PROJECT NATURECONNECT
Institute of Global Education
Special NGO Consultant to the United Nations Economic and Social Council
WWW.WEBSTRINGS.ORG

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Continued from Page Seven

Return to the Beginning, Page 1

 

If we follow our webstring attractions to nature, the life core of each of us, so many of our fears and prejudices toward other people would be replaced."

 

An archive of University of California at Santa Barbara student responses and interactions in the webstring Natural Systems Thinking Process Orientation Course on the internet.

Student names are witheld to protect their privacy and safety.

Course title:
Psychological Elements of Global Citizenship:

The Science of Connecting With the Web of Life, the Art of Thinking With Nature

 

 

 

TOPIC: What can we the breath of life teach us through inspiration?

 

"It is cold, rainy and windy here today, and as societal stories would have me believe, I was warm and dry (therefore "safe") in my house all day. Yet as I sat here reading the nature trail on my computer, and doing the breathing activity, I found that even after I stopped holding my breath, I still felt not quite right, as if I was missing something. That something was the pure outside air of the after-storm. I longed for the freshness, the coolness, the purity of the air outside my "safe" house. So I followed my webstring attraction and went out into the wind, the soft rain, the yellow leaves dancing with water drops as the wind blew through and around the many trees here in my yard. I thought back to the trail and the give-and-take of nature in our breathing, and how all of nature and all of us are interconnected. I trust this knowledge...I love this feeling. I had learned before to hold onto a leaf or a branch and breathe, and feel how that natural thing is supporting me, keeping me alive as I keep it alive. I then realized that what brought me outside now was the nature within me wanting me to feel good, wanting me to breathe this pure clean air, wanting me to feel that sense of expansion in my chest and stomach and head when I deeply breathe in the coolness of this rain-filled air. "

 

 

"A difficult thing for me to do is to equate nature with other people, as I have a tendency to be rather cynical at times of our human society. Yet as I was standing out there, with leaf in hand, breathing, I realized that if we can follow our webstring attractions to the nature that is the life core of each of us, then so many of our fears and prejudices toward other people would be replaced by this same feeling I have toward the leaf and tree and air."

 

 

"What made me feel so good about going outside to breathe was that I could really feel how I was able to recognize and follow my natural attraction to clean fresh air, and how I was able to recognize that while I had been taught to feel comfortable with the "indoor-is-better" story, it did not feel really good to me. It felt really good to go outside, where the world is not linear or made of cement, where the wind goes in all directions and never is straight, where attraction strings are vibrating among nature a million times a second, where holding onto a plant and breathing makes me smile."

 

 

"This activity again challenged me to think in a different way than I have previously. It made me realize that there are a lot of things that happen that we ungraciously dismiss as instincts. The ability to exist is a phenomenal one, and it relies on the lives of plants and the gases in our atmosphere.

There are a lot of things we take for granted and in doing so distort our view of our surroundings. I now understand what Mike means by the 53 senses we have to connect with nature. Before I had though that somewhat odd and ambiguous but now I have a solid understanding of it. "

 

 

"I participated in a nature re-connecting activity. I didn't really go out into nature, but I enjoyed this activity nonetheless. I went up to the eighth floor of the library. The view was absolutely amazing. As I looked out the window, I could see waves crashing against the shore, majestic mountains, and blue skies. As cliché as this sounds, I really couldn't tell where the ocean ended and the sky began. I felt extremely relaxed. I thought that such a gorgeous view would distract me from my homework, but I was actually motivated to study. I learned that your breath helps to sustain all other forms of life. Natural senses balance us personally by balancing themselves and each other. Our senses are altered by our perceptions and prejudices.

Once again, this activity has improved my connection with nature in many ways. These activities always open my eyes and remind me of important concepts and feelings that I often forget. It is so refreshing to be reminded of my connection to the world around me. The activity reminded me that I am dependent on nature and nature is dependent on me."

 

 

"I also did the Breath of life today in the evening when the sun had just set. I could feel the wind blowing against me and felt a chill. I did not feel separated but at one and almost as a part of that wind. I felt a strong desire to take a deep breath of that cold fresh air. It was a feeling so different from breathing the air in my room as I type. The breathing felt like so much more then simply breathing to survive, it was breathing to connect and live with nature in harmony. It was incredibly refreshing and filled my body with life and energy, something the air in my room hardly comes close to doing. This reminded me of how great it is to be in open air and breath natures air while in nature. Just thinking about it makes me want to go outside, which I think I will do right now. "

 

 

"When I did this activity, I didn't really have a sense of a certain aspect of my attractions I was supposed to focus on. so I simply enjoyed my attractions to the beach and ocean. There were no other people on the beach, and it was a cool and cloudy day. Yet, the cloudiness didn't affect me as much as it usually does. I accepted the clouds, and even though the covered the blue sky from my sight, I still enjoyed them. I realized that blue skies are a "story" of what is beautiful and that clouds are a story of gloominess. after realizing this, I was able to appreciate the clouds much more. "

 

 

"I did this activity through a sunset. I hiked to a place at camp where I have seen the sunset many many times and I sat upon a fallen tree. As the sun lowered in the sky brilliant colors arose and the clouds transformed into modeled masses casting multicolored shadows upon the sky and Earth. As the sun began to lower deeper and deeper in the horizon. I closed my eyes. I don't know if anyone has ever sat with their eyes closed at a sunset before but it is an interesting experience. As I closed my eyes I first felt them struggle. They wanted to open, and although I did not allow them to open and that felt bad I instead tried to experience the sunset without simply colors. The sunset happens at a beautiful time of day and I felt the cool breeze, heard the breeze, the crickets began their song and instead of feeling like a spectator I felt more like part of the sunset. I felt attraction and community. At that moment I could be anywhere in the sunset, not just sitting on a fallen tree. After a while I opened my eyes, and although the sun had fallen below the horizon I still watched now. But as I watched I found myself spending less and less time looking at the colors. Instead I felt my different senses become activated in the environment I was a part of as it took hold of me. "

 

 

"The flies were bothering me that day. and what annoyed me even more than the fact that they kept flying into my face, was the fact that they annoyed me. I've always been turned off by flies, and I realized that perhaps it is because I always encounter flies near rot, garbage, and smelly things that gives me the bad connotation of them. however, I wanted to end my bad feelings toward the flies and so I dedicated some careful thought toward them. I watched where they landed and what they were doing. I realized that without them, the beach would be much more "dirty" and "smelly" because they clean up all of the left-overs the birds and humans leave behind. all of the mountains of seaweed that spoil in the hot sun and bodies of inedible crustaceans left to rot were being cleaned up by the flies. I was so excited upon realizing this, that I thanked the flies aloud and was able to appreciate co-existing with them. "

 

 

"Sometimes, I feel very, very alone, and these exercises have helped me to fill some of my inexplicable voids with a sense of belonging and inclusion. feeling like a true member of the web of life instead of merely watching it has given me new perspective on life itself. "

 

 

"Sorry for the delay but I am relieved now that I actually had time to do the activity. For this activity I went to the ocean, specifically I went in the ocean, and for a surf (in fact my hands and feet are still cold from the water). As I was sitting around in between waves the water came to me and it was of my immediate attention. When I closed my eyes I was flooded with sensory inputs, indeed the water is just as great without seeing it. Cool, cold, particularly chilly water seeping through my wet suit, the constant hiss or drone of waves crashing in closer to shore. Wooof. A waft of salt air penetrating my runny nose. A deep breath and that lovely taste of salt air immediately grounding me and letting me know I am somewhere I love dearly. And that same air cool and fresh telling me to take a deep breath and feel it fall deep into my lungs. And then, I rise and fall while still sitting on my surfboard. What was that, that just passed me? I don't know, I am still sitting exactly where I was before? Ah a unbroken wave. Or rather a wave of energy in motion about to transfer its form for someone to enjoy. Then when I open my eyes, all is the same, the sight of the water does not effect me.

What is it about the water that grabs me. It is the touch, the feeling of being surrounded by cold water penetrating my wetsuit. Surrounding my body and pulling off the weight of the day. The water reminds me to enjoy something greater than myself. I get to participate in the cycling of energy through the intertidal system but I take nothing from it as I participate. And the best part about the water is that after I get out of it and go home and off about the remainder my day, the water stays with me. Not being physically wet but in the coolness of my skin as I slowly thaw out. I remember where I just was, and how passive it was. This thaw period just keeps me happy throughout the remainder of the day. and I am completely content right now. "

 

 

"I found that I couldn't hold my breath for very long. I wish I were as quick to abandon other nature disconnected behavior. It really points out to me how important my attraction for air is. Yet it is something I don't think about very often. Only when I am conscious of not getting enough."

 

 

"For the last part of the activity I asked for and gained consent from my yard. I was attracted to a plant that still has leaves on it. It began to sway in a slight breeze, as if it were beckoning me to dance. Sunlight was coming from behind and it transformed the drab leaves into glowing ,delicately patterned treasures. The veins were golden green dividing the leaf into burgundy segments. I marveled at the beauty of the relationship[ between light and leaves. I closed my eyes and gently held a leaf. The breeze caused the plant to tug and I felt even more powerfully an expression of its life. I heard the delicate rustle of leaves on the ground around me that I hadn't noticed with open eyes. Before ending the activity, I gave thanks for being allowed to participate with nature. In a way, I really did have the sensation that we were dancing together."

 

 

"I felt angry, sad and somewhat helpless after reading about the young people who lost their wilderness area. Of course to so many people that spot must have appeared to be a chaotic tangle. After doing the above activity I understand the connection they must have made to that place. I don't want to feel helpless though. It makes me want to teach this process more than ever. The more people who feel connected to nature, the better chance of creating advocates for the Earth. "

 

 

"I learned that shifting into attraction/sensory strand mode continues to be a satisfying experience which means that I will seek out this state more and more. The beauty and detail that abounds in even a small space is astounding. My backyard feels fluid. It is not a static entity. It is a complex system of living creatures of which I happen to be one.

I know that I depend on the stories that tell be that weeds are bad and need to be killed. Yet the leaves I observed in the activity was quite the opposite. I saw beautiful colors, interesting behavior, and mutual attraction, the sun and myself, to a plant."

 

 

"When I first starting reading the passages I found them hard to believe or relate too, but then when I got to Station 8 and 9 it started to make sense. I started to understand what was meant by everything that was being said. When I finished reading the trail I also had a much better understanding of the 53 senses and how to try to be in touch with them. "

 

 

"I was reading Linda's part four posting and I felt the same way when it came to breathing in my stuffy room. I had a strong desire to go outside and get some fresh air. I didn't go outside right away, but after I read Linda's posting, and finished the trail I decided to go outside. I immediately felt better. I felt refreshed, energized by the sun and cool air, fresher and healthier. This has taught me that I can find some joy by following my simple desires to go with my instincts. "

 

 

"I stood up and went outside to find some natural surroundings in order to complete this last activity. I was tired of staring at a computer screen and sitting in this uncomfortable chair, so I gladly went out to find the "most attractive" natural things around me. I thought, finally, all of this talk about connecting with nature and now I was finally going to get out of my closed off room, away from the computer, to connect with nature. It was such a relief to go outside in the fresh air and relax for a few minutes. I immediately felt the cool, refreshing breeze gently grace me, breathing it in graciously after having to sit in my stuffy room for so long. I closed my eyes and heard the breeze rustling the trees with faint bird cries in the background. I could even make out the crashing waves in the far off distance.

I really realized at this moment how fortunate I am to be living in Santa Barbara, where right outside my door I can see a lagoon and the beautiful ocean. The natural smells of trees and water were a nice change from my dorm room. Even though my eyes were still closed at this point, I could see the bright sun shining down on me. I then opened my eyes and it was even more beautiful than when I had first walked out there. The water was glistening in the sun as ducks went swimming by. The trees were green with touches of brown to really give it that natural look. And even more prominent was the color blue everywhere. The bright blue sky with little patches of white clouds here and there. The blue ocean as far off as I could see. It was a completely picturesque scene that made me feel close to nature. I breathed in and out feeling the webstring that I really am and often forget about. It was beautiful and refreshing and a great highlight of my day. I had no other choice than to feel this way because it is my natural instinct for the fact is that I am part of nature, and it is part of me. "

 

 

"Enjoying the stars is always a blessing in life (thanks for reminding me about enjoying stars Adam). We are so fortunate to have clear nights when we can gaze up into the sky and be amazed.

After taking the time to lay on the grass and relax, I opened my eyes and gazed both up into the sky and then into the fire and there was a sense of connection within me. Nature didn't provide my with an epiphany, but it did add to my day, uplifting me a bit. Every little connection like this adds up and all in all can really brighten a lifetime...enjoying the sun earlier today was wonderful as well. There is a comfort in enjoying bright lights in nature (the fire and the stars in the sky) I'm not sure exactly what it is about the brightness that attracts me in such a way. Perhaps it is the fact that it puts me in a trance-like state in which I don't really worry about all the other things going on in my life. its nice to have these kinds of distractions. I need to take the time to distance myself from the American society that becomes such a part of me...the consumer society...the idea that goodness is based on things, grades, jobs, etc....but this is difficult in that it is such a fact of life. I really do enjoy the moments when I can forget about these facts of life and just gaze into nature's bright lights."


Continue to Page Nine of this Archive

 

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Continued from Page Two

 

"Obviously more good experiences in nature add to my strength and spirit. "

Page Topic: Exploring our good experiences in nature

 

"There are many places I have had life-affirming experiences at, but there is one particular experience that always stands out for me. It was the day I learned about the consciousness of rocks. I was at Jenny Lake up in the Sierra's at sun down. To briefly describe this experience is to do violence to it, but in short, the lake is a "puddle" in this great basin carved out by some ancient glacier which also took away a good third of this mountain peak, leaving it a "cut away" mountain (like the "Invisible Man" I had as a kid). As the sun set over the west ridge of this cut away, the shadow crept along the concave skeleton of the mountain. I watched this for what seemed a very long time, and then I climbed up to that zone where the rock slowly gives way to soil and then forest. I got down on my hands and knees and studied the many life processes that step by step and ever so slowly turned this mountain into forest soil--from rock to lichens to rooted plants to forest canopy. For the first time I had a sense of the loooong and slow consciousness of the stone people. The whole event was also backed up by a jammin' forest symphony of woodpecker percussion and avian arias. The deer were also out for their evening supper. "

 

 

"This experience is a deep part of my sense of self and my place in the world. That is why it is the first to pop into my mind when I think of significant places in my life. "

 

"Nothing is stronger that the rock solid base of all life on Earth. Now rocks are not just rolling around like marbles in my hollow head, but are a stone foundation for my heart and affinity for the world. Obviously more good experiences in nature add to my strength and spirit. "

 

I have always have had a fascination with nature. Nature seems to hold so much power and wisdom yet it is gentle, giving, and loving. Nature is where I base my spiritually. Within it lies a power that connects all things. Something that is beyond human thought and reason. It is just pure feeling. It transends cognitive reasoning and perception. Within nature lies so much love. To be in the flow of nature is to be at peace. Through this connection intuitional wisdom can be achieved.

 

Obviously humans have lost their connection with nature. I feel that this connection is key to happiness, understanding of the true workings of the world, and survival. Humans must understand a new and higher perspective. To be in the flow of nature is to tap into intuitional wisdom. Without this understanding of a larger perspective how can any other endeavor be successful? Our society is in turmoil because we have lost the love and understanding of nature. We need to re-immerse ourselves with nature. There is a beautiful and unexplainable force that connects all things with such fluidity and love. I hope to someday become in touch with it.

 

It was interesting learning about the 53 senses and the strings that connect everything. I wasn't a wholly new concept to me but it was interesting to try view and understand the world from a sightly different understand. The readings really showed me how nature can be such a wonderful mirror with which to view the self. I'm not sure that it enhanced my sense of worth or trustfulness of nature. However it was warming and very thought provoking. It definitely induced a longing the be within nature and reminded me of how important nature is to human existence. I enjoyed reading everyone's responses, especially hearing about people's personal experiences with nature.

 

"Well, to use the language of the History of Religions, it was a kratophany--a manifestation of the sacred in place. I experience the collapsing of thousands of millennia and even the future into that one tiny place at the biotic edge of this great garnet bowl--the universe in a grain of sand and lump of soil. Time and self were absorbed into place."

 

 

"The experience activated my sense of time, of extension in space, of weight. My sense of sight, sound, touch, taste, smell and aesthetic. My sense of breathing. My senses of small and large, near and far, high and low, then and now, why and how and my sense of where I am in the cosmos. Most importantly, my sense of being an Earthling. "

 

 

"Without what I've learned from classes, books, people and TV, I would not have had much of the context of experience and knowledge of geography, geology, soil biology, plant biology, astronomy, atmospheric science and acoustics, hydrology and the many cultural notions of the consciousness of rocks and mountains. The experience itself, though, did not come from any of these sources. It came immediately from my full participation in the moment and the place, such that self, time, and place we integrated into a singe existence."

 

 

"I recognize that the ability to register and retain attractive sensory contacts with nature are innate, but I also have learned that we don't notice what we're not interested in nor remember what we failed to notice. These things are in there somewhere (that's why hypnotism is interesting, no?), but if we are not conscious of them, then they do little good for our physical, spiritual, and social development. "

 

 

"I've been coming to my own conclusions about "reality" and how things are only how we perceive them because of what we've been told all of our lives by society. This applies extremely well in the case of nature. I was sitting on a bench with a friend of mine the other day looking at the sidewalk, the grass and a small patch of some brush that was growing. They were all separated unnaturally by a gardener who made sure the brush would remain at the same size, the grass would cross the line, etc. I commented on this to my friend and he replied with a common response. We discussed how our attitudes as humans are taught to be that we should dominate nature when we should really be a part of it. "

 

 

"The activities of Part 1B, the different pictures, many of which I've seen before, all help to see this truth. Reality is simply how you perceive it. Many times by taking a step back you can see how your previous view of reality was in some way incorrect, or fogged. I saw one of these, the old lady who is also the young lady looking away, in a good book I read about realizing how all of your actions are made by your choices. And many times we make the choices without thinking about it."

 

 

"At any rate I found this extremely beneficial and to back up what was only fermenting in my mind: The world of cities and cut grass with sidewalks around it isn't natural. I feel something unique and different in a natural setting. "

 

 

"I enjoyed the way this activity made you think about things and see a lot of things objectively. I had quite a positive experience with it. Although I still cannot formulate a definition of the term webstring, I think I'm beginning to at least understand it."

 

 

"I am sure that we may consider ourselves more ecologically aware and do our part to help the environment, but we still do our fair share of polluting whether consciously or not. Yet, we see beautiful sunsets and sunrises, and feel terribly trustful and comfortable in nature. For this I am greatly thankful because if nature did not unconditionally love us, we would be being put through one hell of a time. I like what you wrote though, keep it up. "

 

 

"I would say I reinforced or reminded myself about the aspects in nature that I really like. When I think about the many pre-sunrise surfs I have had I come to think about all the colors that slowly march across the sky as the sun gets closer and closer to peaking above the horizon. I love the contrast in colors from the east where bright gleaming rays of light spear through the clouds and then down on me providing a little warmth to a chilly morning and then to the west where the sky fades up from a dark blue along the horizon into faint hues of pink and purple. These are the things I enjoy, recognizing the ability of nature to create beauty day in and day out. And the fact that it is just me and nature out on these mornings just adds to the specialness of them to me."

 

 

"One of the most attractive experiences I have ever had with nature was climbing to Glacier Point at Yosemite. It is a four mile hike up 2000 vertical feet, uphill all the way on steep switchbacks. You never think you are going to reach the top but when you finally do, you look over the edge at the whole valley in all of it's majesty. To say it is breathtaking is an understatement! It is a feeling that is indescribable and exciting, one that everyone needs to feel. I hope I will get to experience that feeling many times in this course."

 

 

"I found it interesting that the other people all seemed so exuberant about the whole prospect of things. People all seemed to be entering the program and focusing upon events in their life that connected them to nature and hoping to capture those feelings more(myself included.) After further thought I don't want to chase after those feelings, scrambling for edible fragments of my past, as I do that enough anyway. I am instead interested in finding new feelings, connections, webstrings, or whatever that will define the ever-changing and moving experiences of myself. "

 

 

"I too have felt a strong connection with nature. Some of my strongest feelings of connection with nature have occurred when I was in the Julian mountains. It has been there that I have actually forgot about the many stress's and busy days of life at home and in the city. It has been there when I have felt as a real part of something and not just a busy ant doing all his work, separate from everything else and fighting for himself. My strongest connections have also occurred at unplanned moments when all of a sudden something almost magical occurred and I and those around me sensed a closeness and a spiritualness that I experience on an incredibly rare basis. Although these experiences are incredible, they are also something I do not wish to feel all the time as they are defining moments in my life and incredibly powerful. They mean so much because of this. "

 

 

"This activity mainly permitted me to realize and reaffirm some of my beliefs about nature. It reawakened a passion for the outdoors and the mountains that I had been forgetting about a bit. It excited me more about the next time I will go to the mountains or some form of nature. "

 

 

"This activity has begun to enhance my sense of self-worth appreciation of nature. I also had a revelation as a result!! I have a plant that I keep in my dorm room, and try to rotate it from my desk to the top of the microwave (next to the window sill) so it can get some sunlight. And right after I did the exercise, I realized that the newest stalks and leaves of the plant were extending and bending toward the light!! I was very excited about this webstring discovery in my very own room, but there was no one to share it with who would take me seriously. My roommate rolled her eyes and my boyfriend told me that I was wrong, and that this is only a physical/ biological trait, nothing more. So I'm looking forward to reading all of your responses to 1A and relating to and learning from your experiences! "

 

 

"I think your example of the plant's attraction to light is great, and Hristo, your comments on it were right on. As I see it, if we chose to, we could simply explain the orientation of the plant toward the light source as biological and nothing else, and most people would likely be satisfied with that explanation. But it is no less true that the plant has an attraction to the light would not accurately be portrayed simply by looking at it scientifically. To me, science is no more true than emotions and webstring attractions."

 

 

"In regards your rather disappointing experience with your roommate and her boyfriend I'd like to point out something. I find that most people are simply relying on what they've been told to perceive things as. A lot of times people don't go by what they feel and perhaps know to be true but simply on what society and everyone else has told them. For example they might believe nature is simply a series of biological processes for which we can only take advantage of in a technological sense. But we can also use it emotionally, as you've mentioned. At best we can hope to persuade these people to at least question some of their beliefs, and those who refuse we can only hope to change through our own example. "

 

 

"My most memorable and important positive experiences in nature come from frequent visits to the woods, to a fort, in my hometown Austin, TX. In fourth grade a friend down the street from me built this fort in the nearby woods, now virtually surrounded by houses, save one strip not being developed. Deer live in the forest and the other nearby strips as well. "

 

 

"The fort was rather bland, though well built when myself and a few of my other friends started regularly going down there to hang out and spend the night. We'd build campfires and simply have a great time hanging out in the woods. "

 

 

"The fort is simply four corner stone trees with barbed wire and horizontal logs supported vertical logs and sticks that make a four cornered open aired fort. We brought an old couch and a few chairs and it quickly became my favorite hangout. "

 

 

"I think that I enjoyed the fort so much because there definitely is something inherently pleasing about being in a natural setting. Especially when I feel comfortable with my good friends. Whenever we'd go to the fort, we were almost in another mode, when we'd come back out to the street it would seem almost foreign, different. The morning was one of my favorite times at the fort, so we'd spend the night ceremonially whenever something important happened: leaving for college, etc."

 

 

"I savor my moments in pure nature, without the presence of the ugly boxes we refer to as buildings. There's a cold feeling in big cities. My best experiences in nature were definitely at the fort. I look forward to going back home and I'm sure I'll go out to the fort with my friends. "

 

 

"When I read it I noticed it was a lot like Dr. Cohen's lecture and I felt a lot of the same feelings this time as I did during the lecture. I need to reconnect with nature I am detached from some of the natural webstrings I am not detached from all of the natural webstrings. "

 

 

"My soul felt very guilty for being disconnected from nature for so long. It is excited and remorseful at the same time. I have to say that starting this course has inspired a number of emotions in me mostly good but enough that are depressing to notice. IS ANYONE ELSE FEELING THIS? I found everyone's' experiences very attractive you all are very lucky. "

 

 

"First of all, I'd like to promote the use of the word "webstring." I like it and it appeals to what I conceive of natural attractions. "

 

 

"When I did the activity, I reflected on my experiences with the beach. As I mentioned in my intro, I was born and raised in San Diego and have many personal ties to the ocean. I am very excited about being at Santa Barbara now because I have a new beach to discover and experience. The activity made me realize that even though I love and appreciate nature, I do subconsciously cut and injure webstrings within and around me. This was somewhat disturbing, and I am hoping that as the course continues, I will learn ways in which to stop myself from doing this, as I now am unaware. Another important thing I learned from doing this exercise was that even though I fully believe the concept that webstrings are a form of unconditional love, I have yet to truly experience them in this way. I also realized that my occasional bouts of undue depression may be a result of isolation from the web process, as I sometimes become deeply and sad and troubled without ever having a clear "reason" as to why. "

 

 

"Laurel you wrote that you never thought of nature loving you back but considered that all you experience in nature despite of how you act towards nature. I am sure that we may consider ourselves more ecologically aware and do our part to help the environment, but we still do our fair share of polluting whether consciously or not. Yet, we see beautiful sunsets and sunrises, and feel terribly trustful and comfortable in nature. For this I am greatly thankful because if nature did not unconditionally love us, we would be being put through one hell of a time."

 

 

"I have had many incredibly wonderful experiences in nature, almost all of which have been in the past 6 or 7 years. I have found that these times draw me back to them again and again, and as I incorporate these experiences into myself, I feel better as a person. It is as if I am drawn to the strength and beauty of nature within me, as well as being deeply attracted to the natural world around me. I know that I grow in spirit as a person with each and every natural connection."

 

 

"Whether it was our summer day on the shores of Bow Lake in the Canadian Rockies, or watching Orcas surface off the coast of San Juan Island, or running through a sunlit high-mountain pasture after a thunderstorm in the San Juan Mtns of Colorado, the experience brought me peace. My sensory attractions were to the colors of earth and sky, the feel of the wind, the warmth of the sun, the sounds of the Orcas, the aspen leaves dancing, the textures of tree bark, the motion of clouds, the softness of the rain turning to icy hardness of hail. And I was, and am, attracted to the feelings....those of peace, serenity, and joyful play....those of community and friendship with my natural world family. I become all these feelings...I become who I really am. "

 

 

"I was not taught any of this as a child, or in school or by reading...in fact I was a terrified rebellious kid/adult who used to hang out in bars, drinking and smoking and always searching for...something! Yet my nature connections seem to have always existed within me, even though as many people, I was blinded to it by society. Now I feel so fortunate to have allowed that tiny window to open up in my societal armor, through which nature in me and around me made this profound connection. This connection feels good, it feels ancient and wise, it feels supportive and caring and peaceful. Nature tells me all living things share this connection. Underneath all the "stuff", this is how I experience Life. "

 

 

"I did this activity sitting in my yellow-leafed yard on this warm day...as I recalled the natural areas I have experienced, I felt at great peace, smiling and laughing, with a profound sense of well-being. It strengthened my belief that we have an ancient, inborn connection with the natural world...that in fact we are nature. That silent contemplation on past good experiences can and do reconnect us to them and their rewards, right now in the present moment. That during each moment we can choose to seek and find a natural sensory attraction and follow it to feelings of peace, love, fun, oneness, and happiness. The activities enhance senses of self-worth and trust in nature, absolutely, every time!! This is why I love the earth so much. "

 

 

"The part of me this activity identifies is that part of me that is the Orca at play, the aspen leaves shimmering, the clouds billowing and floating, the water rippling with sun sparkles, the peace of the high mountain meadows in summer, the laughter of deep friendship, the deer with big soft eyes and flicking tail...the connection I share with all life around me. "

 

 

"Sounds like you had an amazing experience with nature when you were young. how wonderful! your experience gives me more conviction of the "webstrings": even though you had probably never heard of "webstrings" when you were young, you still had that connection with nature and it seems to have stayed with you through maturity. I'm just curious to know if you think that those experiences shaped a large portion of who you are, and if they affect your relationships with other people? "

 

 

"An experience in nature that I enjoyed very much was several years ago when I lived in a rural area with several hundred acres of woods just beyond my backyard. The woods were quite marshy and the ground was always covered with soft, green moss. The water undermined the root systems of several trees and they had long ago toppled over. Their roots stood up and were also draped in moss. I loved to draw the tangled root branches which were like magnificent sculptures. I enjoyed the gentle sounds of the woods: The trickle of water over stones, twittering birds and breezes. Over many months I also began to sense a powerful energy dwelling in the stillness. I felt that nature was speaking a language I had once known but had forgotten. I think that nature planted a seed in me that this course is helping to grow."

 

 

"At the age of twelve I went to glacier National Park in Montana. During this trip I was able to experience nature in a way that I never had before. One specific moment stands out in my mind. My parents, brother and I decided to go to a secluded lake because all the major lakes were full of people. We walked for hours until we came to the lake. This lake had a thin layer of mist over it, but visibility was not obstructed. The flora and fauna stretched to the edges of the bank and decomposing trees lay in the water close to shore. There were no boats, no fishermen, and no tourists taking photographs. Evidence of wildlife was shown when a huge moose cross the water across the lake. Since the lake was void of humanly sounds, I could hear the sound of water as the moose stepped along. This was probably the only time that I have been in a habitat that was untouched by man."

 

 

"I had many different reactions to all of the different things presented to think about. Things were talked about involving nature and I often forget to be aware of my surroundings and appreciate them. I know and understand the concept of all the strings but it's true that when one is out and looking at nature, you often don't see all of the connections. Nature seems so free and alive that to analyze it in a more technical nature is often not my natural response. Nature is completely unconditional accepting everything and adapting to the process of life. "

 

 

"One thing that I found very ironic is that as I read more and more, I began thinking of my day and my little involvement with nature and realized I was sitting here, in my room, and looking at a computer screen talking about such in-depth concepts of nature. Completely detached from nature with the exception of my mind remembering experiences or picturing places. I found it odd that it was such great, mind-provoking reading on nature, and I was sitting in a room closed off from it all. It makes me all the more aware of the fact that I need to make a conscious effort to keep in touch with nature. Somewhere it said something about your life losing potential because of this but I believe as long as we avoid all the harms around us and focus on connecting with nature, we are all fine. Everyone at times will feel lonely or sad or stressed, unfortunately, but it is not based on simply our isolation from nature. These are the most important times to reconnect with nature and we can't blame disconnection as the cause of these distresses. Basically, nature is an important factor for our sense of self in our lives. Nature can soothe the hassles of everyday life which makes it all the more important that we take care of it. "

 

 

"I did this activity simply by reading, stopping to think and continuing. I took several breaks and walked outside, did other things between finishing this assignment. This activity didn't teach me three things that I could just state or explain, it just caused me to think about many things I really hadn't considered before. It made me get past the simple nature is beautiful, make sure we preserve it. It made me look more at the structure of nature and myself, comparing the two. It made me contrast the different aspects and ideas turning inside to myself, placing some statements that I had never really thought of that described some responses in me that I wouldn't have realized or expected. This activity didn't have any huge life altering affects but it did make me look inside a little more than usual. It made you truly analyze some things in depth, that aren't usually placed before you to think about. It just made me think of how much nature helps me in getting through those everyday problems of loneliness, sadness, and stress. "

 

 

"I also agree with those of you who feel that the term "webstring" is an apt one. To me, it brings images to mind of interconnectedness and also of fragility. A string can so easily be cut. So the word webstring reminds me both of the mutual dependence among webstrings and of the need to be maintain the strength of these connections. "

 

 

"I like your statement that "I think that I enjoyed the fort so much because there definitely is something inherently pleasing about being in a natural setting." It reminds me of how I have felt this week. I just started a new job, and outside my office is an open-air courtyard with a natural setting - a stream, ferns, trees, rocks, etc. Whenever I look out at this setting, I feel this strong attraction to go to it, yet I can't. It seems like I was attracted to what would be an inherently pleasing experience, but I was trapped in an office. I think the inability to go outside frustrated me, as I knew that I was drawn outside yet could not go. Maybe I'll just take my desk outside! "

 

 

"The environment has always been one of my most influential interests. There's something about nature that is a release for me, it's spiritual, claming, inspirational, and so much more. From my days as a little girl there has always been an attraction to the outdoors, which is one I see myself maintaining throughout life. I want this attraction to be able to be enjoyed by those who come after me, in the scope of the world's timeline. I can't possibly imagine the world without the preserves of nature, some of which I have been lucky enough to enjoy. It would be an incredible misfortune if the selfishness of man destroyed nature's beauty for the rest of humanity."

 

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