A Might-Do List for Herbal Students
Whether you're enrolled in an herbal school, working as an herbal apprentice or pursuing self-study, there are so many ways to be an herbal student on the path to becoming a practicing herbalist.
The life of an herbal student can feel exciting - I'm answering my call to be an herbalist! I love plants and people!
It can also be overwhelming - Woah! There are so many plants and people!
And at times confusing - There are so many plants and people and creatures and philosophies and techniques, oh no!
There are endless educational options for aspiring students as well as more and more culturally-informed herbal texts for all kinds of plant-hearted people to find their home within the shared garden of green wisdom.¹ It's exciting and it's a lot!
While I don't have the time and resources to match every herbal student to their ideal learning program (though, this does sound like a dream job to me), with over 15 years of practice I can offer what it is I wish I started doing as an herbal student and the practices I encourage in my own learning community that helps students to thrive in their studies.
So what follows is my might-do list for herbal students, full of suggestions that you might (or might-not) do as part of your studies. As with all my might-do lists, this is meant to be a low-pressure, full of inspiration sort of guide, that you can easily adapt to your unique needs as a student whether for herbalism or any of the meaning healing paths out there. Enjoy!
Get Down Low
While there are many ways to practice herbalism, our ability to practice our craft and work with plants as allies is only possible through this place we call home: our beloved planet earth. I encourage everyone who wants to work with plants to practice an earth-centered form of herbalism aligned with sustainable, land-aware, and kinship-attuned practices. It all starts with having a relationship with the land you live with, seeking out plants as they grow in wild or cultivated spaces, and slowing down and getting low with our original teachers of herbalism, the plants themselves.
One of the easiest ways to begin centering your practice and studies with the land we all live with is to observe plant life around you. Start by noticing the plants growing up between sidewalk cracks as you walk to work or what might be growing in your local park. After observation, noticing colors, textures, and scents, can come identification and then, if the plant is medicinal, learning how to work with it in your practice. In-between the spaces of observation, identification, and practice is building a relationship with our plant neighbors, introducing yourself, and noticing what other creatures are also in kinship with this plant.
For many modern herbalists who work with a wide range of plants that we don’t all grow or harvest ourselves, it’s important to create connection between the plants we are able to be with in-person to remind us that we are in deep interdependence with the herbs that are in our backyards as well as sitting in jars on our apothecary shelves. An earth-centered practice is a sustainable practice that helps us create sacred relationships with those we serve and the land we live with.
Name Yourself & Honor the Land
I'm a real fan of naming rites and rituals, where we take up (and sometimes let go of) names given and created to shape who we are in the world. Sometimes these namings happen after a big transition and sometimes during or just before one, like in the time of being a student, before we've gone on to do something with our studies. I encourage you to take a moment and write down your name as an aspiring herbalist, listing out what brought you to this path, and where you hope to go with your studies. It's ok for this naming practice to be as serious or as silly as you like! Here are a few naming examples:
I am Zinnia of Sweet Mountain,
Child of the Backwoods,
Brought up in Oak Groves,
Descendant of Scotland and Mexico,
Carrying a fire for change in my heart,
With arms full of plants,
I walk the green path of wisdom
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I am Devon
Son of Marcus and John
Wild heart, star brow
Made of obsidian and quartz
Kitchen witch, game maker
Rescuer of strays
Plant friend, hex breaker
All of this and more
I am becoming
This naming practice can include naming your ancestors, your cultural and spiritual inheritances, gifts and skills you carry, and dreams of who you are becoming. No one ever has to see this poem or maybe it is something you do with your fellow herb students - the point is to spend some time naming yourself as a way to know who is pursuing this path of study and why you're doing it. It can be fun, at the formal end of your studies, to revisit this name poem and see if there is anything you would change about it or if it is great as is, perhaps with new meaning attached to what you'd written.
Following the naming of yourself, it can be powerful to write a personal acknowledgement of the land you live with, a love letter to the place that you are learning how to be an herbalist. You can read my land acknowledgement for inspiration, but your statement doesn’t need to be so formal and can reflect your relationship with the land, the forms and shapes that it takes (from rivers to mountains to oceans and valleys), and how it is that you are being present with the land instead of over it.
Get To Know What an Herbalist Is
Considering that you want to be an herbalist, it might seem odd to spend time figuring out what an herbalist is if it is already something you know you want to be. But there are many ways to be an herbalist in the world and it can be helpful during your studies to explore all the many ways herbalists practice in the world. There are so many ways to practice as an herbalist including as a remedy-maker and manufacturer, clinician (whether at a community clinic or private practice), researcher, farmer and grower, teacher, apothecary owner, and all the ways that herbal work can be used alongside other modalities (like massage therapy, birthwork, etc.).
Early on in my studies, I was drawn to making herbal remedies and that was what my first few years of practice focused on - making and selling remedies. I did this to the point where it was no longer sustainable for one person to do and I had to make a choice about whether I was going to transition my business to a more formal manufacturer or something else entirely. Having some familiarity with the many ways one could be an herbalist in the world meant that the transition was still challenging at times but it felt like I had options. I could now teach other people how to make the remedies that I was so passionate about making myself.
While you might start your herbal studies with one vision of your practice in your heart, it's important to keep exploring what it means to be an herbalist throughout your studies (and especially in the early years of your practice) so that you're able to pause and pivot, ebb and flow with the changes that'll happen in your life. It can also help you identify missing pieces of plant knowledge in your community by learning about all the ways herbalists can be in the world, and you might be led to fill those gaps once you're done with your studies (such as learning about the diverse ways a local apothecary can look like and developing your own to meet the needs of your neighborhood). Get inspired by others as you're developing your own vision!
Set One Small Goal
Having small and attainable study and practice goals, especially at the beginning of your students, will not only be a source of encouragement throughout your student days, but help you get through the more challenging aspects of your studies. No matter what form of learning you choose, there will be challenges from getting homework done, managing your other non-study responsibilities, and the huge amount of energy training as an herbalist asks of us. It can be tempting to write a long to-do list and write down all of your biggest dreams as a student and try to do it all. While making lists and dreaming big are important, I've often found that students (myself included) set themselves up to do far too much in way too little of time.
Instead, I encourage students (again, myself included), while having space to write down big dreams and set those aside, to focus on one small achievable goal at a time. It can be anything from, learning the growing conditions of Thyme (Thymus vulgaris). That's a small task, easily accomplished and one that leads on to other goals - perhaps you'll go to find a Thyme plant or seeds to purchase, learn about Thyme's medicinal uses, drink a cup of Thyme tea everyday for a week, and write your own Thyme plant profile. But you start small with the first step of learning how Thyme grows and then go from there. As a teacher I would much rather a student have worked slowly and steadily with one plant, getting to know them on a deep, relational level, than feel like they need to rush through learning about fifty plants in the same time period. Of course, different traditions of herbalism have different approaches, but I have found a lot of wisdom in working with a few plants deeply instead of trying to learn all the plants.
Practice Simple Daily Care
If you want a long-lived and sustainable practice as an herbalist, and not find yourself burnt out early on in your work, adopting simple daily care routines can help cultivate such longevity. Taking your herbs on a daily basis, doing a five minute body scan to check in with how you're feeling, a breathwork or movement practice, a shared tea time with loved ones or whatever sort of care speaks to you, start practicing it now as a student. While I'm focused on daily care, you can of course add on weekly and monthly care practices from therapy sessions, bodywork, date nights, and more, but those small, simple daily care practices are essential for anyone in a service-based healing field.
As an herbalist you'll be recommending all sorts of daily protocols to your clients, why not begin practicing your own daily protocols now? Not only will it be helpful to your overall wellbeing, but you'll be able to spot the ways that your idealized recommendations may be too much or challenging to adhere to. These daily care routines can also help us learn about and experiment with herbal techniques that we find useful and can model to our clients and communities later on.
Join (or Create) a Student Group
While some of you might have a student group built into your learning program, for anyone taking a more self-guided approach to herbal learning it can be harder to feel connected to community. Herbalism is not a solo endeavor, but a generations deep cultural inheritance, and our experience of the herbal community should be part of our student journey. Seeking out real-time community spaces, whether in-person or offline, can not only provide great spaces for practicing skills with fellow students, resource sharing, and the camaraderie that can only be formed through common pursuits. If there is not a student group that meets your needs that you can find, start one! It doesn't need to be anything more ambitious than having a regular meet-up time, maybe a topic of discussion, and some snacks.
Find In-Person Learning Experiences
My herbal education and now my practice has taken place both online and in-person - myself and my peers were the first generation in which this hybrid model was made available. While online learning spaces are a meaningful and legitimate way to become an herbalist (and especially ones that include a community component if you are just starting your studies), I believe strongly in the importance of in-person experiences as part of your training. Whether a clinic rotation, an herbal festival with lots of hands-on learning experiences, volunteering at a community garden or a weekend workshop, in-person experiences hold a special sort of energy that can't quite be replicated online. And I say this as someone who does a lot of teaching and learning online - you deserve to have at least one, and ideally multiple, in-person learning experiences as an herbal student. The energy of exchange, atmosphere, and opportunities for kinship that happen when gathered in-person are invaluable not only for herbal students,but all plant folks.
There are so many conferences, classes, workshops, community gardens, festivals, and gatherings of plant folk with a range of intersecting identities and specialties from mutual aid skillshares to culture-specific herbal camps to super casual study groups. While you should always do some research about the individuals and organizations behind a gathering and trust your gut if something feels off or ask a trusted friend or loved one to help you make an informed choice, there is a place of lovely folks out there who would love to have you join them on a plant-centered adventure.
Start Organizing Now
I'm actually making two suggestions here: the first is to organize the resources you're creating as a student and will continue to use and create as a practitioner and the second is to participate in organizing and activism work with your fellow plant folk. Both of these types of organizing support each other and let's start with organizing resources. There hasn't been a moment that I've regretted taking a moment to organize my notes, add all the information onto a label that needs to be there, or spending a few hours setting up a digital index that'll save me far more hours of work in the future.
The type of organization that you need as a student will be unique to you, but all keepers of knowledge meant to be passed on and shared with others need to practice some form of organization that allows for an easier transmission of wisdom. I include recitation practices for oral traditions, the inner organizing that occurs with meditative practices, and the organizing of social relationships and exchanges. If you're looking for more inspiration for organizing things like your materia medica, come this way.
The latter part of my suggestion is about organizing as an herbalist with other activists, plant folk, and community members. Whether it is participating in seed banks or community gardens, helping to organize a street clinic training, creating a student union or alumnae organization at your herbal school or any of the many, many ways you can help to create systems of kinship within your communities, do it! Not only will it provide countless opportunities to practice and develop your skills as an herbalist, but you'll be participating in the sort of community models that we all need to feel well and held and hopeful in our lives. If you come to any of this work with your own personal library of resources, organized and easy to distribute, even better.
Follow the Desire Lines
A desire line is a path shaped by the footfall of people and creatures, unplanned and emerging with the need of those walking it. They often work as short cuts to get from one place to another quicker than by the formal established pathways, but they are also formed by creatures who follow a path that for whatever reason are drawn to walk it again and again. Even though herbalism is an ancient form of healing used by humans and other mammals, depending on where you are in the world, it acts more like an informal desire line rather than a formal path. Desire lines can be a source of irritation to city, campus, and park planners, but they can also go on to inspire creative answers to community needs.
None of us have come to the path of herbalism without following the path of those herbalists who have gone before us. While some of us might be walking on a more formal, paved, and approved path supported by the society that surrounds us, many of us are walking along well-grooved desire lines, etched across neighborhoods by deep community needs and often by marginalized peoples. I know that my path of herbalism was only made possible by the countless generations of women and gender-nonconforming folk who saw how women's health was dismissed or made illegal over and over again and so decided to teach each other how to take care of themselves, find aligned medical practitioners, and demand social and legal change. Exploring the history of community health clinics and street medics, the struggles of herbalists before you in your cultural lineage or the history of herbalism in the lands you live with are all powerful ways of understanding how these desire lines that carry you have carried others.
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Whether or not you’re currently an herbal student, thinking about becoming one or a long-time practitioner starting out on a new path of study, I hope you found the might-do list helpful in imagining what it is you might (or might-not) want to do during your student days. If you’re looking for more student-focused inspiration you might like my seasonal apothecary series and my herbal student tarot spread for that extra bit of intuitive guidance.
May your student days be inspiring, your teachers kind, and your path bright with possibility!
This post was made possible through patron support.
❤︎ Thanks, friends. ❤︎
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1. This links to my ever-growing curated collection of herbal texts and purchasing any of these books through my bookshop supports my work. You can also find many of these books at your local library or request that your favorite local bookstore orders them for you.