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Welcome students and colleagues, friends and family, if you have made it this far, I encourage you to stay a bit longer and read about some of my work. The writings reflect many of the thoughts that I carry with me throughout the course of a day, evening, and often times, the dreams that take hold of me while I sleep. The verses represent the inner voice in me that speaks of the past, the present, and the future. Writing is my ultimate form of expression that allows me to reflect, inspire, get well, and grow. The energy that feeds my work, I pull from themes that correspond to Mesoamerica, my ancestral place of birth, and the area I study. References to symbols of the past, deities, and natural phenomenon, dominate certain pieces, and blend with current verses of life, love, and death. I have never taken a writing class... the only "style" that exhibits my work is the one that I create from my imagination, heart, and dreams.

I’m an avid builder and horticulturalist, and so I spend a lot of my time building things and growing different types of herbs and plant food. I do not identify as an artist nor do I make art for aesthetic purposes; my work solely materializes a ritual-ceremonial or utilitarian function. The craft of working with wood I learned from my father, by watching him design and build homes throughout much of my adolescent youth. I also learned how to work with stone by watching my uncles construct brick and rock landscapes, in the wealthy neighborhoods were they labored during much of the 1980s, when construction was booming. My paternal grandpa Juan was also a craftsman, hence why all his sons became builders of some sort, and so building has always been an integral part of my family’s trade history. I learned about plant cultivation from my abuelita Mercedes on my paternal side and my abuelito Severo on my maternal side. Much of the landscaping strategies that I learned from my grandparents came with them from Mexico when they migrated to Alta California, in the early 1960s, along with my parents. A lot of the building and planting strategies that my family has implored have been in use for over 3,000 years. It is my purpose to revitalize and sustain these ancestral practices through ceremony, household building, and plant cultivation.

My fascination with building and growing food is not only familial, but also physical-skeletal (see my Physical Anthropology 101 blog), and because so, I have an admiration for the morphology of the human hand. The hand is unlike any part of the body, and because we use our hands every day, we literally take them for granted, sometimes failing to notice their full potential use. Our hands are our first weapons of choice in an attack, yet they are the first part of the body that we extend when helping or consoling someone. With our hands, we build shelter, writer letters, prepare food, and unknowingly, make love. Our hand-digit coordination is unique because it is precise, well adapted for creating, and for using and making tools. Hand-digit use coordination has been a part of our human evolutionary past since we inhabited arboreal environments, way before we developed bipedalism. When combined with tool use, the creative use of the hands has the capability of decolonizing our minds and bodies.

My inquiry into the relationship between hand-bone morphology usage and social behavior remains in the early stages. Nonetheless, some preliminary findings I modeled in a recent paper where I discuss the role of the hands, and early human tool making, in the creation of spatial wellness. The paper is published in Vol. 3 No. 4 of the International Journal of Development and Sustainability.


UVAS  NO! 
Para una salsa!
Japanese Cucumber
JPC for later... 
Boiling... 
Blend... 
Store... 
Side dish of frijol...

For delivery

Food bunch!
Tomatoes
Pole Beans 
Chard 
For delivery

Steamed frijol, maize, and zucchini

Sopa de Calabaza Y Arroz con Maize

Garcia 2014


My first paper is out! Download!

Modeling household building sustainability (HBS) with wood, stone and paint: Achieving spatial wellness in a West Walnut household of the San Gabriel Valley, USA

Abstract
Populous urban regions can spawn creative knowledge in practice when re-using existing materials for sustainable development (Murphy and Pincetl, 2013:49–50; Naveh, 2007:1437–1438; Vatalis et al., 2013:754–755; Wu, 2010:2; Zaman and Lehmann, 2011:186). In this paper, I describe the use of reclaimed building materials (wood, stone, and paint) through three practical household plans, and how the negotiation of these materials, combined with one’s ancestral knowledge systems (Moreno Sandoval 2012:23), and the household growing of food may lead to spatial wellness. As a result, building with reclaimed materials gives birth to new construction knowledge. When these new ways of building exchange between community members, human well-being, as considered by Meadows (1998:66– 71), surfaces both physically and spiritually. In today’s accelerated world (Steffen et al., 2011), when household risks, disease, and illness threaten our livelihoods, household building sustainability (HBS) and locally grown food combine to strengthen the household clinic. When met aggressively, modifying and negotiating materials and space with the hands represent one method of decolonizing the body and mind, while simultaneously combating the concerns regarding our natural environment, which is in line with the goals of sustainable development identified in the United Nations’ 1987 report “Our Common Future”.

Keywords: Household building sustainability (HBS); Spatial wellness; The household clinic; Reclaimed building materials; Hand-bone morphology; Ancestral computing