The World is Our Garden —Defend It or Lose It
by Julian Rose
When we walk into a carefully nurtured and diverse garden,
we are struck by its beauty and its sense of completeness. We are enraptured by
its scents and its mysteries. We are enlivened by its colours, both vivid and
subtle, and we are nourished by the freshness that fills our lungs.
Altogether, the majority of sentient beings will surely
concur, this garden is a most agreeable place to be – and should someone emerge
who threatens to desecrate this sacred space – the reaction will be to jump to
its defence and protect it against such a criminal action.
So let us consider the fact that many a wise person and many
a spiritual leader has felt impelled to point out that “The World Is Our
Garden” and that it should therefore be tended, nurtured and defended in the
same way as the private space in which we grow our flowers, fruits, vegetables
and herbs. Emotionally, we should make no distinction between these micro and
macro spheres.
Yet look around today and what do we see?
Certainly there are many mortals tending their individual
gardens, and many more with no physical garden to tend. But amongst of all
these, just a tiny minority can be found who are willing to go out of their way
to stand-up for that greater garden called planet Earth.
Even amongst those who would class themselves as ‘aware’ and
advancing along the path of spiritual enlightenment, one finds too few ready
and willing to actively defend the greater whole in the same spirit as they
readily defend and tend their ‘own’ private space. Be that space the place
where one cultivates one’s spiritual growth – or the physical space that is
one’s own garden.
The act of ‘ownership’ appears to have overridden and
nullified our ability to feel and apply a sense of innate responsibility for
that which we don’t ‘own’.
The neo-liberal capitalist/consumerist conditioning that
forms a major part of nearly all our educations – has not taught us to feel
responsible for all life – but only that part in which we have invested our
personal interest and financial resources.
We need reminding that we are the collective trustees of
this unique living entity that sustains and provides us with all our needs for
the duration of our lives – and beyond.
Let us question our supposed ‘spirituality’ in the light of
our unwillingness to lay ourselves on the line to fight for the survival of
that which enables us to eat, drink, breathe and take pleasure in its abundant
generosity.
You see, if we had been entrained from an early age to
respond spontaneously to the life giving heart beat of our planetary existence,
we would make no distinction between empathy for the garden of Gaia and empathy
for our own private garden. Empathy for all children and empathy for our own
children .. and so on.
We would recognize that the manifestation of our protective
instinct to operate only around that which we consider ‘belongs to us’ is a
gross distortion of our natural instincts.
Why do I say that?
Consider for a moment that you are sitting in your garden
and someone comes through the gate with a chain-saw and proceeds to set about
felling your favourite fruit tree … what would you do?
Well, you would almost certainly spring up from your chair
and rush to stop them. Now let us shift to a similar incident where a beautiful
tree in a park on the other side of your garden fence is indiscriminately
approached by a man wielding a chain saw who clearly has no business to be
there. It is clear that this person has the intention of cutting down this tree
… what would your reaction be to this? Would you try to apprehend this person?
Try to find help? Feel a sense of outrage?
There is a chance that you might respond in all these ways;
but there is a much greater likelihood that, after experiencing some initial
discomfort at the brazenness of this destructive intent, you would take no
action, consoling yourself with the thought “There’s nothing I can do about it
anyway”. With that thought uppermost in your mind you would try to ignore the
incident and get on with what you were doing.
If our education system had even a smidgeon of spiritual
aspiration written into its curriculum – we would be encouraged to recognize
our responsibility for all life on this planet from an early age – and be
encouraged to come to its rescue at times when it is clearly under threat.
But that is not what the majority of schooling is about. On
the contrary, it concentrates its energies on teaching us how to acquire the
means to ‘own’ some little niche of this planet, and to accumulate the
thousands of bits and pieces that are deemed necessary to furnish it. God
forbid that we might decide to reject the trappings of this hallowed road to
hell!
Every TV advert, commercial hoarding, glitzy magazine, shop
window, internet and cinema screen – is imploring us to indulge in a
consumptive way of life that both precludes gaining a greater awareness of our
predicament, and contributes to the inevitable rape of the planetary resources
upon which we all depend.
The rising consciousness that comes with our spiritual
practice also has the affect of alerting us to the destructive nature of this
consumptive life style and the majority of jobs that constitute the repetitive
and largely sterile working week.
We see more and more clearly how, if we are caught in this
mechanism, we are just a cog in a vast machine whose overall ambition is
precisely the opposite of that which inspires our spiritual endeavours.
It soon becomes obvious that we have to make a choice: find
a form of work that satisfies our rising sense of discernment and is supportive
of the trusteeship of planet earth, or give-in to the demands and promises of
the corporate state that so relentlessly undermines all that is subtle,
beautiful and spiritually fulfilling in this day to day adventure called Life.
The new society so many of us long for can only come about
if we take the necessary actions to bring it about. One cannot embark upon a
path to higher consciousness while ignoring the damage done through the way one
conducts one’s daily life. In order to realise our deeper selves and sleeping
spiritual powers, we have to bring all aspects of our lives into line with our
rising consciousness.
This means embarking upon a disciplined transition away from
reliance upon the crude and destructive commercial edifices of the status quo –
such as long food mile, profit hungry supermarket chains; highly corrupted
large scale banking institutions; agrichemically and genetically modified
‘convenience’ foods; unnecessarily large gas guzzling cars; mind numbing and
mind controlling TV programmes; following ‘fashion’; frequent boozing and
partying; electro smog producing indulgent cell phone conversations … and so
on.
Not only are these various pursuits negatively impacting on
us and on our surroundings – but by pursuing them we are financially and
energetically supporting those facets of society whose sole aim is profit,
power and increasing control over our daily lives. In other words we are
supporting that which is part and parcel of the uninterrupted destruction of
this ‘world that is our garden’.
This is clearly a thoroughly unspiritual path to tread.
We are either supporting a radical transformation of society
in line with our own rising awareness of its multiple destructive components,
or we are falling into a hypocritical and delusional state in which any gain in
awareness is soon undone and turned in upon itself.
We have no choice other than to walk forward on two feet. To
‘walk the walk’ and to practice what we preach.
It is my belief that we will succeed in this great quest
once we have securely tethered our inner awakening to the manifestation of its
true outward expression.
Thus the road to enlightenment becomes synonymous with
taking actions to ameliorate and heal the social, cultural, economic and environmental
scars that cover our wounded planet. A process which unifies otherwise
disparate endeavours and reveals disengaged, inward looking and passive
spiritual practices – that shun active participation in service of the planet –
to be ultimately fraudulent and a mechanism for escapism.
If ‘The World is our garden’ then let us be united now in
going to rescue it from its enemies – no matter what the odds. Let us defy the
political gamesmanship that has lead governments to ally with the corporate
cause and ignore the cries of imprisoned humanity and the tortured limbs of
mother nature.
Our highest spiritual calling is to come out in defence of
life.* The angels will rush to our side once we have demonstrated our
commitment to taking control of our destinies, which includes the emancipation
of this long oppressed planet which is our unique and irreplaceable home.
* ‘In Defence of Life – Essays on a Radical Reworking of
Green Wisdom’ is the title of Julian’s latest book. Published by Earth Books.
See www.julianrose.info
The Song of the Sun
I am the fire
at the heart of all fire.
I am my own offering,
a self-sufficient sacrifice,
a chalice of flame.
My throne is time and space.
I hold the strings of gravity
to rein in wayward worlds.
I am beginning and end,
light and darkness.
I conjure night and day
from the folds of my golden gown.
Midnight and noon are
the blink of my eye.
I write the story
of summer and winter.
I rise at my command
and, in my daily death,
I give tomorrow birth.
I cross the universe
and humble myself
to find a home
in leaf and blade,
in seed and grain.
I sleep in bough and branch
and dream
of hearth-bound re-birth
and of wakening flame.
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