123 online
 
Most Popular Choices
Share on Facebook 52 Printer Friendly Page More Sharing Summarizing
Exclusive to OpEd News:
Life Arts   

Pax Gaia: Putting All the Peaces Together

By       (Page 1 of 1 pages)   3 comments

Amara Rose
Follow Me on Twitter     Message Amara Rose
Become a Fan
  (2 fans)
"Only now can we see with clarity that we live not so much in a cosmos (a place) as in a cosmogenesis (a process) -- scientific in its data, mythic in its form." ~ The Universe Story by Brian Swimme and Thomas Berry

James Lovelock proposed that the Earth is not only alive, but innately intelligent, regulating the conditions that allow life to exist. Now we're learning how to co-exist - not only with our global siblings, but with our Mother. Our ancestors grasped this connection organically: they knew they were kin to Gaia, because they had a direct daily experience of how the land produced their food and materials for shelter.

Divorced from our origins, we've fallen into the sleep of self-forgetting. Lynton Caldwell, who helped write the U.S. Environmental Protection Act, said, "The environmental crisis is an outward manifestation of a crisis of mind and spirit." Wrapped in our cell phones and iPods, living at 110 decibels, we're anesthetized against an undefined yearning, what Teilhard de Chardin called "almost a sensual longing for communion with others who have a large vision." Having lost touch with the wilderness within, we savage the Earth and each other in an effort to combat our loneliness.

Yet despite pacific cultures, past and present, peace is not intrinsic to the human experience. Cultural historian Thomas Berry writes, in The Dream of Earth: "The universe, earth, life and consciousness are all violent processes...The elements are born in supernovas. The sun is lit by gravitational pressures. The air we breathe and the water we drink come from the volcanic eruptions of gases within the earth. The mountains are formed by the clash of the great continental and oceanic segments of the earth's crust."

So if life itself is born from struggle, how can we hope to be peace? By embracing the Hermetic dictum, "As above, so below": seeing ourselves as the universe, and beholding the cosmos in each individual. Blake put it more poetically: "To see a world in a grain of sand/And a heaven in a wild flower/Hold infinity in the palm of your hand/And eternity in an hour."

Human and planetary survival now depends on a resourceful resolution of our antipathies. In other words, neither violence nor peace is the answer, but rather, the highest state of creative tension that we can hold as a species.

To create Pax Gaia, the Peace of Earth, we need to truly view Earth as a global village - biologically, geologically, theologically. Berry says, "The Peace of Earth is indivisible. In this context the nations have a referent outside themselves for resolving their difficulties."

Now we're getting juicy. Evolutionary emissary Jean Houston speaks of her tendency to "mythologize rather than pathologize...What often appears to be chaos is really cosmos in its most literal sense--world making and remaking." How might we adapt this philosophy on a planetary scale, so that instead of seeing problems needing solutions, we seek the grander story, the connective tissue that unites the issue?

Tom Atlee, author of The Tao of Democracy, tells a fascinating tale of being part of a mobile community that reached consensus without making a decision. Somehow, the group "knew" how it was going to function on the Great Peace March of 1986. Much later, Atlee learned that this is standard operating procedure among the Iroquois: in the tribal council tradition, participants simply talk until there is nothing left but "the obvious truth." It's a bit like boiling sugar down to syrup, or an oyster spinning a pearl from the irritating grain of sand in its shell.

How do we midwife the obvious truth? Atlee admits the Great March breakthrough came only after all the feelings, stories, and information had cooked awhile in the group consciousness. "[It's like] the necessary cultivation of the earth in preparation for planting, like making compost...'setting the conditions' needed to help the natural truth emerge, that takes into account all the different pieces of the puzzle. The struggly, juicy work early on provides the nutrient base for the ultimate discovery of that big truth" - which is then birthed in "an ad hocracy rather than a bureaucracy," to borrow Houston's evocative phrase.

The more we can perceive ourselves as cells in the body of Gaia, ever-evolving, willing to leap creatively across chasms of confusion and miscommunication to form elegant, improbable connections, the greater the possibility we seed for creating the Peace of Earth, rather than the pieces of Earth over which various factions routinely fight. As the cosmic comic Swami Beyondananda says, "If we put all the little pieces together, pretty soon we'll have one big Peace." One planet, indivisible. It's a thrilling concept, and a refreshing response to war.

As one strand in the system grows healthier, the others must follow, since we are all interdependent. Kirstin Miller, executive director of Ecocity Builders, suggests we "start thinking like a flower, not like a tailpipe." Devise ways to pollinate instead of pollute.

We might also invoke the essence of the creative commons license prevalent in cyberspace, that allows people to share their work as long as proper credit is given, and no third party profits. Our air, water, and land resources are all ripe for "creative commons" protection and usage.

And this kind of cultivation, at once mythic and mundane, will accelerate our global guardianship into warp drive.∞∞∞

Take Action:

Tom Atlee sets five requirements for "powerful non-decision-making":

1) Diversity, to allow the development of creative tension

2) Passion: the energy to drive discovery

3) Motivation (commitment, responsibility, necessity)

4) Deep dialogue: a method of inquiry characterized by interest, listening and respect

5) Enough time for the issue to lie fallow, and to reap the rich harvest.

Copyright © May 2008 by Amara Rose. All Rights Reserved.

Rate It | View Ratings

Amara Rose Social Media Pages: Facebook page url on login Profile not filled in       Twitter page url on login Profile not filled in       Linkedin page url on login Profile not filled in       Instagram page url on login Profile not filled in

Amara Rose is a "midwife" for our global rebirth. She is the author of the hour-long digital download, What You Need To Know Now -- A Road Map for Personal Transformation, and a contributor to many health, business and new thought publications. Learn more at LiveYourLight.com, where you can subscribe to her inspirational monthly newsletter. (more...)
 

Go To Commenting
The views expressed herein are the sole responsibility of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of this website or its editors.
Follow Me on Twitter     Writers Guidelines

 
Contact AuthorContact Author Contact EditorContact Editor Author PageView Authors' Articles
Support OpEdNews

OpEdNews depends upon can't survive without your help.

If you value this article and the work of OpEdNews, please either Donate or Purchase a premium membership.

STAY IN THE KNOW
If you've enjoyed this, sign up for our daily or weekly newsletter to get lots of great progressive content.
Daily Weekly     OpEd News Newsletter
Name
Email
   (Opens new browser window)
 

Most Popular Articles by this Author:     (View All Most Popular Articles by this Author)

The Gold Standard: Morphing Out of Materialism

10 Steps To Personal Transformation

Are You Plagiarizing Your Life?

Pax Gaia: Putting All the Peaces Together

If You Can't Stand the Heat...

Becoming REAL

To View Comments or Join the Conversation:

Tell A Friend