T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1023.1 | RULE THE EARTH -- BUT HOW? | WMOIS::REINKE | S/W Manufacturing Technologies | Tue Apr 04 1989 10:40 | 8 |
| I would say that it is not the understanding that we are made in
God's image but a misunderstanding of what it means to "rule the
earth". Many of us take that as a mandate to act as slave-master,
but therein leads to the destruction you talk about. A more help-
ful understanding is the we should learn to rule the earth as a
healthy mind rules a healthy body -- in mutual respect and love.
DR
|
1023.2 | Unity | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Evolving, not revolving | Tue Apr 04 1989 11:31 | 11 |
| Joe,
Perhaps man's so-called 'doom' was not when he saw himself in
God's image and 'separate' from the rest of the world. His
troubles came when he saw himself as 'separate' from God and
therefore not in harmony with the Universe. This illusion
of separateness (the ego) is what keeps the 'fires burning'.
Just a thought,
Ro
|
1023.3 | From the ashes we can build another day... | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Tue Apr 04 1989 11:43 | 11 |
| re: .0
This really brings home the idea that if anything is going to happen
to straighten the mess out, it has to happen inside of each of us,
one at a time. Unless "I" say, "That's it, I'm not going to participate
in the distruction or our Mother Earth any longer!" and move into action
it ain't gonna happen. We all keep waiting for someone else to do it
for us (separation as Ro states, I-they). We are they, we are the
only "someone else".
Terry
|
1023.4 | | NEXUS::MORGAN | All Hail Informatia! | Tue Apr 04 1989 16:05 | 10 |
| Reply to .0,
I have to agree with you. The psychological reality is that for
whatever reason, wo/mankind feels the Mother as just dirt under their
feet.
In the last installment of the Joseph Campbell series he said that the
next great mythology, the next collective dream, will have to be one
that unifies wo/mankind with planet as bio-sphere. The Gaia hypothesis
fulfills that need. I hope it catches on.
|
1023.5 | Stupid ideas... | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | We're part of the fire that is burning! | Wed Apr 05 1989 09:32 | 39 |
|
I was charging the "God's image" idea itself of causing the
contextual seperation of man from beast and the earth itself. I
*know* that the Darwin theory of evolution was the first to upset
this great idea, and that the fundamentalists of *today* are active
with their intent to "downplay" the theory of evolution, because
it goes against it's grain.
Of course, it'd be too much to ask for religion to be as
evolutionary as perhaps science is; whoever wrote it down and decreed
it *first* was right and knew all there is to know about everything,
world without end, Amen. OH, it was the very hand of God himself
who wrote it down - so it *has* to be right.
ALL one has to do is open their eyes to see that this is perhaps
not necessairily so. The most relatable example is the contexting
of the 10 commandments. It is *known* that one cannot motivate another
to a positive end with a negatively contexted instruction. Most
of the 10 are "Thou shalt nots". Would God, in His (God has an gender?)
*infinite* wisdom make that mistake; or would that "slip" be more
likely wrought from the mind of man, who just might have "other"
intentions?
Likewise, one can show that this "God's Image" thing is not
necessairily a good idea, as it has ramifications which are manefesting
themselves across the Earth, and just might kill the whole thing.
Funny, how a chosen belief of man may actually allow him to dispense
with what just may be "God" itself, by this made-up contextual
seperation from it!
.3 - While you may have heard the same song on the radio yesterday
morning, part of the message of the 'Voyage program was that although
you *can* build another day from the ashes, it'll never be the same.
In fact, it'll be so different that the "new day" stands a good
chance of collapsing in on itself! There's irreplacable structure
missing from the whole now. The "missing rivets" from the airplane
wing analogy. How many before failure_catastrophic?
Joe Jas
|
1023.6 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | flight of the dark... | Wed Apr 05 1989 11:07 | 30 |
|
Well, I'm not sure where the statement "man is made in God's image"
comes from, however, I interpret it to mean that our spirits are part
of the All-That-Is - we are made of the same *stuff*. Our world, as
well, and all things of it contain this same spirit. We are all a
part of everything else. Mikie, I believe the world myth is catching
on. This past Friday night I attended a lecture at Interface (east
coast) entitled "New Myths To Live By - The Call to a New
Spirituality" - Fritz and Vivienne Hull, co-directors of Chinook
Learning Center near Seattle. To quote "...an emerging
creation-centered spirituality that celebrates the divine presence in
all things and the sacramental nature of everyday life....the key to a
new spirituality is our capacity to experience the pattern of meaning
which connects humanity, spirit, and earth". This is also the work of
Matthew Fox (an RC priest from California) that has caused the
Catholic Church to put a lid on him for 6-months. He has written a
number of books and has been on the lecture circuit presenting
Creation Spirituality. Probably what really got to the RC Church is
the fact that he has been working with a Wiccan (Starhawk)!;-).
I am currently associated with a number of women's groups that are
working to bring the Feminine back into balance, and one particular
group is in the formulation stages of creating "Gaia's Island" - a
place to source the work of Feminine balance and Mother healing.
Things are happening and I believe we each can play a roll in
nurturing into fruition this new world myth.
Carole
|
1023.7 | Believing is seeing | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Wed Apr 05 1989 12:32 | 14 |
| > Well, I'm not sure where the statement "man is made in God's image"
> comes from...
Somewhere in the Bible, Genesis, I think. At any rate today it's
more of a matter of "God has been created in man's image" anyway.
> Things are happening and I believe we each can play a roll in
> nurturing into fruition this new world myth.
I agree. We all soon will have to agree. It's the only way to
change things.
Terry
|
1023.8 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Mediumfoot | Wed Apr 05 1989 12:59 | 33 |
| RE: Note 1023.5, Joe Jas,
>> I was charging the "God's image" idea itself of causing the
>> contextual seperation of man from beast and the earth itself.
I think the separation was caused, not by the idea that we
are "God's image", but by the birth of ego consciousness.
Animals can clearly hold a mental image of the world in their
minds (to memorize a maze of local trails, for instance) but
ego consciousness is not born until the mental model of the
universe can become complex enough to include one's self as
a part of that mental model.
There came a point where people can do some thing, while
also imagining an image of their self doing that thing. It
is this process that allowed us to build a concept that we
are separate from the universe.
I agree with your basic thesis in .0, that we humans are playing
a major role in the destruction of our own planet. Your comments
on the third world loans are appropriate and I believe correct.
We shouldn't allow the "I'm gonna get mine" attitude to allow
every resource to be raped. Right now (false) economic justifications
exist for every misuse of resources. It is too easy to just
go on making money just the way you have been, it's too hard to
recycle the trash, buy the cheapest food regardless of how it's
been grown... Economic habits are at the bottom of this fire
that is burning.
However, I see no need to bash Christianity with regard
to this. Doesn't this become a form of "negative contexting"?
Alan.
|
1023.9 | Mary Summer Rain | DYO780::CROUCH | Live gently and be at peace | Wed Apr 05 1989 14:09 | 12 |
| This topic has sure stirred up some strong feelings. I agree
with what's been said. The change is *not* going to be a voluntary
one! Man is too self centered and comfortable.
I have just finished reading the first book in a trilogy by
Mary Summer Rain titled "Spirit Song". It makes some very heavy
predictions. I don't know if I believe it or not yet. I am reserving
that decision until I finish the series. However I am very interested
in hearing what others feel about it. It certainly gets to the
heart of this note's discussion.
Larry
|
1023.10 | Ego? Just a tad... | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | We're part of the fire that is burning! | Wed Apr 05 1989 14:27 | 51 |
|
Re .8,
When I say negative contexting, I mean the way a communication is
rendered; it's wrapping or presentation. The best example of this
is the Angry person who bellows: "I AM NOT ANGRY WITH YOU!!!"
Certainly, one can see that the "presentation" is at right angles
(if you will) to the intent of the message; that everything's OK.
Likewise, describing anything in terms of what it's not is a confusing
way to present an idea or to motivate someone to do something. In
fact, it's been shown they'll do exactly what you asked them "not"
to, simply as a result of asking in that manner.
I have bashed Christianity, and have chosen to do so because the
"we have been rendered in God's image and are therefore seperate
from and "above" apes, monkeys, giraffes, gazelles, newts, toads,
frogs, ardvarks, mice, rabbits, porpoises, etc etc etc" is a *current*
issue in our society. It's *still* debatable, in some people's minds
considering their beliefs.
I believe that this "contextual seperation" via "God's choice" was
also what made possible the idea of seperation of the "ruling class"
from the "subject class" of people in England, for several hundred
years there. The King's word was law, because he was the chosen ruler
allegedly by the hand of God himself, and therefore was "above"
the subjects he had power over. That all the subjects believed this
to be The Truth made for a very stable integration of church and
state.
We all know where everyone went who just didnt buy into that idea.
I do realize that people have been "classed" in other societies,
such as the caste system of India, by means that has nothing to
do with Christianity. But that's not a current issue in the society
I live in.
While the relative success of this "way" may just be incomparable
with any alternative (England did conquer the world under these
beliefs, God know's how many thousands of years the caste system
"worked" in India's history) it still doesnt make it "good", "right"
or "best".
But I'm getting away from the basic idea of a general religious
belief that teaches contextual seperation of man from beast and
all else, vs one that teaches contextual integration with such.
And the eventual ramifications of these teachings, when one looks
down upon the world from their lofty God-appointed position...
Joe Jas
|
1023.11 | contexting? | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Mediumfoot | Wed Apr 05 1989 18:01 | 57 |
| RE: .10
So, it appears to me that you are discussing two separate
issues here;
1) The way in which religion has created or propagated a
concept which justifies or enhances the feelings of being
separate from the universe.
2) The abuse of the planet, perhaps because we feel separate
from it, and the hope for our learning how to live in balance
with the planet.
The form of "negative contexting" is at it's most obvious when
it appears all within the structure of the single sentence, as it
does in your excellent example; ("I'M NOT ANGRY AT YOU!")
Yet there may be more subtle forms of negative contexting;
I am wondering if the overall stucture of your arguement
happens to conceal a bit of "negative contexting";
By talking about the separation of self from the universe
you focus on the separation, when what you are really trying
to say is that we are (or at least should be) one with the
planet we have been destroying. You have placed your plea for
oneness within an arguement that talks mostly about separation
and your disatisfaction with a particular religion. Thus I
believe you have done an accidental bit of negative contexting
here.
>> Since Man is "different" and obviously "superior", he can simply
>> eliminate all the trash that stands in His way. The contextual
>> seperation of man from beast is what allows this action to manefest
>> itself.
>> Could a stupid, yet non-trivial monetary debt be driving the
>> eventual destruction of this planet - which is now known as a relative
>> *paradise* among planets?
If it is economic forces driving this, then maybe it's not
religions doing the damage? Your note .0 seems to place the blame
on both religion and the economic system. I think there have
been some damages propagated through religion, but it does seem
to me that the damages you described are mostly caused by exploitation
of resources caused by economic pressure, not by the feeling
that we are separate from the animals and plants.
If it is necessary that we overcome the false beliefs that
we are separate or above the rest of creation, can this be done
by focusing on the beliefs that may have caused that separation?
I would think it's better to focus on just how and why we are
all one. Discuss the Gaia theory, then, rather than focusing
on the religious history that may well have been a part of the
genesis of this problem. Focus directly on the potential for
oneness, rather than placing your arguement in the negative
context of railing against the separation.
Alan.
|
1023.12 | Time to get to work. | SCOPE::PAINTER | Wage Peace | Wed Apr 05 1989 21:09 | 20 |
| Re.0
Hi Joe,
In the Bible way back when, in Genesis if I recall correctly,
it was said/written that humans shall have 'dominion' over the
Earth.
The problem with this is that some people along the way managed
to turn things around so that 'dominion' meant 'domination', and
this is where I believe things started to go downhill at a very
fast pace.
Our mission, should we decide to accept it, is to turn this
situation around to the way it should be - the way it was
originally meant to be.
We certainly have our work ahead of us.
Cindy
|
1023.13 | let's bury _that_ straw man for once and for all | LESCOM::KALLIS | Anger's no replacement for reason. | Thu Apr 06 1989 09:15 | 53 |
| Re "Man in God's image":
This is indeed, as Cindy has pointed out from Genesis. The relevant
passages are:
1:26 -- And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness:
and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and
over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over
all the earth, and over every living thing that creepeth
upon the earth.
1:27 -- So God created man in his own image, in the image of God
created he him; male and female created he him.
1:28 -- And God blessed them, and God said unto them, Be fruitful,
and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it: and
have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl
of the air, and over every living thing that moveth upon
the earth.
Note here "dominion" comes after both "subduing" and "replenishing"
the earth. If we must argue in terms of Biblical literalism,
a few points:
Assuming a single God, how can both men and women be created "in
His own image"? The logical answer is that the "image" in question
wasn't physical, but spiritual.
How about "dominion"?
This is strongly suggested in Genesis 2...
2:5 -- [God made] every plant of the field before it was in the
earth, and every herb of the field before it grew: for the
Lord God had not caused it to rain upon the earth, and there
was not a man to till the ground.
Thus, "dominion" means something akin to "one responsible for the
proper management of" rather than "one who rules with an iron heel."
I've met "old Country" folk who claim "everything -- every animal
-- was put on the Earth for a purpose to serve Man.," or sentiments
to that effect. Here, they've got it backwards: if anything,
it's Man's responsibility to preserve and protect animals and plants
("replenish the earth") as part of the responsibility.
This need not be put in a theological context, but if we choose
to, let's get the concepts straight and in perspective.
As it happened, I, too, saw that episode of _The Infinite Voyage_,
and the most telling thing in it was the currently successful efforts
to replenish a forest. There is a Yin for each Yang.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
1023.14 | Got Me, fair 'n square! | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | We're part of the fire that is burning! | Thu Apr 06 1989 12:23 | 26 |
|
Re .11 -
Arrgh! Seems you caught me being negative! Yes, I am "full of
it" if you will, and could have contexted my argument in a more
positive, constructive manner. I actually do try to speak in positive
context when I write, as I notice my natural tendancy is to write
in the negative, (especially if there's *any* emotion involved in
doing so) and I'll try to "improve" the packaging if I detect
it.
That I cannot see the "forest from the trees", so to speak,
is because I'm doing this correcting pretty much line by line, ignoring
that the overall context may be negative, perhaps in a subjective way.
Thanks for pointing this out. It stemms from my feelings about it.
I do realize it's these feelings that need to be worked through,
and that explicitly making effort to correct the negativity in my
contexting will, er, not "make it go away" either actually or
virtually. It's the so called "sausage effect" - squeeze here with
some effort, and things inside just kinda 'squish over' - and end up
coming out anyway only in a different manner, way, time or place. This
kind of effort is a good example of what can happen when one adresses
the symptom of a problem, instead of the problem itself.
Joe Jas
|
1023.15 | we are like the elk | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Mediumfoot | Thu Apr 06 1989 18:01 | 74 |
|
I posted the following note in this other conference, but I think
it applies to the discussion here. I believe it shows, in a kind
of microcosm, how we have been going wrong in our treatment of
the planet...
<<< WASHDC::SYS$SYSDEVICE:[NOTES$LIBRARY]ENVIRONMENTAL_ISSUES.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Current topics concerning the natural environment >-
================================================================================
Note 41.22 Consumers, consuming the Earth. 22 of 23
SSDEVO::ACKLEY "Mediumfoot" 59 lines 2-APR-1989 10:45
-< the competitive advantage; >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recently I have been reading Alston Chase's "Playing God In
Yellowstone", a powerful and disturbing book on the history of
the management of the park.
It seems there are large herds of elk in Yellowstone, which
are in danger of starving. The problem is that the elk never
belonged in Yellowstone in the first place. When the park was
formed, it was around the same period when the plains were
being fenced off and the buffalo were being killed. The elk
were deliberately herded into Yellowstone, as part of the official
policy to create an impressive herd. But elk had *never* naturally
wintered in Yellowstone, since there is very little winter
forage for them there. Since the elk are larger than many of
the other herbivores in the area (such as beavers) they had
a competitive advantage when looking for food. The elk then ate
the food that previously would have been available for many other
species. This is why there has been a drastic drop in the
populations of many species in yellowstone; there is no food left.
The elk, who like the bark of aspen trees, have stripped the
bark off all the trees, up to the height of their reach. They
also eat the young trees, so that the older ones are not replaced.
On the radio the other day I heard a report that the elk were
trying to leave Yellowstone, and were starving out along the edges
of the highways. All the surrounding range land where they used
to winter, has all been fenced off into private plots. The fragile
ecology of Yellowstone *never* could support a herd of elk in the
winter, but now they have been there since the turn of the century.
There is no wonder why the beaver are gone. The elk have tipped
the balance of the local ecology, and have eaten *all* the food,
including that which the other spieces needed.
If we feed the elk, to save them, they will then continue to
place a burden on the food sources in that region. Eventually
the herd will either starve or migrate from that region. I would
hope they are allowed to migrate. What will the owners of all
the fenced off plots in the area want? Will they be willing to
let the elk cross or use their lands? Will they say that the
elk should be shot if they knock down fences?
As I read all this it occurs to me that we humans are in a
similar situation to the elk. We are more competitive for
food sources than other species. Sadly, though, where the elk
can strip a tree as high as it can reach, we humans have the
ablilty to strip the entire tree, and even dig up the roots.
We not only strip the forests, but we are also stripping the
oceans, depleting the soils, and in fact we are stripping every
single ecological niche on the planet.
It is a well known process, how overpopulation leads to famine.
Soon there will be far fewer elk in Yellowstone, then the beaver
and other small animals may begin to return. It is clear to us
that the elk herd goes on reproducing and growing right up to
the point where all the food is finally gone. The elk never pause
to wonder if the advantage they have will ever be gone.
Alan.
|
1023.16 | We are the elk, part II | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Mediumfoot | Thu Apr 06 1989 18:25 | 36 |
|
Like the elk, we are a favored species. We favored them,
thus in misunderstanding we herded them into a situation where
they can't live naturally. Now we have fenced them in there.
By favoring ourselves we have overpopulated the planet. By
favoring the elk we have allowed them to overpopulate Yellowstone
park. We tried too hard.
We have herded ourselves into this modern civilization,
where we have developed dependencies on fuel and technology.
We view our own selves as natural resources to be reaped.
(When are you going to make something out of yourself?)
I believe the potential for a garden of Eden is always
there. We may pave over the field to make a parking lot,
but if we leave the parking lot alone for a few years, trees
are breaking through the pavement. Our own lives are like
that potential Eden, and we expend great amounts of labor to
keep the parking lot of our minds paved over. What would
grow there if we weren't driving ourselves, herding ourselves
into this corner?
We only need to tear down the fences around Yellowstone,
and the elk will find a place to live, on their own. Just the
same, the trap humanity is in was created by our own procedures,
habits and rules. I believe if we can give up the false fantasy
of centralized governmental control, that natural mechanisms exist
which will rebalance the Earth. But first we must stop paving
over Eden; the Eden of the world, and also the Eden of our souls.
We must see what can grow naturally before we know what path nature
can take. The answers cannot come from the frenzied plans of the
people who drive their selves, and pave over their own souls.
The answers can come to us easily, naturally, in dreams and visions.
Alan.
|
1023.17 | I'll give practical salvation my best shot | NATASH::BUTCHART | Intergalactic Elephant | Fri Apr 07 1989 18:21 | 36 |
| If you feel so strongly about what you saw, what are you doing about it
in practical terms? Other than railing at what you see everybody else
doing/not doing, that is. For those of you reading all the Doomsday
books, how many of you work in your own small way in the other
direction?
I did not see the Infinite Voyage segment, because we have no
television. (We're actually very poor consumers.) But I did not need
to see it, because I have known its truths for quite awhile. I do not
need to read the doomsday books either. I can rely on my eyes and ears.
And I do those silly little things like recycling everything I
can; turning off the water when soaping in the shower, scrubbing the
dishes, brushing the teeth, shaving, peeling the veggies; washing dishes
by hand; taking bags when shopping; taking along my Co-Op America
Buyer's guide when shopping (lists companies and how they rate on
various social responsibility scales and environment is one of them);
keeping our lights off and thermostat low; refusing to have an air
conditioner put in my car or home; carpooling; travelling as little as
possible; staying out of fast food restaurants; changing cosmetics
brands to avoid excess packaging; writing letters to companies,
congressmen, et al; avoiding beef; using bioactivators in my septic
tank instead of having the raw sewage pumped; mulching down all my
yard's leaf/grass/branch trash for future fertilizer; gardening;
contributing to the groups working to rebuild damages (like those
forest rebuilding projects mentioned earlier); by choosing not having
children (I finally decided that instead of having my own, I wanted to
work toward giving my friend's kids a healthy world to grow into)...
I haven't listed all the stuff possible, (others can almost certainly
educate me) or even all that I do every day. You may all laugh at me,
and assure me that my puny little efforts are pathetic. This is
certainly true if I'm the only one doing them.
Marcia
|
1023.18 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | Mediumfoot | Sun Apr 09 1989 13:41 | 61 |
| RE: .17 Marcia,
I think your efforts are honorable and certainly have an effect.
I stongly encourage you to continue recycling and saving resources.
You are a good example for us all. Over the past few years I
have been getting more and more into recycling, and it's good
to see Colorado Springs finally developing some good recycling
alternatives to the "throw it all away" trash companies. It
was a little more difficult for me to give up my car, but I knew
it was wrong, and finally now I am back on the bicycle. In
future months I hope to apply my writing talents to supporting
some local "save the Earth" publications...
But recently I have been wondering; There are the easy things
we can do, but some of the things that need doing will be much
harder. As animal populations react to the weather changes in
coming years, there will be an increasing need for migrations.
Yet many animals (such as the elk mentioned in my previous notes)
cannot migrate because they are blocked by fences. I have come
to a personal conclusion that land ownership has provided much of
the justification for abuse of the Earth, and that in the
final analysis humans do not really have the right to fence off
plots of land for their private abuses. I would like to start
a movement toward "unfencing" the Earth, although I am not quite
sure where to start. I'd take down my own fences but I don't
happen to own any. Clearly I don't have the legal right to
take down other people's fences, although I'd like to.
I support recycling. But, I believe it is not enough.
For generations, the Native Americans lived in balance with the
Earth, recycling all their resources. Yet their land is now
being raped and destroyed, in spite of their ecologically balanced
lifestyle. It's not their fault. And, Marcia, it is not your
fault or my fault that the Earth is in trouble, yet it is.
People in Japan recycle as if it were a religion, yet the
sheer overpopulation on their islands still has a massive impact
and recycling alone has not turned around the trend. Please
don't take this wrong, recycling is necessary. It just is not
enough to turn around the trend. It is not enough to make the
difference that is needed.
As I look across the abused and eroded land, I am reminded
of the desolation described in Tolkein's fantasy, in the land
of Mordor. It was the "Dark Lord's" will to see the Earth
destroyed and it's creatures perverted. There is much to
be said for keeping one's own garden safe and healthy, but, I
believe there is also a time to admit that keeping one's own
garden will not be enough if the "Dark Lord" is not defeated.
Some of you may think I'm daft talking about the "Dark Lord"
here, but I am somewhat serious, since there are many who
pursue power and weath as if it were a war against us all.
It is a war, and our lives are in the balance as corporations
and individuals target resources to be reaped and new areas
to be fenced off from the common domain. If they are allowed
their way, all the earth will look like Tolkein described the
land of Mordor; dark and burned, supporting little life.
So Marcia, please understand, we are on the same side, but
we may be fighting on different battlefields in this war.
Alan.
|
1023.19 | It's a big machine | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Mon Apr 10 1989 09:23 | 35 |
| RE: .17 (Marcia)
I too commend you for your efforts to do the right things with regard
to helping heal our Mother Earth. Although I must confess, I'm not
nearly as dedicated as you. I would like to be but every time I sit
down and try to think of all the things I could do differently to help
make a difference I get stuck. It seems that it is going to take more,
that we are caught in a web we can't get out of, "Married to the Mob",
so-to-speak. For example, we all work for a company that indirectly
supports the manufacture of nuclear weapons and probably sells equipment
to several of the companies listed in your Co-Op America Buyer's guide.
Even worse, we all pay taxes. Look what they are used for. When it comes
to earning a living and paying taxes maybe most of us feel we don't have a
choice (actually we do) but like it or not, no matter how much we do, it
isn't going to be enough. We are part of fire burning inside of a great
machine, a machine determined to destroy the only home it knows, Earth.
Something bigger has to change and I don't know what.
I don't mean this to be an excuse to sit back and do all the wrong things.
We should all do as much as we can. The more people involved in the
right (healing) activities and staying away from the wrong (destructive)
ones will help, however, it will take more. Any ideas?
Anyone see the movie, "King of Hearts". In it, a soilder is separated
from his company and ends up in an evacuated town. He comes across an
institution for the insane, the patients still locked inside. He lets
them out and they all take up places in the town "playing life". Working
the stores, walking down the streets, passing time, etc. Then two opposing
combat forces approach from opposite ends of the town and begin to do
battle. The 'crazies' watch all of this. When the battle ends and the
troops leave, they go back to the institution, take their usual places and
lock the doors. Who is really crazy? (I don't know what this had to do
with my reply, but it came to mind as I was typing...)
Terry (who_wants_to_know_the_answer)
|
1023.20 | So be a virus | NATASH::BUTCHART | Intergalactic Elephant | Mon Apr 10 1989 10:46 | 123 |
| The answer I evolved for myself was to be a virus, a virus striving for
balanced symbiosis rather than destruction. When I look at historical
"solutions" to problems they always seem to involve complete
destruction of something. In the main, the attitudes revealed in the
last couple replies appear to be no different to me: allow the earth to
be destroyed so the machines killing it can die off themselves, or
actively kill off the machines.
Why not transform instead, without violence?
Why blindly accept as "fact" the assumption that transformation must
_always_ involve violence?
Why not try for something _really_ revolutionary?
Now, I am a synthesist. Some part of me is always looking for new
places to apply valuable philosophies. And my attitude toward
practical salvation was born of two things. One is the attitude I have
always taken toward women's and men's liberation. Freeing women, to
me, does not mean destroying men, and vice versa, as so many of my more
"activist" friends have propounded. Many, especially the strongest
fighters, appear to me to come from an attitude that they are
disempowered, and must display "proof" of their power through force,
and then force men to give them their power back. The other thing
involved my work with eating disorders (I suffer from mild forms of
them from time to time). The author I consider the most revolutionary,
Geneen Roth, leads workshops to help people accomplish their
transformation without violence: no controls, no rules, no diets, no
demands to appeal to Higher Powers to help you out, etc., but
discovering and applying one's inner power. One doesn't have to avoid
or "control" food to control one's weight.
Now: as so many of you point out, transformation only really works from
the inside out. I am an inside part, a molecule if you will, in my
societal fabric. How can I expect societal fabric to change if the
molecular structure in it, doesn't change? And how can I expect my
societal fabric to change if I remove myself from its warp and woof? I
have never liked spiritual practices that claim that to become saved
one must remove oneself from daily life. The real challenge is
manifest one's salvation through daily life.
As I said in my previous reply's title: I'm giving practical salvation
_my_ best shot. Forget that so many others feel so hopeless and
disheartened that they won't try. Forget the many others who don't
even care to try. I'll live my philosophy to the best of my being. So
I look for more and more things to do each day, and I work to
incorporate them into my daily living habits.
That especially includes my workplace habits.
When I contribute to environmental organizations, I make sure to
include the matching gift form with my check. That way, my company is
contributing to a cause I believe in.
Our facility recycles paper. One other "private activist" and I have
put little signs up by the wastebaskets next to copiers, hinting that
the recycle bins are nearby, and to use them. We've placed little
boxes next to our office printers, marked them: Recycled Paper.
I have my own coffe cup, and extras for guests: less plastic.
I brownbag my lunch, and have a set of silverware in my drawer: also
less plastic. (Also lots of money savings, too.)
I turn off my terminal when I leave for the night and weekend.
I throw all my office trash in the big "public wastebaskets" rather
than my own. (Besides, the walk does me good.)
I do all the little pickly cost saving measures that our facility asks
of me. The less operating costs they have, the less excuses they have
of "can't afford this expense" if the legislature asks them to
institute toxic waste source reduction programs.
When doing test copies of a document (I do some electronic publishing
in VAXdocument) I print out a page or two, rather than the whole thing.
I work at the terminal rather than automatically making copies.
I hardly save any mail via copies - 99% of it isn't relevant to
anything I do anyway - I delete it instead.
I carpool with two other people.
I wash with as little water as possible in the restroom.
I go around snitching paper out of wastebaskets in the places I
normally frequent and put it in the recycling bins.
I have as many meetings by phone or by tube as possible (so as to drive
less).
I turn in the cans or bottles I may have bought in the cafeteria to the
redemption centers.
I bore people to tears writing replies like this :-}. After all, I'm
using what is, in effect, polluting technology, to give people
information about doing otherwise. I call that kind of subversive,
don't you? Heh, heh, heh.
The "something more" Terry mentions is, I submit, made up of making it
habitual to do the small things that, if enough people do them, _could_
make a big difference. I say "could" because I freely admit I have yet
to be proven entirely correct. I am conducting an experiment, you
might say. I submit that my experiment is preferable to giving up and
participating miserably in something I am pretty sure is eventually
disastrous. I find my experiment preferable to jumping off a bridge,
which is, in the harshest Malthusian sense, what I really "should" do
in order that the planet not have to support me and my trash anymore,
and which, before I began my experiment, I was strongly inclined to do.
My basic question when I wrote my original reply was (and I admit to a
lot of frustration and exasperation when I wrote it): doesn't anyone
else out there want to participate in this kind of experiment? Because
if you don't, you are indeed sealing yours, mine, and everyone else's
doom. Is that how you want it to be?
And I admit I also wanted to let others who may be into practical
salvation too, know that they're not alone. And finally, I wanted to
see if I was, myself, truly alone.
Marcia
|
1023.21 | ...And you don't have to martyr yourself to it, either. | WRO8A::WARDFR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Apr 10 1989 12:05 | 44 |
| I believe that what Marcia is doing is demonstrating what
love of and for life is really about. She is taking RESPONSIBILITY
for the world and is working to make it harmonious to her life.
She is absolutely correct in working from the inside and letting
the outside fall into place from that. This is what so many
of us have talked about so often.
While I don't do "all" that Marcia does, I do several similar
things to the extent I can. I get upset when I see the trash along
the sides of roads and wonder how people can be so inert and
unconscious as to do as they do. But my concern cannot be for them,
for I do not control their lives. What matters is how I conduct
my life and what impact *I* have. I will do all that I can when
I can find myself being conscious. What good is it to claim
being at least moderately enlightened and then pointing fingers
at the mostly unenlightened and expecting them to respond in some
enlightened way? Yes, I can make that distinction and I will.
But I will pick up whatever enlightenment I can from whatever source
it comes and use it towards my own sense of responsibility.
It continues to amaze me that individuals, even in this
notesfile, insist on the doom-and-gloom scenario. Okay, folks,
let's gather our rocking chairs and sing hymns waiting for the
inevitable destruction. At least that's what you seem to be saying.
Forget logic, forget consensus reality, forget what you think is
likely to happen. Start looking at possibilities, the ones
that could be termed miraculous, start looking for a positive
outcome without insisting on understanding how. Understanding
will come in time (isn't this what scientists do?) It is ours
to be the dreamers, to offer an alternative future, to do
the impossible. But if we fail, there is likely little hope
for the rest of our reality.
Though I have not yet finished "ONE" by Richard Bach, there
is a place in the book where he and Leslie visit an alternate
reality where war has been replaced by "war games". That is,
countries compete with each other in combat for money and glory
on television. Killing is not the goal, winning is. While I
haven't done this idea justice here, the point I am trying to make
is similar to Richard's, that is, there *are* alternative realities
available, using the same resources but producing different
results. The most reasonable place to start, however, is from
within. If you don't do your part, it can only be hypocritical
to expect others to be doing it.
Frederick
|
1023.22 | No doom-and-gloom for me! | USAT05::KASPER | In the eye of a storm hope is born | Mon Apr 10 1989 13:01 | 38 |
| re: last two (Frederick and Marcia)
I know my note may sound like I'm the doom-and-gloom type, that
I'm sitting in my chair waiting for the worst to happen to me and
the rest of the world, but that couldn't be farther from the truth.
I don't believe that is our fate nor do I expect it to be. Nor do
I believe violence is even remotely a part of the solution (we all
know it is a BIG part of the problem).
As I said, I do many of the things mentioned to do 'my part' and I am
very much aware of when I'm doing things that are contrary to
what I'm working for and try to change when I can. What I am trying
to work out is not what more can I do, it's easy to find new things
to do, I want to find out how to stop doing things that contribute to
and feed the causes of the "machine", things that we seem to be hooked
into. It's tax time. I cannot, with good conscious, look away (don't
worry, be happy attitude) from the fact that the money I willingly give
to the government is going to partly be used to support many of the
activities that I feel are destructive, things I can't even imagine I
would do myself if I had the power to - but is there really any difference?
I think it was Lazaris who said, "If you are aware of the problem, you are
part of the problem", not to mention help fund the problem(s). I pay my
taxes, like most of us out of blind duty and partly out of fear. The fear
that I might lose some or all that I have aquired if I didn't cherrfully
pay them. (I feel cynicism coming on, I'll slow down...).
Anyway, I think that supporting the wrong things by our actions in the
ways mentioned (and I can think of more than the tax and work-related
examples) does more harm than refusing to drink out of stryfoam cups helps.
This doesn't at all indicate that I'm giving up on the 'little things',
rather I want to start working on the 'big things'.
I'm looking for an answer and I know the only place to really find it is
inside. I have confidence that I (and everyone else) will eventually find
it. I just hope I can follow the advice I receive. For now I'm stuck
(but not at all giving up!)
Terry
|
1023.23 | Community | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Evolving, not revolving | Mon Apr 10 1989 13:17 | 19 |
| Been looking for a place to enter something I experienced this weekend
and since Marica and Fredericak are both writing about taking the
RESPONSIBILITY oneself for bringing about changes in the world I'll
enter it here. I attended a community building workshop based on
Scott Peck's Different Drum. I don't want to lessen the experience
by trying to put it into words but will explain the premise of
community.
Community is 'safe' place in which people reach a stage where they
can overlook their differences and just accept each other. Masks
fade away and differences seem unimportant, all that is left is
a feeling of unity, love, and 'oneness'. Receiving 'community' was
a gift which I felt I need to share. So it becomes my 'responsibility'
to do that; to encourage community by my own actions and example.
Thanks Cindy for your words which inspired me to attend.
Ro
|
1023.24 | Think for Yourself | DNEAST::CHRISTENSENL | | Mon Apr 10 1989 14:53 | 58 |
| Re. .22
The question regarding how to be effective against the big machine
brings to mind _Pogo's_ discovery: "We have met the enemy and he is us".
As long as there is a corporate "them" from which we exclude ourselves,
we feed agreement and power this notion and cause it to exist.
As long as there is a "them" we feel safe being "us". It takes a great
deal of courage to admit we are all them and they are all us.
The next, and more difficult, admission is that we all operate out
of truth-based systems which are so pervasive as to never be examined.
*We all "know" that there isn't ever going to be enough money to do
everything which needs to be done. If "they" printed money in huge
quantities, it would ruin the economies of the world. If we keep
money scarce, we'll all be safe.*
I used money in the above example. Money is not the problem. Substitute
the word money for anything you hold to be of value. Try food.
The problem here is _shortage_ and how it get's coupled with value and
the need to survive.
We all live in a world which operates with shortage and insufficiency
as unquestionable truths. And the odd thing is that we believe without
shortage we would not survive. UUnnhhh...you want to run that one by
me again?
Why do people trade gold for grain? Think about it: It's STUPID!
And we all do it and think little of it and operate as if it's
normal and wouldn't know how to stop it anyhow.
Talk about dis-empowering to discover one is going along with a humongous
fallacy just to survive? We continue to feed the machine and feel disempowered
as we begin to gain some realization of the trouble we are in.
What to do , what to do? First off do nothing. Second, examine one's
own personal unexamined truths and look for the events which created
them and which continue to feed them.
Want to tear down the machine? Well, start at the beginning and discover
how it was created in the first place and ourselves, personally,
got trapped, convinced or cajoled into feeding it. Meanwhile, next
time you go into the market and buy $60 worth of groceries; smile
and know these fools are going to feed you for another week in exchange
for some green paper. Know you are going to get this green paper in
exchange for something you do which is not growing food directly.
The way to defeat the machine is to laugh at it an not get caught
and not to exchange your soul for the green paper.
The Wright Brothers would have never gotton off the ground if they
weren't willing to challenge the imortal truth "If man was meant to fly,
God would have given him wings".
It is not the money, the food, or the flying here. They are only examples
of current and past fallacies which we hold true, operate out of and
hence keep "them" and the machine alive.
|
1023.25 | Lawrence | SCOPE::PAINTER | Nothing is written. | Tue Apr 11 1989 19:10 | 13 |
|
Re.23 Hi Ro - that's great about your weekend! Thank you for helping
me to identify and confront my most recent fear. All went well.
Re: Inspiration
I went to Boston on Sunday and saw 'Lawrence of Arabia' - the
reconstructed 4 hour version. It was the first time I'd ever seen
it in any form and this film inspired me greatly. For those of
you who have seen it, you will recognize my new VAX Notes header
above. It seems so appropriate right now.
Cindy
|
1023.26 | re: .20 more ways to be a "virus" | VITAL::KEEFE | Bill Keefe - 223-1837 - MLO21-4 | Tue Apr 11 1989 22:14 | 105 |
| Cross-posted with permission. More ways of being a "virus".
<<< HYDRA::DISK$USERPACK02:[NOTES$LIBRARY]HOLISTIC.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Holistic Forum >-
================================================================================
Note 397.0 Practical Magic 1 reply
SSDEVO::YOUNGER "Smile when you feel like crying" 103 lines 7-APR-1989 12:57
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The following article was written by Meg Evans for Windfire Magazine.
Posted with permission of the author.
PRACTICAL MAGIC
One of the problems with many neo-pagans, new agers, and witches is the
lack of use of Practical Magick. Most of us realize that our Mother Earth
is beginning to resemble a floating sewer, and that something must be done
about it. We do warm, fuzzy, heal-the-earth rituals, and go home feeling
like we at least did something. Meanwhile, the air we breathe, the water
we drink, and the ground we walk on is becoming more poisonous by the
minute. When are we going to wake up?
Ritual Magick by itself can be useful for increasing awareness, but only
if we add our own energy in the "mundane" world can it have a lasting
effect. After all, our physical well being is dependent on our eco-system,
and those of us who believe we are rooted to this planet for all of our
lives should have an interest in not returning as sentient cockroaches
in the future.
There is a practical spell for healing the earth. It has been used for
centuries: "Use it up, wear it out; Make it do, or do without!" In
other words, Think twice before you add anything to a landfill. Can
it be recycled, added to a compost heap, fed to the pets, given to a
thrift store? If your food is in non-recycleable packaging, can you
buy a different brand? No? Write a letter to the manufacturer. Their
public relations people read every complaint, and enough of them will
generate a change.
Your garden is a wonderful resource for recycling all kinds of household
trash. Every veggie scrap, eggshell, tealeaf and coffee ground has a
place in a compost heap. If you don't know how to build one, ask any
established organic gardener, or your local county extension office. If
you don't garden and have the space, start. Your local earthspace will
thank you and you will have pesticide-free veggies to boot.
Separate all of your trash. Stuff your newspapers into paper bags and
drop it off at the paper recycler, scout troop, or even churches that
have paper drives. Glass that you can't re-use is also easy to recycle.
Aluminum cans can even be profitable, and pay for the rest of your
recycled refuse. If you are fortunate enough to have curbside pickup,
as some towns do, support it. It only takes a few extra minutes a
month to cut your landfill load to almost nothing.
Share your magazines around. There is no need for three or more members
of a circle to have the same subscriptions. Make full moon a time to
trade reading material, as well as warm feelings, gossip, or tapes. This
saves money, as well as landfill space and results in a better read circle.
If you have children, and make the choice to use disposable diapers, (ick),
dispose of the waste as properly as possible. Flush what can be flushed,
so that you don't add untreated human waste to the eco-system. If possible,
use a diaper service or wash your own cloth diapers. Your infant's butt
will thank you as well.
Walk any distance less than a mile (or two or three). You will save gas
(read money), improve the air quality, and improve your own health.
Carry a bag with you and pick up litter as you go. You may not feel
that you are making a dent in the trash on the road, but every piece
that is disposed of properly is one less for our mother to have to deal
with. (You can also make a profit on those ubiquitous aluminum cans.)
Carpool or take the bus on longer trips whenever possible.
"Adopt" a neighborhood park, roadway, or alley and spend an hour or two
a week removing trash. Not only will you be improving your environment,
but others are less likely to trash a pristine area, and may think before
they toss. Where circles are public and the state has an Adopt-a-Highway
program, adopt a quarter mile. This is good press, as well as practical
Earth healing.
When having an outdoor Circle or campout; always leave the area cleaner
than when you found it. Not only are you healing our Mother, but you
are improving the image of all Pagan groups and protecting our right to
use the outdoors without harassment.
Improve the habitat around your home, remembering the wild things you share
it with. Don't spray your yard with poisons. They kill beneficial plants,
insects and animals, as well as the pests. Plant some native wildflowers
and shrubs for the birds and small animals. Put up feeders and birdbaths,
and remember to keep them full even through the winter. Plant trees, they
clear up pollution as well as adding shade and beauty for years to come.
In low rainfall areas, learn about xeriscaping and save water.
Finally, donate money to your local chapter of Greenpeace, Earth First!, or
the Audobon Society, and get involved on a large scale healing. Work to
elect conservation minded representatives. Write letters encouraging
legislation that contributes to the well-being of our Earth, and deter
those who don't think of what they are destroying. This is large scale
Practical Magick to save our planet. The first small battle you win will
fill you with more warm, fuzzy feelings than three hours of chanting,
honest.
Saving our Mother is a major task that often seems overwhelming, but if
each of us does our part, we can only improve the odds that we will
survive.
|
1023.27 | an aside | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Evolving, not revolving | Wed Apr 12 1989 13:14 | 14 |
| Hi Cindy, (.25)
Will be in touch offline to talk about the weekend. I'd like your
feedback, but I can't quite put my thoughts into words yet. Scott
Peck's son, Chris, was one of the facilitators. He was great.
BTW, a girl friend saw you at the movies on Sunday (she remembered
you from my DEJAVU party). I asked her if she spoke to you but she
was afraid you wouldn't remember her so she didn't. That's what it
is all about, letting go of fear. Those fears keep us 'a part of
the fire that is burning'.
Ro
|
1023.28 | aside aside | SCOPE::PAINTER | Nothing is written. | Wed Apr 12 1989 18:12 | 13 |
|
Re.27
Hi Ro,
Oh dear - that's too bad about your friend.
That's exciting about Chris! Will look forward to talking with
you about it when it starts to come together. It is rather intense
and I still come up with things that mirror that experience even
today.
Cindy
|