Everything is changing. The whole ship is turning in a new direction and there's no turning back so get your boots on because there is a great deal of life to be lived and we have only this short while. If others knew what I know, I know they would change their lives. People would return to the people around them from the insatiable hysteria of the mainstream material world. We need one another in ways and dimensions that we do not consciously perceive. We rely on one anothers existence, and while we may feel isolated in our individual bodies, within our individualistic culture, we are in reality intricately and constantly connected and affecting one another. I feel you. Even though I don't know you. Your suffering and your joy are in my world. Your needs are among my needs. We each live our lives in one anothers midst and with out one another we would not survive. This is my invitation to you to spend each day for the rest of your precious lifespan on this planet fully being the human the you were born to be, unique, intelligent, sensitive, creative, and capable of more than you have ever imagined for yourself.
Evolutionist
Wednesday, May 2, 2012
Thursday, March 22, 2012
3rd Street Trees
In new development the living environment is seldom given the value of historical, or social significance. A 100 year old tree is sacrificed to make space for a building designed to stand for 25 years. This is not always the case though. Through out American history we have had the foresight to realize that the trees in our communities are living monuments of the path our history has taken, and the way in which our communities and country have developed over time.
Here in Carbondale there are five, 80 year old evergreen trees that stand in the way of new development. Town trustee Frostie Merriott wrote that he had “real concerns that not much thought went into trying to save any of the five 80-year-old spruce trees, which are some of the most valuable trees in the Carbondale Tree Inventory.”
The fact that these trees are not considered part of our local cultural history because they are living is a misrepresentation of our connection to our living environment in Carbondale. In fact they represent our life and progress here in this climate. They are our living heritage. The attitude towards living things, even as they provide us services of rain fall, soil stability, carbon fixing, and habitat, reflects a larger and very grave disconnection between our small individual choices and their effects on larger more serious trends.
The quality of our atmosphere is deteriorating towards gas balances that are not hospitable for life. Our primary living partner in supporting an environment that can sustain our lives are our trees. The trees in our biosphere act as our externalized lungs. We rely on their photosynthesis to sustain our own lives and the lives of other species with which we have many subtle reliances. In human history we have been faced with the choice between un-apologetically destroying the natural environment in order to fit the current trend in progress or to adapt our living needs with the living needs of other species on which we depend. On this planet we know this. That if we continue to cut our trees, in particular our large trees, we are trimming the branches of our planetary oxygen tank and there will be a point the sacrifice of a few more trees, just as we have been sacrificing them for years, will be the last leverage point in tipping the balance between our environments capacity to absorb CO2 and produce oxygen.
These trees and the CO2 they hold, and the environmental services they provide are locally significant examples of the global human indifference to our dependence on other life forms. In fact we need these trees, and would be wise to plant more in order redirect the possibility of dramatic human and biological suffering that we are currently headed towards. In our time we chop an impossible 100 trees per minute as human beings. We can point a finger at deforestation, but at our first opportunity to acknowledge the significance of our connection to our trees we have failed completely. In Carbondale these trees are among the largest and oldest standing in town. They are historical, and biological land marks with in our micro society. It feels some how contrived to speak on behalf of the trees, but as Lorax understood, I must, "for the trees have no tongues."
Our history of destroying our environment beyond its carrying capacity will repeat until we evolve beyond self destructive behavior. This pattern of biological impact can be seen in developed societies through out history. What could have possessed ancient cultures to destroy the things on which they relied. The people of Easter Island decimated their environment 1 tree at a time until their soil chemistry and rain fall and biodiversity crumbled around their civilization. We have the same constraints. The same limitations apply to us weather we are aware of them or not. As we approach a tipping point with the destruction of photosynthetic life on this planet I suggest we strongly consider weather this is really an appropriate course of action. Here in this community, this course of action means preserving our limited arboreal population.
Here in Carbondale there are five, 80 year old evergreen trees that stand in the way of new development. Town trustee Frostie Merriott wrote that he had “real concerns that not much thought went into trying to save any of the five 80-year-old spruce trees, which are some of the most valuable trees in the Carbondale Tree Inventory.”
The fact that these trees are not considered part of our local cultural history because they are living is a misrepresentation of our connection to our living environment in Carbondale. In fact they represent our life and progress here in this climate. They are our living heritage. The attitude towards living things, even as they provide us services of rain fall, soil stability, carbon fixing, and habitat, reflects a larger and very grave disconnection between our small individual choices and their effects on larger more serious trends.
The quality of our atmosphere is deteriorating towards gas balances that are not hospitable for life. Our primary living partner in supporting an environment that can sustain our lives are our trees. The trees in our biosphere act as our externalized lungs. We rely on their photosynthesis to sustain our own lives and the lives of other species with which we have many subtle reliances. In human history we have been faced with the choice between un-apologetically destroying the natural environment in order to fit the current trend in progress or to adapt our living needs with the living needs of other species on which we depend. On this planet we know this. That if we continue to cut our trees, in particular our large trees, we are trimming the branches of our planetary oxygen tank and there will be a point the sacrifice of a few more trees, just as we have been sacrificing them for years, will be the last leverage point in tipping the balance between our environments capacity to absorb CO2 and produce oxygen.
These trees and the CO2 they hold, and the environmental services they provide are locally significant examples of the global human indifference to our dependence on other life forms. In fact we need these trees, and would be wise to plant more in order redirect the possibility of dramatic human and biological suffering that we are currently headed towards. In our time we chop an impossible 100 trees per minute as human beings. We can point a finger at deforestation, but at our first opportunity to acknowledge the significance of our connection to our trees we have failed completely. In Carbondale these trees are among the largest and oldest standing in town. They are historical, and biological land marks with in our micro society. It feels some how contrived to speak on behalf of the trees, but as Lorax understood, I must, "for the trees have no tongues."
Our history of destroying our environment beyond its carrying capacity will repeat until we evolve beyond self destructive behavior. This pattern of biological impact can be seen in developed societies through out history. What could have possessed ancient cultures to destroy the things on which they relied. The people of Easter Island decimated their environment 1 tree at a time until their soil chemistry and rain fall and biodiversity crumbled around their civilization. We have the same constraints. The same limitations apply to us weather we are aware of them or not. As we approach a tipping point with the destruction of photosynthetic life on this planet I suggest we strongly consider weather this is really an appropriate course of action. Here in this community, this course of action means preserving our limited arboreal population.
Dare to pereive
We develop conciousness or insights at the expense of other people or things. Inner light inner sight. Vision a form of reception, projection, selection. You will create something or destroy something based on the lense that you wear.
Tuesday, February 28, 2012
The Myth of the Tragedy of the Commons
There is a prevailing attitude that if something belongs to everyone it naturally will become abused and deteriorate. In this mode of thinking each individual will act predictably out of selfish interest to strain the common resource for his or her own benefit. There are innumerable examples of this. Litter in public parks, marker scratch in public bathrooms, air pollution, and even the stock market. The oldest evidence for this comes from communal grazing, and subsequent over grazing that result from sharing a common resource for individual means. So common grazing grounds have been eliminated, public and social support facilities like human health departments, public bathrooms, libraries, jails, parks, public schools and public transportation are minimally invested in because they are our common property and so we give them the least and expect the most. We don't fertilize the common grazing ground, and we overload it with our livestock until collapse.
But the Tragedy Of the Commons is built on a common flaw. It is viewed as the result of inevitable behavior, when it is in fact the outcome of a world view that perceives the self as an interest isolated from the whole. In true democracy, in the true emergence of all things as they are, the health and happiness of the individual is an expression of the health and happiness of the whole. The individuals are the commons. The individuals are self sacrificed when the commons are sacrificed.
The outcome of this inevitable tragedy pervading our current mode of thinking has been a confused justification in converting all publicly owned resources into private hands to ensure their preservation. These resources include information, raw materials, energy, food, shelter, and medicine.
Historically the basic necessities of life we not the property of one interest, to be purchased by another interest, they were all common. Knowledge, shelter, energy, food, medicine, and space are the elemental and ecological conditions for human life. This fact, that this planet has these things, is also the reason we as individuals were born. Because earth supports life.
Earth is the common property and in the private hands of few individuals it, and all of its living resources are being exploited nearly beyond the point of regeneration. When we understand that we can not be separated from our resources without it costing us our own human vitality we are able to blossom into the common understanding that the quality of the system we live in is the quality of our own lives. Our interactions with the commons are reflective of our interactions with self.
The myth is in believing that if we share, we won't have what we need. It is in believing that we as individuals are separate from the whole of our sensitive interactive responsive supportive environment and each other. We are connected in ways we can not even perceive and are capable of seeing our common assets as regenerative for everyone when contributed to by everyone.
In a recent dream I realized that the entire body of human knowledge is common property. Soon after I read that any scientific fact discovered is eventually understood by all scientists. Today our knowledge is separated from us. There is unequal access to it. In order to affect this realization into reality I readily submit my individual knowledge to the commons.
http://creativecommons.org
But the Tragedy Of the Commons is built on a common flaw. It is viewed as the result of inevitable behavior, when it is in fact the outcome of a world view that perceives the self as an interest isolated from the whole. In true democracy, in the true emergence of all things as they are, the health and happiness of the individual is an expression of the health and happiness of the whole. The individuals are the commons. The individuals are self sacrificed when the commons are sacrificed.
The outcome of this inevitable tragedy pervading our current mode of thinking has been a confused justification in converting all publicly owned resources into private hands to ensure their preservation. These resources include information, raw materials, energy, food, shelter, and medicine.
Historically the basic necessities of life we not the property of one interest, to be purchased by another interest, they were all common. Knowledge, shelter, energy, food, medicine, and space are the elemental and ecological conditions for human life. This fact, that this planet has these things, is also the reason we as individuals were born. Because earth supports life.
Earth is the common property and in the private hands of few individuals it, and all of its living resources are being exploited nearly beyond the point of regeneration. When we understand that we can not be separated from our resources without it costing us our own human vitality we are able to blossom into the common understanding that the quality of the system we live in is the quality of our own lives. Our interactions with the commons are reflective of our interactions with self.
The myth is in believing that if we share, we won't have what we need. It is in believing that we as individuals are separate from the whole of our sensitive interactive responsive supportive environment and each other. We are connected in ways we can not even perceive and are capable of seeing our common assets as regenerative for everyone when contributed to by everyone.
In a recent dream I realized that the entire body of human knowledge is common property. Soon after I read that any scientific fact discovered is eventually understood by all scientists. Today our knowledge is separated from us. There is unequal access to it. In order to affect this realization into reality I readily submit my individual knowledge to the commons.
http://creativecommons.org
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Gift of Suffering
It is possible that all of the shit we have been through, our worst broken hearts, become in us our deepest pools of empathy. This vital resource, our empathy, our humanity, is the connecting point between us and future generations. Without human empathy we as a species loose the comforts of infancy, our family, our friends, our communities, our doctors. All connections in which we feel a familiarity and trust dissolve without our ability to relate. Our empathy shines through our action when we understand and respond to one anothers needs. It is only through cooperation across time that we are able to live today. We alone did not build our homes, sew our clothing, or produce our fuel. Many people created this life, within our human society. We were working together all this time without even being awake to the connection between our lives. There are farmers in South Africa, and Chile, and the Central Valley in Mexico who produced with their human attention your food, and the food of your neighbors. Still our clothing is sewn in the brutal human reduction of sweat shops. Our insatiable demand for energy comes at the expense of energy field workers, international military troops, local cultures, and environmental integrity. We are all doing this together. We establish the pattern of human culture together as individuals constantly collaborating on a changing vision of what we really are. And how can we know? Sensitivity. To ourselves, to others, to other life on this planet. The suffering of the human experience is our que to remember who we really are and what is really happening on this planet. We are biological electrical hydro sentient events. We are alive. If we were unable to feel pain, unable to hurt, or to understand the hurt of another person, how would we then act? Where can a human ethic without feeling go? We are fragile. This is universal among is. We can be killed. And will ultimately die. We have only this brief experience with one another. It is a rare opportunity in this universe to become aware of our own sensitive intelligence, and then to develop it. Many species evolve but I can see that we alone can decide in which mode we choose to evolve. Our primary lighthouse through the storm of human evolution is our empathy to one another. To feel as though the other is self, because though we are individual, there is ultimately nothing separating us. We must be vigilant against those parts of ourselves that have become unfeeling, and perhaps fatigued in an apathetic world. Look around you at each human face, know that if they were gone, the man at the gas station, the child at the park, the unknown strangers of this planet, you would miss them very much. Together we are redefining what we are.
Saturday, February 18, 2012
Adapting to Climate Change
We are aware that climate change is eminent and understand that adaptation will be the survival mechanism for all life that continues forth from this point. In the instance of humanity, the adaptation is both cognitive and behavioral. The simple truth is that in time, we will not be living as we are living now. Many systems are going to change including energy and public power, transportation, communication, food and water supplies, information exchange, and human cooperation. We needn't fear these changes as all of these things have been changing in continuum since the rise of humanity and our co-emergence within these dynamicies. We should however, as observant, responsive, intelligent life, that wishes to carry forward, adapt.
Our behavior and the manner in which we conduct ourselves among other life is ascending beyond dominion thinking into a more complete understanding of our dependence upon, and vulnerability to other life on this planet. Humans have both the potential to cultivate life beyond ourselves or to act biocidally with common disregard for all life forms.
Our survival into the future begins now with growing plants, and trees. While this may seem simplistic, plants store Sulfur, and CO2 in their structure. They use our toxins to build themselves. We have incidentally suppressed photosynthesis and increased aspiration in our activity. The obvious outcome is a new gas balance less hospitable to the way we operate. Some plants can fix 20lbs of CO2 a year in new growth. Many plants and mycelia uptake our heavy metals and toxins into their systems and either metabolize them into safe compounds or store them. This year, starting right now, we must begin to cultivate life in order to save our own. Project 1 Urban Gorilla Gardens = nutrient dense, free, local food and climate change reversal through photosynthetic carbon fixing. This is our adaptive collaboration with life that we co-developed across millennia ∞
Our behavior and the manner in which we conduct ourselves among other life is ascending beyond dominion thinking into a more complete understanding of our dependence upon, and vulnerability to other life on this planet. Humans have both the potential to cultivate life beyond ourselves or to act biocidally with common disregard for all life forms.
Our survival into the future begins now with growing plants, and trees. While this may seem simplistic, plants store Sulfur, and CO2 in their structure. They use our toxins to build themselves. We have incidentally suppressed photosynthesis and increased aspiration in our activity. The obvious outcome is a new gas balance less hospitable to the way we operate. Some plants can fix 20lbs of CO2 a year in new growth. Many plants and mycelia uptake our heavy metals and toxins into their systems and either metabolize them into safe compounds or store them. This year, starting right now, we must begin to cultivate life in order to save our own. Project 1 Urban Gorilla Gardens = nutrient dense, free, local food and climate change reversal through photosynthetic carbon fixing. This is our adaptive collaboration with life that we co-developed across millennia ∞
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