Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Envisioning positive futures

This wonderful article, posted from Grist magazine, so expresses my longing for positive world vision that I just have to reprint it here in full. Love, Gail

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Gotta Wear Shades
Drop that apocalyptic vision and start imagining a positive future

By Karen Hurley
11 Jul 2006

Back at the turn of the millennium, the local government I was working for asked community members to contribute their vision of the municipality in the year 2025. As an environmental planner, I attended the community's presentations with some interest.

One group that responded was a gifted-students' club from an elementary school. In their envisioned future, they imagined a community with only indoor parks. Beyond these parks, there would be no trees, no plants, no birds, and no animals. Freshwater would be gone, because lakes and streams would either be dried up or too polluted to support life; drinking water would have to be created from desalinization plants on the coast. In the future these children predicted, universities and colleges would be closed because everyone would learn -- alone -- through their personal computers.

As the children spoke, I sat with tears rolling down my cheeks. Had I really just heard what they'd said? Had the appreciative and encouraging municipal council heard the same thing? Why would children who lived in an idyllic natural environment -- surrounded by trees, a rich diversity of plants and lush gardens, abundant wildlife including deer and cougars, large forested parks, and fish-bearing streams -- imagine a future that was ecologically dead?

The answer may be because this is the future collectively envisioned by most everyone, including scientists, technology pundits, fiction and documentary filmmakers, writers, advertisers, video-game producers, and those of us whose careers are devoted to trying to protect the planet. Perhaps these children envisioned a future in which their community was dead because that's the future they're taught is inevitable.

I fully understand this despair. I hit a wall of it straight-on during my tenure as an environmental planner. In fact, I remember saying things like, "Yes, we will hit total ecological collapse, but our job is to ensure that as many species as possible live beyond it." Now I see how harmful such words are.

Somehow, we need to begin to envision ecologically sound and socially just futures that reflect the great diversity of all beings, including humans. We must insist on having a say in what our futures look like. We do not have to accept the singular vision being created by those in power. This singular vision of the future is hyper-urban, with decaying cities, polluted air, and corporate and technological dominance. There is not a speck of nature. White men are still in charge. And then there are those damn flying cars.

This isn't the future I want, nor is it one I am working hard to create in my community. My vision of the future includes birds, trees, and clean flowing streams; organic, small-scale farms and lots of bicycles; conversations with neighbors at local stores and engaging educational institutions; clean air, strong women, diverse communities, truly democratic decision making, and happy children. No flying cars.

Some people will dismiss my vision as idealistic or unrealistic. But as scholar Ivana Milojevic of Metafuture reminds us, the dominant, dystopic vision of the future is seen as more "realistic" simply because it is talked about more, visualized more, and analyzed more. It is given infinite time and space in the media. It serves those in control; it is a continuation of their world. It's endorsed by our corporate culture, because people who have been made to feel powerless to contribute to a better world simply give up, becoming self-absorbed in golf games, video games, war games. Becoming relentless consumers to fill the void -- without challenging a thing.

Some people will say that my image of the future is counterproductive; that the doom and gloom is necessary to keep us all on our toes, to get us to respond to the warnings. I understand this. I have witnessed how politicians are unwilling or unable to take action until there is a crisis in front of them. But it doesn't have to be an either/or. Yes, a good cautionary tale is a powerful thing. What makes me crazy is that a cautionary tale is all we get. We also need the alternative. We need hopeful visions to give us something to work for, as opposed to always working against something. We need a diverse crop of sustainable ways forward.

Back to the children who imagined their future as dead: I went to visit them a few months later, and told them about the work I was doing at the local level, some of the amazing work being done by teams of people at the regional and federal levels, by volunteers, and by nonprofit groups. And they completely shifted. They reworked their vision to include flowing streams, trees, birds, animals, and happy people. They just needed to know that there were adults making positive change toward a flourishing earth. And then they asked me how they could help. So we set to work on a plan to create a native garden in their schoolyard.

As peace activist Elise Boulding puts it, "The sheer difficulty of imagining a future sustainability different from the present is one of our greatest problems as a society." Let's create, in the space that Grist provides, a dialogue about our worries and our hopes. Let's share stories about what is important for us to put in place for the future, and what's happening in our communities now that provides hopeful ways forward. It will be hard work to imagine sustainable and just futures, but it is time to begin. -->
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Karen Hurley is an interdisciplinary Ph.D. student, eco-feminist futurist, "retired" environmental planner, ex-restaurateur, and board member of a community organic farm. She works daily at baby steps toward enabling sustainable and just futures.

Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Body, Soul, and this Human Experience

There is the body, having an experience here on earth.

There is the mind that feels and creates the body of experience here on earth, including the physical body, and is capable of sensing both body and soul.

There is the individual soul itself, yearning to fully express on earth what it always knows of heaven, as the human mind can come into agreement with what the soul knows to be true.

There is Law of Attraction, endlessly propagating the desires of every being. These creations are held in vibrational safekeeping until the mind can come into alignment with them.

Thus the Universe expands, with every being offering creations in thought that wait in safekeeping until the being comes into emotional alignment with its own creations.

The creations themselves are neutral, and the person who made them may or may not realize that he did make them. But in every case the creations – in body or circumstance – perfectly express the objects of desire (or fear) and the degree of emotional alignment (or belief) with those desires.

To maintain and increase desirable creations, one must maintain an emotional stability that recognizes and allows the soul’s beautiful nature to express itself. This is achieved through daily spiritual practice, through coming into conscious alignment with the truth of one’s own soul – which is boundless, generous, infinitely kind – and feels wonderful.

To change undesirable conditions in body or circumstance, one must understandingly and consciously focus on things that feel better to contemplate. This shift happens gradually, by degrees, as resistance softens, and one becomes willing to voluntarily shift one’s habit of focus in daily life. Some contemplate heavenly things, some immerse themselves in nature, music, or art. Some companion with animals or friends. Some write, and explore to the source of their own eternal truth.

This is the essential spiritual skill, to know what you are aiming for: to know how good and wonderful the Universe is, and to maintain a trusting confidence in the natural unfoldment of that good. By allowing our own soul’s heavenly beauty to express, we can each contribute our maximum gift to our fellow beings on earth.


Gail Murray 7/5/06