like an orchestra

When I recently listened to a classic orchestral piece on my car radio it struck me how the sound of so many different instruments melds into one, and how that one complex sound can only be achieved if all hundred or so musicians play together in total harmony, unison and synchronicity.  Take away the brass instruments, or ten violins, or a particular instrument that is crucial to one particular segment, and the whole is diminished.  One instrument on its own can never do what an orchestra does.  The whole is so much greater than the sum of its parts, and individual parts shine more brightly in the context of the composite whole.  

Through Suzanne Simard’s work with forest ecosystems for example we are beginning to realize that trees are less competitively Darwinian and individualistic, and exist within a mutually beneficial and cooperative mycorrhizal network of nutrient distribution from mother trees to seedlings rather than existing in isolation.  Take the big mother trees away and new seedlings suffer.

How is it that we humans have come to think of ourselves as distinct and separate, from one another and from nature?  Maybe the pandemic has brought to the forefront that we exist within a network of interdependence.  How dependent we are of postal workers, healthcare professionals, supermarket staff, bus and subway drivers, warehouse workers and delivery drivers to keep the whole running.  How dependent we are of our network of friends and family to keep us mentally sane, and how difficult isolation is.  We can accomplish so much more when we get together around common goals than if we go it alone.  We feel so much more grounded and settled, emotionally nurtured and embraced, in company.

Interdependence is not a sign of weakness but strengthens the whole and furthers a common cause exponentially.  Regardless, for example, of what your stance is on vaccines, the huge effort to bring a Corona vaccine to market within a year could only be accomplished through the work of a huge interdependent network of scientists and government efforts all working in unison towards a common goal.  Alone we are powerless at the enormity of the challenges of climate change.  But in the spring, when the earth stood still during the worldwide lockdown, we saw how fast pollution can be reversed.  

A whole orchestra can produce a gloriously complex, powerful, and magical listening experience in a way an individual violin simply cannot.

always a way out!

Recently, my husband visited a jobsite in an unsavory Brooklyn neighborhood and parked his car in the street. When he returned, he absentmindedly opened the trunk, put his bag in, put his cellphone in, put his key in, and shut the trunk.  

Oh no! Now cellphone and key were in the trunk and the car door was locked.  No cellphone, no way to call for help.  A building maintenance person nearby had one of those wire door break-in contraptions and offered to help.  Hope!  

Oh no! That didn’t’ work. What now? The maintenance guy let my husband use his cellphone to make a call, and a while later a guy from Pop-a-Lock showed up.  Hope!  Pop-a-Lock unlocked the car door and also popped the hood, but since the electronics had been bypassed, they self-disabled automatically, and with it the electronic trunk pop device was also disabled.  

Oh no, for the third time!  Pop-a-Lock had no further solution, suggested to get the car towed, and left.  I was too far away to drive down to bring the other car key, and towing the car home would be big hoopla.   My husband had to find another solution.  Knowing about electronics, he asked the building maintenance guy for a wrench to disconnect the car battery.  Hope!  Lo and behold, disconnecting the battery also disabled the electronics, and he was able to open the trunk manually.  Success!

All this to say that the only limitation to a solution is the mind.  When the mind shifts, so does the problem, and possibilities open up. Hopelessness is in the mind, there is always a way out.  

 

collecting the pieces

Many years ago, my husband and I traveled through Europe for six months.  After a while the experiences became a blur, we could no longer remember what we did three and four weeks ago because it became too much to take in. It was time to return home to integrate and process the travel impressions.  

During very busy times it seems similarly that I become fragmented, losing bits of myself here and there along the way.  When the busyness subsides, I need to collect and ground myself to bring all those scattered fragments back under one roof.  

The English meaning of collecting oneself  has to do more with composure, while the German expression sich sammeln, which translates identically, has more to do with reintegration after this kind of fragmentation.  Reintegration for me consists of quiet time by myself, puttering around without agenda or an appointment looming, reading a book, cooking something, or drinking tea and reading the newspaper.  A good night’s sleep can do wonders but may not be enough.  Regular meditation is a good way to ground yourself but is not for everyone. Walking in nature, going on a vacation, coloring or working on a crafts project, taking a bath, making music, are all ways to bring yourself back home because these activities inactivate the rational-analytical left side of the brain and make room for the subconscious to do its work.  The effect can be compared to tidying up a messy closet so you see again what you actually have and can find everything easily.  

You can’t go a mile a minute all the time without disintegrating, starting to coast and going on auto-pilot. Depression is actually an advanced form of loss of connection to self. Being aware of this need to push the stop button periodically and reintegrating is helpful and you can do it any which way that fits your personality and lifestyle.   

 

 

 

the world's alive

The minimalist cleaner upper guru Marie Kondo has encouraged people for years to connect with their clothes, books, furnishings and nick-nacks to make sure you get a charge out of them, and if not, kindly thanking your stuff for its service before giving it away or discarding it.  Silly, you might say.

Milana Perepyolkina, author of Gypsy Energy Secrets, calls the world alive.  She writes, “We experience that each thing has a soul,” including “plants, trees and even stones,” and she treats her pillow with love and respect because it is her key to sweet dreams.

As a pet owner you probably agree that your dog, cat or horse has a soul.  Although not so sure about the goldfish, right? And we can probably agree that trees and plants are alive.  After that you may need to stretch your mind, and the rest is up for reflection, philosophy, speculation, cosmology, and individual belief.

Author and founder of the Perelandra Center for Nature Research, Machaelle Small Wright, communicates with flower divas to create her flower essences, and nature and spirit entities for a cocreative healing relationship with nature.

A feng shui consultant told me years ago to connect with my house in a deeper way. With things it’s perhaps less that they are truly ensouled than that they absorb our personal energy, which is why for example they recommend smudging an antique piece of furniture or a second-hand clothing item with sage before bringing it into your life.  

Philosophy has all sorts of fancy names for an alive world, like hylozoism, panpsychism, or animism, the Gaia Theory (here a previous post), and more, depending on how far to take aliveness, ensoulment and nature intelligence.  Soil, plants, rocks, and crystals all may seem more evidently alive one way or another, while inanimate objects, like your house, your pillow, or your clothes not so much.  

Have you thought how far you’d be comfortable taking the idea of an alive world?