>WWOOF means Willing Workers On Organic Farms (...also Biodynamic). 
>I know of this because I worked on a Biodynamic Farm in Canada that 
>accepted many WWOOF'ers from all over the world.  The typical 
>arrangement is that people come to live on the farm to learn about 
>farming in exchange of labor.  But... I've also seen people come for 
>therapeutic cures...  Sometimes living on a BD farm, eating BD food, 
>and helping in whatever way possible can be just the right thing.  I 
>know because I've seen people heal from the land.  Here is a www 
>link for the US. 
><http://www.wwoof.org/wpusa.html>http://www.wwoof.org/wpusa.html . 
>Perhaps you can find something just right for you.
>

Folks -

I've hosted a lot of WWOOFERS in the past 5 years. Most of them have 
made great contributions to the farm; a pitiful few came to the farm 
hoping to exploit the program (they didn't stay with us for long). I 
personally do not know of a BD farm that could afford to carry 
someone who is too ill to work, let alone spare the time to listen to 
them talk about their problems or express unique needs - - at least 
not in the growing season, of course.

The WWOOFING movement is based on that WILLING WORKERS aspect, which 
is a deep understanding of how much all biological farmers need the 
willing labor of capable workers. The workers, in my experience, get 
the satisfaction of supporting the whole foods movement by helping 
out on the farm and the opportunity to get deep insights into how 
another farmer works his patch.  This picture, of course, can be 
substantially different on robust farms that have a sizeable paid 
staff.

It's a wonderful program. I'd hate to see it abused and I'd hate to 
see Lily given false hope that would take her energy from discovering 
appropriate solutions for her situation.

I do know BD farms that practice 'agrotherapy,' which is an 
oppotunity for the ill to heal in the healthy atmosphere of a living 
garden. Agrotherapy, in my experience, is a service that one pays for 
and not something that farmers I know can afford to provide for free 
or for the sort of labor that can be provided by the infirm.

Having pretty much pulled myself through chronic fatigue and 
(officially diagnosed) multi-chemical sensitivities and into full 
time biodynamic farming in the past 20 years, I feel qualified to 
recommend that Lily experiment with the excellent mask/filters that 
are available now for reasonable prices (and do not mold between uses 
like they did when I needed them) and to experiment with charcoal for 
clearing the leaky bowel syndrome, always remembering that millions 
of other people are breathing those same crappy molecules and 
eliminating them without getting loopy, weak or woozy? In fact, to be 
honest with you, if you can't deal with the dry cleaners, you 
probably can't deal with the pollen load on a biological farm, 
particularly one rung with forests, like my own.

Do I sound harsh? I probably do, but I have to say that a turning 
point in my own "cure,"  which is not to say that I know what is best 
for Lily, was the day that a college professor who patiently listened 
to me talk about how atrocious my life was due to chemicals until he 
apparently could take no more  said "Can you hear how you sound like 
a goddam baby crying in a crib? What is it that you want, baby? What 
is it you think adults can do for you that you can't do for yourself? 
" I chewed on this one for a long time before I started looking 
towards where I should be going rather than where I at the moment.

That said, does anyone know if Camphill programs have work exchange 
programs that someone with Lily's needs could participate in?

-Allan

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