectives other than my own, I am beginning to recognize my privilege. In being here. In getting here. In growing up feeling “safe”, and how that affected every breath, every moment, every movement, of my days.
 
The lack of pigment in my skin has come with many privileges, most of which I have taken for granted. And this whiteness I inhabit has a painful generational history attached as well. And even though all that territory is uncomfortable, it is my duty to explore it. And so that’s what I’ve been doing. Quietly. Exploring. Listening. Learning. Crying. Reading. Sitting with the discomfort. And then listening some more.
 
Black Lives Matter. 
As I listen, I am able to hear why vocalizing that is so important.
If it’s hard for you to hear that, or say that, or you feel yourself getting defensive about that, I challenge you to set down your defenses, and just LISTEN. 
Just. Listen.
 
It seems that most everything about 2020 is uncomfortable.
Most everything about growth is uncomfortable.
Talking about race is uncomfortable.
Coming to terms with the true history of this country is uncomfortable.
Lecturing my loved ones about why they shouldn’t be getting together during a pandemic, and why I won’t be joining them, is uncomfortable.
Wearing a mask is uncomfortable.
Living with rattlesnakes, where it reaches 112 degrees in June, is uncomfortable.
Not knowing what’s going to happen to my career is uncomfortable.
Grieving the loss of my Nanny is uncomfortable.
Not hugging is uncomfortable.
Being an empath in times of intense planetary grief is uncomfortable.
Listening to someone's pain in uncomfortable.
 
I’m gonna do it all anyway.
 
Because it’s okay to be uncomfortable.
That’s where the growth happens.
 
2020 is forcing us to grow in new and uncomfortable ways, providing us the opportunity to consider perspectives and lived experiences that are different than our own, demanding that we notice what we have taken for granted, and finally, asking that we imagine a better world, and that we do the painful and necessary work to make it so.
 
And about that pandemic…
It’s not over. It’s getting worse. Here in the US, we’re winning in all ways we don’t want to be winning. Experts are saying the first wave and the second wave will likely just blend into one massive wildfire. Fun times.   
 
Stock up on food for yourself (and your pets) for the fall. Trust me on this one (or don’t).
And wear a freaking mask when you go out in public.
 
Now if you’ll excuse me, my darlings, I have a 7 am date with a weed whacker.
Because wildfire waits on no one. 

Much love to you and yours. Truly. So much love. 
Thank you, as always, for listening.


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Post-production on “Where There Once Was Water” continues. I was recently interviewed by Jaime Lewis on her podcast CONSUMED. We chat about progress on the film, life in the Carrizo Plains, the harsh realities of life without running water, and... we manage to giggle a lot too. I think you’ll enjoy our conversation. Take a listen HERE.

And if you haven't yet, I invite you to take a couple minutes out of your day to watch the official "Where There Once Was Water" movie trailer, HERE.  


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The Soda Fire in California Valley on June 10th came within one mile of my home. It was a terrifying experience. I remain intensely grateful to all the firefighters, and reminded of how quickly fire can move in the dry & windy conditions we've been experiencing out here.


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I created a resource page for all things COVID-19, and I am doing my best to keep it updated as the situation evolves. It is my gift to you, and you are welcome to share it widely...  wherethereoncewaswater.com/covid19


And finally, here's a quick peek at what I'm reading these days. Much Love, y'all. xo

ANXIETY

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I went to town yesterday. The drive takes just over an hour.
And. I noticed something. 

Honestly, I am hesitant to share. It exposes a new piece of me. A piece that isn’t strong or resilient. A piece that has been hiding beneath the surface. I know I am not alone in the discovery of new discomforts. In this liminal space, we are all confronting our demons in one form or another.

Context is king. And so. Backup. 
I bought a tiny off-grid home this year. 
Out in the Great Big Empty. 
Escrow closed on March 13th. Shelter-at-home March 18th. Okay.
For the first time in almost two years, I actually have a home. I can do that. Solid.

After 2.5 weeks of not leaving my brand new and mostly empty home for any little thing, while I prepped for my first trip into town, I felt really anxious. Like, REALLY anxious. At first I blamed it on my too-big to-do list. But, in reality, it was the first time since the world flipped upside down that I’d be around people, or in stores, or at my office. It was the first time I’d stock up on groceries, or visit the hardware store, or grab mail from my PO Box. It was the first time I’d see my parents, the ocean, Highway 101, everything that once felt so familiar. 

And it didn’t feel that way that day…. Familiar. 
Not at all. 

Instead I felt a deep loneliness. An ache that hadn’t hit me yet at home - my tiny new home way out amidst the Carrizo Plains. When I was in there, amidst the hustle, near to everything and everyone that is and was familiar, I felt alone. 

My people were there. All around me. And I couldn’t hug them.

Fast forward. 
Yesterday I went to town. And what I noticed, clear as day, is this… I experience intense anxiety around the seemingly simple act of going to town. Every. Single. Time. It hasn’t gotten any better. It hasn’t gotten any easier. And I don’t know when, or if, it will.

And so I breath. Because, occasionally, let’s be real, a woman’s got to buy groceries, and haul water, and do laundry, and and and.

But why this intense anxiety? Why must we always, with the why? I don’t know. And I don’t know. So I will sit with the unknowing. I will hug the frightened little girl inside of me, who doesn’t know which way is up or down, or what her life might look like on the other side of all this. I will sit with her, and I will listen for whatever else comes up.

We are all in this strange liminal space. Together. The eye of a great storm. A highly contagious respiratory virus. Still out there. Still invisible. Still spreading. A world unfamiliar. A normal turned upside down.

This storm will not be over any time soon. I understand the Hammer and the Dance. Right now we Dance. And then. Repeat.

I’d like to be clear here. I am not seeking pity. I am not breaking into a million tiny irreparable pieces. I am not cryptically crying for help. What I am doing is finally, consciously, recognizing and giving words to the fragility I feel within my being. In hopes that sharing brings relief somehow. For me, for you, for someone I’ve never met. In hopes, as always, that there is resonance in the Collective. This is hard. All of it. What shows up for each of us will be different than the next. And it’s important to remember that our feelings, as strange & uncomfortable as they may seem, are, straight up, immensely valid and important.

I will find a way to move through my anxiety with self-compassion. 
I will find a way to go gently into the world when I need to.
I will find a way to stretch and grow into the woman the Universe is calling me to be.
I can feel her in there, bubbling to the surface, stretching her wings in the weirdest of ways.
I do love who I am becoming, anxious warts and all. 

I don’t know how this ends. And I guess that’s a part of it too.
Break me apart to put me back together.
We can do this.  

I love you friends.
Thank you for listening.


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Post-production on “Where There Once Was Water” continues in this time of otherwise-stillness. I was recently interviewed by Inge Bisconer on the The Water Zone : Ag Podcast

We chat about progress on the film, sustainable agriculture, and life in the time of Coronavirus. I think you’ll enjoy our conversation.

Take a listen HERE.


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I created a resource page for all things COVID-19, and I am doing my best to keep it updated as the situation evolves. It is my gift to you, and you are welcome to share it widely.

wherethereoncewaswater.com/covid19

STILLNESS

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40 was big and brave and beautiful. Part of me is sad for it to end. Part of me intrigued and excited for what comes next.

Layered on top of a year already full of all flavors of fullness, I purchased a home, on a couple of acres, way out in the mighty Carrizo Plains. A tiny little off-grid cabin. A dream of dreams. And after so many chapters of moving around, renting, house-sitting, vagabonding… the sense of stillness I feel here is a gift.

I am finding Brittany here. Truly and completely. Underneath all the layers. Grounding.

Seven ducklings, ten sheep, a mating pair of barn owls, a six foot guardian gopher snake. June bugs, lady bugs, dirty sock bugs. Tarantulas and grasshoppers. Hummingbirds, bees and butterflies. Cottontails and jackrabbit, coyotes and kangaroo rats. Kit foxes, rattlers, elk and pronghorn. They’re all here with me. And I with them. Birds with songs so numerous I can’t yet identify. Crows, raptors, swarms of black birds.

I am not alone.

In this strange time of solitude, I am surrounded by the kind of life and living that begs for stillness, observation, and wonder. I am surrounded by life that was here long before any peoples, homes or bumpy dirt roads. My life intertwining. Gently.

I tiptoe. I ground. I am grateful.

Today the clouds hang low and the morning sun is sliding off the mountain ranges, aiding me in gently bidding adieu to a year of living into my own skin.

This home is the dream I’ve been dreaming. That dream now lucid.

And as the ewe gives birth to her lamb/s in the coming days, so too will I give birth to this dream. Land and animals, food and soil, regeneration and stillness. Living and learning, and, more than anything, love.

Tomorrow will mark two months in this home, and 41 years on this planet. Tomorrow will mark a heart overflowing with gratitude, and a renewed hope for a collective tomorrow that feels as peaceful as my today. I believe that if we sit still, really truly sit still, the wonders of the natural world have much to say. I plan to spend 41 listening.


I created a resource page for all things COVID-19, and I will continue to update it weekly. Please feel free to utilize this resource, and to share it widely. With Love & Gratitude, Brittany

wherethereoncewaswater.com/covid19

PATIENCE

We are wading towards the deep end. Now six weeks deep in a strange new world.

My hands ache from the busy with which I’ve been filling my days - moving, building, gardening, poop scooping, tending to the land I now call home. The sun has kissed my pasty white shoulders and the sensitive little tip of my nose. My moon time, now far from regular, indicates that the stress levels in my body are quite different than they feel to my waking consciousness. Today is tomorrow is today and yesterday. Time is warping. And yet, all this strangeness, I believe … is a gift. A oddly-packaged, slapped-on-your-doorstep, terrible, wonderful, never-before-experienced, what-will-you-do-with-it, gift.

The ducklings are a month old. Last night they slept outside for the first time. Last night I reclaimed my living room. Swept, mopped, made a fire. I checked on them incessantly, 8pm, 11pm, 3am, 5:30am - hopeful they were safe and warm and not too frightened. I built them a fortress. They approved. I do hope it remains fortress enough for all the critters we share this grassland with.

I have been feeling all the feels, as they say. In my mind and heart and body. Plenty of curiosity & optimism, as per my usual recipe. And lately I’ve also been chewing on the big one… 

Patience. 

Like a llama, I chew on it, swallow it, spit it back up, into my mouth, and then chew on it some more. Yummm. I mean, after all, the reason I’m chewing on patience is because, let’s be honest, most of us have plenty of time to be chewing on patience right about now. 

I decided to try slicing off the tip of my thumb a couple weeks ago. Out here in the middle of nowhere. Good times. Wouldn’t recommend it. I’m quite fond of my thumbs. I’m guessing you probably like yours too.

This accident slowed me down. Required more patience of me than I wanted to give, while simultaneously bringing into sharp focus the level of my isolation. Hop in the car, drive an hour, and you’ll get somewhere. But between here and somewhere is only wide open spaces.

Spaces plenty big for patience. Spaces plenty big for time, and distance, and wonder. Spaces and places plenty big to dream up a whole new dream. Space to build, to be, to grow, to learn, to observe, and to wonder. Wide open spaces. The Big Empty.

Whether we find ourselves surrounded by sky or sky scrapers, or something in between, I believe we are all being asked, by a force we cannot see or comprehend, to learn, really learn, patience. This is a gift. Wrapped up like a lesson. This is no small task. And as un-easy as it is, so too is it important.

Right now I am paying bills with money from my savings account. This is a temporary fix. Without inputs, the savings account will only get smaller. Every day a new email… “we have decided to postpone our event due to Coronavirus”. Yes of course. I support the decision whole-heartedly. My income and my bank account will wait. I am not alone. None of this is easy.

Patience.

I applied for the PPP. I may or may not get money. It may or may not be forgiven. I am a sole proprietor. I am a gig worker. I am an artist. I don’t fit into any of the boxes. 

Patience.

I have not touched another human being in over seven weeks. I live alone. I ache to be held. Leant on. Kissed. A hand in mine, on mine. Hugs. One hug. Touch. Is like breathing.

Patience.

We are in this together. Apart. Together. Should we open. Should we not. What is safe. What is worth it. Will the second wave be worse than the first. How many will die. Will it be me. Will it be someone I love. What happens to our economy. How will we help ourselves. How will we help each other. Is our food supply chain breaking. What was already broken. When can I hug my friends again. When will the kids be back in school. How will I pay rent. What day is it. Will my parents be okay. Will I have a job. Clients. Income. When will this all be over. Will life ever look normal again. What is normal anyway. And do we even want to go back to it.

I hear you. LOUD. There is angst in the collective. 

I have my truths. We all do. They may be different. But our truths, all together, different or the same, are outweighed by the vast unknown. By this strange, terrible, wonderful, unsolicited gift, that we don’t yet understand. 

We are not in control. And we humans don’t tend to like the way that feels.

Patience.
Gratitude.

For a few days last week I had no running water. Welcome to off grid living. Things get weird.
Wash your hands now, ya hear? No running water.

No running water is no way to live. 
And yet.

Two million people. Two million people right here in the good ol’ US of A live that way every day. While we’re asking all the other questions, let’s ask the bigger ones. Why do we let this happen. Why do two million of our brothers and sisters here in the United States NOT have running water. And why are most of those people Native Americans living in Navajo Nation. Who do we think we are. Who do we want to be. What kind of a world do we want to be a part of. What changes can we make, as we rebuild an already broken world, to create a new world, more equitable. More kind. 

Humility. 
Patience.

Tonight my ducklings will sleep outside, again.
Tonight the barn owls will dance their mating dance and sing to the night sky.
The hills will go dark, the coyotes will howl, and our dreams will speak to us, if only we will listen.
And tomorrow the sun will rise, and bring with it an opportunity, each day anew, each day melting into the next, to learn patience. To chew on it, swallow it, spit it up, and chew on it some more. 

Breathe deeply, my friends. 
Practice patience.
Practice not knowing.
And know that not knowing is much of what all of this is all about.

We’re in it now. A marathon of marathons. We’ll not be through this quickly. And we’ll not recognize ourselves on the other side. Let’s make that unrecognizable self the biggest, brightest, softest, kindest self we’ve ever dreamt we could possibly be.

We can do this.
We can do hard things.
And we can do them with grace and kindness and patience, together, six feet apart.

Much love, y’all.


I created a resource page for all things Coronavirus, and I continue to update it weekly. Please feel free to utilize this resource, and to share it widely. With Love & Gratitude, Brittany

wherethereoncewaswater.com/covid19

OSCILLATION

I’m oscillating….

Hope. Irritation. Gratitude. Sadness. Contentment. Loneliness. Laughter. Tears. Connection. Exhaustion. Joy. Overwhelm.

What are we, if not creatures of emotion?
What new landscape is this… all alone, all together, in the Great Big Empty.

How many loved ones will we lose?
Will we also lose ourselves along the way?
What and whom are we being asked to become?

I don’t have the answers. I only present the questions. I share in hopes that there is resonance in the collective. I don’t need to be told “don’t be lonely”, or don’t feel those feelings, or this or that, or adviceadviceadvice…..

On the matter of loneliness, I believe that’s a part of what this is all about. BE lonely. Go deep inside the complicated mystery that is you. Feel it. All the darkness. All the light. Feel it, know it, embrace it, sit with it, cry and laugh and yell, and grow with it. This is hard work. This is good work. This is important work.

Many of us are spending more time online in these days of quarantine. I do think it’s a good way to stay connected, so long as we can satisfy our appetites for internets in small healthy doses. I’m a story teller, a content creator - I make images and words - I arrange them in ways that feel right and true - and I share them with you, with love. Sometimes I am sharing purely to inspire, sometimes to spread joy, sometimes to stand up for marginalized communities, sometimes to speak for the water, sometimes, truly, just to connect.

Both my career and my calling ask that I spend a lot of time online. And I imagine that I will continue to stay connected this way, as we wander through this mystery together. In doses, it is indeed therapeutic. But I’ve noticed a thing the last few days, and I’d like to ask a favor. Not just for my own sanity, but perhaps for yours as well. If I ask for advice, or your friend asks for advice, and you have some to share, please do. But if I’m just sharing some joy or inspiration, and not specifically asking for advice, please don’t throw advice at me. It’s just too much right now, and as I’ve noticed a sharp increase in the well-meaning, but totally unsolicited advice, I’ve noticed myself shrinking back. Perhaps you feel this too. Perhaps it is just me.

Tangential rant over. For now.
Have I mentioned that I’m oscillating? Maybe you are too.

Right now, in my living room, are seven baby ducklings. They are spazzy little fuzz-balls, who alternate between sleeping in a duck-pile, and chirping and quacking and splashing and playing. I love them. They bring me great joy. They light me up. They are providing some company out here in the Big Empty, and if I’m honest, they mark the inception of a long-held dream for a humble homestead. I bought a house on March 13th, just a couple of days before the world turned upside down. And right now, on this little plot of land in the Carrizo Plains, while the world spins in ways unfamiliar, it feels like a real good time to begin turning that little homestead dream into reality, especially since all my paid work, for the foreseeable future, has either been cancelled or postponed.

I breath deeply. I practice gratitude.

Many of you know that my mother has been in the hospital. It has been two weeks, and thankfully, she continues to improve. In a non-COVID-emergency that came upon her suddenly, she checked into the hospital with a blood infection, that led to a large abscess in her neck, and an emergency surgery at Stanford to remove the abscess and the affected bone. The road to full recovery will be long, and of course includes added concerns and hurdles that come in this time of Coronavirus. It has been a heavy time for my family, and a lonely time for my mother, who has had to walk this path physically separated from those she holds most dear. We have rallied in all the ways we can, to be there for her, and with her, but this is all new. The distance, the unknowing, the sadness, the hope, the gratitude. You know the value of water when the well runs dry. You know the value of nurses & doctors & surgeons when they save your mother’s life.

All this is to say, I suppose, that I’m with you. We are emotional creatures, and many of the emotions we are about to feel will be either foreign and/or uncomfortable. And that’s okay. Let’s hold space for that. Let’s hold space for ourselves and each other. Let’s cry, and laugh, and sleep, and grow, and connect, and meditate, and cry some more. Let’s be grateful. Let’s go deep, and go high, and go in, and do the hard work, and let’s tip toe when we need to.

And also, let’s yell.
When our “leaders” make choices that prioritize their pocketbooks over the people - our people, you and me and everyone we know and don’t know - let’s yell.

This is a time for change, from the ground up.
This is an opportunity to create a world that actually works for everyone, not just billionaires.
This is a time to ask yourself who you really want to be.
What sort of world do you want to be a part of?
What makes you feel alive?
What are you grateful for?

Big times, my friends. Ups and downs and all arounds. There’s room for all of it. I love you. As always, thank you for listening. Hang in there. Breath deeply. Take your time, and take good care. This is a marathon.

“Don't ask yourself what the world needs. Ask yourself what makes you come alive, and go do that, because what the world needs is people who have come alive.” ― Howard Thurman


I’ve compiled a list of resources for all things COVID-19, and will continue to update it as we move through this mystery. Perhaps you will find something helpful there. Please feel free to share the resource widely. It is my gift to you, and feels like an appropriate way for me to be of service at this time.

You can find the resource page HERE.

With all my Love & Gratitude, Brittany

METAMORPHOSIS

And here we are. In a time unlike anything we’ve ever known. Many of us are now at home, watching the unfolding of a silent global wildfire. A Pandemic. These are no small times, my friends.

Yesterday I found myself in a sense of overwhelm. My sweet & steady brother said to me, “Sis, try not the carry the whole weight of the world on your shoulders right now. It’s too much.” I needed to hear that, and perhaps, you do too.

Know this : You don’t have to be everything for everybody right now. You don’t have to understand why this is all happening. You don’t have to be perfect. Right now… slow down, breath deeply, be grateful, reconnect with nature and each other, listen to the birds & the sky. Ask how you can be of service. Do your best. And most of all, take care, be well, and tell those you love that you love them.

I live on the Central Coast of California. My county went into lockdown on Thursday afternoon, and the State of California, as a whole, followed shortly thereafter. We are being asked to do something that is both so simple and so extraordinary, to protect each other, and particularly, to protect our health care workers….

STAY. AT. HOME.

This will be harder on some of us than others. Check on your neighbors. Check on the elderly. Check on the more vulnerable among us.

Some people will still be going to work, to literally keep us safe and alive. Reach out to them - to those who work in essential services - like food & farming, health care, utilities, public safety - thank them - ask them how you can support them during this time.

And for the rest of us, for most of us… for the sake of everyone around you, everyone you know and love, STAY AT HOME.

I’ve been studying this virus like it’s my job. And honestly, since I’m a self-employed event photographer, and all my upcoming gigs have now been cancelled, I guess it kind of *is* my job. It feels important to read & share accurate, helpful information at this time, so that is what I will continue to do.

Realistically, half of us will get this thing eventually, most of us will be able to fight it off at home, some of us will need treatment, and some of us will die. This is why it’s important to slow it down. If we can slow down the spread, which is the intent of the Shelter-at-Home orders spanning the globe, the doctors & nurses will be able to treat those who develop more acute symptoms. If we don’t slow it down, and we all get sick at once, the health care system will collapse, and people will not be able to get the treatment they need - for COVID-19, a broken leg, a snake bite, an asthma attack, a stroke, anything. THIS is why we are being asked to stay at home. THIS is why the world is cancelling everything. To give our health care workers a fighting chance.

I feel a lot of fear in the collective. Let’s not focus on that. Fear is the mind-killer. Fear causes a stress response in the body, and stress causes sickness. Acknowledge the fear, my darlings, but don’t let it eat you up. These are strange times, but this is not the Apocalypse. This is not the end of the world - this is the beginning of a new one.

I believe that we are in a metamorphosis. Not dissimilar to the hungry caterpillar, who doesn’t understand why, but after endless gorging, begins to cocoon himself anyway. After some quiet time alone in the dark, letting go of all he once was, he emerges, brand new, unrecognizable. Bigger and brighter and more powerful than before. Able to support and sustain life far beyond his own, through his newfound powers of flight and pollination.

I believe that this slow-down, and the distances we are being asked to keep, are ultimately offering us the opportunity to reassess. To pay attention. To listen to nature, and each other. To ask the hard questions. To be reminded of what is most important as a global community. And ultimately, to transform.

It’s gonna be a minute before life looks anything like “normal” again. So take a deep breath, slow down, go within, feel the feels, and get ready for a marathon. For the first time, in maybe forever, the world is united around a common concern, a common challenge, and I do believe we can rise to meet it. We can do hard things.

I have created a resource list, that I will update regularly….
Wanna know the straight facts about the Coronavirus? How to file for unemployment? Where to buy food? How to support your local community? How to keep your now-homeschooled kids entertained? Would you like to listen to healing songs & prayers from Indigenous peoples around the world? It’s all there. From my heart to yours.

Please CLICK HERE and feel free to share this resource widely.

And remember… I love you, lots of people love you, and we are all in this together. Much Love, y’all. We can do this. xo

Eyes Wide Open


Let’s start with gratitude…

Greetings friends. It is my sense that 2019 & 2020 have been transformative for us all. In looking back over the past year, for me personally… I see a beautiful, terrible, upside-down, inside-out, throw-up, rebirth, find-a-new-way, honor-the-old-way, kind of year. A dig-deep, travel-far, hibernate, adventure, lean-on-friends, ask-the-hard-questions, sit-with-the-pain, awaken-the-Goddess, kind of year. A grow-bigger-than-ever-before, work-hard, save-money, dream-big, cry-some-more, vagabonding, perspective-shifting year. And I am grateful.

Grateful for this beautiful community, for all the tiny moments that have made me into who I am, for the opportunity to move into 2020 with eyes wide open, and for the ferocious drive I now feel to complete and share "Where There Once Was Water" with the world. Thank you, as always, for your support & love on this wild ride.

“She decided to free herself, dance into the wind, create a new language. And birds fluttered around her, writing “yes” in the sky.”

- Monique Duval

For over a year now, I have been working on a long-form project for a client up in the California Delta that has serendipitously tied in beautifully with the production of my own film. This winter has found me spending first and last light photographing the migrating Sandhill Cranes. (Somebody pinch me!). I am grateful for the opportunity to do this work that fills me so completely, and even-moreso for the farming family who has dedicated their life to creating habitat for these birds. Their commitment to practicing agriculture in the Delta in a way that benefits the sensitive peat soils, provides habitat for migrating waterfowl, and returns an impressive profit for the farmer, is a total inspiration.


I spent much of the summer of 2019 working on a huge project with DigDeep and the US Water Alliance, and it has truly been one of the greatest honors of my career thus far. My images supported and illustrated the first EVER national report on water access and sanitation, right here in the United States. This is huge, friends...

"Up until now, we had no idea how many people were living without access to clean water in the country. Why is that? Because up until now there has not been any formal data on this very critical issue. So we decided to take up that mantle and find out for ourselves. And the results are SHOCKING to say the least: Over 2 million Americans are currently living without access to clean running water or sanitation services. But here's the good news, now that we know how extensive the problem it is, we know what we need to do to solve it.” - DigDeep

I encourage you to read the first report on water poverty here in the U.S.and help #closethewatergap -->  closethewatergap.org


And what else? Well, Earthships. of course! I’ve been fascinated by Earthships for quite sometime.... How are they built? Do they really work? What’s with all the cans & bottles & tires? It’s been a dream a long time coming to join a build at the Earthship Biotecture community in Taos, New Mexico, and it’s a dream that I chose to live out in the chilly month of December. These are the homes we need for the climate we are creating, folks - fully off-grid and designed to “encounter the phenomena of the planet”. Built from mostly garbage, the homes incorporate passive heating & cooling, rain water catchment, solar & wind energy, food production, and grey/black water treatment onsite. It's all there. The experience changed me. I remember telling a friend shortly afterwards... "It feels good to have done a thing that makes the sky feel bigger". To the artists, builders, and brilliant new friends who made it so - THANK YOU. 


“I am here not only to evade for a while the clamor & filth and confusion of the cultural apparatus but also to confront, immediately & directly if it’s possible, the bare bones of existence, the elemental and fundamental, the bedrock which sustains us.”

- Edward Abbey, Desert Solitaire

Prints Now Available

Throughout this project I have created photographs at almost all of the locations I have visited. Many of you have requested access to these images, expressing your interest in purchasing prints. And so (drumroll please)... Prints are now available in a variety of sizes, at discounted rates, and ordering is easy through an online gallery. All money raised through print sales will be put directly towards post-production expenses. So, if you're looking to freshen up your walls, or you want to find unique gifts for friends, it's all right HERE.


The State of Water

“When it comes to our natural resources, we are in a time that demands of us advocacy for restoration over reclamation and for replenishment over extraction.”
- Obi Kaufman, The State of Water

In this brilliant and thoughtful book about California water, author Obi Kaufman digs deep and shares his journey with us all in a refreshingly authentic way. I have been grateful to Obi for being a light-post as I wade my own way through the complex web of California water issues. He has encouraged me to to think bigger, always.


Last but definitely not least, please watch (and share!)
our OFFICIAL TRAILER. 

Until next time, much love to you all. Thank you for your continued support, patience and feedback.  I literally couldn't be doing this without you.