Colleagues, as we approach the culmination of the extensive and thoughtful debate on the AGATA Time Priorities Charter, I want to center a vital aspect from the perspective of embodied farm and care labor. It is heartening that resilience, redundancy, regeneration, community, education, accessibility, and long-term ecological stewardship are anchored in this charter — these pillars reflect the complexity of our work and our care for the land and people. However, I want to give particular emphasis to the often overlooked, yet integral, labor of our bodies as they move through the work rhythms of this farm and cultural lab. Our physical engagement with the soil, plants, animals, and fellow laborers is not merely a means to an end but the very rhythm through which resilience and regeneration are enacted and experienced daily.
This embodied labor is also deeply entangled with accessibility and education — ensuring that those who participate, from diverse physical abilities and cultural backgrounds, are supported to engage fully and meaningfully in work that is both skilled and careful. The inclusion of long-term ecological stewardship rightly demands recognition of the physical and emotional labor that sustains it, demanding that our time legislation and project plans create conditions and temporal rhythms that respect and prioritize worker health, rest, and sustainable workloads.
Let us not conceptualize time priorities solely as abstract policy pillars but as lived, physical realities shaping the health of our bodies, communities, and land over time. These realities must inform Todd and Delaney's immediate operational blocks, such as scheduling, rest periods, and participatory design of work performances and rituals, as well as our decade-spanning commitments to soil, water, and species care.
I urge us all to carry forward this embodied perspective in refining and implementing the Charter, ensuring our Time Priorities not only withstand systemic shocks but honor and elevate the farm and care laborers whose motions, efforts, and presence breathe life into AGATA.