issue 4: Kinship with Nature
In this issue we explore just a few ways humans can and are working with Nature in creative, collaborative and mutually beneficial ways.
To more fully comprehend the impact we have on each other’s lives, we must first acknowledge the profound intelligence inherent within all of Creation. With that great and creative intelligence comes a deep interest and care for all children of Creation, particularly calling to us “Younger Brother" prodigal sons who’ve strayed.
And what does that look like exactly? A call can be a persistent issue, a tugging or a vision that occupies our attention; a cry can be far bigger to get our attention, like a massive natural disaster; while offerings of gifts and guidance are most often so quiet and subtle as to be overlooked if we’re not paying attention. The communication is both magical and mundane. Perhaps you’ve noticed a sudden sprouting up of a certain plant around your home. Isn’t it curious, you might wonder, how my yard should suddenly be filled with Milk Thistle never intentionally seeded while all surrounding properties are not. That is Nature acting as physician and pharmacist, offering medicine you probably didn’t even know you needed. But how would the plants know? Our modern western science has now satisfactorily shown that plants possess and utilize not only our basic 5 senses, but 15 more! Just think of the implications of this next time you hug a tree or hack at your garden. Plants feel us, perceive us and can read us more deeply than we do them, or our fellow humans for that matter!
Also recently ‘discovered’ in the world of science is the astounding level of interconnectedness within the plant world among itself. For example, trees across tremendous swathes of land are dialed in to their own “Wood Wide Web” of communication facilitated by vast underground networks of mycelium. They use this “web” of communication to warn relatives miles away of incoming danger and also provide them with chemical codes they’ve developed in response, special VOC (Volatile Organic Compounds) formulations their kin can replicate and emit to help avert damage or attract other organisms that are antagonistic to their invaders. What sort of intelligence has the ability to work with others to develop such a technology, and so far in advance of our own equivalent? If this new understanding is not a bit humbling, I’m not sure what is.
While mycelium may represent the ethernet connection among trees, we also have access to a kind of global wi-fi connection via the Schumann resonances or “heartbeat of the Earth” which connects all beings via the electromagnetic portal of the heart. We can practice this connection in deeper states of meditation and in connection with Nature. I find that if I ask a sincere question to a body of water, the great open sky or the natural world at large while focused from my heart center, I am consistently shown a metaphorical demonstration or confirmation of the answer I’m seeking. If not immediately and directly in front of me, I find that my attention will be inexplicably drawn to notice something very specific at just the right moment which I receive on a feeling level as a clear response. This is not just e-mail, this is em (electromagnetic)-mail.
Nature subtly communicates with us in metaphorical and archetypal ways, but also in some profoundly obvious ways as demonstrated by a group of wild South African rescue elephants that traveled 12 hours from various parts of a large sanctuary when their rescuer and dear friend suddenly died of a heart-attack. They had not been to that particular compound nor visited their friend at all since he’d moved there though they somehow found their way from separate locations and remained at the residence with his family for a two-day vigil before parting ways. All this makes me wonder just how expansive and interpenetrating this capacity for awareness and communication between us really is. The only way to truly know is to tap in and try it for ourselves.
Our kinship with the natural world goes beyond communication and collaboration with animals and plants. We can also work in collaboration with the elements Earth, Wind, Fire and Water (not the band, but… what ever happened to their water BTW?). As we are now in fire season, and the issues of massively destructive super fires increasingly affect our western region and beyond, it is very much worth considering how indigenous peoples can assist with this ever-growing destruction pattern (which leads to other problems such as mass displacement, loss of life, habitat destruction, land erosion and flooding not to mention the economical toll). By utilizing their preserved (though long suppressed) traditional wisdom acquired through their close relationship with the nature world around them, indigenous Fire Lighters can not only mitigate larger fires through managing their fuel source, they help to foster conditions in which a greater diversity of plant and animal species can flourish. Working with the elements is a fundamental part of every earth-based culture though few have been able to preserve wisdom specific to their particular land region which is key to its greatest effectiveness as more localized solutions. That said, we must all pay respect to and draw from the wisdom that has been passed down while working to reconnect in order to reacquire the knowledge and wisdom Nature has to offer us.
The examples I point to here are just a small few. I hope you’ll follow these threads to discover many more examples of our kinship with nature on your own, and try for yourself even simple acts of connecting with the natural world in more meaningful ways with the assumption of a sentient intelligence that pervades all of Creation.
If you’re old enough to have experienced a world pre-internet, you know the difference between our world prior to global human connectedness and after. For better and for worse, it’s about greater interconnectedness, accessibility to more ideas and information and to like minds for greater facilitation of shared aims. We must rise to a higher level of maturity as a humanity to utilize our more expanded connectedness for better. Now, imagine a world of total global connectedness with all intelligences, fostering creative collaborations with so many more beings of our natural world—what an experience of expanded possibilities that will be!
In Truth, Beauty and Goodness,
B. Monique
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