"Oh, what
a catastrophe, what a maiming of love when it was made personal,
merely personal feeling. This is what is the matter with us:
we are bleeding at the roots because we are cut off from the
earth and sun and stars. Love has become a grinning mockery because,
poor blossom, we plucked it from its stem on the Tree of Life
and expected it to keep on blooming in our civilized vase on
the table."
- D. H. Lawrence
"By thoughtfully
learning how to become conscious of webstrings we reattach our
ability to love to its roots in nature. This restores love to
its fullness and heals our bleeding."
- Michael J. Cohen
Most of us are deluded. We
believe that because our thinking can identify life in balance,
it can produce it. Such thinking has thrown the world and us
out of balance. Isn't it time to think again?
Our destructive personal and
environmental imbalance uncontrollably produces war, abusiveness
and dependencies. Although we despise
them, they don't readily change for, subconsciously, we have
psychologically bonded to the ideas, materials and values that
produce them. We are in denial. We each hold psychological addictions
that our thinking neither recognizes nor treats as such. Without
appropriate treatment for them, we and consequently Earth, remain
unbalanced.
The good news is that our addiction
to imbalance responds to proper treatment. The bad news is that,
like any addict, we deny we are addicted or need treatment. Chances
are your psyche is caught in this dilemma, you think others,
not you, need help.
Biologically and psychologically
we are part of nature and nature is part of us. Survival demands
that we and Mother Nature mutually fulfill each other's needs.
However, we live in extreme separation from nature and its balanced
ways.
The severance of our natural
emotional fulfillments in nature produces addictive cravings
that we must gratify elsewhere, no matter their ruinous effects.
They distort our thinking. For example, although there is good
evidence to the contrary, very few of us think that we can fulfill
our cravings and restore balance by feelingly reconnecting to
nature. This type of denial is typical of addicts.
We have become so bewildered
(wilderness separated) that we try to resolve our problems by
using the same nature disconnected thinking that produces them.
Many have recognized this:
"I go
to nature to be soothed and healed, and to have my senses put
in order."
- John Burroughs
Today, most experts accurately
portray nature and the web of life by gathering a group of people
in
a circle. Each
person is asked to represent some part of nature, a bird, soil,
water, etc. A large ball of string then demonstrates the interconnecting
relationships between things in nature. For example the bird
eats insects so the string is passed from the "bird person"
to the "insect person." That is their connection. The
insect lives in a flower, so the string is further unrolled across
the circle to the "flower person." Soon a web of string
is formed interconnecting all members of the group, including
somebody representing a person.
Dramatically, people pull back,
sense, and enjoy how the string peacefully unites, supports and
interconnects them and all of life. Then one strand of the web
is cut signifying the loss of a species, habitat or relationship.
Sadly, the weakening effect on all is noted. Another and another
string is cut. Soon the web's integrity, support and power disintegrates
along with its spirit. Because this reflects the reality of our
lives, it triggers feelings of hurt, despair and sadness in the
activity participants. Earth and its people increasingly suffer
from "cut string" disintegration, yet we continue to
cut the strings.
Every part of the global life
community, from sub-atomic particles to weather systems, is part
of the lifeweb. The intelligent, globally conscious process by
which they interact produces nature's unified balance and prevents
runaway disorders.
Natural beings relate while
in contact with the whole of the web through its strings. As
part of nature, we are born with this ability. Our troubles result
when we disconnect it, deny its existence or hurt it. Pulitzer-Prize
winning sociobiologist Dr. Edward O. Wilson, of Harvard, affirms
that people have an inherent biological need to be in contact
with nature. He says Nature holds the key to our aesthetic, intellectual,
cognitive, and even spiritual satisfaction.
Recently, I asked web activity
participants if they ever went into a natural area and actually
saw strings interconnecting things there. They said no, that
would be crazy. I responded, "If there are no strings there,
what then are the actual strands that hold the natural community
together in balance and diversity?"
It became very, very quiet.
Too quiet.
Are you quiet, too?
Warning! Pay close attention to this silence.
It flags the missing link in our thinking, perception and relationships
that produces many troubles. The web strings are a vital part
of survival, just as real and important as the plants, animal
and minerals that they interconnect,
including
ourselves. The strings are as true as 2 + 2 = 4, facts as genuine
as us. As part of nature we are born with the natural ability
to know them but we learn to neither recognize nor exercise this
ability. Without seeing, sensing or respecting the strings in
nature and our inner nature, we break, injure and ignore them.
Their disappearance produces a void, an uncomfortable psychological
emptyness in our lives that we constantly try to fill. We want
emotionally and materially, and when we want there is never enough.
We become greedy, stressed and reckless while trying to gain
webstring fulfillment, placing ourselves, others and Earth at
risk.
Today, newly researched nature
reconnecting activities enable us to bring webstrings back into
our lives. Their presence helps reinstate balanced personal and
environmental relationships.
The strings are biologically
of, by and from nature. Profound disbelief registered on many
faces when I told the participants that since they were part
of nature, the strings were in them and they could learn to relate
harmoniously to them through a nature connecting self-improvement
process (3). Addictively, they disbelieved this because we are
conditioned to conquer, not connect with, nature. We have learned
that the strings in us, our inner nature (inner child, inner
self ), are taboo, flaky, subjective, spiritual, unscientific,
bad, wrong, impulsive, unthoughtful etc. They have hurt and fear
attached to them. That blocks them from freely entering our consciousness,
communication and thinking. They are probably as alien to you
as were the "Indians" to many frontiersmen. (4)
"We cannot live for ourselves alone.
Our lives are connected by a thousand invisible threads, and
along these sympathetic fibers our actions run as causes and
return to us as results."
- Herman Melville
Scientifically, it is clear
that natural systems communicate and organize themselves with
the string. Moment by moment they create
additional
string and connections that increasingly weave, balance and repair
the web of life. This is not done haphazardly, rather it forms
an intelligence that produces nature's optimums of life, diversity,
cooperation, balance and beauty. The process is inclusive and
caring enough to globally produce and sustain the web of life
without creating garbage or pollution. Nothing is left out, unattached
or unwanted, a way to define unconditional love (2).
Natural systems and nature
centered people don't display the disorders that plague our lives.
Our problems arise because our estrangement from nature prejudiciously,
addictively, deprives our thinking from making conscious connections
with the string, its intelligence, nurturance and energies. We
spend, on average, less than .000022% of our lives in conscious
sensory contact with nature. Our "stringless" solutions
for our runaway personal and global problems are as ineffective
as the warning labels on cigarette packages.
"There
must be the generating force of Love behind every effort that
is to be successful"
- Henry David Thoreau
It is common knowledge that,
with the exception of humanity, no
member
of the web of life relates, interacts or thinks through words.
The web is a non-verbal, preliterate experience consisting of
sensitivity attraction relationships, of loves, not words. Like
our own sense of hunger, a bird's love for food (hunger) is a
webstring. So is the tree's attraction to grow away from gravity
and its roots attraction toward it. The fawn's desire for its
mother and vice-versa are webstrings.
"From
atoms and molecules to human beings with developed consciousness,
all entities feel attraction for one another. . . . attraction
is the law of nature"
- P.R.Sarkar.
The webstrings are actually
communication and relationship building through natural attraction
sensitivities. Every atom and its nucleus consists of, expresses
and relates through natural attractions. All of nature, including
us, contains these attractions. People have the ability to sense
and feel many of them.
Verbal communication is a new
string of the web used mainly by humanity. It is a great asset
to human survival when we use it to help our thinking sustain
sensory contact with the web and its intelligent ways. However,
our literacy becomes a source of our problems when through nature
disconnecting stories, it removes us from our origins in the
web and its wisdom.
A new science, the Natural
Systems Thinking Process, reverses many of our personal, social
and environmental troubles. It expertly addresses our addictive
disconnectedness by tangibly reconnecting our psyche to nature.
The process starts by helping
us recognize it is reasonable to reconnect with nature. We learn
how to safely and consciously make enjoyable, non-verbal, sensory
contacts directly with the lifeweb's strings, not media substitutes
for them (5).
These sensory contacts in natural
areas enable us to sentiently reattach the strings within us
to their origins, the strings in the web of life(6). We feel,
enjoy and trust the connection, it is an uplifting experience,
not just another fantasy.
The Process then helps us translate
these sensory attraction feelings into verbal language and share
them. Our sensory connections with the web feelingly express
and validate themselves in words that help guide our reasoning.
(12)
Because
we mostly think in words, the string reconnections enable us
to think like nature works. We enjoy nature's harmonious wisdom
as it enters our relationships. Support replaces destructive
competition and greed (7). The natural world, backyard or backcountry,
becomes our classroom, teacher and library (8). It helps us peacefully
co-create a sustainable future with the global life community
(12).
"Nothing
is more indisputable than our senses."
- Jean Le Rond d'Alembert
Attractions feelingly register
in our consciousness as sensations we call senses. For example:
as natural loves for sight, touch, and sound ; as our attractions
to water (including thirst), color and community; as attachments
for nurturing, belonging and trust, as affinities for contact
with nature, for wholeness. Senses of place, gravity, pain, motion,
temperature, and trust, are each attractions that, when energized,
register and play in our conscious thought.
"The senses,
being the explorers of the world, open the way to knowledge."
- Maria Montessori
Natural people and things think
and love through at least 53 different sensory attraction strings,
not just five as we are taught (2). Each string is an intelligent
way of knowing that inherently attracts to and blends with other
strings to build and be guided by the common good. Nature helps
create, sustain and balance life through these powerful 53 sensitivities
in concert. To our loss, our excessive separation from nature
addicts us to think and relate with less than six of them.
"The moment
my inner attraction string for color touched the color string
of this woodland, I experienced a special joy."
- Raymond Sierra
A metaphor about seven blind
wise men touching and arguing about an elephant conveys the dilemmas
of our blindness to lifeweb attraction strings and our natural
senses. In the story, each blind man argues their case based
upon what part of the elephant they are touching. While one is
conscious of the elephant as a pipe (the tusk) others say it
is a snake (trunk) or like a rope (tail). Such differences often
lead to disconnection, hate and war because we psychologically
bond to, and fight for, what we know to be "the truth."
We seldom reconcile our differences by making further common
contact with the integrity of the whole elephant or whole of
the web of life. Satisfying many of their natural attraction
senses would have led each wise man to further explore the elephant
and further discover the diverse integrity of the animal, each
other and themselves.
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