Willi Paul's Posts (34)

Sort by


Giger’s Harvest Tradition @ Root River

New Myth #79 by Mythologist Willi Paul

http://www.planetshifter.com/node/2343


"It’s time-off for Giger, 3 miles downstream at the old Stormgate summer McMansion, a food forest and berry batch is weighted with apples, peaches and blackberries. His rituals dance in a submerged dock; the fire pit and the river’s shoreline. All give face to the Harvest Tradition."

9142457253?profile=original

Read more…

“Taking the Food Forest to City Hall” - International Permaculture Awareness Week. New Myth #78. Vision by Willi Paul, Planetshifter.com Media

http://www.planetshifter.com/node/2341

9142455474?profile=original

Read more…

“Sound Archetypes and the Four Seasons”

Children’s Video and Documentation 

by Willi Paul, Planetshifter.com Media (+PDF)

http://www.planetshifter.com/node/2340
9142453886?profile=originalfter.com/node/2340

Read more…

"Alice Greening and the Parking Lot Sharing Expo."

New Myth #35 by Willi Paul, NewMythologist.com

9142445663?profile=original

 

“At this special holiday event, we’ll have a re-gifting exchange, share holiday decor, and have a few holiday-themed demos. Bring your bikes, bike supplies, homegrown fruit, vegetables, eggs, herbs, honey, flowers, paints, markers, books, shirts, skirts, pants, fabric, yarn, paper, sheet music, patterns, books, garden tools, craft tools, toys, kits, seeds, unwanted gifts, and more. Be sure to bring a bag to take home the bounty, so you’ll have enough for gifts!”


 * * * * * *

A local seventh grade girl from East Palo Alto is curious to experience what her teacher calls the "new local economy." Alice Greening rides her bike over HW 101 to Palo Alto to check-out a new kind of “neighborhood sharing event” that looks at first glance like her thrift shop turned inside out! Curiously she finds an old silver dollar in the shrubbery as she parks her bike and wonders what she can buy with it. Each time she gets the same response: “Nothing! What do have to share?”

Her first stop is the bike man who is giving his time and expertise for free to tune-up everyone’s two wheelers. Alice sees a ton of bikes at the gig. But where is the car repair booth, she wonders? What she doesn’t get yet is that sharing is part of a larger heart-felt movement to create local relationships and resilient communities.

"Cars are losing favor in this circle," she smirks. With her old Schwinn now tried and true, she looks for another table to explore.

 

“Come over here dear, calls the cookie lady!” “Do you want to put some frosting on a cup cake and eat it at the Expo?”

 

“Are you teaching us something, Ma’am?”

 

“Oh Yes, indeed. I am sharing my experience as a start-up home bakery business. Frost-up a red velvet while I explain the bizz: batter to sprinkles!”

 

Alice walks on, rubbing her silver dollar and whipping off frosting from her cheeks, chagrinned, wondering if anyone at this strange Expo will ask her to spend it. Ahead on her right, a large blue sheet is on the ground, covered with little piles of clothes. A woman drops clothes onto the sheet and walks on while another is sizing up a blouse.

 

“What are you looking for today?”Alice asks the woman.

 

“Nothing special. Just good to hang out here. In Brazil we have a family tradition of sharing; we need no parking lot expo to take care of our generations!” Alice is admiring a red scarf.

 

“It’s yours honey! Give back what you can!”

 

There are many exciting things just ahead in the parking lot, and many colorful people to check-out. Piles of books, house plants, fabrics and seeds. People playing weird instruments.

 

Alice guesses and says hello to one of the organizers of the Expo.

 

“Ma-am?”

 

“Hi!”

 

“None of my friends are here today. Can we hook-up our neighborhoods somehow?”

 

“Can I ask you to take back some flyers to your churches and schools?”

 

“Cool beans.”

 

“Ma’am?”

 

“Yes, Alice!?”

 

“Here is a dollar for the sharing fund.”

 

* * * * * * * *

 

Check-out the other New Myths!

Read more…

Our instruments have no way of measuring this feeling
Can never cut below the floor, or penetrate the ceiling.
In the space between our houses, some bones have been discovered,
But our procession lurches on, as if we had recovered.

Draconian winter unforetold.
One solar day, suddenly you’re old.
Your little envelope just makes me cold,
Makes destination start to unfold.

Our documents are useless, or forged beyond believing.
Page forty-seven is unsigned, I need it by this evening.
In the space between our cities, a storm is slowly forming.
Something eating up our days, I feel it every morning.
Destination, destination.

It’s not a religion, it’s just a technique.
It’s just a way of making you speak.
Distance and speed have left us too weak,
And destination looks kind of bleak.

Our elements are burned out, our beasts have been mistreated.
I tell you it’s the only way we’ll get this road completed.
In the space between our bodies, the air has grown small fingers.
Just one caress, you’re powerless, like all those clapped-out swingers.
Destination, destination.

Destination” by The Church

* * * * * * *

BB-Final

Interview with Bonnie by Willi

How is depth psychology related to the new mythology?

C.G. Jung, widely credited as one of the founders of depth psychology around the turn of the 20th century, regarded the field as an aggregate of all the sciences, including philosophy, medicine, anthropology, physics, and more. As one common description of depth psychology is that it is “the study of the unconscious,” it lends itself to inquiry into any topic by looking below the surface level and reflecting in order to ascertain what is hidden, invisible, or marginalized. In some ways I believe we could consider depth psychology IS the new mythology because it provides a way for new narratives to emerge.

With the gradual development of our corresponding capacity for logical thinking in humans (that is, to “think about our ability to think”), we have both increased opportunities for consciousness but also increased challenges in the sense that we categorically seek to analyze, label, and put into buckets the things we don’t understand, sometimes becoming reductive and trapped in limited thinking. In order for us to transcend our current mythology and come to new creative awareness, we need to be able to look beyond established boundaries and facades to see what new and emergent concepts await.

One good example of this is the current debate about gun control in America in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting and so many other recent tragic violence with guns. On one level it’s quite common to look at it as whether or not we need to ban public access to guns (and it certainly is worth the debate), but if you use a depth psychological lens, you look beyond that simple black-and-white question to see what the undercurrent is in our society that is enabling or even driving certain individuals to use guns to commit such horrible atrocities.

Part of the study of depth psychology includes regarding the shadow, that invisible aspect of ourselves that is a blind spot for us (even though those close to us can usually see it clearly). The negative, repressed parts of us that we are unable to deal with have often become split off from our awareness but continue existing (and acting out)–albeit under the radar so to speak. For example, one individual may be highly critical or even become derogatory toward parents who allow their children to run wild in public, but in the end it may be stemming from individual’s own deeply ingrained memory of her own experience with parents who punished her for doing the same, insisting she was “bad” for doing so. Gradually the details of the reason for negative feelings disperse, but the negative feeling remains—simply no longer connected to any rational reason that one could point to that triggers it.

Like individuals, society also had its shadow. Going back to the issue of the growing number of mass shootings, I recently read a very good article that offers a symbolic and depth psychological take on the matter. In “Mythology of Bullets” (Spring 81: The Psychology of Violence), Jungian analyst and professor Glen Slater reflects on one of the most fundamental beliefs of the American culture at large. He suggests our inherent belief in the American dream, that anyone can achieve success if he works hard enough may be partially at fault.

In conjunction with the Second Amendment our forefathers bestowed the right for every individual to bear arms, and the rather black-and-white mandate that stipulates failure in America is not an option and we must do whatever it takes to succeed, those who are moving at a pace that is not sustainable and still find themselves failing, marginalized, and teetering on the brink of defeat simply fall prey to a power complex in which they grasp onto the one enduring symbol that lives in the very biology of our cells. Passed down from the pioneers who subdued (and colonized) the Wild West in order to establish the United States of America, the access to and utilization of guns and bullets to finally and forcefully remove all objects in the way seems an inherent right.

More, by placing a finger on the trigger of such a device that can kill at a distance, it makes us remote–removing ourselves from the human connection. Slater refers to connection between bullets as projectiles and the psychological projections we easily make in blaming others for our failures. The shadow we can’t possibly see rises up, projecting fault and simultaneously seeking to obliterate any thing that might be perceived to be linked to our failure, lack of ability to connect, and our corresponding exile to edges of acceptability in a society so focused on success. Additionally, Slater points out, the tendency of our narrative –our cultural myth, if you will—is that the hero always wins, is shiny bright and successful, and has no shadow side. There is no room for failure, and at the same time, we tend to move so fast and expect so much that we fail to allow for a slowing down, a reflection on the reality of life’s ups and downs, and a container for just being in the grips of difficulty, sadness, anger, and depression.

Jungian James Hillman, founder of archetypal psychology and one of the greatest depth psychologists in contemporary times (he just died last year in 2011), points out how absolutely critical it is that we engage in the journey to the “underworld.” Traditional rites of initiation—now essentially absent in our culture—require the initiate to travel on what is essentially an underworld journey to go into the depths, encounter obstacles, overcome trials, and return bearing gifts for the society. If we are not willing to experience the depths, the despair, and the trials, we can’t possibly experience positive growth—what Jung called “individuation”–in the same way. Equally, it’s critical that we participate in what depth psychologists Mary Watkins and Helene Schulman refer to as “engaged witnessing” to honor and validate the suffering and sacrifice of those who have lost loved ones to these terrible eruptions of shadow in the cultural landscape. If we fail to “feel” and honor the feelings of grief, despair, anger, and loss that naturally arise in situations such as this, we remain only “passive bystanders” who are far more likely to participate only as onlookers that experience only the shock value or entertainment-related aspects of such dramatic and traumatic events.

Tell us about your PhD dissertation. What is your “point?!”

Writing a dissertation is, for me, truly a gift. It’s hard, but it’s an opportunity to engage deeply by delving into topics that are not necessarily easy on any level but seem so critical to humanity at this time and juncture. In my case, I have been profoundly impacted by the loss of home and home places–particularly as a result of ecocide and environmental disaster. What happens when people are displaced from their homes, especially due to acts of “nature”? In recent years, we have seen increasing nature-related catastrophes and human-caused ecocide—the destruction of home places—whether it’s due to pollution, oil spills, developmental projects like dams, highways and shopping malls, or massive deforestation. Climate change in an increasing factor, leading to massive drought, flooding, food shortages and increasing instances of “superstorms” like huge hurricanes, clusters of tornadoes, or intense blizzards—all disastrous to people who have lived for generations in certain places who now find their home places severely threatened. The  American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), predict we will have as many as 50 million environmental refugees worldwide as soon as 2020, an estimate that is backed up by the UN Institute for Environment and Human Security

Environmental refugees, described as ‘persons who no longer gain a secure livelihood in their traditional homelands because of what are primarily environmental factors of unusual scope’ are  also predicted to number upwards of 150 million by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) by 2050. In the face of such tragedy that is already occurring, one wonders where all these individuals will go to find new home places and how they will survive the trauma of losing all they have—a core factor of their identities.

It is already imperative to regard the sense of exile and refugee-ism for individuals who suffer the loss of home due to earth-related disaster, but it becomes ever more meaningful to look at the significance of psychological exile in the face of all we have lost. In western culture, heavily based on the Biblical myth of our exile from the Garden of Eden, we begin to realize we have suffered tremendous loss by feeling we have been evicted from our birthright and have no place to call home. Perhaps this has also led to the capacity of some of us to colonize first peoples in their existing home places the world over. Over millennia, we have divorced ourselves from a sense of belonging that existed in early human societies and are increasingly feeling separate, isolated, and abandoned—psychological refugees who have no recourse to the difficulties of modern day save numbing, dissociation, and percepticide—the cutting off of our capacity to truly see the devastating circumstances that occur in our culture (like the Sandy Hook shooting of so many innocent children). Because—if we were to truly allow ourselves to look and “see” what we have allowed our culture to come to and how we are increasingly destroying ourselves, each other and Earth—the only home place we know, it would be too horrible to bear.

In the end, this exploration is critical for all of us to understand where we are seeking refuge for ourselves from the horrors of ecocide, devastation, poverty, hunger, and crimes against humanity. How do we each as an individual as well as a culture collectively numb, detach, or turn to addictive behaviors or consumerism to deal with the nearly unbearable challenges we face?

These questions drive me on a daily basis, and make me realize all the more strongly how important it is to be able to take a depth psychological look at these challenging issues and try to make some sense of them.

The Depth Psychology Alliance is welcoming new members like crazy. Who are these people and what are they looking for?

I’m really grateful for the increasing number of people who are finding and joining the Alliance. Even though it’s free to join, there is some effort to be made in signing up for yet another social media network—so I think those who are joining are really motivated to connect and to understand on a larger scale. The Alliance is dedicated to expanding the reach of depth psychology and people who are coming together are in search of something bigger than the every day selves most of us are familiar with and live with everyday. We all seek to understand how we are interconnected and I think the Alliance offers that perspective and opportunity. As of this writing, we have over 1800 members from all over the world and we’re growing. I think most of us would agree it’s a dynamic group of like-minded people who are all deeply drawn by the field of depth psychology. While there are many Jungian analysts and clinical psychologists who participate, our members come from various walks of life including artists, writers, doctors, scientists, healing professionals, counselors, students, business people, and so many more–so there is much cross-disciplinary knowledge and experience to be shared. It’s truly a testament to Jung’s desire to make depth psychology a multi-disciplinary field, and I think it’s also a “home place” for many of us who are looking for a place to feel rooted and a sense of belonging in a culture that’s increasingly chaotic and disturbing.

How is the new Depth List listing service progressing? Is this about revenue?

Honestly, the discovery of depth psychology and its principles have had such a profound effect on my own life, I feel somehow driven to help bring it to others. I think the creation of a database of depth psychology oriented practitioners—from Jungian analysts to psychotherapists to astrologers and somatic therapists is critical at this stage. I don’t know how these skilled practitioners who have dedicated their lives to this kind of work are currently promoting their skills and their practices, but certainly there’s a huge amount of educating that usually has to happen to help everyday individuals understand what depth psychology is and the value of a depth psychological approach to self-improvement and coping.

If I, with a background in marketing in the corporate world for 15 years, can do something to help these individuals get the word out about their offerings, I’ll do it. I won’t say I don’t wish I could figure out how to make a living out of it—or even initially break even for the cost of developing, hosting, and promoting DepthPsychologyList.com, but I’m committed for the foreseeable future to just work out the marketing piece so we can all—both providers and clients—benefit from what’s available. The service is free to enlist through the end of December so I invite everyone who offers depth psychology oriented service to sign up now. It’s also free for anyone to search and find practitioners by location, zip code, or type of services offered.

Who is your competition?

Beg your pardon? I can’t even fathom the concept of “competition” in this context. I realize more than ever how strongly my own desire is to get the word out to the general population about depth psychology. Carl Jung is a huge piece of that—and Jungian analysts have done a good job of marketing themselves for decades—but there’s so much more that can do good for the human race if we all just increase our consciousness that there’s more to life—and our human potential—than meets the eye. If nothing else, I would wish “depth psychology” would become a household term so that everyone—whether they choose to engage or not—at least would know that it stands for the opportunity to understand ourselves and each other better and to increasingly improve our ability to love each other, to feel connected, to engage those who are struggling, and to make meaning of this thing called “life”—through wisdom that comes from dreams, symbols, archetypes, nature, wisdom traditions of indigenous societies and mythology—and to truly allow ourselves to renew ourselves on every level at every moment to make the world a better place.

ANY organization that is working toward this goal and finding ways to share depth psychology in the world is doing something so significant and important. I am happy to do anything in my power to help them succeed as well and invite them to contact me to form a partnership so I can help spread the word. It was only a few years ago that I, myself, had never heard the term “depth psychology.” In this scenario, there is not such thing as “competition” but only increasing awareness and amplified efforts to get the word out to those whose lives will surely be changed if they only have the chance to encounter and engage.

* * * * * * *

Bio – Bonnie Bright is the founder of Depth Psychology Alliance, the world’s first comprehensive online community for depth psychology and hosts a regular podcast, Depth Insights, as well as editing the semi-annual scholarly e-zine of the same name. She recently founded www.DepthPsychologyList.com, a free online database to find or list depth psychology oriented therapists and practitioners. She holds Masters degrees in Psychology and Depth Psychology and  is a Ph.D. candidate at Pacifica Graduate Institute in Santa Barbara, CA.

Read more…

Sounds for New Mythic Alchemy?

9142445093?profile=original

http://youtu.be/qRkGrD7u8pc

SCAPES:

[ 1 ] Intro - Lying on the Ground

[ 2 ] soil_howl

[ 3 ] fracking the union

[ 4 ] new grid rising

[ 5 ] ear tools

We are in need of new life-giving myths~

“We are living at the end of an era. The stories of this era were written when the earth was still flat, when our planet was thought to be at the center of creation, and before the Hubble space telescope showed us that we are one in a billion galaxies in the sky. The old myths have exhausted themselves. We are in need of new life-giving myths that can sustain us and our children for the next thousand years. These myths are beginning to appear. They are stories of sustainability, of stewardship of the Earth of everything around us being alive.”

“…Most important, I believe that we have to discover a new personal and collective mythology and begin telling empowering stories about ourselves and our epic journeys through life.”

“I was then a young anthropologist investigating the healing practices of the shamans of the rainforest, and I decided to use myself as a subject…During one healing ceremony the shaman explained to me that like everyone, I can either have what I want or the reasons why I can’t. ‘Your are too enamored of your story,’ the old man said. ‘Until you dare to dream a different dream, all you will have is the nightmare.’”

“That evening I learned how to craft a different story for myself, my family, our students, and the Earth. I do this with other dreamers, who come and gather around a holy fire in the Dreamtime. Each of us brings a small piece to the dream, and when we share it, suddenly we can taste it, feel it, sense it—and occasionally we see it.”

~ Alberto Villoldo in Awakening to the Spirit World: The Shamanic Path of Direct Revelation by Sandra Ingerman & Hank Wesselman

Read more…

Mimicry: An anti-predatory device where a species copies the appearance, sound or form of a model species in order to survive. Camouflage: A survival technique in which an otherwise visible organism may be unseen or indiscernible from its surrounding environment. Camouflage is used by animals to hide from predators and prey – including humans hiding from other humans.

* * * * * * *

Believe me, building a mythical space as big as Monterey to Vancouver Island is not an easy thing. The 33 new myths + are starting to-fill in the places, people and Chaos Era struggles but much more is needed if Cascadia will be a reality in the future.

First, seven colors have been selected from seven Cascadian animals because Nature is the design driver and basis for the new federation logos, mascots and flag. The Cascadian Color Palette helps to integrate Nature with Tribe identity and the new regional community.

What does Biomimcry have to do with a make-believe county? The color palette is the new spiritual, protection and economic visual standard.

The camouflage that is created from the palette and recycled / naturally dyed second hand clothing is how humans are using Nature’s colors to protect themselves from other humans, shielding from the Dark Side bandits.

Using the Color Palette, four camouflages for Cascadia over-alls, yurts, flags and tattoos and other fair trade items are created:

Read more…

Missey Harrison’s long ponytail was always getting in the wrong places. Just yesterday she was trimming veggie starts in her micro garden behind her parent’s house on Euclid Ave and her tail got really dirty between the rows. She has burned the thing in the biochar oven more times than she can recall.


“Anything for the movement, she yells (to no one)!”soil_hands.jpg?w=218&h=300&width=218

Her new soil lab includes a series of small neighborhood supported compost piles, drying racks made from recycled pallets, a tool shed, and her father’s old banker’s desk where she packs her magic for global shipment. She learned about soil chemistry from her permaculture PDC; Harrison is now a globally-recognized biochar activist and alchemist. She ships seed balls via FedEx.

 

* * * * * * *

 

On her web site, the biochar burn is explained as:

BioChar is simply charcoal that is intended to go into the soil where it has some amazing benefits for soil and the environment. Charcoal is the carbon-rich material made from heating wood or other plant material in an oxygen-deprived atmosphere. As a soil additive, BioChar offers numerous potential benefits. It increases the capacity for soil to hold nutrients, enhances crop yields and captures and stores carbon for the long term. Unused biomass such as farm residues, green waste and sawmill scraps is heated with no or little oxygen present in a BioChar oven where the temperature can reach 1000F. The biochar-heating process releases energy-rich gases and preserves the char which can be ground up and mixed into soil to increase its fertility. And there’s money to be made from the process. A ton of BioChar could retail for $2000 or even more if packaged for specialty uses such as growing orchids or pot plants!

This is not about buying huge plantations or taking over natural forests; this is about using waste biomass and turning it into viable end products which then help the soil, help our food productivity, help with the climate problem and bring environmental, social and economic benefits. Biochar can greatly reduce the amount of water and fertilizers needed as well as making healthier, stronger more nutritious plants and vegetables. 

 

 

* * * * * * *

Harrison’s Production Cycle is as follows:

Food Waste Materials Collected / Separated >

Heated in biochar Oven >

Produces Enriched Charcoal Soil Additive >

Biochar is mixed with available soil and organic materials in the compost pile >

Producing Super Soil > Hybrid, drought tolerant food crop seeds are then formed into 4” diameter balls with biochar >

Seed balls (one part BioChar, one part super soil, one part seed ball) are shipped across the Planet.

 

 

* * * * * * *

Food forests are now growing in rural and village areas in Africa and Australia from these seed balls. Harrison is collaborating with Occupy the Farm on genetically protecting her seeds from Monsanto. The backyard farmer will tell anyone who stops by that the “super soil’ is her “elixir”, or grail. Just ask Sissy the Rooster.


Read more…

Starhawk Interview (.mp3): 33rd Annual Spiral Dance,

Kezar Pavilion, SF. Sat Oct 27, 2012.

< Complete Details >

By Willi Paul, NewMythologist.com

: Listen Here :

5 Questions for Starhawk

1. As you create the event, how do you balance the internal or spiritual with the group joy?

2. What is happening these days for you personally at the intersection between Nature and magic?

3. Is Kezar Pavilion a sacred space for you? How can we know such a place?

4. The Cardinal Altars will be interactive? Why? What is the benefit to the dance goers?

5. Can you tell us more about your vision as the “new world (is) born?”

Read more…

9142443475?profile=original

http://wp.me/p2JLqK-6f


Two (of ten) questions from the survey include:

4. Do you get information directly from other folks? Where? When?

8. How would you improve the political dialogue in your city?

Read more…


Cascadia’s Green Mythic Tea Tribe.
New Myth # 30 by Willi Paul

 

9142443455?profile=original

- teaser -

Menku and Kay work in the basement of the Green Leaf Café, a localized tea plantation (a reclaimed cemetery) and sipping spot in northeast PDX, now a proud member of Cascadia. They work with several other researchers to discover how the mythic gene works and if they can turn it on for folks without its spark.

http://wp.me/p2JLqK-91

Read more…

Building the Story of Cascadia: New Tools for the Transition

Workshop Video & Hand-out from 2012 NWP Convergence

by Willi Paul, newmythologist.com

 

9142442459?profile=original

Read more…

"The Ostrich & the Flame Thrower: Crisis Storytelling in the Chaos Era", Willi Paul, Principle, newmythologist.com

- excerpt -

The big question here is how do non-profits, corporations and other organizations nurture and disseminate their stories in a global climate of chaos? Can Occupy protests, nightly corporate TV news and environmental justice web sites plant “non-GMO seeds” for new stories and new myths?

http://wp.me/p2JLqK-50

Read more…

Reckoning at the 2043 Cascadia Shaman’s Convergence –

New Myth 28 by Willi Paul

Resilience is best understood as a process. It is often mistakenly assumed to be a trait of the individual, an idea more typically referred to as “resiliency”. Most research now shows that resilience is the result of individuals being able to interact with their environments and the processes that either promote well-being or protect them against the overwhelming influence of risk factors. These processes can be individual coping strategies, or may be helped along by good families, schools, communities, and social policies that make resilience more likely to occur. Commonly used terms, which are closely related within psychology, are “psychological resilience”, “emotional resilience”, “hardiness”, “resourcefulness”, and “mental toughness”.

 

* * * * * * *

 

The men and women spirit channels hived at a secret crossing along the American River northeast of Auburn, CA. Only Shaman of the Light Network are aware of this geomantic location. A few mature trees that remain in the post-Chaos Era welcome and shelter them.  A look-out schedule is posted as they must keep all eyes for the out-stretch hands of the dark troops mutating in the east.

One of the rituals in the Shaman’s Convergence is the sharing of new songs, poems or myths from their territories in Cascadia. Zephyr Canon took-up his turn by showing the group how to use a quartz crystal to refract and dance the fire light to help illustrate the times before the Chaos Era finally ended the founding fathers greed, global aggression, and in-sustainability joy ride.

“The year is 2021, people,” he called.

 

“They had to hightail themselves out of the cages of the ruling class and toward local circles of resistance and honest barter.”

 

“The future is of little concern for the poor, the homeless and the ill.”

 

“Quite so.”

 

 

“Many spoke and marched and broke store windows back then but too few took real actions to build a more egalitarian and localized system.”

 

“Permaculture is fractionized; marginalized by old boy egos and profit-taking.”

 

“On the surface, many were “acting collectively” but were actually just small businesses preaching sustainable collectivism.  Like so many GMO-corrupt farmers markets. “Latino, Asia, Jamaica, African-America, and White neighbors set-up their own booths to take their profit from the community while forced to pay a percentage -taking authority for the right to locate there for the day.”

 

“Fewer and fewer ate healthy, were safe and had access to tools to build local systems.”

 

“Who wrote the new myths in the Transition and Chaos eras?”

 

“The Shamen.”

 

“Here then is a fundamental paradox: who really needs a new story or vision? And by default: who keeps getting the old ones shoved into their ears?”

 

“Our challenge is to continue to satisfy the “universal” mandate of myth building – even with so many misplaced souls and twisted spines.”

 

“The end of the Transition meant that the rich were out of resources and the poor finally understood the value of their gold. The Chaos on all levels was unavoidable.

 

“Fire is as fundamental to our history, sisters and brothers – and to our Post-Transition future – as Nature herself.”

 

Zephyr Canon dropped his magic quartz piece into the hands of the next sharer and went to relieve a sister on the perimeter.

 

 

 

 

Read more…