Friday, February 28, 2014

IN THE NAME OF LOVE


Togier Berge Photographer, photo used with permission

In the eyes of the law, the fox kit was out of place, a weed, expendable. To me, his individual life was precious, his death arbitrary.
                                                                                          Priscilla Stuckey

All tremble at violence; all fear death. Putting oneself in the place of another, one should not kill nor cause another to kill.
                                                                                          Buddha

Fragmentation, competition, and reactiveness represent three key aspects of cultural dysfunction, in organizations and society. They are not just isolated behaviors but powerful strategies that have outlived their usefulness.
                                                                                          Peter Senge and Fred Kofman

     
The first quote broke me when I first read it. It broke me the third and the fourth times too. Broke through my sluggishness. Life expendable? Dylan has it right, “the answer is blowing in the wind.”

In Kissed By a Fox, Priscilla Stuckey writes of our western creation story that shaped a rupture in our understanding of the world. It is the separation story of mind split from body and spirit from matter. Tracking Descartes, Plato, Augustine, Malthus and Hobbes, Pricilla brings to light the western confabulated creation story, producing hosts of paradigms: humans steeped in original badness, (and there is nothing we can do about it); animals as unfeeling mechanistic forces; and the belief that if we cut ourselves from our bodily experience, heaven will redeem us. Well, “basta” on that.

History books and the media sirens are rampant with old embedded views, moldy cheese stories. Even the mice don’t want that cheese. Who Moved My Cheese? What I love about paradigms is that untruth can be released. Poof! Goodbye old world-views. Hello life connection!

“In the Andean story,” Priscilla writes, “humans as well as llamas, potatoes, maize, beans, ancestors, rains, and mountains all keep life running smoothly by loving and allowing themselves to be loved.” West African couple, Sobonfu and Malidoma, says that each child is raised knowing they were born to bring a special gift to the village.  Basil, Francis, Thoreau, Butterfly Hill and The Achuar found radiance in connection with our environment, taking stands to protect and honor Father Sun, Sister Moon and Mother Earth. Unlikely Loves written by Jennifer S. Holland chronicles animals who share love between species as they bear their special gifts.

Jennifer writes of Piper of Oklahoma, a Pit Bull, who was first responder in licking rejected baby goat back to life. “Piper and GP (Goat Puppy) were like Mother and Son after Piper revived the little goat that night.” Posed Paws, a group of pet photographers, posted this jewel of love between the species, http://posedpaws.ca/edmonton-pet-photographer/real-life-fox-and-the-hound-best-friends-will-melt-your-heart/. In 2010, the positive news media reported the story of Buddy the German Shepherd, that went viral. Buddy raced to get the lost Alaskan state trooper after Ben Heinrichs let Buddy out of their burning house. Once found, Buddy raced ahead, leading the trooper to the burning house and his family in need.

Martin Buber also got it right. We exist in relatedness. There is the I-Thou relationship. The Wind’s been blowing into a better creation story all along. Many of us are setting sail. The fox kit, indeed ALL life, is not expendable.

Togier Berge, Photographer, used with permission

3 comments:

Susan Swan said...

There is a great appeal to the belief all nature including rocks, trees and all vegetation are connected in oneness—all a part of a whole and each as valuable and important as the other. And we in the western world may have split ourselves too far away from nature and its real value, aliveness and beauty. We have been too caught up in our wants and desires and the profit motive.

The stories of the dog helping the baby goat live and others are wonderful and inspiring. There is a lot we can learn by opening our hearts to human one ness with nature and we need to be much more aware of the damage our lifestyles can do to our environment if we are to survive.

I also feel that we need to realize that with all the different beliefs there are certain things like war that are common to every race. Even before European invaders came to the Americas, Indians despite their belief in the oneness, of everything engaged in war with each other.

I think that to stop war and killing will take a belief that not only are we all one but that there is enough for us all to be able to live.

Conversations with Karla Boyd said...

Thanks for your thoughtful and reflective comments Susan... I believe you are offering the cure to the greed and the western world's movement away from nature --- by opening the human heart to oneness and being consciousness.

I also see a fresh perspective that by everyone having plenty on the planet there will be less fear and lack that will aid in peace being present in our world. Thank-you for your reflections.

Berit Helberg said...

Hello. This is the author of the book "Snusen & Tinni" and the composer of their song on the video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkYljPXqVoc
Could you please correct the name of the photografer? It's "Torgeir Berge."
Thank you :)
Berit Helberg