Monday, December 31, 2012

The future is unforeseeable


 The goal of foreseeing the future exactly and preparing for it perfectly is unrealizable. The idea of making a complex system do just what you want it to do can be achieved only temporarily, at best...The future can't be predicted, but it can be envisioned and brought lovely into being. 
~Donella Meadows, Thinking in Systems

Saturday, December 29, 2012

Indigenous vs Western View of Technology

The following are excerpts from The Healing Wisdom of Africa by Malidoma Some. Malidoma has had the rare experience of being immersed in both Western culture and African tribal culture. Through his writings, he brings a great gift of speaking to the strengths of each culture and how important it is to balance these aspects. There is much to be learned from tribal beliefs. They hold an ancient wisdom that we have lost in our present-day society. If incorporated into our modern technological world, we could achieve a much more peaceful, balanced and healthy way of living. The following writings from Malidoma provide a view regarding technology that I believe our culture can benefit from immensely. I am not against technology at all and believe that society can benefit greatly from it. I am against the way in which some technology has been developed and thrives at the expense of the natural world and human health and well-being.
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In the indigenous world, technology takes a radically different form than in the West because its intention is not to disturb the natural world. Indigenous people tend to be familiar with the sorts of technology that do not assault nature, do not compete with the natural order, and do not tend to show them as superior with respect to nature. Indigenous technology, which focuses on working with the world of Spirit, requires the same awareness for safe operation as does Western technology focused on manipulating matter. It doesn't make you want to settle in here with a mountain of possessions and a large mortgage.

Technologies in the indigenous world are developed in order to fulfill basic human needs, such as community health, harmony, and a sense of meaning and purpose in life. In this sense technology is oriented toward Spirit. This seems to contrast with the West, where the craving for connection with the deeper sense of meaning and the yearning for spiritual vitality are most diluted amid the noise of traffic and factories. Yet it is obvious that the one wants or needs the other. Villagers in West Africa who are taken on a tour of a factory often come out of there silent for days, unable to put in words what they saw. They are mesmerized at the power of the machine and its ability to make things. Some are confused as to whether there is a spirit behind all this or if the machine is not the spirit in disguise. They report that they feel as if their spirit was sucked out in the factory and that they need healing to recover from their encounter. This recovery often leads to the person returning to the city in search of the god of the white man whose power they have seen. But enchantment with technology can work in the other direction also. A Westerner is introduced to village "magic" and decides to settle there.

Many ecologists and environmentalists in the West say that technology sets itself up as an enemy of nature. They fight to close a nuclear power plant here or there because they understand that the purity of Nature is being contaminated by these plants, and the consequences to countless species, including humankind, are serious. Westerners talk about rivers of pure water having become like sewers. One gets an image of industry abandoning its droppings anywhere it wishes, knowing full well that what it cannot digest, nothing can. Some suggest this is the price to pay to get the results needed. Hasn't modern technology, overall, contributed to bettering human life? The problem is that wherever there is a yet-undamaged piece of the world, modernity tends to regard that place as primitive, archaic, and, at best, pre-industrial.

By contrast, indigenous technologies look rather non-aggressive. In producing anything, indigenous people make it a point to inquire with the Spirit World as to whether this product is appropriate. For indigenous Africans, dream and vision are evidence of the Spirit pointing the way to us. What is shown to you in that manner is actually an invitation from a higher realm to consecrate yourself to the production of something that is going to benefit the greater community.


A culture that is in touch with its spiritual connection is a culture that is poised to evolve. In the indigenous context, change is tolerated, even welcomed, because it originates with Spirit. If evolution originates in a spiritual source, then it does not disrupt stability. If evolution is seen in terms of the modern definition, concerned with ascendancy, acquisition, and control and mastery over the material world, then evolution becomes destructive to stability. The modern notion of stability has a heavy load of military hardware associated with it. This contrasts sharply with the indigenous view of stability, which is a state of alignment with Spirit, with cosmic rules and regulations.

The very word cosmos implies evolution, and in this context, evolution means discovering new things and learning new methods of handling the affairs of life. This is one purpose of technology, to help human beings increase their awareness and consciousness. In this sense precolonial indigenous cultures, even within their apparently primitive technologies, were heavily involved in an evolutionary process. In the interest of their own evolution, it was essential to maintain cohesion within the culture, for you have to stick together to evolve together. In the development of Western technologies, we cannot allow some among us to evolve while some are left behind, because that is not community. Community is the common handling of the journey. Attention to community and to Spirit in indigenous technologies has meant, however, that the evolution of indigenous cultures takes place quietly, without the explosive and destructive side effects of Western technology. When your ties with Spirit are strong enough your evolution has less visibility. A good portion of modern technology is extremely destructive, probably because of the lesser presence of Spirit within it. The larger the presence of the Spirit, the subtler and less polluting technological evolution will be.
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On one of my trips to my village I brought a VCR, a small TV, and some videotapes of this popular science fiction show [Star Trek]. During one of the scenes where people were being dematerialized and moved around by the transporter machine, I asked the elders if they understood what was going on. They were rather taken aback, replying that of course they knew what was happening, but could I please explain what all of the machines were for.
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Wednesday, December 26, 2012

Don't edit your own soul...


“Don't bend; don't water it down; don't try to make it logical; don't edit your own soul according to the fashion. Rather, follow your most intense obsessions mercilessly.” 

- Franz Kafka

Saturday, October 27, 2012

How do we make it better?




It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” 
~ Krishnamurti

Sunday, September 30, 2012

Paradise Lost?

I'm a pretty chilled out, mellow person. Few things really get to me and get me worked up. Those who know me well, know this does (hopefully I'm not starting to sound like a broken record, but this is overwhelmingly important to me):

I've been hearing many climate scientists say they are worried, concerned for the future of our planet. Climate models are beginning to paint a grim picture of our future. We are beginning to see the effects of climate change manifest in drought, record temperatures and record arctic ice melt. Climate change is beginning to impact those who live on remote islands. It saddens me, it frustrates me. The communities that live on these islands are the first to experience the negative effects of our changing planet.


Our country can spend trillions on war (http://costofwar.com/), but when it comes to the preservation of our own planet, we aren't willing to spend. Why have our presidential candidates mostly ignored the issue of climate change (http://climatesilence.org/)? Why can't we, as a nation, be leaders in addressing and acting upon what we already know is happening? I know that people like to argue that climate change is a natural process, many people are skeptical. It is true that the climate naturally changes over time. Over long periods of time, it changes drastically. However, I don't know how people can deny the fact that we are significantly altering earth cycles, most notably, the carbon cycle. As a result, our actions are accelerating the pace of climate change and altering the way in which climate change would occur naturally. How can we deny the fact that extracting carbon from within the earth and transferring it into the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels (32 billion tons per year) is having a negative impact on our environment? (http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/ghgemissions/gases/co2.html).

I understand the argument that we are living creatures that have a right to consume and advance our civilizations, which means using the earth's resources. However, we are an amazingly intelligent species with high potential. We are capable of moving away from a carbon-based economy, maybe not completely, but we can sure do a lot better than we currently are. One of the main obstacles for clean renewable energy is money.

It is painful to see that corporations are already lining up to access the natural resources and oil that is soon going to be exposed as ice melts over the arctic. They want to access more of the thing that has caused the melting in the first place. Scientists have been warning us that we are reaching a point of no return in regards to the damage that is going to be caused to the planet, and essentially ourselves (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/06/07/earth-tipping-point-study_n_1577835.html).

Instead of trying to prevent damage and drastic changes, our governments are simply beginning to think about how to handle the stresses that will be caused by changes in climate. Why are we not being more proactive? Yes, it will cost money to change now, but if we don't start to change, the cost will be even more in the future. There will be a high psychological and emotional cost as well. Oh, and the cost of lost life, too...But our mighty dollar and present needs are more important.


I feel bad about what is happening now on some of the islands across the planet. We are beginning to see the effects there. We go on living our lives as if nothing is happening. We can't continue this way. Eventually it will effect every part of the earth and every ecosystem, this includes us, we are not separate, we are not immune. I suppose eventually, when governments and corporations realize that they are being negatively effected by climate change, things will begin to change, but will that happen before excessive amounts of damage and suffering takes place?

I simply don't understand why so many people are in denial about the reality of what is happening around us. Why don't we (government and corporate America included) want to work harder to make our world a better place for future generations and to ensure that the planet and thus the people who inhabit it have a healthy environment to live in? Even if all of the climate models are wrong, all you need to do is look at the smog and breathe in the dirty air in a big city. It can't be healthy, why are we okay with it? I understand we must consume and "destroy" certain aspects of the planet in order for us to live and thrive. I just wish we were more mindful of our impact and more respectful to the planet that has fostered life as we know it. We live on a wondrous and amazing planet. She deserves so much better from us...and we are capable of it.


Please take the time to educate yourself about what is going on around the world. Knowledge is power. By combining our knowledge with compassion, we CAN make this world a better place for ourselves and future generations. A good site for frequently asked climate change questions: http://www2.ucar.edu/climate/faq

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Awaken



Compared to what we ought to be, we are only half awake.
— WILLIAM JAMES

Monday, August 13, 2012

Risk Your Heart



“Life will break you. Nobody can protect you from that, and living alone won’t either, for solitude will also break you with its yearning. You have to love. You have to feel. It is the reason you are here on earth. You are here to risk your heart. You are here to be swallowed up. And when it happens that you are broken, or betrayed, or left, or hurt, or death brushes near, let yourself sit by an apple tree and listen to the apples falling all around you in heaps, wasting their sweetness. Tell yourself you tasted as many as you could.” ~ Louise Erdich

Sunday, July 29, 2012



"For all our failings, despite our limitations and fallibilities, we humans are capable of greatness." 
- Carl Sagan

Saturday, July 28, 2012