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From: Vol.12 N.01 – The Braided Gift

Fallow, as survival strategy

by Andy Jackson

What if precarity is the condition of our time?… Might we think of mutualisms as a form of love?
          —Anna Lowenhaupt Tsing, The Mushroom at the End of the World: On the Possibility of Life in               Capitalist Ruins

	  Underneath leaf litter, a dark warmth whispers
in a language with no words for buy or sell.
      Our language has words for things that don't exist
and it thieves from the earth to make them seem real –
    cloud, stream, branch, growth, real interest. From the earth's
vantage, waste and nutrients become each other.
     The advantage of wasting time – we become
sedentary, mycelial. Pores, now spores.
   Bones, now filaments of love, mycelial.
Sure, these threads are more strange and frayed than we thought,
       but all lives are strange and frayed in this wreckage.
Rest, darken – something else, profitless, might stir.
 Withdrawal, grief, might stir some neglected thing
asleep underneath the litter of our thoughts.
Published: November 2025
Andy Jackson

Andy Jackson’s most recent poetry collection is Human Looking (Giramondo, 2021), which won the ALS Gold Medal and the Prime Minister’s Literary Award for Poetry. A co-editor of the recently-published anthology Raging Grace: Australian Writers Speak Out on Disability (Puncher & Wattmann, 2024), he is also a lecturer in Creative Writing at the University of Melbourne. He writes and rests on Dja Dja Wurrung country.

An Australian and international
journal of ecopoetry and ecopoetics.

Plumwood Mountain Journal is created on the unceded lands of the Gadigal and Wangal people of the Eora Nation. We pay our respects to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people, and to elders past, present and future. We also acknowledge all traditional custodians of the lands this journal reaches.

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