Wisdom from A Hopi Elder

August 28th, 2011 by sally Categories: Introducing, Sally Blog No Responses
rushing river

“You have been telling the people that this is the Eleventh Hour, now you must go back and tell the people that this is the Hour. And there are things to be considered . . .

Where are you living?

What are you doing?

What are your relationships?

Are you in right relation?

Where is your water?

Know your garden.

It is time to speak your Truth.

Create your community.

Be good to each other.

And do not look outside yourself for the leader.”

Then he clasped his hands together, smiled, and said, “This could be a good time!”

“There is a river flowing now very fast. It is so great and swift that there are those who will be afraid. They will try to hold on to the shore. They will feel they are torn apart and will suffer greatly.

“Know the river has its destination. The elders say we must let go of the shore, push off into the middle of the river, keep our eyes open, and our heads above water. And I say, see who is in there with you and celebrate. At this time in history, we are to take nothing personally, Least of all ourselves. For the moment that we do, our spiritual growth and journey comes to a halt.

“The time for the lone wolf is over. Gather yourselves! Banish the word struggle from you attitude and your vocabulary. All that we do now must be done in a sacred manner and in celebration.

“We are the ones we’ve been waiting for.”

~ attributed to an unnamed Hopi elder, Hopi Nation, Oraibi, Arizona

Right now I hear a call to non-action: to simple, clear awareness, and to the willingness to sit in that awareness. Thats the call I hear. I want to create space for that, for myself and for others who hear a similar call. Most other activity at this particular time feels like struggle to me. And struggle is the word the Hopi Elder advises me to banish from my vocabulary.

As I listen, as best I can, to my own true impulses, to the often subtle and delicate feeling of what is right, here and now, what feels right is to be quiet, small, and simple. To notice the simple beauty and pleasure that is available to me in wearing this sweater I’ve knit from thrift store yarn recycled from a sweater vest, and from some donated from a friend’s culled stash. Simple. A candle, some tea. The sound of Tim’s fingers tapping rapidly on his keyboard telling me the words and images of a story are funneling through him.

I need space to simply “Be.” The world, it seems, is unraveling, like that sweater vest I took apart to re-use. I sense there is mystery, too, that unravels in the world, beyond my ability to know, much less to control.

I feel the river running ever faster now. I can only intuit my part in a chaotic system beyond control or prediction. There have been, and will be, beautiful vortexes emerge as droplets such as myself join currents and gracefully, rampantly, terrifyingly, sweep around and over the rocks and boulders, by the banks, into the flood plain. I am not called to control this one whit. I can’t.

I can relax and surrender my self, to become part of this wild current. I can, maybe, if I stay alert, keep my own head above water. Apparently, that will not happen by struggle. The world is not in my control and efforts expended in that pursuit feel wasted.

I can feel the joyous longing to find my place in this crazy rushing movement, and I can surrender to the likelihood that there is no guarantee of any particular outcome.

It feels cold at first, this river, as exhilarating as it is frightening. And it is frightening. But as I relax, my body learns over and over again to quiet, to surrender to the inevitable rather than to fight and grasp. Every time I try to seize a low hanging branch or to hold fast to a rock, I become exhausted from the effort. Gladly, exhaustion overcomes the fear and I can’t help but surrender again.

Sometimes I cry, screaming “It’s not fair!” But then I let go the struggle for a handhold and instead become a part of this natural force. Then, even when my head goes under, I relax again into the fury, and then my simple intention to keep my head above water seems enough. I come up and catch a needed breath, and another, and another.

Sometimes this raging current hits a landscape where the river spreads wide and the fury abates. I am able to look around and see there are others in this river as well. There is a temptation to swim to shore, to find a place to stay, to call to these others and suggest we build a settlement or, at least, a raft. But before I can gather my voice, another storm cloud lets loose, the flood plain resolves again into a narrow canyon and the furious current returns again to take me over.

The sight of the others stays with me. For brief moments either memory or vision arises and I feel my sweet longing for companions, for the hearth, the fire, the bowl of hot food and the touch of arms and hands, tender kisses of hello and welcome. But those flashes of past and future I can’t hold for long because this crazy river keeps rising. My focus is captured by learning to relax and be carried, to calm rather than tighten my body, like I imagine fish do, to learn the balance between swimming and being swept, to respond from intuition rather than plan or rational thought. I gently hold the intention to keep my head above water but I learn to not insist on that. For most times to insist requires too much energy and struggle. Best to quickly release myself, to surrender, again and again.

This is what it is like for me when Tim tells me the climate news of the day, or Dan sends the reports of unemployment graphs, with not only unemployment increasing but the rate of increase itself increasing. I can’t make plans in this river. I can only imagine there may come a time of respite from the storm, or a time when the storm, all storms, are over, when my intention to keep my head above water doesn’t hold, when this huge river either spreads and slows and I easily float to shore, or else I am led down to the depths and not allowed the breath I had intended. Then my body will be released from all struggles. There will be no choice or intention for these arms and legs, for this back and chest and belly and skull. Then, what I thought I was will be carried with no effort at all, carried back to its elemental state. And the fears and longings and passions and desires of that form will no longer be there.


This is what facing death is, what facing being fully alive is, for me, right now, in this time.

But what about the Hopi elder’s counsel to know my garden, and where my water is? What does that mean? How do I have a garden and at the same time let go of the shore?

This year, having lost the garden spot I’d prepared in the past, I tended a garden on land that belongs to an elder care residence. A nice symbolic event: gardening on the land of elders. That was an unplanned experience of knowing my garden and letting go of the shore at the same time.

A garden is what feeds my deepest hungers and water is what quenches my soul’s thirst. In the midst of this raging river of change, what feeds me is letting go, into the exhilaration of change, being present so far as I can to each person, moment, and season, planting seeds while holding a vision, but letting go all attachment to, or guarantee, of harvest. What feeds me is seeing others in this river too, seeing them and sharing with them brief calls and greetings, no wasted time with long explanations or justifications for how we got here. Smiling, yelling, even tearful protests followed by quick recovery. I love these people and then I let them go as a another bluster erupts and the sky opens and I am in the canyon, a new canyon, even more narrow, with absolutely nothing to hold on to, no commitment, no plan, no program in place, just the willingness to learn how best to be, when I’m not in control.

Look around. Who is in there with you?


All of the Above is Now Available!

August 26th, 2011 by Tim Categories: Home Page Blog No Responses

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Contact: Timothy Bennett

774-776-8375

info@bluehagbooks.com

www.bluehagbooks.com

NEW SCI-FI/ADVENTURE NOVEL ADDRESSES GLOBAL SOCIAL/ENVIRONMENTAL/POLITICAL PREDICAMENTS

Blue Hag Books is pleased to announce the release of ALL OF THE ABOVE, first novel from author and filmmaker Timothy Scott Bennett.

U.S. President Linda Travis embarks on a heroine’s journey in this exciting page-turner. Briefed at gunpoint and told of the human-alien conspiracy that secretly controls her government, President Travis does something none of her predecessors dared to do: she runs. During the chase that ensues, from rural Vermont to the arctic wilderness of Bathurst Island, through the underground blackness of the aliens’ Ottawa Lodge to the bewildering landscapes of the astral realm, Linda encounters both adversaries and advocates where she least expects them. Along the way, she falls in love, recovers her buried past, and meets head-on the converging crises of energy, economy, and environment that threaten the entire world. Finally, Linda questions core assumptions about the very nature of reality itself. By doing so she sees clearly what she must do to help her people.

ALL OF THE ABOVE, Bennett’s first foray into the world of science fiction adventure, is sure to be received with excitement by the many fans of his documentary film What a Way to Go: Life at the End of Empire. Bennett now uses fiction to continue the conversation he began in his documentary regarding the social, psychological, and spiritual implications of our global human predicament. The story offers an inspiring and challenging view of the news of the day. ALL OF THE ABOVE invites readers to gaze through a unique lens anchored in new science, indigenous mysticism, and non-ordinary human experience.

Timothy Scott Bennett holds a degree in anthropology from Michigan State University, and has also studied theology and filmmaking. He lives in Maine with his wife, Sally Erickson, where he writes, renovates a hundred-year old house, rides his bicycle, and revels in the sea air.

ALL OF THE ABOVE is available for sale at Amazon.com in both PRINT and KINDLE editions. Review copies are available.

Blue Hag Books
New Stories for the Next Paradigm
www.bluehagbooks.com

Press Contact:

info@bluehagbooks.com

774-776-8375

###

Tim Bennett is about to give birth….

August 17th, 2011 by sally Categories: Blogs, Introducing, Sally Blog 8 Responses

As is often the case, childbirth gets very intense at the end. Tim is exhibiting all of the symptoms of being there: He forgets to breathe and immediately calms down when he remembers. He has an intense desire to push and be done with it. He feels the immensity of this time and needs quiet and focus to accomplish this last part of the creative process: Actually getting the baby into the world.

Tim Bennett is about to publish his first novel, All of the Above.

As his spouse and one of his editors I am, of course, excited and pleased. Last week I visited the Blue Hag Books website to find this tagline of Blue Hag’s purpose:

New Stories for the Next Paradigm.

As soon as I read those words I felt something shift inside my gut. All at once Tim’s journey of the last two years, my journey alongside him, and now the publishing of this book became connected to a greater purpose than simply telling a good story, selling some books and supporting the next effort. All at once, all this effort felt connected to a much larger purpose that resonates deeply and runs as a deep current through my life: We are part of a quantum shift from an old paradigm which is culminating in social and environmental destruction of unfathomable scale to something else, some new way of being that will come next. We don’t know what that will be because paradigm shifts are that way: so profound and different that while in the throes of the current one it is impossible to know what the next one will be.

Human beings are myth-makers and story-tellers. And now the insights of quantum physics point to something we’ve only begun to understand: That our stories actually create our reality.

How incredibly important and vital at this particular time, then, to be creating and telling new stories.

Even the “story” that “Our stories create our reality” is a NEW story.

My background in counseling and psychotherapy, on both sides of the couch, underscores on a personal level how important it is to find a new story. I’ve witnessed, personally and in the journeys of scores of clients and friends, that when a core belief or story changes, everything changes. Victims become heroes. Perpetrators become fallible, wounded egos with souls worth saving. The rich become poor and the poor become strong. Everything turns around. I’m no longer the wounded daughter of crazy, insecure, isolated parents. I’m the noble soul who came to help unravel a family system based on fear and scarcity, to heal a generations-old story of abuse and neglect embedded in a social system of exploitation and dis-empowerment.

We are living in exciting and frightening times. As people alive during unprecedented social, political, and environmental upheaval, it feels exciting to step into what becomes possible when we shed stories of victimization, exploitation, helplessness, and domination and step into new stories of transformation, evolution, and the power of consciousness to change circumstances.

All of the Above is a wonderful part of that movement into new stories. This book tells the engaging story of an intelligent, caring, courageous woman president, elected on a platform of truth and integrity, who actually lives up to her promises. She’s not a bimbo or a puppet. And she refuses to tell less than the truth. How different a story is that?

What about our own personal stories? What unquestioned core beliefs run our personal, economic, political, and social realities? What if we can change outcomes by changing what we tell ourselves, by rewriting our own stories? What if we are way more powerful than we’ve been schooled to believe?

I hope you will celebrate with us this new baby that Tim is about to deliver. I hope you will be inspired, and also challenged by the story, willing to examine and question personal and cultural beliefs and assumptions, just a the protagonist Linda Travis is. I hope you will step into your own new story for the next paradigm.

Come “Like” All of the Above on Facebook and be one of the first to get the birth announcement, hopefully early next week. It’s going to be quite a celebration!



Who Killed Economic Growth

August 3rd, 2011 by sally Categories: Home Page Blog No Responses

Here’s a short but great little video by Richard Heinberg, one of the authors and scholars we interviewed in What A Way To Go. This is a piece that Post Carbon Institute produced. Worth the watch. Even more, worth actually digesting. When we suspend the assumption that economic growth is good, is possible, is recoverable, a whole host of opportunities and possibilities arise. On the other hand so long as one stays hoping for “economic recovery” bestowed from above by a benevolent authority who lives in a big white house or sits at the head of a shiny conference table in a glass and metal office building, there is only the opportunity to be, and feel, victimized.

http://www.energybulletin.net/media/2011-08-02/who-killed-economic-growth

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