
Great Smoky Mountains National Park, Gatlinburg, Tennessee, April 11, 2014
William Wordsworth nailed it with his, "The world is too much with us late and soon..." and its lament regarding our lost connection with nature and nature's way of getting things done. "We have lost the magic," he would say, or better perhaps, "We have traded the magic for thirty pieces of silver, or its modern equivalent!" The older I get, the more unfamiliar the world becomes-- and that, I think, is a common experience among humans at least since the Industrial Revolution, though I expect long before, before the advent of "civilization." The world is not a trustworthy place to be. I have seen it in the eyes of my six-month old great grand daughter, and regret her coming encounter with the world beyond mom and dad and their extended families, as she enters day care or "preschool" and the regimen/realities that come with it. Do we ever out-grow what we lose in that "bargain"? Barbara Navarro's work in protesting the loss of life and a way of life among the indigenous Yanomami people to gold "miners" in South America highlights the world of a small tribe of families where the children never leave home in our sense of the word, but live out their lives within the "family" providing stability and security with no preschool, etc. to intrude. The love of money is destroying their world, and there is no fair exchange in that transaction. We have lost what they are losing, without noticing/grieving/knowing what we do not have. But something knows within, and we carry the burden of our alienation from what something knows throughout our life, knowing only that something is not right, and not-knowing what to do about it. The old Yogis and Taoist/Zen masters withdrew into the silence of the lost world of Yin/Yang, seeking the balance and harmony, the stability and security, of their ancestors way of life. Aren't we all drawn to the AUM of union with the source and goal of life and being? To know the peace of our belonging to our place in "the great scheme of things," now beyond recovery, beyond remembering past the sense that this is not it and never will be again? To know this much is to mourn our state, and follow the old Yogis, Taoist/Zen masters into silence seeking the way to peace and wholeness through recognition and realization, walking two paths at the same time in acquiescing to what has been lost, while consciously adjusting to what now is in a "We're not in Kansas anymore" kind of way. Making the best of what we have to work with through rituals, ceremonial objects, stories, and small communities of like-minded people, grounded and centered upon "Here we are now what?" as we find our way through this world, knowing that our place is with that world before this one became what it is.
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That fallen moss-covered tree is the opposite of laying waste our powers.
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Jim. So well put and said. And the beat goes on…
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