Tara Brach - Earth's Crisis: On the Edge of the Roof
Episode Date: August 30, 2019Earth's Crisis: On the Edge of the Roof - This talk was given in 2015, yet it is as timely as ever. It views the ecological dis-ease of our planet through the lens of our evolutionary unfolding. We ex...plore the egoic trance that has precipitated the destruction of our environment, and the inner practices of presence that enable us to respond from love and wisdom (from the archives). Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks and meditations freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara
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In this coming week, some of you may be aware that it's probably the greatest mobilization
on behalf of the earth that's ever happened in human history.
And on Sunday, the 21st, there's going to be a people's climate march in New York City,
But it's also happening, there's activity in about 188 plus other countries around the world.
And of course, there's the UN Climate Summit.
It's a lot going on.
And in one way to look at it is humans are actually really waking up to the crisis of our planet.
And another view is it's happening really slowly.
It's scary how slowly.
a huge amount of indifference and ignorance.
What I'd like to do tonight is through the lens of Dharma,
through the lens of what sometimes described as a spiritual path
or the Bodhisattva path.
And the word bodhisattva, Bodhi means awakened and satfa as being.
Through this path that we're all on really of waking up.
How can we view this?
what's our role? How do we pay attention?
And I've been inspired since I was a young girl by the Museum of Natural History in New York.
That's the place I used to go with my parents and learn about, I mean, the planetarium was awesome.
And it's just an amazing museum.
And in recent years, they've done a lot on global warming.
And the scientists described there that we're in the six,
extinction meaning that it this is predicted be the most devastating of all the
extinctions that there have been a number in the past the most since the
asteroids wiped out all living creatures and you know the dinosaurs plus
this is supposedly to be the most devastating since then and I'll give you a
little bit of what they say they estimate that half of all plants and
animals and bird species will die off in the next 85 years.
So I think of that.
I think of, well, that would be my grandchildren's lifetime,
that half of the creatures we know of won't be here.
That 75% of all mammals the next 334 years will be gone.
So one scientist writes this, he says,
this should keep you awake at night.
And it's interesting that it doesn't, really.
I mean, that's probably, that's something we'll explore a little.
But most scientists are saying that in contrast to all the other extinctions, the cause is human,
and that we're injuring the Earth daily.
You know, we're cutting down trees, wide swaths of trees, we're affecting how the Earth breathes,
mining, overfishing.
There's a global ocean commission.
made up of former heads of states and business leaders and scientists.
And they were at the Museum of Natural History in New York
and gave a kind of summary of their research
and basically concluded that the oceans are dying
from climate change and pollution and overfishing.
And that the ocean, they said, why should we be concerned?
And this is what they wrote.
The ocean provides 50% of our oxygen
and fixes 25% of global,
carbon emissions. Our food chain begins there. They add a healthy ocean is key to our
well-being and they say no ocean no us. So there's these devastating
consequences to what's happening and again there's you know we see the
mobilization that's happening this week and then there's also the contrast I
I kind of did informal surveys. I was traveling around and I was in Italy and Amsterdam and London,
just asking, you know, how much activity and how much awareness and things are happening everywhere.
And in some way, it's still a kind of crisis that's a mental or conceptual problem.
it's not my personal crisis.
It's not taken in in a way that really shakes the nervous system for many people.
I was really struck coming back to the states.
There's so many contrasts between being in Europe and being here.
Biggest one is like these little cars there and these huge cars here.
And the size of our homes here.
And so many people biking and moving around on their own steam,
in Italy I was amazed
these really steep hills
in these little towns
and these elderly Italian
men and women
moving up and down those hills
and it's not all like
great there not great here
one friend of mine told me that in Vienna
they have this arrangement
there's a group of apartments that are sold
and the arrangement is that on to elderly people
and then when the person dies it
goes back to the building owner.
It's a four to six stories tall buildings.
And they began in recent years installing elevators.
Before that people, these elderly people were walking up and down four to six stories.
But they installed the elevators because it served the bottom line, more revenue, because people
started dying younger and they calculated the investment that way.
And they actually started making more money than the cost of putting in the elevator.
So they put in the elevators.
So they put in the elevators.
Well, we live in a culture where everything is to make us more and more comfortable, you know?
And there's this more and more consuming and more and more obesity.
And that's not just in the United States. Europe is catching up with us.
So, again, we have this crisis and a kind of lack of response that we see in general.
see in general. So about four years ago I was at a conference and I was presenting. There were a number of
presenters and Tick Natham was invited to do the keynote. And in the keynote he started talking about
this crisis of our earth and he shared a sutra, which is a spiritual story that was in the Buddhist
classics and it's called the Sutra on the Sun's Flesh. And it's about a couple in a young
sun crossing this vast desert. And they hadn't planned well, so they ran out of food,
and they decided to kill and eat their child. And then, of course, after they did, they tore their
hair out and beat their chest and carried his remains and grieved and grieved and grieved.
And then the Buddha in a discourse with monks about this, he talked about how horribly they
suffered, and he said the teaching was the way we grasp, the way we consume, the way we
consume kills us and it takes away our happiness. And it's a horrific metaphor, of course,
and yet I think Tickna Han and many others are feeling like, well, what's it going to take
to get us to pay attention to how we're living and that it's not working? 50% of all creatures
gone in 85 years. So the teaching here is that by living unmindfully,
by over-consuming oil, coal, the earth's resources,
by over-producing, we destroy the world for future generations.
So I read you a line from Rumi that gave me the title for this talk.
Rumi says, sit, be still, and listen.
For you are drunk, and we are at the edge of the roof.
Sit, be still, and listen.
For you are drunk, and we are at the edge of the roof.
So if you're looking for this talk, it's called On the Edge of the Roof.
I just thought it was such a cool line.
But the teaching that Rumi is saying is the same,
that we're drunk, we're in a trance of some sort,
and are planets in great trouble.
Okay, so we're going to go back to King Arthur's Times now.
and this is a legend from the Holy Grail.
And in this legend, Parciful is a young knight on a quest.
And he's wandering into, he's going for the Holy Grail.
And he wanders into this really parched, devastated land where nothing grows.
And when he arrives at the capital of this wasteland,
he finds the townspeople are behaving as if everything's normal.
They're kind of on automatic.
They're not wondering, like, oh, what horror has befallen us?
This is terrible what's going on.
They're just dull and mechanical.
They're under a spell.
So Parcival is invited to the castle
where, to a surprise, he finds the king is lying in bed
and he's pale and dying.
And like the land around him,
the monarch's life is wanting.
And Parciful's full of questions,
but he's been told by older knights
that's not polite to ask questions.
It's improper for one of his stature.
And he also figures, well,
how can he help?
So the next morning, he leaves the castle to continue on his journey.
But soon after leaving, he meets up with the sorcerer, a sorceress, her name's Kundri,
and she hears that he didn't even ask the king about himself.
He didn't reach out at all.
And she goes into a rage and says, you know, how could you be so callous and caring?
So he figures she's probably got a good point, turns around, goes back to the castle,
he takes, but he's taking her words to heart.
So he goes back to the wasteland, back to the castle,
goes to where the king is, and he kneels before him,
and he very gently asks,
Oh, my lord, what aileth they?
And at that moment the color comes back into the king's cheeks,
and he stands up fully healed,
and throughout the kingdom, everything comes back to life.
People are newly awakened.
They're talking with animation, and they're laughing and singing and moving with vigorous step.
Crops begin to grow.
You get the idea.
The grass is glowing.
Everything's springtime and happy.
Okay, so what happened there is, you know, we wonder.
And I think the point is, and this is really a core teaching on the Bodhisattva path.
And the Buddhist core teaching is
if we don't acknowledge suffering,
if we don't acknowledge that our heart is hurting,
that we're not aligned with ourselves,
that we're living in a way that's causing us pain,
that we're addicted, that we're not feeling intimate with others,
if we don't acknowledge that our earth is dying,
that the oceans are dying,
if we don't acknowledge, then we can't respond.
We are caught in trance.
We're living in it.
And our habit, our conditioning is to not go where the pain is.
So by turning away, by looking away, by denying it,
we block our survival response.
We get caught in this kind of indifference
where we're not looking, we're not seeing, and we're cut off.
We're in a wasteland.
So what we'll do just to continue this kind of exploration, how do we look through the lens of Dharma or the spiritual path,
is to say, well, how do we get drunk and how do we go into that trance?
And what serves our healing?
You know, what is it that helps us like with Parciful and the King begin to say,
okay, so what's happening and how do we respond?
And you can listen with the filter of this both in an individual way.
How do each of us go into a transfer where we start living in a very limiting sense of ourselves
as separate from each other or separate from the world?
And how do we go into a transfer?
We end up starting with enacting behaviors that actually get us more into trouble,
ways that we defend ourselves, or ways that we're aggressive,
or ways that we numb ourselves.
So you can have the lens there
or see it on a societal level.
I find that one of the most useful ways
to understand our development,
how we get stuck and how we heal,
is to think of evolution in terms of three phases.
And you can think of it developmentally
as an individual and as a species.
And the first phase is where we're fused with the world.
When we're in the womb and we're first come out of the womb,
there's still a sense that there's no separation from the natural world.
We're just one with it all.
And this fusion is not an enlightened fusion.
There's nothing wrong with it, but there's a process to be aware of awareness
so that we're united, but awake to that being united.
So this is the primordial fusion.
And then we emerge as a self-conscious ego.
And that is a process of separation where awareness takes itself to be the form,
where we feel separate, where there's me and there's a world out there.
And as I many times use the phrase,
the primal mood of that egoic self is fear.
Because whenever there's a sense that I am apart from the beloved,
I am part from a sense of belonging,
Whenever there's a sense of separation, there is a fear that in some way, I am in danger,
I will be hurt, I am short-term, it's all true, we are short-term if we're identified with the
separate self, and I need more to make it.
So then we get stuck in our patterns as a reactive ego that's separate from the world.
The third phase is awakening to a true belonging, awakening to realize
this web of life, we're part of it. And this awareness that's recognizing this web of life is our
essence. Now, most of humankind is in the egoic phase, and much is arrested at the
egoic phase. And what that means is that there's a sense of mortality and a lot of clinging
and a lot of avoiding, that we're drunk.
So that's one way of thinking about it.
And then you can sense that in a daily way.
I mean, how much during the day do you sense
that you're not really living from your wholeness of being
where you're feeling that just natural flow of generosity
and receiving and giving
and collective concern for others
and appreciation of others?
It's more, how am I going to get through the day?
and what's going to help me
and how we're reacting to criticism
or feeling obstacles
and we know if we're honest
that we spend a lot of time in the egoic trance
and by the way judging that and thinking that's wrong
deepens the egoic trance
so it's just to see that
and we see how much it's defined by judgment
how many moments we're comparing ourselves to others
how many moments we're comparing ourselves to how
we think we should be, and either putting others up or down. And this happens even on the spiritual
path, you know, different groups were the best, we're the one way. I always love the story of
this Taoist master who his habit is to sit in this hut on a mountaintop naked, and he meditates
that way. But a group of Confucianists are very upset with the way he's doing that. So they go up,
They hike up the mountain to talk to him about the proper conduct that they think should be happening.
But when they see him sitting naked, they're kind of shocked.
They're kind of shocked. They say, what are you doing sitting naked in your hut without any pants on?
And here's his response.
He says, this whole universe, this whole universe is my hut.
This little hut is my pants.
What are you fellows doing in my pants?
So we see ourselves go through the day
and putting some people down and putting ourselves down, putting others up,
that's the egoic trance.
And when it's full-blown, it turns into addictive grasping,
have to have, wanting to possess,
and it goes into kind of addiction to violence,
have to aggress, can't hold that bad.
And again, the undercurrent is a sense of separation.
So in the egoic trance, the trance that really leads to the wasteland in Parcival's myth,
there are two big delusions.
And one delusion is that sense that I mentioned of this kind of primordial fear,
the sense that around the corner something is going to go wrong.
And hand in hand with that is, I'm not enough and I don't have enough.
So there's a chronic going for something more.
I need more.
I need more approval.
I need more food.
I need more possessions.
I need more attention.
I need, I want.
Saw a little cartoon with two goldfish swimming in the ocean.
And one saying to the other,
so what is it that your heart really desires?
And the response is,
I'd love to have, you know, the fish bowl
and the colored gravel and the plastic plants
and the little castle.
You know, the whole deal.
So it's kind of like that.
That, you know, here we are and we're alive.
And we have this capacity to love without holding back
and the sense is, you know, just the mystery and the wonder that's here.
And we grasp onto much smaller things.
So one delusion is not enough.
I need something more.
on a societal level, it's described that we're at a phase two peak society, which means
that we're hooked on continual growth. It's the common consensus. And this isn't just
conservatives that are, this isn't just people that politically think that, you know, the rich
should be as rich as they want to be. This is across the board belief that it's a good thing for us,
our society to keep on growing economically.
It's a good thing to keep producing more and consuming more.
And I have a friend that works in a liberal think tank.
And this is an assumption in the liberal agenda.
This is not, again, a conservative thing.
That it is good for us to keep growing.
And it's not questioned.
It's like, why is it good?
to keep on having more consumption and more productivity.
I mean, if you're obese, why is it good to eat more?
If you're rich, why is it good to own more?
If you're a warming planet, why is it good to have more oil-based production?
You know, why?
It's that same thing.
It's this goodness as I need more.
It's feeding more.
So that's one delusion.
Never enough.
Have to be more.
The other delusion is that the object,
out there are the source of what we want.
So whether it's another person and we want to get their money or their affection,
or it's the Earth and we want its resources,
there's an objectifying of the world outside of us.
This is part of unreal other.
That we're real, we're the center of the universe,
and everything else is a player on the stage.
And this is really part of our,
historic, egoic narrative.
It's really part of manifest destiny,
if you think about it.
That, you know,
there's this driven entitlement
to vanquish and destroy
that which was indigenous,
the rights of settlers,
taking the wealth to make more for empire.
I mean, this is, we're going back hundreds of years, but
it was like, yeah, this is our right.
We can go somewhere and take
from whoever's native in that area
and expand the empire.
It was a papal
decree. It's the same thing with global business. It's this attitude towards the natural world
that it's ours for the taking and that humans are at the center and we're above all the
other species and we can do what we want. Does this make sense? What I'm saying? I'm just kind of...
Okay. It's really dangerous for the earth that one species thinks it's entitled to consume
and produce and ravage more and more.
Now what exacerbates this way of being,
a feeling separate from the earth and entitled,
is the more we are mental.
The more we think and are mental,
the more we perceive ourselves as apart from the rest of the world.
And that's even more exacerbated by how much we live in a virtual and cyber
reality. You know, in the United States said that we spend about 90% of our time indoors,
and a lot of that's looking at a screen. And that's really scary, what the implications are
for our relatedness with the earth. Children are even more removed from, you know,
the natural world than ever before in history. You know, they live in a site. You know, they live in a
cyber field. And so there's this question, will they grow up to care enough about the earth,
to feel a belonging to the earth? Story I heard that I really liked. This is a writer in the
New Yorker describes how when his son turned 12, they weren't having good communications,
but he found that if he texted his son, he heard back from him. Otherwise, he just got kind of
grunts. So they began a texting relationship. And he's just,
describes how, you know, his son would text and sometimes write LOL,
and it really made him feel good that his son was saying lots of love.
And he thought it was a really cool thing that in the, you know,
it's kind of a way in the 20th century.
It's like a little arrow of love you can send out to anybody you know.
You send him an email or text and go LOL.
And it just was a really sweet thing.
So he describes his infatuation over the next six months
with emailing and texting and L-O-Ling.
so his sister's getting divorced
and he writes to her,
we're all behind you and beside you,
L-O-L, your brother.
His father gets L and he sends him L-O-L, you know, in Canada.
A person loses his job, you know.
It's really sad that this happened, L-O-L, you know.
He just everywhere.
People with financial troubles,
teenager with drugs, you know,
you get the idea.
So at one point he's texting with his son, he's at the airport saying,
you know, I'm sorry, I have to be away.
I really hate being away so much, but I kind of need to because we're tight money right now.
There's something.
And he signs it LOL.
And his son responds, Dad, what exactly do you think LOL means?
Anyway, he gets set straight and he has to, of course, write millions of emails of apology.
But he crumbled with that one.
How much are we really communicating?
online.
It's clear that
cyber communications
here to stay
whatever that means, it's not going to go away,
and that there's many riches to it.
I mean, there's an amazing flow of information.
But it also seems clear to me
that, and I'm not alone,
I'm a lot of other,
I've been doing a lot of reading lately,
and those that are sensing the impact
of the virtual realm on our brains and the way we think.
And it's also clear that we get disembodied
and that the amount of information
and the way we move towards it and with it
keeps us from being able to really learn to concentrate
and sink in and have any real depth in our thinking.
In other words, it's taking away depth.
It's taking away a kind of a sense.
centeredness and a depth of kind of concentrating and attending that we can't go with when we're going like this with this much information.
And if we're disembodied and our attention can't really sink into what's here, we can't activate the compassion networks in our brain.
So we can hear about terrible things happening on the earth.
We can get more information than we've ever gotten about what's going on.
But if we're not embodied, and if the mirror neurons aren't activated,
the compassion will be mental, not heartfelt.
We won't respond.
It's still possible to be indifferent on some level.
So this is, I'm just spending a little time with this,
that we've got some forces at work that keep us in a time
trance. Joanna Macy writes this about our relationship with the earth.
And I'm going to, I'll mention her a few times. Joanna Macy, I think of as one of the real
leaders in the spiritual and ecological movements, bringing together the depth of spiritual
awakening with, we belong to this earth, and it's ours to save.
She says, we've been treating Earth as if it is a supply source and space.
sewer, extracting resources and then pouring waste into it over and over.
How we're violating is not sustainable.
It destroys first those that are most vulnerable.
A lot of those listening perhaps right now might not be as personally affected right away.
And unless you live in southern Florida or right on a coastline where you know that it's
happening, that water levels are rising.
the most vulnerable countries where the economy is vulnerable,
relying on just one product,
really susceptible to the impact of storms and so on,
that's where it's felt the most.
And yet the responsibility is the developed world
that's consuming and producing the effect of global warming.
So our basic ignorance is that we forget we belong to the earth.
that we're of the earth and that whatever happens affects all of us, that it's collective.
And I like it best the way Chief Seattle puts it.
This earth is our mother.
Whatever befalls the earth befalls the sons and daughters of the earth.
This we know.
All things are connected like the blood which unites one family.
All things are connected.
Whatever befalls the earth befalls the sons and daughters.
of the earth. We did not weave the web of life. We were merely a strand in it. Whatever we do to the web,
we do to ourselves. So this is the basic bodhisattva teaching. We're connected. We belong.
And yet when we forget that, we act in ways that destroy our larger body that we all share.
And if we look at, well, what is it that really keeps us from facing this?
In one way, it's kind of like lobsters in the pot.
It's happening in a way that's gradual enough that we don't register in our everyday life.
In another way, to some of us with a more sensitive nervous system,
it might be that it feels uncomfortable or awkward to speak up or stand up
and really engage in activity.
And I think for many, it's really upsetting to think about.
And there's a sense of powerlessness, like, who am I to make a difference?
I mean, maybe if I was a congressman or a scientist or this or that,
but I can't really do anything.
Again, I want to just share the words of Joanna Macy
that addresses this last one, that, you know,
I don't want to look, it's too painful, and what can I do?
she says there's so much going on in our world today that makes us want to close down and not see and not here
it's easy to shut down in the face of suffering but i think that's the greatest danger of our time
the greatest peril is not nuclear war weapons not climate change not impoverishment of more than
half the world's population the greatest danger is the deadening of our hearts and minds it arises
is not from indifference but from fear. The fear we might be shattered by pain are stuck in
despair forever. So, given that, given that the greatest suffering is that we avoid the
suffering, how do we begin to wake up? So describe the developmental phases that we're kind of
caught in the egoic phase of grasping and aversion. And what facilitates is moving in
this collective consciousness and what allows us to move into a sense of not I or me but
we is deepening our attention, is on purpose deepening our attention. Short story for you.
So I'm moving back and forth between individual addiction and struggle and societal on purpose
because we can see it, the dynamic in our personal lives.
So one man was with his psychologist
and he's struggling with anxiety and addiction,
working on overeating and weight,
and also a sense of not having real intimacy in his life, loneliness.
So his therapist encouraged him to take some meditation classes,
and he told him, you'll feel better.
So he took some classes, and then he came to a retreat.
and the following week you went back to his therapist and he said
I know you said I'd feel better but it was really difficult
in fact I felt a whole lot of fear and my anxiety turned into like real fear
I felt a lot of shame and a lot of self-aversion so you said I'd feel better
and the response was yes you are feeling better you're feeling your feelings better
you're feeling your shame better
you're feeling your fear better
but he went on to say
the only way
to really feeling
your wholeness of being
feeling the mystery
feeling beauty feeling love is to feel
we have to feel
which means if we're not feeling our own feelings
or if we're not feeling the pain of the earth
if we're cut off
we're not going to be open
to feeling the joy and the beauty and the mystery.
The only way is through actually contacting what's here, feeling it.
And this is no different than the teachings in any system,
whether it's in Western psychology or 12th step or Buddhist psychology,
that what is locked in our nervous system
until we touch it and contact it fully with a world,
awareness stays locked in. So Rumi puts it in a simple way for us in this talk. Sit, be
still, listen. For you're drunk and we're at the edge of the roof. So we begin by
acknowledging what's going on, the realness that we're poisoning our earth, our sorrow
about it, our anger about it, our feeling of no power about it, despair, whatever it is,
we acknowledge it. And again, Joanna Macy says, you can be really present. You don't have
to be optimistic. In fact, trying to be hopeful can wear you out. Okay, just be willing to be
present. Sit, be still. Listen.
In that presence, just as this man did find out, because I didn't give you the rest of the story,
which is he continued to practice and became intimate with both the suffering in him and also more with his aliveness
and with the nature around him and others, in that presence with the suffering of this earth,
we feel others being present, we feel our tenderness,
and we start coming home to a feeling of really belonging.
This is a reading I love.
We're part of a great mystery.
The Big Bang started the universe pouring matter through space.
Some of this matter formed stars.
Residue formed the planets.
Everything on Earth, including our living bodies,
is formed out of the same material that form the stars and planets.
Your bones are made of calcium and magnesium, and there is seawater in your blood.
You are the living earth in this particular form.
As cosmologist Brian Swim says,
four and a half billion years ago,
the earth was a flaming molten ball of rock,
and now it can sing opera.
It's an amazing universe.
And presence brings that awareness and one.
wonder alive in us. And I share that because ultimately the decision to act on behalf of this
enlarge body of ours, this earth, has to come out of our hearts. That's why we begin by sit
and be still and listen, because then we start getting in touch, both with the pain and the beauty,
and we want to respond, and it becomes, we want to respond because, we want to respond because
we love life.
That's where it comes from.
Joanna has a poem called
Beastieri and it goes like this.
She says, these are just parts of it.
She says, tears aren't enough anymore.
Give me a song, a song for
a sadness too vast for my heart,
for a rage
too wild for my throat.
And then she begins
to list
some of the endangered
species and says this list
is getting longer every
year. Giant sable antelope, Wyoming toad, grizzly bear, brown bear, bacterian camel, nile,
crocodile, Chinese alligator. Where are you? Musk deer, cheetah, chinchella, Asian elephant,
African elephant, desert tortoise, crested ibis, mountain zebra, Mexican bobcat, ivory-billed woodpecker,
Indus River dolphin.
We reenact Noah's ancient drama,
but in reverse like a film running backwards,
the animals exiting.
Ferret, gorilla, jaguar, wolf.
Your tracks are growing fainter.
Wait, this is a hard time.
Don't leave us alone in a world we have wrecked.
So it's from the sadness and the love.
that we begin to try to sense, okay, how do we make a step?
And there's something that I feel is really just kind of want to add in here,
which is we want to feel like, well, I can see that it's possible that we can save our earth.
We want to feel more certain of it to make a step.
It's like it's very easy to kind of feel like resigning.
And the truth is, we don't know.
We just don't know.
And I like the way Wendell Berry puts it.
He says, we don't have a right to ask whether we're going to succeed or not.
The only question we have a right to ask is, what's the right thing to do?
What does this earth require of us if we want to continue to live on it?
So we can only make a step.
Thomas Merton puts it this way.
He says, do not depend on the hope of results.
You may have to face the fact that your work may be apparently worthless
and even achieve no results at all,
if not perhaps results opposite to what you expect.
As you get used to this idea,
you start more and more to concentrate not on the results
but on the value, the rightness,
the truth of the work.
of the work itself. All we can do is care and take a step. And then we're being true
to our hearts, because we really don't know. We just don't know. So we start reflecting on it.
And I think probably most everyone listening has reflected in some ways. So what is the earth
asking for me in my own life? And there's many different ways that we can
try to sense our own carbon footprint and there's
different ways we can watch how we're living and educate ourselves
and speak aloud our with each other, our experience of what's happening to
this earth, the feelings of loss, the feelings of love.
There's a lot we can do individually.
And we need to focus on systemic change. It's bigger. It's a collective process
where we need our institutions to shift their policies
away from this perpetual growth economy, this idea that we're always supposed to be consuming and producing more,
and move it towards what's the real meaning of well-being?
How do we impact the policies that really govern the production and consumption of fossil fuel?
How do we affect the dissemination of information that informs an awaken so people really know?
So these are larger questions.
I think the thing I want to most emphasize is that the only real energy that will get us going is responding collectively.
I've been fortunate to work over these last months with a group of Buddhist teachers that are getting more and more involved with.
How do you really engage this practice of ours of deepening attention and have it serve the healing of our world?
and engage communities in it.
And it's really my relationships
with some of these other teachers
and our conversations
that has kept my attention
and my heart
kind of engaged in a certain way.
And there's more and more going on locally
and at all different kind of levels
that we can plug into.
One thing you might consider
is there's a series of online conversations
that are available
and you can find out
about these on the IMCW website, IMCW.org, or also my website, tarabrock.com, both on the
homepage, are at One Earth Sangha. And these conversations will be dialogues led by some
Buddhist teachers, and the first one will be Jack Cornfield and Ruth King and myself, and then
there's groups of three leading the rest of them over the next couple of months. But that just
one thing. The hope is that if people from different communities listen to these conversations
and then get together in their own small collectives, that can create a sense of support and
energy. I think really when I was speaking of the cyber world, the danger is disconnecting from
the earth and the hope for each of us is to keep reconfirming.
connecting and feeling the sense of the preciousness of this living world.
You might want to close your eyes for a moment.
I'm going to read you from Paul Hawkins.
And this is part of the closing for this evening.
You might sense both in our personal lives and as a society
that it's part of our evolutionary predicament to go into trance,
the egoic trance where we spend a lot of our time
worried about moi, about what I need, I want, where there's defending and aggression,
and the societal trance that is creating a kind of wasteland that's really destroying our earth.
And that the waking up out of the trance, as we saw with Percival, is just beginning to go
back and just take a step and say what's really happening and bring our presence to it.
This is the Bodhisattva path.
Path of an awakening being is the sense,
I belong to this.
This is part of my heart and my being,
and it's part of my life to take whatever step I can
to move towards healing.
And we begin to reflect on this incredible mystery of our aliveness.
And these are the words of Paul Hawkins.
He says, in each of you are one quadrillion cells,
90% of which are not human cells.
Your body is a community,
and without those other microorganisms,
you would perish in hours.
Each human cell has 400 billion molecules
conducting millions of processes
between trillions of atoms.
In a millisecond,
our body has undergone ten times more processes
than there are stars in the universe.
Exactly what Charles Darwin foretold
when he said science would discover
that each living creature
was a little universe
formed of a host of self-propagating organisms
inconceivably minute
and as numerous as the stars
of heaven.
So I have two questions for you.
First,
can you feel your body?
Stop for a moment.
Feel your body.
One septillion activities
going on simultaneously.
And your body does this so well,
you are free to ignore it
and wonder instead when this talk will end.
Second question,
who is in charge of your body?
Who's managing those molecules?
Hopefully not a political party.
Life is creating the conditions
that are conducive to life inside you
just as in all of nature.
What I want you to imagine is that collectively humanity
is evincing a deep innate wisdom
in coming together to heal the wounds and insults of the past.
Ralph Waldo Emerson once asked
what we would do if the stars only came out once every thousand years.
No one would sleep that night, of course.
The world would become religious overnight,
night. We would be ecstatic, delirious, made rapturous by the glory of God. Instead, the stars
come out every night and we watch television. Or go online, I add. This extraordinary time
when we are globally aware of each other and the multiple dangers that threatened civilization
has never happened, not in a thousand years, not in ten thousand years.
So we begin our response as we sit, be still, and listen.
When the animals come to us asking for our help, writes poet Gary Lawless,
will we know what they're saying?
When the plants speak to us in their delicate, beautiful language,
will we be able to answer them?
When the planet herself sings to us in our dreams,
will we be able to wake ourselves and act?
In these final moments, please feel within yourself
whatever prayer you have for this living earth
for all beings.
Namaste.
For more talks and meditations,
and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
