LLEWELLYN VAUGHAN-LEE mourns the
forgetting of our connection with the Earth, inviting us once more to
remember, reconnect and rekindle the sacred of that relationship in our
lives.
The pandemic has confronted us with a world seemingly out of balance, a
health crisis easily becoming an economic crisis. Here in California, a
summer of raging wildfires has brought climate crisis to our doorstep, the
air dense with smoke, the sun rising red, ash falling. As the world spins
more and more out of balance there is a pressing need to stay inwardly
aligned, to keep our feet on the ground and our hearts open. We cannot
afford to contract into fear or be caught in the miasma of disinformation
and distortion, to be swept along by the strange currents of this time. It
is essential to have a simple spiritual practice to remain centered, whether
watching the breath, a prayer, or just resting in silence.
The remembrance of the heart is one such practice. Through our remembrance,
the Divine becomes alive within our heart and comes to meet us in our daily
life. We bring a quality of love into our ordinary life, nourishing our
environment in hidden ways. But remembrance also implies forgetfulness; we
remember what we have forgotten, being with the Divine as a living presence,
in friendship, companionship. Initially, for an individual, awakening is
always an act of grace, given as a gift to help us begin our journey home.
We are given a taste of our pre-existing state of divine oneness, or
presence. Spiritual practice is then a simple way to remain awake from the
forgetfulness caused by the illusions of the world, and gradually lift the
veils that separate us from the light within us and around us.
Because our present culture has lost touch with the knowing of how we are
interconnected with the Earth, what the Zen monk Thich Nhat Hanh calls
“interbeing,” we have forgotten how deeply we affect the Earth as a living
being. We are belatedly realizing how our global industrial growth and
consumer society are negatively impacting our physical environment,
destroying the web of life on an unprecedented scale, pushing the planet’s
life support systems to the edge. We do not yet realize how our collective
consciousness also impacts the Earth. Earlier cultures lived in harmony with
the Earth, recognizing how it was alive spiritually and magically as well as
physically. With their prayers and rituals they communed with the Earth and
its many inhabitants, keeping the balance between the worlds and never
forgetting the Great Spirit present in creation. Their song, dance, drumming
infused the Earth with their awareness of its divine nature, their sacred
symbols belonging to both the outer and inner worlds. In this way, since the
very beginning, they helped the Earth come alive as a magical being, just as
our own spiritual practice can help us individually to bring alive our
awareness of our divine nature.
The remembrance of the heart is one such practice. Through our remembrance,
the Divine becomes alive within our heart and comes to meet us in our daily
life. We bring a quality of love into our ordinary life, nourishing our
environment in hidden ways.
In the first days, when human consciousness awakened on the Earth, maybe
two hundred thousand years ago or longer, something changed, shifted within
the spiritual body of the Earth. The light of human consciousness,
mythically imaged as fire stolen from the gods, communed directly with the
light of the Earth; the human soul and the soul of the world,
anima mundi, sang together. The Earth awakened in a new way; a
different quality of Earth consciousness was born. And as the first peoples
danced and sang their stories and creation myths, the magic of the land
awoke. This was also the time of the naming, when shamans or wisdom keepers
were given the names of creation, which gave them access to their magical
power, the healing properties of plants, the wisdom and powers of animals.
In this earlier time there was a knowing that has now become deeply hidden
– a knowing of the sacred purpose of creation, of its beauty and wonder. And
this knowing was continuously coming alive, speaking to human beings in all
the myriad voices of the world around, in the streams and storms, in the
cries of the birds and the animals, in the first language of
life1. And the awakening Earth was cared for by the first
peoples, by their ceremonies and prayers, and later by their sacred art –
drawings of bison, horses, deer, and then by stone circles aligned to the
midsummer rising sun, or temples whose statues often imaged the fertility of
the goddess. In this way, human consciousness and Earth consciousness met in
a sacred manner and nurtured each other, the light of the human soul and the
light within creation helping both humanity and the Earth to evolve, to sing
together.
And so, for millennia, the Earth and humanity evolved together, until we
began our journey of separation from the Earth, when God retreated into
heaven, the soil stopped being sacred, and we began to forget. Now our
creation myth is the Big Bang of science, but where in this story are the
salmon swimming upstream, and the bear hibernating in winter? Where are the
spirits of the mountains and rivers, felt in the winds and the water? Where
are the power and the wonder, the magic that can come alive through our
senses, through our direct relationship with the land and its inhabitants?
What have we lost? What have we forgotten? And what does this mean to the
Earth Herself that our prayers are no longer present?
Sadly, tragically, our forgetfulness of the Earth’s magical nature, and the
fact that so few of us practice the rituals that sustain this relationship,
have meant that this magical living dimension of the Earth has receded from
consciousness. For most people it remains only in myth or children’s
stories. Its song is no longer heard; its sacred meaning has been forgotten.
And the Earth Herself has suffered, Her light withdrawing.
Now, the Earth is dying physically and spiritually. We cannot return to the
dances and stories of our ancestors – they belong to a different time and
place. But the simple act of our remembrance of Her sacred nature can help
in this moment. And the heart’s remembrance is always love. Love is life’s
greatest gift and our greatest gift back to life. And, as the poet Mary
Oliver writes so poignantly, “There is only one question: how to love this
world.” We can help the world remember what our culture has forgotten – how
the soil, the seeds, the rivers and the stars all carry a central message of
love. In all its diverse forms, its different ways of being and breathing,
the living Earth is a celebration of love. And now it is calling out to us,
crying to us to remember its sacred nature.
1
In The Spell of the Sensuous (1996), David Abram describes how “for
the Inuit, as for numerous other peoples, humans and animals all originally
spoke the same language.” He quotes an Inuit woman:
In the very earliest time when peoples and animals lived on earth... All
spoke the same language. That was the time when words were like magic...
Those who are recognized as shamans or medicine persons “most fully remember
the primordial language, and are thus able to slip, at will, out of the purely
human discourses in order to converse directly with the other powers.”
Adapted from
A Handbook for Survivalists: Caring for the Earth, A Series of
Meditations.
Available as a free PDF at www.goldensufi.org. © 2020, The Golden Sufi
Center
Article by LLEWELLYN VAUGHAN-LEE