Each shoe is custom fit to my foot.
The steps of my ancestors have tread a path to where and how I stand on Turtle Island today.
…
1. Find the land where my Settler ancestor first set foot.
2. Research the history of that land, applicable treaties and any present-day land claims.
3. Learn about the Indigenous Nations that call this territory home.
4. Walk the land where my ancestor first set foot. Explore*, notice, scavenge, meet.
5. Scavenge shoe materials from this land. Focus on discarded objects. Purchased items must be second hand or be bought in order to connect with a local person to learn a story.
6. Handle all materials with love and respect. Materials are chosen for their inherent resource value, hidden stories, and for the ways they have introduced me to the land.
7. Choose a shoe design to reflect and embody my ancestor and their journey.
8. Infuse each material with a part of the story during the shoemaking process. Materials become surrogates for what I have learned and what I still wonder.
9. Be self-reflective and honest. Be hyper vigilant for Eurocentric views and assumptions. Do not hide or conceal these, but stitch them into the shoes.
10. Write a personal and specific Land Acknowledgement for the land.
11. Accept the shoes for what they are. Understand that these shoes chronicle a journey, but cannot take you to a destination. Empathize with the failures and mistakes you will find while using these shoes.
12. Use these shoes to talk about living on Indigenous land with friends, family and other Settlers.