As
my retirement looms closer, I've been giving some more thought about
exactly what I'll be doing with my days when I retire. In my previous
post Intention
to Practice I summarized the
nine steps that I am following (and urging others to follow, in their
own way) to make the world a better place, illustrated in the graphic
above.
To implement these practically into my new life, once I've moved, I
have organized my day into three blocks of time: 10am to 1pm for
reconnection practices, 2pm to 6pm for learning, facilitating action
and model-creating practices, and 8pm to 12pm for reflection and
writing practices. Starting with these three blocks of time, I
developed the chart below
that shows my long-term intentions, the long-term practices that
"stretch toward" those intentions, and the short-term, daily intentions
(exercises) in alignment with the longer-term ones. The long-term
practices tie into the nine steps in my What You Can Do graphic above,
and the colour (red, yellow, green) is from my 'scorecard' and shows
how much work I have to do on each.
Long-Term
Intention
Long-Term
Practices
Short-Term
Intentions (Exercises & Projects)
Hrs/day
now
Hrs/day
intended
A.
Reconnecting
with All Life on Earth, Instincts & Emotions
Appreciation
(1) Presence/Paying
Attention (2) Heart-Opening/Letting
Go (3)
2pm-6pm:
facilitating action:
- Open Space: Stopping the Tar Sands
- Open Space: Ending Factory Farms
0
1.5
D.
Creating
Models of a Better Way
to Live and Make a Living
Model-Building
(8)
2pm-6pm:
creating:
- novel: The Only Life We Know
- film: Earth 2200: A Travelogue
- workbook: Finding Your Sweet Spot
- unschooling: personal practice guide
I'm now starting to drill down into what I'm going to do, especially to
move from "red" to "green" in steps 1, 2 and 7. Here are some of the
exercises I'm intending to do:
Reconnecting
Exercises (preferably, but
not always, in company with others):
Listening and talking
with other creatures during forest/ocean walks -- paying attention to
their songs and sounds, to try to understand, viscerally and
intuitively, what they are saying, and 'talking back' to them in
something like their own voice
Spell of the Sensuous
exercises -- those described in David
Abram's book, connecting time
past and future back into the present
Sleeping in the wild
Acknowledging my grief
for Gaia, letting my heart be broken, and showing my broken heart to
the word -- with others, using some of Joanna Macy's exercises like the
truth mandella (taking turns speaking of these feelings of grief,
anger, fear, pain and dread), and confessing sorrows to each other,
drawing on Joanna's Six Principles:
This world, in which
we are born, and take our being, is alive.
Our true nature is
more ancient and encompassing than the separate self defined by habit
and modern society.
Our experience of
pain for the world springs from our interconnectedness with all beings,
from which springs also our powers to act on their behalf.
Unblocking occurs
when our pain for the world is not only validated, but experienced
(i.e. it is not enough to listen to the bad news in the media).
When we reconnect
with all-life-on-Earth, by willingly enduring our pain for it, the mind
retrieves its natural clarity (or as Derrick Jensen puts it "When you
listen, really listen to the land, you will know just what to do.")
The experience of
reconnection with all-life-on-Earth arouses desire and intention to act
on its behalf. Conversely, as long as we remain disconnected, we will
remain unmotivated, helpless, part of the problem.
Trust walks with
others (taking turns blindfolded, guided by a partner, and sensing
without seeing)
Meditation in
wilderness, especially guided meditations on the theme of affirmation
and gratitude
Intentional exercises
(like this article, except done in groups)
Artistic expression
exercises -- drawing, painting, dance, composing
music, sculpture -- including collaborative work
Facilitating
Action (organizing and
enabling groups to design and take actions that will undermine the
worst and most destructive facets of industrial civilization, with the
goal of ultimately dismantling it):
My belief is that this work must be collaborative, creative, and
self-critical. It must achieve measurable results effectively i.e.
without hurting others and hence creating martyrs of the supporters of
our unsustainable systems, and without getting ourselves arrested. The
results it achieves have to be more than public attention, even if that
achieves some change in understanding, beliefs and behaviours. My two
"starter" projects are to bring an end to factory farming (at least in
Canada), and to halt the Alberta Tar Sands.
We have to be more creative than chaining ourselves to tractors and
"liberating" farmed animals. These are PR stunts and they don't achieve
the results we seek: less (and eventually no) factory farming, and less
(and eventually no) Tar Sands operations. We cannot rely on changing
people's buying behaviour (I've learned what battery caged hens hellish
life is, but even I still eat food with eggs from unknown sources of
supply -- it's just too difficult under the current industrial
agriculture system to bring about real change through consumer
movements alone). We cannot rely on politicians or lawyers or changes
to laws and regulations and enforcement. These are the clowns that have
got us into this mess, and they are fully invested in keeping it going.
We are not going to be able to embarrass corporations to behave better
-- ExxonMobil is at once the world's worst polluter and the most
profitable company in the history of civilization. We need to find
better, more effective ways to bring these horrific practices to an end.
What we need to do, I think, is bring together a lot of creative minds,
with a great breadth of knowledge, experience, and deep understanding
of how the Tar Sands and factory farms currently operate. And then we
have to be methodical in identifying all the vulnerabilities of these
systems and how they can be exploited. To that end, I think a good
place to start is with Open Space as a methodology to enable a large
group of invitees to self-organize to develop understanding and action
plans, coupled with Donella Meadows' 12 Places
to Intervene in a System, which
can focus our attention on actions that will achieve maximum results.
So, for example, how could we deprive tar sands and factory farm
operators of critical sources of supply? How could we deprive them of
funds? How could we disrupt production? How could we prevent them
getting their 'product' to market? How could we reduce their market?
How could we change the purpose of the energy sector from increasing
supply of non-renewable energy, to reducing global carbon output to
zero through sequestration etc.? How could we change the purpose of the
farming industry from producing the maximum amount of food at the
lowest price, to producing a healthy diet for everyone with minimal
production and zero waste? How can we enable local energy and food
coops to spring up and meet the needs of their communities so they have
no need at all for the products of the tar sands or factory farms?
I don't have the answers, but between us, with effort and shared
knowledge and creativity, we
do. There is a better way to live. We just need to seize the
opportunity and power to create it, demonstrate it, and at the same
time bring down the corrupt, cruel, wasteful, toxic, unnatural,
irresponsible, unsustainable operations that the lawyers and
politicians and corporations and educators and media have brainwashed
us into believing is the only way to live. My job is to facilitate
making that happen, and also to apply what I do uniquely well
(imagining possibilities, and writing) to provoke the thinking that
will bring these essential changes to fruition.
That's some of what I intend to do, anyway.
MY GRAVITATIONAL COMMUNITY People
who have inspired or informed me frequently over the past few months.
For my full blogroll/online reference library, see
here. [* indicates
people I've met f2f]
- original research,surveys etc.
- original,well-crafted fiction
- great finds: resources,blogs,essays, artistic works
- news not found anywhere else
- category killers: aggregators that capture the best of many blogs/feeds, so they need not be read individually
- clever, concise political opinion consistent with their own views
- benchmarks,quantitative analysis
- personal stories,experiences,lessons learned
- first-hand accounts
- live reports from events
- insight:leading-edge thinking & novel perspectives
- short educational pieces
- relevant "aha" graphics
- great photos
- useful tools and checklists
- précis, summaries, reviews and other time-savers
- fun stuff: quizzes, self-evaluations, other interactive content
Blog writers
want to see more:
- constructive criticism, reaction, feedback
- 'thank you' comments, and why readers liked their post
- requests for future posts on specific subjects
- foundation articles: posts that writers can build on, on their own blogs
- reading lists/aggregations of material on specific, leading-edge subjects that writers can use as resource material
- wonderful examples of writing of a particular genre, that they can learn from
- comments that engender lively discussion
- guidance on how to write in the strange world of weblogs