Archive for the ‘Aspen-Body Wisdom’ Category

Aspen-Body Wisdom Archive

November 4, 2008

The Santa Fe Sun Monthly (Nov. 2008) has just published Forbidden Knowledge and the Aspen-Body, Aspen Goldthe first version of which appeared on this blog as a post (see below for link). I’ve been looking however to take a larger look at the writing I’ve done on aspens, including on SAD (Sudden Aspen Decline), and this gathering of links is an initial step in that direction. My hope is that it might also help any who find their way here through the Sun’s publication, to discover more of the aspen’s medicine.

See a post to come shortly for an update on related off-site aspen links (SAD, ecology…).

Loneliness & Presence: What the Aspen Know, August 22, 2007

The Aspen Have Been Working Me Over, August 9, 2007

Forbidden Knowledge and the Aspen-Body, October 20, 2007

Aspen-Body Wisdom: Learning Journey Quotes, October 25, 2007

A Celebration of the Self: Wild Resiliency!, October 29, 2007

Learning From Nature’s Emergent Creativit: Margaret Wheatley and the Aspen Trees, October 31, 2007

Self-Love: A Radical Political Act, November 3, 2007

Intelligence in Nature: Chimps vs. Humans, December 8, 2007

Change Hardiness & Learning Agility: What the Aspen Know, January 6, 2008

S.A.D? Sudden Aspen Decline!, March 26, 2008

The Power of McCain’s Religious Worldviews, May 8, 2007

Interwoven Spiraling Dimensiions of Consciousness, July 22, 2008

Restoring the West 2008 — Aspen Restoration, August 4, 2008

To Think a Tree Might…Save Us From Ourselves? September 23, 2008

Bits of Wisdom From a Tree! September 17, 2008

What is the Most Important Question You Can Ask? October 25, 2008

A Walkabout into Collective Consciousness, October 27, 2008

Collective Consciousness, Wisdom and Intelligence Resource Links, October 27, 2008

A Walkabout into Collective Consciousness

October 27, 2008

There is a way that nature speaks, that land speaks. Most of the time we are simply not patient enough, quiet enough, to pay attention to the story.
— Linda Hogan, Native American author and poet

Look deep into nature
and then you will understand everything better.
— Albert Einstein

I recently participated in the Summer 2008 Presence Walkabout hosted by Glenna Gerard, renown for her work in the field of dialogue (Dialog: Rediscover the Transforming Power of Conversation, with coauthor Linda Ellinor). This Presence Walkabout was “intentionally focused on exploring the frontiers of collective consciousness and the ways in which our relationship with Land invites and facilitates this experience.”

The program’s invitation drew a delightful collection of diverse colleagues, 3 men and 4 women, and a couple of ‘virtual participants’. We quickly discovered our deeper shared interests and concerns: the personal and collective evolution of humanity and our love of Life, our love of the Land and of the Earth, our concern for these and for the state of the world—and who we are within it.

These shared concerns and passions emerged into view as we explored the initial questions proffered by Glenna:

  • What is consciousness?
  • What does it mean to ‘be conscious?’
  • What models of consciousness might inform our inquiry?
  • What is it for a group to create and experience a “collective” consciousness?
  • What practices might a group develop to nurture such a state of awareness and intelligence?
  • What role might the awareness of such a collective consciousness play in today’s emerging political and business world?

Our inquiry into collective consciousness was deepened by the by the demanding beauty of Northern New Mexico. Each day of our seven included an excursion into a landscape of enchantment, and non-religious but intentional invocations of its presence into our personal and collective consciousness. Glenna’s leadership, grounded in the land as it is, made these invitations of awareness artful and appropriate and without pretension. A meditative walk in the surreal Plaza Blanca setting near Georgia O’Keef’s Abique, a labyrinth walk, a visit to a pueblo ruin, a medicine wheel, circle listening… such ceremonies of calling intention into presence became gifts of simple ritual appreciated by all.

The embodiment of appreciation and gratitude rose early into our presence as practices to deepen our inquiry, as did the simple and yet profound practice of simply placing questions into the center of our circle without defaulting to a cultural need to respond or answer them. We also cultivated a practice of speaking into the center of our circle. The intention being that the contribution of one’s voice arise out of a listening to the deep-silence—a field of presence greater than the individual. Each voice thus held potential revelatory meaning and wisdom sourced from deeper than the speaker’s personality.

Also personally appreciated was the emergent recognition of “the requirement to support and maintain the integrity of the individual…as necessary to the constellation of the collective.” This bit of wild wisdom is also inherent and vital within the Aspen-Body Wisdom material that plays me, as is indeed are the themes of collective consciousness, collective intelligence, collective wisdom, somatic consciousness and embodiment….

Each of these themes, and their inherent tensions and polarities, might well begin and end with the question, “What, or who, is the self?”  Honoring this question and the polarities of tension between the individual and the collective, I have written elsewhere that Self-Love is a radical political act; this too is a timely bit of the Aspen’s wild wisdom.

The relevance to this Walkabout’s focus of collective consciousness is that the Aspen grove is the largest known individual life form on the planet, and the most widely dispersed tree in North America. Its abundance is largely due to the tree’s strategic cloning behavior off its root system.

This reproductive investment in shared rooting is a strategy for thrivability subsequent to forest fires; what is an environmental disruption and eco-shock for many others species can actually stimulate aspen’s root system into procreative sprouting. Entire mountainsides and landscapes of aspen trees that are in reality “one organism,” are witness to the strategy’s success.

Thus, a walk among the aspen trees may literally be a walk inside the ‘body of an organism.’ Yet one can look out upon that forest and perceive the leaf, or the tree, or the grove…as a self, as an individual, or as a collective consciousness.

This perceptual agility regarding the dimensionality of the ‘self’ only broadens and deepens as one considers the biological and symbiotic relationships of other mutually interdependent organisms, including squirrels, butterflies, birds, grasses, bacteria and fungi… just for starters. The medicine that aspens work within me, and that they offer us, is this mythic and ecological perspective of our own biological and ecological self-nature, indeed the very nature of our collectively interwoven consciousness.

Here is western science speaking on that consciousness, as it is present between aspens and various fungi, such as Aminita muscaria mushrooms.

In the ectomycorrhizal symbiosis between fungi and trees, the fungus completely ensheaths the tree roots and takes over water and mineral nutrient supply, while the plant supplies photosynthate. Recent work has focussed on…the role of mycorrhizal fungi in connecting individual plants to form a ‘wood-wide web’.
Verena Wiemken and Thomas Boller, Ectomycorrhiza: gene expression, metabolism and the wood-wide web

I suggest we are more like this “one biological entity” forest, this “wood-wide web” of connectivity and consciousness, than we are dissimilar.

The interwoven consciousness and ecology and history of New Mexico’s enchanting landscape, within which our walkabout was embedded, informed our inquiry into collective-consciousness the way Aspen groves carpet entire flanks of the local Jemez and Sangre de Cristo Mountains. The Ojo Caliente River, whose banks we met upon, did not divide the land but tied us to the mountains further north and to the Gulf of Mexico further south. The Rio Grande River we rafted connected us to the Rocky Mountains and the dynamic juncture of continental tectonic rifts and plates, and to the 4.5 billion year old fine vintage water in our own bodies. Highway 285’s ribbon of black asphalt tied us to people passing through, some from across distant oceans and speaking languages, that like English, are not native to the local Pueblo peoples, whose ancestors once lived and migrated across the soil we now sat and talked upon.

Like these resilient native people, we too looked to the yet older “first peoples” of the Cottonwoods and Willows, to Ant and Spider and Beaver and Raven and Snake…to see if we too might hear their indigenous voices and songs amidst our own. Each of us heard their singing in our own way, as we too heard our own and the chorus of our collective as well: each in our own way.

How could it be otherwise, but that we live and listen life, as a verb—each in our own way? And that we are also informed by and inform the collectives of community we are embedded within. These communities are the weavings of our relationships, whether we weave them unconsciously or choose to risk a tapestry of conscious relationship to them, to life itself.

Relationships are, after all, The Language of Life. We are each embodied living walking talking eating burping digesting desiring fearing loving sleeping and… yes…waking and awakening…paradoxical individual and collective selves. It is the nature of the self, and of the Self. As individuals, our self is woven of a collective consciousness the way a forest floor is woven of a mycelium web, a wood-wide web of symbiosis and reciprocity.

And as we weave our web of listening and perception…so too are we reciprocally woven. That human conscious arises out of and is embodied within this wood-wide-web of the starry universe implies that to consider our collective consciousness outside of the other than human landscape—is to diminish what it is to be human. This reciprocity is the nature of the consciousness of the world soul.

The only question that now comes to mind is this: “How consciously shall I (we) live this multiplicity and dimensionality of rooted Oneness, these wondrous lives we are embodied and embedded within?”

I for one am confident of the wild collective consciousness, the wild intelligence and wisdom that live within us, that is available to us, that flows in an unbroken linage from the birthing of the cosmos into me and into you. I am also confident that if we but risk opening ourselves to deep listening, if we but open ourselves to the wild resiliency of this heritage, we can and will create a world of our conscious desires rather than the shadow world of our unconscious fearing.

The choice is ours…for the claiming.

Selected Additional Resource Links:

This list became so long that I’ve moved it to a separate post. See Collective Consciousnesss, Wisdom and Intelligence Resource Links. Please feel free to suggest additons or to add your own in the comments.

What is the most important question you can ask?

October 25, 2008

Change is coming,

but is it a ripple in the water

or a convulsion of our sacred earth,

preparing to mourn our passing?

Nancy Wood, We Became as Mountains: Poems of the Pueblo Conquest

In such a time of change as ours, what is the most important question you can ask? Charles Eisenstein answers poignantly, “What is the most beautiful thing I can do?”

You can see how he gets to this question, and more of his wisdom, in the post excerpts below. It takes a strong courage and a clear seeing to recognize and acknowledge the deeper failures that are occurring systemically in western civilization. Eisenstein writes on this:

“On a personal level, the deepest possible revolution we can enact is a
revolution in our sense of self, in our identity. The discrete and
separate self of Descartes and Adam Smith has run its course and is
becoming obsolete. We are realizing our own inseparateness, from each
other and from the totality of all life.”

This bit of wild wisdom is the forbidden knowledge the aspens, and indeed all of nature, whispers into our ears as well.

Money and the Crisis of Civilization

…I think we all sense that we are nearing the end of an era. On the most superficial level, it is the era of unregulated casino-style financial manipulation that is ending. But the current efforts of the political elites to fix the crisis at this level will only reveal its deeper dimensions. In fact, the crisis goes “all the way to the bottom.” It arises from the very nature of money and property in the world today, and it will persist and continue to intensify until money itself is transformed. A process centuries in the making is in its final stages of unfoldment.

In the face of the impending crisis, people often ask what they can do to protect themselves. “Buy gold? Stockpile canned goods? Build a fortified compound in a remote area? What should I do?” I would like to suggest a different kind of question: “What is the most beautiful thing I can do?” You see, the gathering crisis presents a tremendous opportunity. Deflation, the destruction of money, is only a categorical evil if the creation of money is a categorical good.

…Where there is no money to facilitate transactions, gift economies reemerge and new kinds of money are created. …this is going to happen anyway in the wake of a currency collapse, as people lose their jobs or become too poor to buy things. People will help each other and real communities will reemerge.

In the meantime, anything we do to protect some natural or social resource from conversion into money will both hasten the collapse and mitigate its severity. Any forest you save from development, any road you stop, any cooperative playgroup you establish; anyone you teach to heal themselves, or to build their own house, cook their own food, make their own clothes; any wealth you create or add to the public domain; anything you render off-limits to the world-devouring machine, will help shorten the Machine’s lifespan. Think of it this way: if you already do not depend on money for some portion of life’s necessities and pleasures, then the collapse of money will pose much less of a harsh transition for you. The same applies to the social level. Any network or community or social institution that is not a vehicle for the conversion of life into money will sustain and enrich life after money.

In previous essays I have described alternative money systems, based on mutual credit and demurrage, that do not drive the conversion of all that is good, true, and beautiful into money. These enact a fundamentally different human identity, a fundamentally different sense of self, from what dominates today. No more will it be true that more for me is less for you. On a personal level, the deepest possible revolution we can enact is a revolution in our sense of self, in our identity. The discrete and separate self of Descartes and Adam Smith has run its course and is becoming obsolete. We are realizing our own inseparateness, from each other and from the totality of all life. Interest denies this union, for it seeks growth of the separate self and the expense of something external, something other. Probably everyone reading this essay agrees with the principles of interconnectedness, whether from a Buddhistic or an ecological perspective. The time has come to live it. It is time to enter the spirit of the gift, which embodies the felt understanding of non-separation. It is becoming abundantly obvious that less for you (in all its dimensions) is also less for me. The ideology of perpetual gain has brought us to a state of poverty so destitute that we are gasping for air. That ideology, and the civilization built upon it, is what is collapsing today.

Individually and collectively, anything we do to resist or postpone the collapse will only make it worse. So stop resisting the revolution in human beingness. If you want to survive the multiple crises unfolding today, do not seek to survive them. That is the mindset of separation; that is resistance, a clinging to a dying past. Instead, allow your perspective to shift toward reunion, and think in terms of what you can give. What can you contribute to a more beautiful world? That is your only responsibility and your only security. The gifts you need to survive and enjoy will come to you easily, because what you do to the world, you do to yourself.

Notes and Links:

Charles Eisenstein is author of The Ascent of Humanity: Civilization and the Human Sense of Self

Money: a Transformative Agent — wisdom from Lynn Twist, author of Soul of Money: Reclaiming the Wealth of our Inner Resources, founder of Soul of Money Institute

Bits of Wisdom from a Tree!

September 17, 2008

Lichen Boulder in Aspen

“Many men go through life as though they wore horse blinders or were sleepwalking. Their eyes are open, yet they see nothing of their many wild neighbors. Their ears, attuned to motorcars and traffic, seldom detect the music of nature – the singing of birds, frogs, or crickets, or the wind in the leaves. There men, biologically illiterate, often fancy themselves well informed, perhaps sophisticated. They know business trends, or politics, yet haven’t the faintest ideas of ‘what makes the world go round.’” — Roger Tory Peterson

I often speak of aspens these days as being “medicine for our time” pricisely because they can teach us of “what makes the world go round.” They can teach us of ‘change hardiness and of learning agility,’ of ‘the wholeness of a self,’ of ‘the ethics of wholeness in a fragmented world’ and more.

The following ‘bits of wisdom‘, of biological literacy, were generated for a recent presentation at the Four Corners WholeExpo in Durango, CO.

Aspens: Ancient Wisdom for Thriving in Challenging Times
Lessons from the Aspen Grove

1.    We are more ‘like’ the aspens, more like a forest in the nature of our self, than we are ‘unlike.’ The patterns in nature are the same as in our own bodies.

2.    We are a diverse multitude of One!

3.    Relationships are the Language of Life! (Mutual Coherency, symbiosis, mutualism, predator, prey…)

4.    The Self is an ecological construct.

5.    Living systems network and self-organize around nurturance and/or threats, around “blissed or pissed.”

6.    We are embedded in an intelligent and communicating world.

7.    The failures of adaptation and transformation are real. (Eco-shock and eco-trauma lead to a diminished quality of life if not to extinction itself.)

8.    Eco-recovery and eco-restoration are also real. Life wants to happen. The River of Life supports our orientation toward wellness, hardiness and wholeness (bio-tropism).

9.    The resilience and health of a system paradoxically resides in the integrity of its component member systems and in their wholeness. (Note that increases in system efficiency are often losses in system resilience however. [↑ efficiency = ↓ resilience])

10.    The wholeness of a Self resides in its connectivity, its connect-ability. (To support the healing of an ecosystem [self], reconnect it to its component parts, its larger self: i.e. restoring healthy fire regimes to our forests, wolves to Yellowstone….)

11.    Investment in one’s (wild) resilience is an investment in eco-shock/eco-trauma proofing one’s Self; it is an investment in thrive-ability.

12.    The resources of collective intelligence and collective wisdom, analogous to the rooting and mycelium resources of the Aspen lying underground, are likewise available to us personally and collectively, waiting but our cultivation and nurturance.

God Bless My Friends And My Enemy

God Bless My Friends And My Enemy

13.    Letting Go! The aspens’ dropping of leaves and branches that no longer serve… the return to soil… the surrendering to Life and to Death….

14.    The wild ethics of wholeness in a fragmented world.

To Think a Tree Might…Save Us From Ourselves?

September 3, 2008

It’s absurd to think a tree might teach us how to live more joy filled lives, let alone how we might save us from ourselves. Of course it is.

Unless, unless of course the tree in question might be the metaphorical Tree of Life. But such a tree as that is to be found only within the fantasies of our imagination, like the mythical Fountain of Youth or the fabled Cities of Gold so…

So thought some scientists in Africa who were studying Acacia trees and discovered that Relationships are the Language of Life. Surely this is the trail of apparently forbidden knowledge and wild wisdom, the biognosis, Albert Einstein pointed to:

Look deep into nature and then you will understand everything better.

So too I have come to experience that mystical Tree of Life as being embodied and closer to us than I ever believed possible as a youth. Now I know that, as George Washington Carver said:

Anything will talk to you if you love it enough.

So while some may find the Garden’s Gate through a holy book and others through perhaps—even a rock, the Aspen Tree, the Aspen Grove, they too provide us with an open and indigenous portal into the primal and essential nature of our own being—if we are but willing to look. Of course to do so will result in a revisioning of the nature of the self, of what it is to be human, of indeed the texture of the world itself so… so the risks are high.

On the other hand, or perhaps, more appropriately, on the other branch, perhaps we have everything to gain and nothing to lose by discovering that we do indeed belong, that Relationships are the Language of Life. It might change…everything: for in that wisdom lies the capacities for balance, adaptation and transformation. Yes, for peace making too, with all our relations.

In the spirit of this I am returning to blogging about Aspens. Until I’m able to gather past and coming posts into a planned ebooklet, you can view them in the Aspen-Body Wisdom Archives. Also, I will be presenting Aspens! Ancient Wisdom for Thriving in Challenging Times in Durango, CO, September 7, 2008, at the Whole Expo: The Four Corners Holistic Health & Ecological Conference and Exposition.

My fall/winter workshop schedule will be finalized shortly and I appreciate whatever help might be available to arrange presentations and workshops. You can sign up to be notified of these through the Be Well! Stay Wild! newsletter form at wildresiliency.com.

Coming soon is a longer video on Aspens! Change Hardiness and Learning Agility. Coming sooner, What We Can Learn From a Tree: Aspen Lessons.

Restoring the West 2008 — Aspen Restoration

August 4, 2008
Frontiers in Aspen Restoration

Restoring the West Conference 2008: Frontiers in Aspen Restoration

I too often find myself not posting anything to this blog because I’ve not had time for some creative piece of writing… Yet I also often find myself overloaded with provocative resources and opportunities that I’d love to pass on. So I’m going to try focusing on sharing more of these resiliency resources and opportunities as a way of cleaning off my desk a bit. Here’s one for all lovers of Aspens and the Wisdom they carry.

RESTORING THE WEST CONFERENCE 2008:
Frontiers in Aspen Restoration
September 16 – 18, 2008
Utah State University
Logan, Utah

“Interest in western aspen forests and their restoration and management remains high. This year we will build on the foundation laid by this conference in September 2006 where we discussed aspen management and restoration efforts going on throughout the West. We will cover aspen biology and ecology, possible effects of climate change on aspen forests, trends in aspen management, monitoring, human dimensions of aspen ecosystems, and other topics. It will appeal to managers and researchers, including public and private land managers, landowners, and others. This year’s conference will include two full days (the 16th and 17th) of invited presentations with a poster session, and a final half day of roundtables/workshops to discuss how best to move aspen restoration efforts forward. A meeting of the Western Aspen Alliance will follow at 1:30 pm and is open to all who are interested. Anyone can propose a poster presentation; please visit our website at www.restoringthewest.org for instructions on submitting a poster presentation.

This conference is organized and sponsored by Utah State University (Ecology Center, Wildland Resources Department, College of Natural Resources, and Cooperative Extension), the Western Aspen Alliance, and USDA-Forest Service Rocky Mountain Research Station and State & Private Forestry.”

Interwoven Spiraling Dimensions of Consciousness!

July 22, 2008

I exist-as interwoven spiraling dimensions of consciousness. This ‘I’ is a complexity of entangled webs, woven of but one golden thread of essence. It is the challenge of following and identifying that thread, that essential identity, that core of being that embeds all others, that is the ‘I’ this self seeks to identify here.

For many years ‘I’ thought ‘I’ was my beliefs. Despite encountering the Buddhist mantra of “I am not my beliefs…” perhaps some thirty years ago now, I cannot say ‘I’ am yet free of petty self-identifications with my beliefs. I can still go into a reaction of self-defense when someone attacks a belief I unconsciously seem to cherish as part of my identity.

Somewhere along Life’s journey ‘I’ encountered the thinking that if perhaps, I am not my beliefs, maybe it is my attitudes that are closer to my essence. And so here too, in my attachments to the positive attitudes that cultivate a happy life, was yet another web-of-identity: “I am a good man!”

“I will have positive beliefs.” “I am the master of my own destiny.” “I deserve a good life.” “The Universe wants me to be happy…” Boy, can those affirmations ever weave a tangled web-of-identifications!

Then too, there is the identity-web of memories, of personal history. This is a sticky web in which it is easy to become lost in one’s own story, a particularized version that selectively emphasizes certain aspects or events while excluding other perspectives on the same.

My version begins thus: “Yes, I am the son of a preacher man. My father was a hellfire and brimstone evangelist and an abusive man. I was suicidal in the third grade….”

The problem with this story of ‘I’ however, is that it keeps me imprisoned within a victim’s identity. Even though, as an adult, ‘I’ and you know I no longer live under my father’s roof and am now free to be my own man.

Still, to begin the story of ‘I’ through the lens of this early spiritual and physical abuse is, well, it is a web like the Black Widows’. The story is sticky and messy and difficult to untangle the golden thread out of.

So it is that our stories, like our memories, are yet another interwoven spiraling dimension of our consciousness. But they are not who we are. They are not our essence. No. Not the personal ones nor the collective ones, the tribal ones nor the identifications we share with professional sports teams or the churches to which we go to or the political parties we belong to or….

Hindu tradition, through the Rig Veda, gifts us with the image of Indra’s Net, as a way of imaging who this essential ‘I’ might be. This version I found in Meg Wheatley’s Turning to One Another, which is a wonderful resource and is there attributed to Anne Adams.

There is an endless net of threads throughout
the universe…
At every crossing of the threads there is
an individual.
And every individual is a crystal bead.
And every crystal bead reflects
not only the light from every
other crystal in the net
but also every other reflection
throughout the entire universe.

This too, is the Forbidden Knowledge the wild wisdom of the Aspen-Body invites us into. It is the soul of the world, the soul of our own Being, the collective intelligence and wild wisdom of which we are… and are not separate from. This experience and knowledge too, is the golden thread that can lead us down the path of Thrivability.

As one resource, there is a provocative reflection on Indra’s Web at http://www.heartspace.org/misc/IndraNet.html

Also, for a longer and beautiful read go to Anima Mundi: Awakening the World Soul, by Llewellyn Vaughan-Lee, at http://www.goldensufi.org/A-AnimaMundi.html

SAD? Sudden Aspen Decline!

March 26, 2008

Our treasured Aspens across the West are facing SAD (Sudden Aspen Decline.)Aspen Vista, Santa Fe, NM Utah and Colorado have lost over 50% of their Aspens in the last few years; Arizona lost over 90% of theirs in but three years. And what of ours in New Mexico? Are they, like our forests and mountains and rivers and deserts and diverse cultures, not part of who we are, part of our very identity?

This issue of identity, of what it means to be human, is critical to our future and to the future of the aspens as well. The pragmatic cleverness of the human mind can and will do much to help us meet the enormous challenges we face, but it is this same cleverness of mind that created today’s problems. Something more is required to envision us into a world Beyond Sustainability – into Restoration and Re-Creation, into Thrive-ability.

The Aspen Grove, as the world’s largest known individual life form, offers us aAspen Road primal and imaginative window into our own deep identity and nature, and into a dynamic vision of a world of thrive-ability. As medicine for our time, aspens invite us into the vital experience and knowledge of our wholeness; this is a radical affirmation of the sensorial resources of deep satisfaction, pleasure, and joy as guides into our evolutionary future.

It is my belief that aspens are an iconic image for the fragmented world we find ourselves awakening within, and for the deeper wholeness we are innately also part of. To walk among them, to lay on the ground above their rooting, staring at a blue sky and bathing in the forest odors, is to experience being inside the body of an organism!!!

Aspens even provide my home state of NM with a major influx of tourism dollars.Aspen Leaf And the ecological value they provide for wildlife and for domestic forage is likewise significant. And yet it is relatively unknown that they, like the polar bear and other iconic species, that the aspens are in trouble.

I believe that the sudden decline of aspens across the west offers us an opportunity to tap our common love of aspens for the well being of our wholeness. To this end, I am interested in creating partnerships… hence I recently presented at the Western Region ASERVIC Conference (New Mexico Association for Spiritual, Ethical and Religious Values in Counseling), at the New Mexico Heritage Preservation Alliance Conference in Taos, and will be offering a free public multimedia presentation tomorrow night in Santa Fe Soul, as well as several upcoming Forest Quest Day Hikes and other workshops.

Below are a selected list of links that will lead one to additional information regarding aspens and their ecology, including SAD, as well as a few of my own posts on Aspen-Body Wisdom.

Aspen Delineation Project
http://www.aspensite.org/index.html
Aspen Ecology in the Western US: 2004 Managing Aspen in the Western Landscape Conference
http://extension.usu.edu/forestry/UtahForests/Aspen_WayneShepperd.htm
Fading Gold: The Decline of Aspen in the West
http://www.fs.fed.us/wildflowers/communities/aspen/index.shtml
Managing Aspen in Western Landscapes Conference 2004
http://extension.usu.edu/forestry/UtahForests/ForestTypes_04AspenConference.htm
Restoring the West Conference 2006: Aspen Restoration
http://extension.usu.edu/forestry/UtahForests/RTW2006/RTW2006.htm
The Unplanned Organization: Lessons from Nature’s Emergent Creativity, Margaret Wheatley
http://www.margaretwheatley.com/articles/unplannedorganization.html
Aspen-Body Wisdom Quotes
http://wildresiliencyblog.wordpress.com/2007/10/25/aspen-body-wisdom-learning-journey-quotes/
Change Hardiness and Learning Agility: What the Aspen Know
http://wildresiliencyblog.wordpress.com/2008/01/06/change-hardiness-learning-agility-what-the-aspen-know/
Forbidden Knowledge and the Aspen-Body
http://wildresiliencyblog.wordpress.com/2007/10/20/forbidden-knowledge-and-the-aspen-body/

Change Hardiness & Learning Agility: What the Aspen Know

January 6, 2008

It is not without reason that Aspen Trees are so universally loved and mythicallyBrian Tracy’s Aspen woven into human history. Anyone who has ever walked within an Aspen Grove knows something of the silence and deep sense of presence that can be experienced there; and it was a crown woven of Aspen leaves that protected Hercules in his escape from the Underworld.

Now it turns out that the Aspen Grove, not the gigantic fungus we once thought, is the largest individual organism known on the planet. Renowned organizational consultant Margaret Wheatly lists, along with termite mounds and chemical reactions, the Aspen Grove as one of three images that changed her life, her worldview.

Margaret writes about Aspens as an image of self-organizing systems and what we can learn from them. And yet I believe, and I’m confident she would agree, she only begins to open the windows of perception as to what we might be capable of learning from Aspens.

Aspens, you see, have an enormous amount to teach us about not only self-organizing systems and about Presence, and about the Power of Arrival, but also about the very nature of what it is to be ‘a Self.’ Yes! About our Wholeness and what it means to be human, a Human Being, and even about what it is to thrive as a business—in a world of uncertainty.

These trees can teach us business and personal strategies for thriving through times of ecological disruption, about change hardiness and learning agility: two valuable traits for any business or person to cultivate in times such as ours. They can teach us such strategies precisely because they have already pioneered the way through times of environmental fragmentation and disintegration.

In Turing to One Another, Margaret writes of our human fragmentation:

Most cultural traditions have a story to explain why human life is so hard, why there is so much suffering on earth. The story is always the same-at some point early in our human origin, we forgot that we were all connected. We broke apart, we separated from each other. We even fragmented inside ourselves, disconnecting heart from head from spirit. These stories always teach that healing will only be found when we remember our initial unity and reconnect the fragments.

I suggest that thrive-ability, that business models integrating a vision of possibilities ‘beyond sustainability’, will also, as Margaret suggests, “only be found when we remember our initial unity and reconnect the fragments.” This is what the Aspen can help us re-member.

It is not that our management models have failed to keep pace with the emergent times, as Gary Hamil suggests in The Future of Management:

Yet unlike the laws of physics, the laws of management are neither foreordained nor eternal – and a good thing, too, for the equipment of Management is now groaning under the strain of a load it was never meant to carry. Whiplash change, fleeting advantages, technological disruptions, seditious competitors, fractured markets, omnipotent customers, rebellious shareholders – these 21 first century challenges are testing the design limits of organizations around the world and are exposing the limitations of a management model that has failed to keep pace with the times.

I suggest instead that our management and leadership and business and community models have simply failed to meet the world ‘as it is’. They are fundamentally incongruent with Our Ground of Being; and that is why we are self-destructing. We are still, predominately, operating out of models of reality that see humanity as the ‘center of the universe,’ and this is a circumstance not solved by technology’s ever and ever-greater efficiencies of production.

A different world awaits but our ‘dreaming,’ and the Aspens can point the way!

For additional information see the post on this blog: Forbidden Knowledge and the Aspen Body

The Renewal Group Sponsored Tele-Conference Note: Join me in a free lively, provocative, and inspirational conversation: Aspen Body Wisdom – Change Hardiness and Learning Agility.

Logistics: Friday, January 11, 2008, 12:00 to 1:00 PM EST

Conference call number 605-475-4333 Access #: 858616

No cost to participate. Long distance charges will be billed to your carrier.

Intelligence in Nature: Chimps vs. Humans

December 8, 2007

I escaped to a remote mountain cabin (1900bps on the modem) for a few days. The human intelligence represented by civilization’s progress was getting to be too much for me. Besides, I was looking for my Self too, as I’m often known to do. The sucker just seems to runaway on me a lot.

It can be hard to keep a Self at home you know. At least mine is that way. You try to train ‘em right, to be civilized and all, to not think forbidden thoughts or go wandering off to where ever they please but…. Too much wonder or joy is a dangerous thing you know; a Self ought to stay within the boundaries of the corral.

War is good for us! Remember? Helps the economy and gives us peace. Eventually. Maybe. In some people’s dreams, it seems.

But if you find yourself frustrated or pissed off or anxious, well go shopping and buy something for Christ sake. It’s your patriotic American duty! And we know who said so, huh George.

And if you see a homeless person wandering down the street, don’t look into their eyes whatever you do; it’s not good for ‘em. Might make ‘em think you care enough to give them a devalued $20. Worse, looking into their eyes might even just… make your heart hurt.

Dead Horse Juniper, UTAnd if we need to drill for more oil and gas on what little remains of our ‘pristine and sacred public lands,’ like Nine Mile Canyon in Utah, why God made for ‘em to be governed by the “multiple use” principle you know; every extractive industry deserves an equal right to their abuse. Besides, a Self can get lost out in those wild places if they’re not careful. One might even get all inspired and start thinking they’re worth saving.

Or even worse yet , God forbid, one might start to think the ‘other than human world’ possesses a dignity of its own, or even an intelligence… equal to… in its own way… human intelligence?

Take the recent reality research reported on in the journal Current Biology, with a link here to the Science News Story: Chimp Aces Memory Test: Outscores People.

Turns out that when a 5-year old Chimp was pitted against adult humans in a short-term memory test, yep, the Chimp won. See for yourself.

That challenges the belief of many people, including many scientists, that ‘humans are superior to chimpanzees in all cognitive functions,’ said researcher Tetsuro Matsuzawa of Kyoto University.

No fooling! You’d think, by our civilized attitude toward the other than human world, that we consider the making of nuclear bombs to be a mark of intelligence. And as if the capacity to blow ourselves up once wasn’t enough to prove our IQ, we made another, and then another 26,000 more, and now our old growth forests and wild lands are but endangered remnants as well. And now too, the outlook for our oceans is bleak as sea ‘deserts’ grow.

And we’re debating whether it’s OK to torture our enemies? Like we got nothing better to do than torture people? After signing international treaties and declaring and prosecuting it as an international war crime for all these years, how did we ever come to think of torture as a national policy even worthy of debate?

Get back in the corral yall!

And how did we ever come to think of torture as a worthy Presidential strategy against terrorism?

Stop thinking like an Enemy Combatant!

You’d think we’d lost sight of… our Selves or something. Like maybe they just got too domesticated and started believing what they were being fed. And once they’re in the feedlot, it does get hard to tell ‘em apart. They do all start to look alike and think the same after all, once they start eating that Fear Food.

Be careful what you eat is what I say! If you don’t get out and eat and drink some of that wild clean old growth forest air while we still got some left… if you don’t go stare in wonder and amazement at the ancient Anasazi petroglyphs in Nine Mile Canyon before they sink those oil and gas wells there, you’ll never hear than kind of silence again. It’ll be gone. Just like the polar bears.

And your Self, and those of your grandchildren, you’ll never again get the chance to remember how to wander out of the corral and into the dark forest, and how to think for your self.

Yep. We’re still writing that old story of human intelligence: Can we learn in time? Are we willing to transform our collective consciousness and to claim the personal responsibility of freedom?

Am I willing to transform my personal consciousness and to lay claim to the freedom of that responsibility?

Nothing I might write here however can come close to the poetic eloquence of Red Hawk (Robert Moore), from his book The Art of Dying, so I’ll stand aside.

THE PROBLEM WITH HUMAN INTELLIGENCE

Easter Island is a remarkable place
not only for its giant stone statues,
one thousand of them, each weighing
18 tons and standing 15 feet tall, but

also for its fossil pollen record and
what it tells us about Human Beings.
Easter Island is completely treeless
but the fossil pollen tells us that

a fruit palm tree flourished on Easter Island
for thousands of years and the decline of that species
began about 1200 years ago and continued for
several hundred years until the tree became extinct.

1200 years ago is when the Humans came to Easter Island.
If you stand on the island’s highest point
you can see nearly the entire island so
the people knew what they were doing:

systematically they were destroying their paradise
and the man who cut the last tree, the very thing
he depended upon for his survival,
knew it was the last tree standing and

he cut it anyway.

The more clearly we can focus our attention on the wonders and realities of the universe, the less taste we shall have for destruction. — Rachel Carson

Go talk to the Aspen Trees for Christ ‘s sake! They know the forbidden knowledge, that all our great problems are but symptoms of the same wound, the very same personal and collective wound: our self’s experience of separation from Self, from our very Nature, and so from our neighbor too.

Or try staring into the eyes of a Chimp, a wild one preferably, as if you were looking into a mirror. There is, after all, only about a one percent genetic difference between us and humans!

And there is less than that between humans and their human enemies!