Watershed

Attending to Body and Earth in Distress

2021
Author:

Ranae Lenor Hanson

WINNER of the Minnesota Book Award for Memoir & Creative NonfictioN

selection, AUPresses Book, Jacket, and Journal Show

LISTEN: RANAE LENOR HANSON IN CONVERSATION WITH LENA JONES AND TEDDIE POTTER

LISTEN: HANSON IN CONVERSATION WITH SARAH DEGNER-RIVEROS, CHELSEA DEARMOND, AND SAM GRANT, HOSTED BY THE EAST SIDE FREEDOM LIBRARY

BOOK DISCUSSION GUIDE

A personal health crisis, stories from environmental refugees, and our climate in danger prompt a meditation on intimate connections between the health of the body and the health of the ecosystem

What if we tended to an ailing ecosystem just as we care for ourselves in the throes of a medical condition. This possibility is explored here, in a work that is at once a memoir of illness and health, a contemplation of the surrounding natural world in distress, and a reflection on how these come together in opportunities for healing.

"The credo ‘water is life’ has become a key environmental rallying cry in the years since Standing Rock, and this book helps us remember why. It recalls an American past, inhabits a global present, and imagines a working future—it will be an aid to many as they grapple with our difficult moment."—Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org and author of The End of Nature

The body of the earth, beset by a climate in crisis, experiences drought much like the human body experiences thirst, as Ranae Lenor Hanson’s body did as a warning sign of the disease that would change her life: Type 1 diabetes. What if we tended to an ailing ecosystem just as Hanson learned to care for herself in the throes of a chronic medical condition. This is the possibility explored in a work that is at once a memoir of illness and health, a contemplation of the surrounding natural world in distress, and a reflection on the ways these come together in personal, local, and global opportunities for healing.

Beginning with memories from a childhood nurtured among the waters of Minnesota, Watershed follows the streams and tributaries that connect us to our world and to each other, as revealed in the life stories of Hanson’s students, Minnesotans driven from their faraway homelands by climate disruption. The book’s currents carry us to threatened mangrove swamps in Saudi Arabia, to drought-stricken Ethiopia, to rocks bearing ancient messages above crooked rivers in northern Minnesota, to a diabetic crisis in an ICU bed at a St. Paul hospital. With the benefit of gentle insight and a broad worldview, Hanson encourages us at every turn to find our own way, to discover how the health of our bodies and the health of the world they inhabit are inextricably linked and how attending, and tending, to their shared distress can lead to a genuine, grounded wellbeing.

When, in the grip of a global pandemic, humans drastically change their behavior to preserve human life, we also see how the earth breathes more freely as a result. In light of that lesson, Watershed helps us to consider our place and our part in the health and healing of the world around us.

Awards

Minnesota Book Award for Memoir & Creative Nonfiction

AUPresses Book, Jacket, and Journal Show – Selection

An educator and committed climate activist, Ranae Lenor Hanson taught writing and global studies at Minneapolis College for thirty-one years.

The credo ‘water is life’ has become a key environmental rallying cry in the years since Standing Rock, and this book helps us remember why. It recalls an American past, inhabits a global present, and imagines a working future—it will be an aid to many as they grapple with our difficult moment.

Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org and author of The End of Nature

In a direct and often wise voice, through a series of moving, revealing, and entertaining stories, Watershed makes clear the connection between climate change and our own bodies. A difficult task in a culture that ignores the urgency of climate change while denying that human beings are part of nature. Difficult, but needed now while the earth that sustains our bodies is under assault. This book presents us with a paradoxical gift, the idea that we can make use of the aches and pains and illnesses plaguing so many of us to wake up and act in common cause with the earth.

Susan Griffin, author of Woman and Nature

Ranae Lenor Hanson’s elegy for the Earth and our bodies speaks of the holy, the sacred. The fates of water, our bodies, our communities are intertwined. She gives voice to the voiceless. She reports on the sacred and challenges us to live our lives knowing that the connection to each other and the Earth is the basis for health, the holy, the sacred.

Carolyn Raffensperger, executive director, Science and Environmental Health Network

We need Watershed now. There’s no book like it. It’s as clear-eyed and immersive as the northern Minnesota waters that birthed it. It’s the story for our time, and just in the nick of time. With courage and tenderness, Ranae Lenor Hanson pulls back the curtain to show us that the harm we have wrought on the world is no longer a future problem to be solved. It is here now in our bodies as much as in our watersheds and forests—and in the beloved homelands of her immigrant-refuge students whose voices and stories pierce any doubt, any ill-founded hope that all will be well.

Eric Utne, founder, Utne Reader

Ranae Lenor Hanson’s remarkable book is a deep, rich, profoundly personal, and powerful exploration of how we are inseparable from the water that surrounds us, that flows through, around, and beneath our lives. It’s a book that connects us to where we stand, to the place, the watershed, the webs of love, water, family, and nature that hold us throughout our lives. Its roots run deep, its implications even deeper, and it brings many rich gifts for these extraordinary times.

Rob Hopkins, founder, Transition Movement

Such a beautiful blend of Ranae Hanson’s own story and how it connects to the deeper story of environmental damage and climate change. The book gains gravitas and urgency by weaving the impact of environmental crisis on our own human bodies with stories from all over the globe. It shows that we must face this worldwide, systemic issue together now.

Ann Manning, director, Future First Initiatives

Born in northern Minnesota where waters divide, Ranae Hanson has been communicating with the earth with reverence and empathy since early childhood. Decades of conversations are gathered in Watershed, a beautifully written memoir that weaves together explorations of keenly observed impacts of ecologic damage, climate change, and personal illness. Wisdom that Ranae Hanson has gleaned from many years of service to the earth and her students is now available to us all. It is a captivating, cautionary tale urging humility, respect, and action.

Ted Schettler, science director, Science and Environmental Health Network

Watershed is grounded and calming. It brings the full story of ecological disruption into view. Ranae Hanson’s life story combined with an exploration of the real threat and the embodied response that is necessary is a new and important angle to address climate change.

Julia Nerbonne, executive director, Minnesota Interfaith Power and Light

This book took me away from this daily dose of gloom and filled me with a sense of preciousness enabling action that isn’t just reaction. Ranae Hanson’s personal and intimate stories are full of unsentimental love for people, trees, plants, and animals displaced by our political and climate brutality. In the stories told here, those of us who are in true community with the world around, close by and far away, find moments of joy and solace by standing side-by-side near the trauma without averting our eyes. The stories point toward possible sustaining acceptance even in the midst of nightmare realities.

Robert Bosnak, author A Little Course in Dreams

This book is very unique. Much like a memoir peppered with meditations and insights, it’s filled with so many anecdotes and details, it’s easy to relate to Hanson and her somewhat unconventional upbringing.

Rochester Post-Bulletin

Watershed helps us to consider our place and our part in the health and healing of the world around us.

The Thirteen Towns

In a sea of books about the environment and personal health, Hanson’s Watershed demonstrates the remarkable degree to which they are the same topic.

Minnesota Brown

Hanson encourages us to examine our own experiences of place, home, landscape, and watershed.

Land Stewardship Project

Ranea Lenor Hanson’s memoir intertwines reflections about how her body’s health challenges reflect the earth in distress.

Minnesota Women’s Press

The book connects people across generations, cultures, and continents.

Creative Nursing

Ranae Hanson weaves a connection of humanity like a watershed collects the essence of the land it flows through.

Ely Summer Times

Hanson manages to write a memoir that truly captures interconnectedness: between people, cultures, species, and watersheds... the book as a whole feels deeply rooted, with a full and conscious awareness of the issues and challenges inherent to environmental justice.

ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment

Contents

Navigating the Waters of This Book

How to Live

1. Where Waters Divide

Handholds and Stepping Stones

2. Do Not Fall Away

3. Pause to Survey

Consider the Need to Stop

4. The Pattern of Breath

Stop. Breathe. Settle.

5. Thirst

Longing for Water

6. Listen and Accept

The Voice of the Body

7. Rely on a Deep, Cool Lake

8. Feel the Grief

Practice for Mourning

9. Connect Humbly

10. Accept Both

How to Die

11. Bear Witness

Come to Know

12. Walk With and Nourish Others

13. Water, Plant, and Make Soil

Coming Home

14. Fog

15. Miracles, Mystery, and Dreams

16. When the Time Comes

Listen and Prepare

17. Return

18. May Your Watershed Live – and You with It

Remember the Branches and Stones

Coda: Life Principles of the Indigenous People of My Natal Watershed

Notes