“The participants in a ceremony say, “All my relations” before and after we pray; those words create a relationship with other people, with animals, with the land.” – Linda Hogan, Dwellings, A Spiritual History of the Natural World
In this dawn, in this coolness before a heated day, Rufous Hummingbirds are the first to wake. Hunger beckons. Their whirring wings beat a figure eight pattern at 70 times per second or higher. Rapid-fire click calls dance through a breeze like fingers flying upon an old typewriter. Their destination? The columbines outside our kitchen window tower five feet tall. Tubular blooms of red and yellow offer the sweetest of breakfast syrups. All my relations.

I sip coffee. The hummingbird sips nectar. My hands cradle a favorite pottery mug with a smooth lip and handle of cobalt blue and the rest a natural clay etched with mountains, sun, cattails, and flying birds. The rufous male is the flickering flame. Another hummingbird whips in and the two burst away in fiery chase. Bare feet anchor me, as mind flies to the pine tree where now the raven gives the top-of-the-hour report in three rasping, yet melodic syllables–Here! Here! Here! All my relations.
Chickasaw poet Linda Hogan spoke to our Emergence Magazine book club yesterday on Zoom, after we’d read Dwellings, savoring each essay as a weaving of people, animals, and land– “the alive and conscious world.” She’d written the book in 1995, and since then so many poetic words have poured forth and soon we will have the gift of her newest book, The Radiant Life of Animals. “Spoke to” is not the right description. Every question asked, she responded with a thoughtful, centered grace that matched the beauty of a woman who lives with attention, quiet, stillness, and curiosity.

“I would write all day if I could,” she said. Her days are filled with connection to nature on her 15 acres of wildlife corridor and dwelling place in Oklahoma. Her small home was once a shack that remains simple, yet light-filled. Behind her, I could see rounded pottery on shelves. Before our session, Linda had been outside, down on her knees observing a procession of ants, admiring their single-minded drive. All my relations.
From my scrawled notes during that precious hour, I wrote down phrases this morning, as the neighbor’s rooster crowed, the hummingbird notes cascaded, a chickadee gave three dees, and the slurred whistle of a lesser goldfinch seared my heart. All my relations.
I share her words here — each with a photo from our wild yard in July–an offering to the silken pink cast of light in the pines, to the soughing wind sifting pine needles, the hum of hummingbird wings, and the slumbering bumblebees enfolded in wildflower petals. All my relations.








All My Relations. — With gratitude to all the birds, bees, wasps, butterflies, moths, ants, beetles, dragonflies, wildflowers, pines, manzanitas, ceanothus, bitterbrush, spirea, mock orange, elderberry, lava rocks, sky, and so much more that animates this Friday morning on the last day of July—and to Linda Hogan and Emergence Magazine book club.
This is so joyful. The reading and rereading. Then forwarding it to share with those I know will do the same.
Yes, enjoying the coolness of morning. I’m learning to do that rather than mindlessly rush out to work. Just being attentive is enough sometimes.
Greetings to you both. mary
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Thank you Mary! So good to think of you in the beauty of your wild yard in La Grande–miss you!
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Mary McCracken, Nice to hear from you, it is indeed glorious, a wonderful way to start the day simply listening. In winter and springtime, my early morning pleasure is lying snug and warm in my bed waiting for the first birdsong which is usually from my favorite, the White Crowned Sparrows. And, even in these hot summer nights I sometimes hear an owl off in the distance.
I love Linda Hogan’s writing!!! Mary McCombs
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Some of our ground and grass dwelling relations were disturbed today, along with me, the Friday cacophony of lawn mowers, trimmers, edgers and leaf blowers. The Black-capped Chickadees and the Lesser Goldfinches persevered at the feeders and just now the Red-breasted Nuthatches returned. It is now 96 degrees in the shade but blessedly quiet here at our corner apartment and the birds are swarming the feeders …. a different part of all our relations dwells in this urban setting but they are here. Thank you for being a relation 🙂
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Thank you for providing an oasis in the shade–wish people would relax about all that need to trim, mow, edge, and blow–especially leaf blowers that I read are very destructive to insect biodiversity-which of affects birds.
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Simply wonderful. And thank you for introducing me to the Poet.
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Another lovely post filled with your detailed descriptions. I had not known Linda Hogan. Thanks for introducing me to her, Marina. xoA
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Thank you, Marina–I just read your words this afternoon, and this morning had just read that same essay, All My Relations, by Linda Hogan. Your words add such depth to hers, and vice versa. Thank you for all the ways you illuminate this beautiful world.
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Dearest Marina,
I just noticed that my comment was posted as “Anonymous”. I like that. But I also wanted you to know that I read your blog and was very moved by it! I hope you’re having a great board retreat in Enterprise.
Love,
Sandra
From: Kingfisher Journey- Marina Richie Reply-To: Kingfisher Journey- Marina Richie Date: Friday, July 31, 2020 at 9:45 AM To: Subject: [New post] All My Relations
Marina Richie posted: ” “The participants in a ceremony say, “All my relations” before and after we pray; those words create a relationship with other people, with animals, with the land.” – Linda Hogan, Dwellings, A Spiritual History of the Natural World In this dawn, in th”
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Nice Sunday morning reading. I’m hearing the same birds outside my window, and a little rain is actually falling! Hope you are doing well! Thank you for writing.
Cilla
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