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A Solstice Approaches, Unnoticed
ONCE, HUMANS were intimate with the cycles of nature, and never more than on the summer solstice. Vestiges of such awareness survive in White Nights and Midnight Sun festivals in far northern climes, and in neo-pagan adaptations of Midsummer celebrations, but contemporary people take little notice of the sun reaching its far point on the horizon. Tomorrow is the longest day of the year, the official start of the summer season, the fullest of light — yet we are apt to miss this phenomenon of Earth’s axial tilt, as we miss so much of what the natural world does in our surrounds.
In recent months, catastrophic weather events have dominated headlines as rarely before — earthquakes and tsunami in Asia; volcanic cloud in Europe; massive ice melts at the poles; tornadoes, floods, and fires in America. “Records are not just broken,” an atmospheric scientist said last week, “they are smashed.” Without getting into questions of causality, and without anthropomorphizing nature, we can still take these events as nature’s cri de coeur — as the degraded environment’s grabbing of human lapels to say, “Pay attention!”
To our ancestors in the deep past, that attention to nature was, well, natural. They made the evolutionary leap into human consciousness through close observation, among other things, of what heavenly bodies do in the sky. In a cosmos over which they had no control, paying attention to patterns of heat and cold, light and dark, rain and drought was a matter of survival. The invention of agriculture depended on awareness of seasons, so that times of planting and harvesting, herding and grazing, could be depended upon. Movements of the sun and moon were seen to have both influences on, and counterparts in, individual human experience — from mood swings to menstruation to aging. Astrology opened into astronomy, calculation into mathematics, scrutiny into science. Definitions of the calendar were essential to culture. The solstice was a marker of all this.
But this habit of regard for nature was essential also to the transition into modernity. Contemplation of the sun was nothing less than the incubator of our age. Copernicus and Galileo, after all, ushered humans into the breakthrough of testable knowledge by means of their study — one theorizing, the other experimenting — of Earth’s place in the solar system. The solstice, previously perceived as the sun’s standing still for a moment before reversing course on the horizon, would never be understood that way again. Heliocentrism initiated the maturing of science, which eventually would demonstrate that seasonal rhythms not only produce global dynamics of climate but also hormonal changes — daily, weekly, monthly — within the individual human body, each person biologically synchronized to the cosmic clock. Because of science, we were able to grasp the age of the earth — to know that there have been more than 4 billion summer solstices. Humans awakened to the full complexity of the universe.
Ironically, the accompanying social revolution of industrialization led to illusions of human mastery over nature, and ultimately to detached indifference toward it. Contemporary technological civilization became blinded to key phenomena of the living world, much as the night sky is blotted out by the artificial light of cities. Most recently, the cycles of time have given way to the eternal present of the computer screen — detachment squared. As humans came to know so much, we lost our grip on the knowledge with which we became human: our familiarity with the physical universe we live in. Imagining that we no longer needed nature, we ourselves became the great threat to nature. As our sense of the complexities of life quickened and deepened, our destructiveness of life also quickened and deepened. Through ambitions of unlimited growth, consumption, competitive manufacture, and self-expanding technology, we humans have become a mechanism of extinction. When we stopped noticing Earth, we began to destroy it.
Intimate awareness of nature and its cycles, as we saw, was an ancient mode of survival. But survival is at issue again. Noticing the length of light now, reveling in the sun’s achievement, rejoicing in Earth’s perfect balance, honoring the summer solstice — loving it: This is how we became human, and it is how we stay human.


76 Comments so far
Show AllVery true comments about how we have lost touch with our roots in Nature. How many times have I seen someone walking along a nature trail talking on a cell phone, missing the birdsong, frogs, insects, and the sight of wild iris blooming? Does anyone know the constellations anymore--even the Big Dipper? And the moon's phases--is there any notion that the full moon rises at the very time the sun sets? All of this is going on around us--and nobody cares. Texting replaces our connection to the natural community around us.
One thing--the solstice is not a phenomenon of the Earth's tilt--as stated in the article. The Earth's tilt remains roughly the same. The solstice happens because of the Earth's path around the sun. Now, the position of the Earth in its orbit has the Northern Hemisphere exposed to more sunlight, a welcome phenomenon for me at 45 degrees north latitude.
i for one pay attention to the skies/nature, but as you say few people are aware of the exquisite shows that nature provides free of charge................
Well coco, i completely affirm your comment.
Where have you been coco? I've missed your short, insightful comments. And, I, also, enjoy the free shows from Nature, except now I'm in southern China and seldom get to see a star other than the sun.
iºve not been anywhere dizi..........my p.c. has given up the ghost and i have to use the local free internet at the library. itºs a good service, but obviously i cannot just log on at any time i feel like it. i really feel adrift at present and not up to date with the ´real´news..............iºm in southern europe and the milky way is very visible at night now. just waiting for the meteor shower in august now...............
dosera wrote:
One thing--the solstice is not a phenomenon of the Earth's tilt--as stated in the article. The Earth's tilt remains roughly the same. The solstice happens because of the Earth's path around the sun.
* * * * *
My Comment:
The solstices result from the Earth's tilt as the Earth revolves around the sun.
Although climate is a much more complex phenomenon, the four seasons experienced by people in certain parts of the northern and southern hemispheres are due in part to the Earth's tilt as the Earth revolves around the sun.
The Earth's moon shows us only one face because the moon's spin on its axis is synchronous with its revolution around the Earth. If this synchroncity were also true for the Earth's spin on its tilted axis with respect to the Earth's revolution around the sun, there would be no solstices at least not across half the planet, a dramatically different global climate system, and probably no life on Earth.
I think the earth's tilt, as it moves around the sun, first the northern pole facing the sun then the southern pole is what the author is referring to and it does create the phenomena of the solstices and the equinox. Without the tilt the earth would present the same portions to the sun regardless of the location in its revolution around the sun.
I liked the article and the ideas it is presenting that as a species we have lost our moorings and are adrift on a current we can no longer see or take heed of that is carrying us to a precipice that may mean our extinction. Just ask our children who have never seen a star.
Can't deny anything anyone wrote about the causes of the solstice. Since the earth's tilt does not change (significantly over hundreds of years) the proximal cause of the change in seasons is the Earth's position in its orbit around the sun. Certainly, the fact that the Earth's axis has a tilt is necessary for the seasons to happen. Lots of people think the Earth's axis changes in its yearly path around the sun; as a former science teacher I have heard this "explanation" that I have become hypersensitive. Mea culpa.
Rush Limbaugh once stated the seasons change because the earth's orbit was closer in summer and farther away from the sun in the winter. A half hour later, without admitting he was wrong, revised his statement explaining that the axis tilted the Northern Hemisphere toward the sun in the Summer and away in the Winter.
Perhaps someone in the studio told him that the earth is closer to the sun in December than in June, so his "explanation" was nonsense. That is, if anyone in the studio has the balls to say he is wrong about something.
I was going to ask if the Earth's tilt was to the left or to the right. But if it confused the all-knowing Limbaugh, it must be to the left.
As usual, Rush Limbaugh is full of intestinal gas and his oral belches contain about as much correct information as his anal discharges.
The Earth's orbit is not circular, but elliptical, slightly "out-of-round". In actual fact, the Earth makes its closest approach to the the Sun, called perihelion, on January 3 (during winter in the northern hemisphere) and is farthest from the Sun, called aphelion, on July 4 (during summer in the northern hemisphere). The difference in the distances is not very great and has only a slight effect on the amount of available solar thermal energy reaching Earth's surface, but it does tend to moderate seasonal extremes. This is the case in the present astronomical epoch, but as the direction of the Earth's tilt changes in a process called precession, with a period of about 26,000 year. So in about 13,000 years aphelion will occur during the northern hemisphere's winter and perihelion will occur during the northern hemisphere's summer. Be sure to wear plenty of sunscreen then.
drosera wrote:
Lots of people think the Earth's axis changes in its yearly path around the sun; as a former science teacher I have heard this "explanation" that I have become hypersensitive. Mea culpa.
* * * * *
drosera,
I like the article. But given that the author James Carroll was drawing our attention to nature, the relationship between our attention to nature and science. the relationship between nature and our own bodies, and of course natural phenomena like the solstice, I think it would have been better had he included the Earth's revolution around the sun in his explanation of the solstice. But . . . .
Thanks for your comment and for helping us and your students pay attention.
Drosera is correct that the tilt is stable on our time scale. But as the planet rotates about its north-south axis, it precesses, like a top. That is the rotational axis rotates in a circular path, like a top. I believe that it takes about 23,000 years to complete the rotation.
As this precession occurs, stars appear in different places in the night sky, hence the term "precession of the equinox." At present, the rotational axis is pointed nearly at Polaris, the "north" star. When Columbus sailed, there was no star in the "pole position," so navigators had to estimate North in the evenings by watching how the stars nearest to what they thought was north rotated, and estimating where the center of the circle those stars defined happened to be. It was not precise, but was close enough. According to his biographer (Morison, a small boat sailor), Columbus was never more than about 50 miles from where he thought he was.
Interesting. I have heard of the term "precession of the equinox", but I cannot remember when or what was said about it. Thank you for your comment sheepherder.
Nicely said drosera.
Yes we are out of touch with Nature but it seems we have only two season's in North America now in the Great Lakes area, winter and summer. to cold to go out in the winter and to hot and dnagerous to go out in the summer and lot's of rain this year, Hope the floods in the mid west don't blow out the Nuclear reactors. They are in real danger and the Nuke companies like GE own the media so don't expect to hear much about it.
Yours,
RR
What a great article. I find most people have no clue anymore about the seasonal cycles and the energies they bring, anymore than they can tell what phase of the moon it is, or what time of day it is without looking at a clock. And I do believe this disengagement makes it far easier to abuse the enviorment....Thank you for the food for thought, I am passing it along.
"Copernicus and Galileo, after all, ushered humans into the breakthrough of testable knowledge by means of their study — one theorizing, the other experimenting — of Earth’s place in the solar system."
Oh really? How Western of you to say so! It might also be important to your survival to acknowledge that in South America astronomy was more advanced and cities larger than those in Europe at that time. Additionally European values included the belief in Christian "Dominion" over nature leading to the exploitation of Mother Earth. No such belief exists among Indigenous Peoples in South America. Indigenous Peoples believe in respect, balance, and reciprocity with the Earth Mother. When we take something from the Earth we give something back. Try selling that to the Western, Christian Domonionist Capitalist Peoples. Revisionist history and a culture of destruction and death will not serve Western Peoples well. You are what you do and what you do is death. Death is your future.
Agreed!
Evo Morales and Pablo Solon, in the plurinational state of Bolivia - both men "speak for Earth" (Carl Sagan).
When will we listen?
Manysummits
========
Bullshit -
You sir, have no lock on the truth or on life. Your arrogance speaks of a deep-seated hatred - always a sign of mental debility.
Manysummits
======
Regarding the stone, ManySummits, and bloodmeridian sequence of posts:
- -
stone (in response to the author of the article, James Carroll) wrote:
"Copernicus and Galileo, after all, ushered humans into the breakthrough of testable knowledge by means of their study — one theorizing, the other experimenting — of Earth’s place in the solar system."
Oh really? How Western of you to say so! It might also be important to your survival to acknowledge that in South America astronomy was more advanced and cities larger than those in Europe at that time. Additionally European values included the belief in Christian "Dominion" over nature leading to the exploitation of Mother Earth. No such belief exists among Indigenous Peoples in South America. Indigenous Peoples believe in respect, balance, and reciprocity with the Earth Mother. When we take something from the Earth we give something back. Try selling that to the Western, Christian Domonionist Capitalist Peoples. Revisionist history and a culture of destruction and death will not serve Western Peoples well. You are what you do and what you do is death. Death is your future.
- - - - -
Michael Desautels (aka Manysummits) (in response to stone) wrote:
Agreed!
Evo Morales and Pablo Solon, in the plurinational state of Bolivia - both men "speak for Earth" (Carl Sagan).
When will we listen?
- - - - -
Bloodmeridian (in response to Michael Desautels) wrote:
You will never listen.
You are destroyers, not folks who feel with the pulse of creation.
- - - - -
Michael Desautels (aka Manysummits) (in response to bloodmeridian) wrote:
You sir, have no lock on the truth or on life. Your arrogance speaks of a deep-seated hatred - always a sign of mental debility.
- - - - -
bloodmeridian (in response to Michael Desautels) wrote:
Your knee-jerk denial of an obvious truth speaks of a deep-seated hatred for all life forms on the planet.
Always a sign of a white supremacist destroyer.
* * * * *
My Comment
Well said, Manysummits.
Succinct .
To the point.
Judging from the extensive evidence provided in the past by bloodmeridian herself under various aliases, evidence which unfortunately has mostly if not completely been deleted by Common Dreams, you have spoken (in written words of course) an obvious truth.
After all bloodmeridian is very generous with her insults, but her generosity unfortunately is often guided by blind hatred.
There is the possibility that bloodmeridian was using the word "you" in the plural sense in her first reply to you as a reference to people of European ancestry living in the Americas as a whole and not to you in particular, in which case she should have somehow indicated that her statement was not an ad hominem attack on you. But bloodmeridian's numerous posts on Common Dreams, mostly deleted, strongly suggest that an ad hominem attack was what she intended.
Anyone who has not been insulted by bloodmeridian under at least one of her aliases should seriously consider examining their own sense of integrity. Not that I recommend gratuitously taunting her. That would be cruel.
The genocide committed by people of European ancestry in the Americas against native peoples is the proximate cause of her hatred. But considerable evidence provided by bloodmeridian in her previous posts indicates more fundamental causes that lie deeper within herself as you have clearly sensed.
bloodmeridian’s current alias is apparently derived from the title of a 1985 Western novel by author Cormac McCarthy. That ‘s not a bad choice actually given the plot and the recent upsurge in overt racism in the state of Arizona. Still, I liked her "Orchard Keeper" alias better.
- - - - -
About "Blood Meridian", the novel:
“The narrative follows a teenage runaway referred to only as "the kid", with the bulk of the text devoted to his experiences with the Glanton gang, a historical group of scalp hunters who massacred Indians and others in the United States–Mexico borderlands in 1849 and 1850.”
Wikipedia URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Meridian
- -
About the Glanton Massacre:
In Arizona, John Glanton's men killed some Quechans and took over operating their ferry on the Gila River in Arizona, which transported emigrants to the California Gold Rush. They sometimes killed the Mexican and U.S. passengers to take their money and goods.[8] A band of Quechan led by Caballo en Pelo killed and scalped Glanton and most of his gang in retaliation. They reclaimed the tribe's ferry business.[9] The California state government recruited men for a militia and directed the ill-fated Gila Expedition military operation against the Quechan tribe.
Wikipedia URL: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Joel_Glanton
No kidding. The sad thing is, there are still people convinced that space alien visitors were responsible for the spectacular South American architectural wonders, as well as Giza, Angkor Wat, and other pre-Christian wonders of the world.
FYI, Angkor Wat is from the 12th century CE not pre-christian.
The West: "Death is your future." Oh, and have a nice day!
And you are connecting to CD and this thread through some device of these Indigenous Peoples' manufacture?
You may be more of "the Western, Christian Domonionist Capitalist Peoples." than you think. ;)
I think that was kind of the point, I could be wrong. The ground you walk on is captured land by domination and subjugation. In history, the only time there were united nations without war and subjugation was by native americans (the basis for your government). The fact that you everyone keeps trying to apply this misguided version of the truth, I guess can only be seen by people that know different. The leader is you and your relationship with all other things that are equal to you. This day, you celebrate that relationship between these nations and by doing so you bring honor to yourself and your tribe.
Scientists study the natural world, but they can be 'unaware' nonetheless.
Moreover, the exacting language of science almost precludes scientists' ability to pass on their information in a meaningful way.
Here is an example from today's BBC World News - Environment:
"What we're seeing at the moment is unprecedented in the fossil record - the environmental changes are much more rapid," Professor Rogers told BBC News.
"We've still got most of the world's biodiversity, but the actual rate of extinction is much higher [than in past events] - and what we face is certainly a globally significant extinction event."
"World's oceans in 'shocking' decline" (by Richard Black)
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13796479
===========
What is being discussed is a new report on the state of the world ocean, by the BBC's environmental reporter Richard Black, on whose website I blogged intensively for a year and a half.
In a nutshell, the panel of scientists have concluded that things are much worse than anticipated, i.e., they were 'unaware.'
This reminds me of the nuclear industry's various regulatory bodies and the poo-bahs who purportedly lead the industry itself.
The few scientists who have stood up in the past decades and shouted their concerns have been labeled radicals, or whistle-blowers, or accused of delusion.
But it is in fact everyone else who is deluded, including eminent panels of scientists.
I read the headlines of the articles posted here on Common Dreams, and peruse their contents, commenting on some.
Yet - the situation on planet Earth is now hyper-critical, and if you can't see that, if 'we' can't see that, and act decisively in our own defense, the ecosphere will expel us and a goodly portion of the Earth's inhabitants in the near future.
Classically, this would be the time for a hero to appear and lead us out of this mess.
Yet we 'progressives' think that a leaderless but inspired group of pure democrats should 'lead' the way, here, in Greece, etc...
Isn't that something of an oxymoron?
Or are we going to sit back and 'observe' - The Collapse - on the Internet, of course?
Manysummits
=======
Michael Desautels (aka Manysummits) wrote:
Yet - the situation on planet Earth is now hyper-critical, and if you can't see that, if 'we' can't see that, and act decisively in our own defense, the ecosphere will expel us and a goodly portion of the Earth's inhabitants in the near future.
Classically, this would be the time for a hero to appear and lead us out of this mess.
Yet we 'progressives' think that a leaderless but inspired group of pure democrats should 'lead' the way, here, in Greece, etc...
Isn't that something of an oxymoron?
* * * * *
My Reply,
Manysummits,
I agree human beings are in very serious trouble and we are taking many other species down with us. That's the optimistic outlook. It could of course end up much worse for life on planet Earth.
The problems facing us are deadly serious and also very complex even though what we must do in some respects is quite simple.
But leaders have appeared, but they do not have the power necessary to change things alone, and we do not always agree with everything they suggest and they may in other respects not inspire our support.
NASA climatologist Jame Hansen is just one example of a leader calling attention to global warming and climate change and what we should do.
We don't need to choose one leader necessarily, but we do need to change ourselves and our society and our economy, and we need to support and empower leaders in our communities and in government who will help us do this.
Those who benefit from how things are now will not do what we need to do and will not empower leaders who will help us do what we need to do.
We need to empower our heros and our leaders, and in order to do that we too need to lead and to work together and to act like heros.
"All authority of any kind, especially in the field of thought and understanding, is the most destructive, evil thing. Leaders destroy the followers and followers destroy the leaders. You have to be your own teacher and your own disciple. You have to question everything that man has accepted as valuable, as necessary."
I read this quote here on CD but do not have who to attribute it to. perhaps one of you know.
Excerpt from text quoted by coldponder:
You have to be your own teacher and your own disciple. You have to question everything that man has accepted as valuable, as necessary.
* * * * * *
My Comment:
I wholeheartedly agree with the last two sentences of the text you quoted, the two sentences I have excerpted here, particularly if the need to question yourself is included.
The first part of the text is quite often true, but I do not think it is in an absolutist sense true, particularly if people pay attention to the truth of the last two sentences.
We can learn from each other and be inspired by each other.
I do not know who deserves credit for this statement you quoted.
Turn left an next intersection.
Thanks to advances in technology we no longer have to observe street signs or know how to read a map. The disconnect between human consciousness and the world that surrounds us increases every minute even as that world is destroyed.
When this bites us on the ass there will be some righteously pissed off Fashionistas, should Starbucks run low on muffins and espresso it will ruin their entire day.
Madhoosier wrote:
Turn left an next intersection.
Thanks to advances in technology we no longer have to observe street signs or know how to read a map. The disconnect between human consciousness and the world that surrounds us increases every minute even as that world is destroyed.
When this bites us on the ass there will be some righteously pissed off Fashionistas, should Starbucks run low on muffins and espresso it will ruin their entire day.
* * * * *
My Comment:
Ah, yes. We have our own personal leader. Our own GPS.
Once again, the benevolent but biting visionary sarcasm of a mad hoosier helps us realize in case we forgot that we are living in an insane asylum populated with large numbers of people suffering from a delusional and terminal (for us all) case of Nature Deficit Disorder (NDD).
Given the pandemic outbreak of Nature Deficit Disorder, NDD should be included in the next version of the DSM (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) as a socially and culturely transmitted form of mental illness.
:>)
I agree that technology is taking over, but can think of one example of when that is good. I do not use GPS when I drive - I can read a map - but a woman I know , who lives out in the boondocks, recently had a stroke. When her husband called 911, the responders did not need directions to the house - he said they said they could "see" where the house was.
Ironically, this couple was considering doing away with their landline telephone to save some money. If they had, the responders would have needed very explicit directions to get to the house. With a stroke patient, every minute counts.
With most systems like that the 911 operator can key in an address and get the same results. Also most rural counties now have codefied address systems that have done much to end confussion. Whiskey Road is now County Road 700 West while Bontrager Road is now C.R. 600 S.
Having said that, in rural Americal you are probably screwed if minutes count as response times are quite long.
Light pollution obscures the night sky. I can't remember the last time I saw the Milky Way.
And paving means many of us never 'have to' touch the earth.
Our connection to nature is so easy to lose in the modern world. Nature seems to be regarded as something that happens to us, ie the weather and seasons, or is something to visit in a park or 3rd country.
Maybe the extraordinary weather we have been experiencing will wake people up. Maybe.
Very sad situation indeed.
It seems there is a direct correlation between the number of people and the number of stars. The more people on the ground, the fewer stars in the sky.
Yeah. I know what you mean. Too many people sitting by campfires outside their cave. Who ever said that a light bulb was a good symbol of a bright idea?
:>)
I do, however, think that the current human population is unsustainable given current technology, or any technology we humans are likely to develop and implement in the reasonable near term future; and that the capitalistic organization of our economy stands in the way of necessary changes in the organization of our economy, in consumption patterns, in personal values throughout society, and in the development and implementation of less destructive technology.
The Summer Solstice is still celebrated in Northern Europe, and in fact is one of the biggest days of the year in countries like Denmark and Sweden. Also, in Scandinavian countries, the celebration of the Winter Solstice is still known by its original name, "Jul" (wheel), and not the church-fabricated notion of Christmas -- as if anyone has the slightest idea when Jesus of Nazareth was actually born (which almost certainly was not in December).
The Church has worked particularly hard to eviscerate from our collective memory the original reasons our ancestors have celebrated these particular days, which was part of its strategy of both co-opting pagan rituals in order to sell Christianity to the masses, as well as establish the concept of "dominionism" over nature. This has been catastrophic for the planet as a whole.
It's worth noting that countries which still maintain their pagan traditions (such as those of Scandinavia) have some of the most progressive environmental and energy policies in the world, and in those countries that have completely abandoned or forgotten about their pagan roots, such as the USA, we're doing things like blowing up mountains to dig up a little coal.
Excellent post, DC......
My favorite picture of Christ is a painting of him sitting in meditation in the forest.
My ancestors are Bohemian. I feel a strong connection to the solstice and all Earth related celebrations. My love and connection to America is through this land.
Well, my suggestion: find out the exact time of the sunset in your location (through, for example, weatherunderground); take a trip to the beach, or a mountain, or the top of your building or somewhere you can see for miles (on a clear day); watch the sun set, contemplating during the 15 minutes of its descent into oblivion, the surface speed of Earth's rotation, sweeping you backwards at 6,000 miles per hour.
It's a cosmic experience.
Your idea is a good one. I've missed too many sunsets staring at this little screen, but the speed of the Earth's rotation is closer to one thousand miles an hour, not six thousand. Hey. Longer sunsets!
Sorry to confuse the speed. I guess I was mixing the 1000 mph of the rotation with the 67,000 mph of the orbit. Then we need to calculate for the expansion of the universe. Nothing's simple! But it's cool to contemplate.
There is no need to panic, or to hate or to blame. The answers are all inside ourselves, each one of us, and each one of us will find answers according to his or her own personal efforts. Relax in the knowledge that the universe really is unfolding as it should, and that whatever comes our way, it is honing the pure light of consciousness. This is the truth. We do not need men nor women to lead us, though guides are often needed. The same energy that powers the stars and sends millions of litres of sap up arboreal limbs into the sky, powers us too, and we are therefore an intrinsic part of the change we see around us. Embrace it. Do not fear it. Don't let yourself be tormented by the men and women of power who twist words and fan negative emotions. They too have children and are scared beyond breath at what the future holds. They too have a right to live their lives as they see fit. Move silently away from people who pick faults and encourage division, and there are many on this site who claim to be healers and helpers. They too have a right to say their piece, but do not let their words hurt you. Above all, listen. When you wake and throughout the precious day, listen. Quieten your raging minds and listen to the old and the young, the wise and the foolish. See the precious creative spark that gives rise to all our thoughts, and honour that energy. Be kind. It will be returned to you.
That's my thruppence worth.
Beautiful comment. Thanks for sharing.
Your post may be beautiful, but it's like filigree and Panglossian to boot.
Lots of people won't find answers; most people won't find answers. Most won't even make a "personal effort", let alone know how to make a personal effort.
What do you mean "the universe is unfolding as it should"? What does that mean? Where is the core of *value* from which the "should" emanates?
What is the "change" we should be "embracing"? Physical change like death of the oceans? Extinction of multiple ecosystems?
"Don't let yourself be tormented by the men and women of power who twist words and fan negative emotions. They too have children and are scared beyond breath at what the future holds. They too have a right to live their lives as they see fit. Move silently away from people who pick faults and encourage division, and there are many on this site who claim to be healers and helpers. They too have a right to say their piece, but do not let their words hurt you."
You are wrong. Everyone does *not* have the right to live as they see fit. Little matter of it killing us.
You don't go far enough into your own words of wisdom. Embrace negativity and division as well as "positivity". It's all part of the web of being and, through time, a meaning emerges.
In regard to the subject of the article, my opinion is that the basic relation of life with nature is in the medium of time, and it is that lost relation which is doing us in. The lost aspect of time (developed in the cycle of the days, seasons, years, epochs) creates patterns in the mind and spirit (specific association with nature) which involves an intimate, almost loving relation with time as manifested in nature. In disassociating ourselves from the deeper aspects of nature, we have delegated perceived time to the hands of those with a sociopathology of selfishness and compulsive accumulation who have a specific agenda of perpetrating an hysterical mythology of "inevitability" and linear "progress".
Abu Rayhan Biruni, Persian scholar, drew sketches of the moon's phases and preceded Copernicus by centuries in the concept of a heliocentric system
http://www.learn-persian.com/english/Biruni_astronomer_and_mathematician.php
Another aspect of seasonal influence is that the structure of the school year (as most of us know it) was developed so that families could have more bodies in the fields during the main part of the growing season.
Now, largely because of the petroleum perversion, people think summer is mainly about travel and relaxing.
It used to be a time of occasional hard labor and intimately connecting with nature for the majority of people, wherein they might learn to celebrate a raindrop.
Today, it is rare to hear anyone speak well of rainy days as we are taught to run away from the rain and dread the deadly effects of floods which we, in fact, largely bring about because we have disconnected from nature.