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Archive for RestoringWholeness – Page 14

Bioneers ~ Day2

Ok, I’m hooked.

Day 2 at BIoneers was bliss from beginning to end. Maybe it’s just the luck of the draw in choosing from the rich bounty offered beyond the plenaries, but I thoroughly enjoyed myself all day…

I’d still like to see a more open format for the break-out sessions, but I did notice how much personal interaction & networking was happening on the grounds between sessions, and how well connection is fostered in the range of evening opportunities offered. There is a lot of vitality here, and the organic integration of age and race is truly remarkable.

Again, the plenary was spectacular (btw, these plenary sessions are all available as downloadable mp3s or CDs online in the Bioneers store – they’re sold individually or as a set), starting with the impressive young Clayton Thomas Müeller from the Indigenous Environmental Network
who began by asking permission to speak from the ancestors of the
peoples of this land, saying "I come here humbly, in a good way."

This gentle but powerful beginning was followed by a hard-hitting challenge from Thomas Linzey, co-founder of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund, leveled at the efficacy of Regulatory Acts, which only regulate the flow of destruction, and the assumption that our environmental efforts are made within a democracy, where the majority rules.

To illustrate this last point, Linzey took us back to our legal system’s roots in English property law, showing that it was created to secure the expansion of empire, & based on the protection of property – favoring the rights of a small group of nobles against the majority of possible dissentors at home. He went on to quote John Adams and other authors of the Constitution, our ‘founding fathers’, revealing their priviledging of the power elite over the rights of the people (which back then of course did not include women, or people of color). Rather than being the product of democracy, Linzey asserts, we are actually living in a corporate state.

The hits just kept coming… Linzey was followed by Carl Anthony, past director of the Earth Island Institute who was likened by the woman who introduced him to the "mountain" that June Jordon called on to describe Martin Luther King. She left the stage in tears, deeply moved by the importance of this powerful black man in the white dominated field of the environmental movement. And this charistmatic black man was indeed instrumental in bringing the threads of justice, race, and class issues to the fore and weaving them into the warp of environmentalism, in the service of making it relevant to all peoples.

Anthony projected a wonderful film about the origins of human beings, which unveiled the centrality of the black race in that history and showed how we can all learn from the lessons we see reflected there.

Anthony was follwed by an Amy Goodman, on fire with her message about the need for independent media and the importance of protecting it – including the crucial importance of net neutrality. She went on to blast the White House Press Corp, who she called the ‘Access of Evil – trading access for truth’, and media giants who have favored profits and the protection of the powerful over the sacred oaths of their profession.

I think Amy Goodman has matured beautifully – in the past I’ve had trouble with what I’ve perceived as her tendency to create or stir polarity and opposition, rather than provide true neutrality or even better, find a perspective that would foster more positive results, but today I was struck by her deeply compassionate humanity, and her obvious service towards making a better world.

The afternoon sessions I chose were both just amazing experiences…

Most striking was the first, called ‘Women’s Leadership in Transforming Culture’. Maybe it was the smaller panel (Sarah Crowell, Susan Griffith, Sofia Quintero & Joanna Macy) or maybe the skill of the moderator (Akaya Windwood), or maybe it was the easy cooperation between the panelists, or the fact they they were all women, but this session really flowed with energy and creativity and true interaction. The talk went deep & got personal; it brought several people close to tears, and it brought in the ‘co-madres’ in the audience so that we all felt a part of it and knew the power of women’s leadership in our own bones and hearts.

The second, ‘Nature, God, and String Theory’ with Brian Swimme, Leonard Susskind and Mary Evelyn Tucker, moderated by Bokara Legendre, was much more abstract and to tell the truth I could barely follow Susskind’s over-simplified presentation on string theory but it was fascinating to see these great minds grapple with the big questions.

Bokara is obviously a professional and she did a brilliant job of keeping the conversation lively, posing several provocative questions and calling on the expertise of Science, Religion & Cosmology (represented by each of the panelists) for answers to the great mysteries.

I resonated most deeply with ME Tucker’s learned expositions of religious and philosophic interpretations of our origins, particularly Confucianism’s placing of the human in the cosmology of heaven and earth. Over and over she was succinct in her responses, and poetic without losing objectivity.

There was an interesting point in this deeply astute and knowledgable discourse when no one countered Susskind’s assertion that mathematics was chosen as the language of reality because it was the only logical option, and I had to agreed with his own admission to being a ‘killjoy’ when he responded to a question about whether the universe is alive by dryly asking for a definition of ‘alive’.

But I loved the session, even though Swimme was strangely reticent to speak to a number of Legendre’s questions, or say much of anything beyond his inital assertion of the magic of life and how beautiful the world is from all perspectives – which was plenty for me, by the way – and it occurred to me that there might be some academic politics at play here.

All in all a wonderful day, and I’m very much looking forward to this next, last one… and to following the ripples from this event’s vast seeding for good.

>> Next: Day Three…

Bioneers

A very cool side-effect of attending the legendary Bioneers conference this year is witnessing the dawn light outside my window – I can just see the last sliver of the waning moon each morning as I wake up in enough time to get ready & drive over the bridge.

I was really excited to be sitting in the audience as it began yesterday morning. Bioneers is one of those gatherings that several thousand people hold as a sacred yearly ritual, and the warm welcome from co-producers Nina Simons & Ken Ausubel made me feel that I would definitely be one of them in the future.

Plus, from a professional standpoint, I am thrilled by the whole Beaming Bioneers concept they’ve pioneered, of broadcasting the conference plenary sessions into 18 US cities (from Anchorage, Alaska to Marion, Massechusetts) via video satellite, to be presented along with relevant on-the-ground sessions offered by their local partners. This seems like a great model for the future.

Nina summed up the Bioneers ethos "It’s all alive; it’s all intelligent; it’s all connected;
we’re all relatives" as she congratulated us in our
collective efforts to write ‘a new co-creation story’ and the
conference was of to a fabulous start.

The plenary sessions didn’t
disappoint, and two of the five particularly moved me. The first was a stunning presentation/performance by the students of DestinyArts, a spoken word/dance/movement center run by the spectacularly cool Sarah Crowell. The kids were amazing, and I have to say that lots of us aging idealists pronounce our desire to include and attract younger people in our projects and organizations, but Bioneers puts its programming and love and attention where it needs to be to actually make that happen – this audience had a huge percentage of people under 30, and the energy was HOT.

Besides my body’s response to the beat of these vibrant dancers, my heart & mind were both extremely responsive to Sarah, whose presentation was entitled "The Courage to Walk in Beauty". She began with an invitation for us to turn to the people around us and introduce ourselves, recognizing the beauty we saw reflected there & then speaking it out loud, and went on to talk about how she uses this recognition of beauty in each other to help these kids take "big wide strides with ‘I belong here’ in them. She ended by saying "Let us not be a generation that is afraid to look into each other’s eyes and find something beautiful there…" Now this is a girl whose message I LIKE.

The next plenary session I was so struck by was given by the gifted psychologist & thinker James Hillman. He was urbane, clever, articulate and at ease even when wayward snippets of broadcasting verbiage kept finding their way into the sound system (he just addressed them like they were garbled voices in our heads or something. 🙂 He delivered a beautifully drawn short essay; his main point being that as thinking beings we have criticised all the ‘positives’ out of our lives – one can no longer make a positive statement without needing to justify it – in today’s sophisticated intellect everything is polarized and presented as oppositional. He gave a long list of examples, saying it is time we went beyond the binaries of current thought, back to Aristotle and the ‘excluded middle’ to return some nuance to our understandings of reality.

Like the Coyote Trickster figure of Native American mythology, he encouraged us to turn everything we know upside down, just to see what it looks like. Instead of bemoaning the fact that America is a nation of adoloescents and youth-obsession, let’s throw our money & energy into the youth – for education, for health care. Let school begin at 10:30 or 11 to follow their natural sleep pattern rather than force them into a schedule that works for administrators and building cleaners.

He went on in this vein for some time, playing a sort of devil’s advocate hand, suggesting that rather than be upset by the apparent apathy & lack of national political interest in electing our highest offices, we do what Americans are best at and ‘drop out’, simply ignore what we know is corrupt and not worth our time, and not show up for those elections. Instead, he championed those cities who have taken the lead on issues like climate change, fuel emissions, human rights, minimum wage, etc. rather than let the national government set the agenda & limits.

I was a little disappointed during a later session where he was meant to be presenting on something called "When Stories Change, the World Changes" as part of a small panel, but as it turned out there were so many panelists that he only had 10 minutes to briefly share his thoughts on the narrative models our current stories are based upon – Christianism, Scienceism, and Economics, and as a whole, the session never did get around to actually discussing how changing our stories might change the world.

Ah well, Hillman’s exemplary plenary session alone was good enough to justify the price of Friday’s ticket.

I was very disappointed by a session on "Internet Interventions & Cyberspace Strategies", however. Maybe it’s just a case of knowing too much, but with some notable exceptions, I found the presentation a bit patronizing, and there were several things that as I thought about it, I found downright objectionable.

One of them was the fact that proprietary products were recommended without any acknowledgement of that fact, or other choices as an attempt to be objective. Another was the way that open source applications are casually referred to as ‘free’ without clarification. I’m afraid I rather traumatized the otherwise quite nice young presenter from Drupal by cornering him afterward with my demand he admit that in truth he or some other programmer would change several thousand dollars to install it, which would otherwise be impossible for a layman (or even someone quite experienced in codes other than PhP & MySQL) to do. He did admit it, so I let him go. 😉 No really, from the heat that came up for me in that encounter it’s clear there is a lot more I want to say about this whole subject, so I’ll be addressing that in a future post.

I hate to end this report on such a negative note when I started out so filled with love & happiness :-), but the truth was I found the ‘old style’ conference model (that my experience at Bioneers so far would seem to suggest they’re still following) a bit underwhelming. I’m much more excited by the newer Conference 2.0 models of more open interaction with the presenters and among the audience, which in this case especially is full of amazing people doing amazing things.

But it’s getting late – time to go off to my 2nd day now… I’ll report back on my further adventures later.

>> Next: Day Two…

Violence

Glory
"The rush and pressure of modern life are a form, perhaps the most common form, of innate violence. To allow oneself to be carried away by a multitude of conflicting concerns, to surrender to too many demands, to commit oneself to too many projects, to want to help everyone in everything is to succumb to violence.

More than that, it is cooperation with violence. The frenzy of the activist neutralizes his work for peace. It destroys her own inner capacity for peace. It destroys the fruitfulness of his own work because it kills the root of inner wisdom which makes work fruitful."

~ Thomas Merton

Never Shout at a Bear

This is the introduction to a true story about a dear friend of mine, Pele Rouge of Resonance, and her profound encounter with a bear while living in the wilderness a few years ago. It’s a fabulous story, written for children, about the wisdom of nature and it’s available now on DVD (the book will be out next year).

The DVD itself is absolutely beautiful, narrated by Pele with music by Gentle Thunder & illustrations by Finnish artist Outi Kuma – I recommend you pick one up for all your beauty-loving friends, but definitely get one for all the children you know because their young hearts & minds, especially, will thrive on nature’s truth, and this will touch them directly.