In Defense of the Uninvited — Part II
There is a particular kind of anxiety that lives at the edge of an unmowed lawn. You can feel it from the sidewalk — the low-grade disapproval radiating off a neighbor’s glance, the HOA letter with its careful language about community standards and property values. We all know this pressure. Many of us have bent to it.
I feel it too. At my own eco-art studio, mid-restoration, volunteer plants have started pushing up through the gravel parking lot this spring. In modern aesthetic terms, it looks unkempt. Do I groom the lot because that is what looks cared for to the human eye, or do I do what I preach? First, what I preach is holistic, meaning every situation is different and I have to look at the bigger picture. And if I did want to clean it up — how? I won’t use pesticides. Pulling them is more work than I can manage. I could burn them with a torch, which releases carbon — leaving the lot neat, but barren. I know this option well. It’s what I did all last summer. I feel the pull of that option still. If the entrance looks controlled, does that make visitors more willing to accept the wildness in the garden beyond? That question — how much tidiness do we owe society before we’re allowed to let something live — is exactly what this essay is about.
But where does that feeling actually come from? Why does an unruly patch of goldenrod or a volunteer elderberry pushing up through the fence line produce something closer to alarm than curiosity?
The ancient part of your brain that kept your ancestors alive is genuinely afraid of the tall grass. It is scanning for the snake, the bobcat, the thing with teeth. It wants visibility. It needs control.
That instinct is old. It is wired in. The impulse to clear, to see, to know what’s out there — it kept people alive across tens of thousands of years. We are not wrong to have it.
But we are living in a different world now, and that old circuitry is misfiring. The danger is no longer the rattlesnake in the grass. The danger is the bare ground. The landscape stripped of everything living in the name of control, safety, and the appearance of order.
Consider what that reflex, scaled up across millions of properties and across vast stretches of agricultural land, is actually producing. The fires in Colorado. The fires in California. The flood on the Guadalupe on the Fourth of July. Hurricane Harvey. To name a few. The heat domes that park over cities for days — fed not just by hot pavement and bare urban lots, but by the barren heat radiating off monoculture fields left fallow between seasons. We call these natural disasters — as if nature did this to us, unprovoked.
Extreme weather is increasingly weather that gets stuck. When large amounts of dark surfaces and bare ground absorb and radiate heat, they create heat domes — and the pressure those domes generate is what prevents weather from moving across the landscape. Living plant systems — their moisture, their transpiration, their cooling and breathing — help move weather across the landscape. Strip those systems out and replace them with hot pavement and monoculture lawn, and you remove the very mechanisms that keep weather moving.
What would it take to shift not just individual behavior but the aesthetic itself — to make living, layered, uninvited-welcoming landscapes look like what they actually are: acts of intelligence? Acts of care?
The weeds already know what to do. The seeds are in the soil, waiting. Life is not asking permission. It is ready to come back the moment we stop yanking it out.
The question isn’t whether the land can recover. The question is whether we can — from this idea that control is the same thing as care. That bare is the same thing as clean.
The greatest threat humanity faces isn’t what’s hiding in the weeds.
It’s that we cut them all down.