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Archive for October, 2022

We have a way of looking at the world as if it’s made up of lots of separate parts which are moving.

The invention of movie film led us to believe that reality is made up of separate moments, each one in its own frame, and if we run the frames past our eyes fast enough we see motion.

We’ve looked deeper and deeper into matter thinking that at the bottom of everything are static, indivisible atoms. But now we know it’s not like that. We’ve looked inside the atoms and found…..it’s all flow, not parts.

Every part we see, every moment we encounter, every atom we discover only emerges to us as it, and we, flow on.

Flow comes first, parts come second. Parts are the shimmering sparkles in the flow.

I think that’s pretty easy to notice once you take it on board. Our right hemisphere is great at noticing the flow, our left sees parts.

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What’s the story?

We humans are dedicated storytellers. We understand our lives through stories, the stories of others and the stories we tell ourselves.

We use stories to make sense of our everyday experiences and to create a coherent sense of self which runs through all the years of our life.

So when I looked at the bottom of this waterfall, through the tumbling waters which rushed between boulders and rocky banks, and saw this particular, greenish stone I thought…..”what on Earth is that??!!”

When you see a shape like this you know there’s been at least one human hand involved in its creation. Nature doesn’t make square stones like this. So, instantly, I’m thinking, who made this, why, when and how did it get here? Actually, it’s highly unlikely I’ll ever get the answers to any of those questions but I can give my imagination free reign and make a story which would explain it all.

Why don’t you have a go?

What story could you tell to explain this stone and how it ended up at the bottom of a waterfall?

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Growth

Economists and politicians talk about the improvement of growth, but they are rarely asked to answer the questions…..”growth of what?” and “growth for whom?”

The assumption seems to be that what’s needed is just more stuff….more produced, more consumed. It doesn’t seem to matter too much what the stuff is. No doubt because the capitalist system we live in makes money the main goal, and more stuff sold means more money for the owners.

But isn’t this a crazy way to organise a society? Can’t we do better than that? After all, we live on a finite Earth, so it’s just a matter of time before the “stuff” runs out. Unless you don’t care about future generations, your grandchildren’s grandchildren, this short term, blinkered dash to consume makes no sense. And that’s before we even consider the issues of pollution, waste, species extinction and climate change.

I think growth is a great idea, but only the way we see it in Nature. Look at these Colchicum…..they are flourishing, and flourishing is the kind of growth we can all aim for. Development in the sense of maturity and the realisation of potential is a fundamental of natural processes.

Can’t we organise our societies around this concept of growth instead? Not growth based on greed, but growth based on nurture. After all, a child flourishing or a plant blooming, is both beautiful and wonderful.

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Sometimes change is more obvious than it is at other times. I know that in reality nothing stays the same. We, and everything in this universe, constantly changes. The two seasons of Spring and Autumn make that so obvious, don’t you think? They are also the seasons where change can appear most beautiful, whether with new buds and blossoms in Spring or with gorgeous golds, yellows and shades of Autumn red.

Since I moved to the French countryside I’ve spent more time outside than I’ve done in any other period of my life. I notice flowers, trees, birds, much more now, and I’ve become much more aware of the seasons and cycles of Life.

I realise now that we humans are suffering from a profound disconnection. We’ve developed a way of living where we privilege consumption so much we actually refer to people as “consumers”. And we have been telling ourselves that “nature” is something different from us, that it’s “out there”, just waiting to be exploited and controlled.

It seems to me that the wheels are definitely coming off that bus! From climate change, to loss of diversity, and pollution of the entire planet, we should be able to see we need to change direction.

But which way should we go? Increasingly, I think the answers lie around and within us. When we get a better understanding of the complexity and interconnectedness of reality, we get more in touch with the need to privilege harmony, beauty and flow over consumption and control.

It’s easy to think the systems we have created are impossible to change, but we humans made them, and with imagination, will and love, we can make different, more satisfying ones. Can’t we?

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Fractal forest

The discovery of the fractal in mathematics opened up a new path for us, enabling us to see symmetries where we’d never seen them before.

A fractal symmetry repeats the same pattern no matter how far out, or how far in, you zoom your attention.

I got down on the forest floor to take this photo of delicate moss emerging into the daylight. When I look at it now it looks just like a tiny forest.

I love the self symmetry of the fractal. It confirms the old esoteric knowledge – as above, so below.

Everything is connected through pattern, relationship and beauty.

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Movement

When I look at this old photo I immediately have the impression that the kite is pulling the boat. But that’s just a coincidence of positons. They are, of course, unconnected. Well, except when I use my imagination.

Imagination let’s us see what’s possible, and also what’s not possible. We use it to create patterns, connections and stories. It expands and deepens our everyday experiences making them unique to us. Imagination brings the subject and the object together.

When I look at this photo my imagination kicks in as I see the vast expanse of the sea, the ferry on the horizon, and the setting sun. It conjures up thoughts of travel, of distant places, of what lies beyond….beyond the limits of my vision, beyond the curve of the Earth. I wonder where the passengers will wake up in the morning.

I see the kite surfer’s kite, high in the sky, blown by invisible winds, and if I look very carefully I can see the kite surfer skimming over the surface of the water.

It’s a still photo, but nothing in it is still. The kite, the surfer, the ferry, the sea, the sun….everything is movement.

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Connecting

In the French town of Aubigny-sur-Nère I found this phone box. There’s a plaque on the back which tells you that it’s a gift from the people of Haddington, a town near Edinburgh in Scotland.

This phone box has been turned into a free book exchange. You can take any book you’d like to read, and leave any you’d be happy to share with others.

I like the depth this brings to the core value which I think we need more of in this world – connecting.

When it had a phone in it this box was a beacon of connection. It was where anyone in the community could have a conversation with others far away. It brought people closer, enabled them to build and deepen their relationships. It allowed them to find help when they needed it, and to offer help to others.

Now that it’s a book exchange it enables the exchange of ideas, the re-telling of stories, the stories which inspire us, encourage us.

Whether through the telephone or through books this little red box is a symbol of making connections.

And look how deep are the connections in Aubigny-sur-Nère, the town where, in 1295, an alliance was formed between the Scots and the French. An alliance, a friendship, a connection which has existed for so long we call it “The Auld Alliance”. An alliance formed for military reasons, which over the centuries became a deep, and lasting friendship.

Making connections – communicating, sharing, telling stories, describing experiences, building mutually beneficial relationships between diverse and different people. Listening with empathy, listening attentively, listening without judging…..

It’s how we build a better world.

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The sun sets

My mum passed way peacefully this morning. She was 93 and spent this last year of her life in a care home with increasingly severe dementia. I am hugely grateful to the staff of the home who consistently presented cheerfulness, kindness and care. She was well looked after and, somewhat bizarrely, seemed perhaps more content in recent months than she’d been for some time.

It’s a tough disease, dementia, as the person you know disappears slowly from the world but I’m glad that, for her, the world she disappeared into was the one of her happy childhood.

My dad died back in 2015 and I know this is a natural and universal experience. You’ll also have lost family members or other loved ones, I’m sure.

Perhaps that connects us even more deeply…..this shared, yet always unique, experience.

From my heart to yours. Thank you for your continuing support and connection.

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Two hemispheres

I saw this illustration on the wall of a bookshop in Orleans. It immediately struck me as consistent with Iain McGilchrist’s hemispheres theory.

The right hemisphere allows us to engage with the world as a whole, using a broad, open attention which enables us to create relationships, subject to subject. We see a world of living creatures this way, of vital, vibrant organisms.

The left hemisphere allows us to engage with components of the whole, using a narrow, focused, analytical attention. It re-presents and re-cognises what it already knows. We see a world of parts, machines and mechanisms this way. A world to be manipulated and controlled.

You can see why it’s best to use the whole brain, can’t you?

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Nature loves diversity.

Loss of diversity results in loss of resilience and sustainability.

Diversity is healthy and it’s beautiful.

I think this fundamental characteristic of Nature teaches us how to be healthy, individually and as a society. A diverse diet is a healthier one….too much of any one foodstuff isn’t good for you. Diversity in our activities is also healthy. Getting stuck in a habit, or worse, and addiction is never good. Diversity of activity at work is also healthy. The capitalist, industrial model of fashioning a human being into a machine like cog to carry out the exact same limited range of tasks isn’t good for any individual. Diversity of races, traditions, beliefs and values produces healthy societies.

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