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A Slow Living Moment: Shelling Peas

Certain sounds don’t just fill the air; they settle into your bones. The pop of a snap pea pod opening between your fingers. The soft patter of rain on a tin roof in the distance. The rustle of wind through tall trees, slow living, shelling peas, porch life, seasonal living, intentional living, southern lifestyle, mindful moments, gardening life, simple joys, homestead habits, outdoor rituals, spring garden, nature connection, heirloom practices, it travels like a tide through the garden. And the quiet creak of a wooden rocking chair as you sit, shelling peas with no rush, no goal beyond being here for it.
This is one of my favorite slow living rituals: shelling peas.
It’s not always peas. Sometimes it’s green beans or sweet corn, depending on the season and what came out of the garden that week. But the rhythm is the same. Pull a chair into a shady spot. Grab a colander or a big enamel bowl. Let the breeze in. And begin.
When you live in tune with the land and its cycles, your life’s pace shifts subtly. You find yourself noticing things that used to blur into the background. The way the birds quiet rdown ight before the rain. The scent of basil on your fingers after you brush past it in the raised bed. Or throw your hands, remember how to move through a task someone once taught you, without thinking. Shell, pinch, drop. Shell, pinch, drop. Each pod has a small story of sun, rain, and patience.
This kind of work doesn’t ask for your speed. It asks for your attention.
It’s easy to overlook the beauty in these moments because they’re quiet. They aren’t flashy. They don’t clamor for likes or retweets. But they anchor us. They give shape to time in a way a digital calendar never could. This is how the days unfold in spring and early summer, one pod at a time, each with its soft crack as it opens.
I used to shell peas and de-silk corn with my late ex-mother-in-law from my first marriage. We’d sit outside around a table, our hands moving in rhythm, the sounds of summer all around us. No one called it “mindfulness” back then. It was just something you did. But looking back now, I see how rooted those moments were in presence and care. We weren’t in a rush. We were just there, doing what needed doing, together.
And maybe that’s where I first learned that slow living isn’t about doing less. It’s about doing this, whatever this is, with care.
The truth is, the world will keep spinning fast, the notifications will keep pinging, and the weeds will keep growing. But you and I get to choose where to place our attention.
So I shell peas.
Not because I have to, not even because I particularly love peas (though I do). But the ritual reminds me of who I am when I’m not being pulled in every direction. It reconnects me to the dirt under my fingernails, the memory of shared hands doing shared work, and the sound of birdsong overhead. It roots me.
In moments like this, I find myself slipping into presence without even trying. I am not meditating or performing stillness just being and noticing the weight of a full bowl. I am watching a hummingbird hover near the bee balm and letting my mind wander, not to a to-do list but to quiet corners of memory.
These moments also invite a kind of practical poetry. There’s something deeply satisfying about doing something useful with your hands, like preparing food you grew. You participate in the full circle of it, from seed to harvest to meal. There’s no shortcut to this. You can’t microwave mindfulness. You have to let it simmer.
I highly recommend it if you’ve never shelled peas on the porch, but if peas aren’t your thing, find your version. It might be slicing strawberries for jam, brushing your dog in the morning light, or mending a hem with a cup of tea beside you. The action doesn’t matter nearly as much as the intention.
Slow living isn’t a lifestyle you buy. It’s a habit you return to.
It’s not about aesthetics. It’s about presence. It’s not about being unproductive. It’s about choosing what kind of productivity matters to you.
Shelling peas on the porch may not change the world. But it changes me. Every time. It reminds me that I’m allowed to pause. That there is value in the in-between. The hands that tend can also receive it.
Maybe this week, you can find your small ritual that lets the air back into your lungs. Something ordinary enough to be sacred. Something quiet enough that you can hear yourself again.
And if you happen to be on a porch with a bowl of peas and a gentle breeze, know that I’m out there too somewhere in the south, rocking gently, one pod at a time.
Further Reading / Sources:
- Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer – A lyrical exploration of indigenous wisdom, botany, and the practice of noticing
- The Ruth Stout No-Work Garden Book – On gardening the slow, easy way
- On the Porch by James Howard Kunstler – A look at the cultural and architectural beauty of porches in American life
- The Art of the Commonplace by Wendell Berry – Essays rooted in agrarian thought and slowing down to truly live
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