09/29/2008

Mother mind and Ubuntu

Vusamazulu Credo Mutwa is a Zulu Sangoma (traditional healer) and High Sanusi from South Africa. He is well known and respected for his work in nature conservation and is an author of books on African mythology and spiritual beliefs.

In the first video he speaks about “mother mind” that part of human consciousness that feels what is happening in the world. He simply and gently states:

We must not just listen to newspapers, we must ourselves feel! It is said by our Zulu people, that women think with their pelvic area, where children grow and are born. We must think that way. We must no longer look at a tree but must see a living entity like me in that thing. I must no longer look at a stone but I must see the future lying dormant in that stone. What universe are they? We must think like grandmothers…that’s all.

(Note: If you’re subscribe via email to this blog, you must click to the blog itself to be able to watch these fantastic teachings.)

In the second video he describes the African philosophy, Ubuntu—”I am because you are”—as the root of humanity’s interconnectedness:

It’s not a mystery, it is something plain and simple. We are human beings and we should feel with each other, and feel for each other. This is Ubuntu. That I must do to other people what I want other people to do to me. That I am a Muntu, a human being, because of other human beings around me. If there were no other human beings on this planet, if I was alone, I would no longer be a Muntu, no longer be a child of Ubuntu.

09/18/2008

International Day of Peace Sept 21, 2008

The International Day of Peace has been observed since 1983.

The Japanese Peace Bell was presented to the United Nations in June 1954 by the United Nations Association of Japan. It was cast from coins collected by people from 60 different countries including children, and housed in a typically Japanese structure, resembling a Shinto shrine, made of cypress wood.

It has become a tradition to ring the bell twice a year: on the first day of Spring, at the Vernal Equinox, and on 21 September to coincide with the opening of the General Assembly. In 2002, the General Assembly set 21 September as the permanent date for the International Day of Peace.

Over the years, it has grown to include hundreds of thousands of people, showing their commitment to peace in diverse and creative ways. Peace Day events are organized by individuals and organizations all over the world. Peace Day celebrations also include annual observations at the UN headquarters, as well as many UN operations and offices around the world.

Peacebuilding 101

Peacebuilding is different from “peacemaking” and “peacekeeping” in that it focuses on creating a long-term culture of peace, rather than solving existing conflicts or preventing old ones from re-occurring. Peacebuilding activities aim at building understanding and tolerance between individuals, communities and societies and establishing new structures of cooperation. Peacebuilding activities range in scale from personal acts of kindness toward others to global inter-governmental programs.

Peacebuilding is the construction of new environments and new cultures which transform deficient structures and capabilities which unite the strengths of emerging innovations in all pathways of our local-global planetary life. Peacebuilding creates and maintains beneficial conditions for sustainable (life-enhancing) social, economic, political and spiritual development of all peoples. Learn more here.

The UN’s website dedicated to this special day has many ideas to plan and celebrate your own Peace Day event:

Dag Hammarskjöld the 2nd Secretary-Generalhas said:Unless there is spiritual renaissance, the world will know no peace.” The United Nations has a long history and base in spirituality. A wonderful blog post by Diane Williams details some of this foundation, together with some eye-opening information and links to other spiritual NGOs.

And you can read the message of the Secretary-General in 2007 in the post I published on this blog.

Peace includes many things such has having the basic necessities of life, being secure in home and finance, having a healthy environment, welfare of family, an inner practice of loving kindness, and elevating others to have the same.

At this critical time in world history please dedicate time, as well as mind and heart power to the ideal and function of peace.

An eye for eye only ends up making the whole world blind.

–Mahatma Gandhi

09/13/2008

Offshore drilling, oil addiction & Hurricanes

While I make available the compassionate and supportive Light of Reiki to all who have been in recent hurricane zones, including hurricane Ike’s victims, and give large gratitude that my loved ones are safe, I also wonder about related concerns where our choices as people and nations are so very critical right now.

If you look at the archives of this blog, you’ll notice that there is a strong environmental and social responsibility component. We are not islands, and even if we were we are interdependent and interconnected in an ecology of life and being. I feel uneqivocally that while we are here on this beautiful blue planet, our spirituality is inextricably linked with all the elements of life and society as we know it today. This is sometimes known as engaged spirituality. And our engagement is being desparately demanded now. Our attention, our voice, our vote. For if we’re not engaged, the forces that shape life and society dictate and often without truth or even a modicum of superior solution-thinking.

There are many reasons not to drill offshore, which are listed below. Let’s stay topical for a minute and look at the impact of hurricanes.

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita caused “six major, five medium, and over 5,000 minor oil and hazmat” spills, according to the U.S. Coast Guard. An estimated nine million gallons of oil were spilled, and that estimate does not even include the 5,000 minor spills. See this slideshow of the spills. Hurricane Gustav, on the other hand, plowed through more than 4,000 offshore drilling platforms and 33,000 miles of pipeline in the Gulf.

Oil is a human-wide addiction. It isn’t any different from any other addiction, except that its damage and devastation is global. When an individual is addicted, he or she causes damage and suffering to themselves, loved ones and sometimes to a wider sphere. It’s still tragic, but contained somewhat. Oil addiction is massive.

Without the type of energy oil provides, life stops. Energy is mission-critical to life. But feeding the addiction is not the solution. We’re dealing with a fossil fuel, i.e., it’s going to eventually dry up, it’s nonrenewable. Here are 10 reasons Greenpeace says offshore drilling is dumb:

10. Offshore oil drilling won’t impact gas prices today, and it won’t have a significant impact on gas prices in the future.

9. This is nothing more than a money grab by the oil companies – who are already making record-breaking profits.

8. We burn 25% of the world’s oil here in the U.S., but we have only 3% of the world’s oil reserves. So even if all offshore oil magically came to market today, the vast majority of our oil would continue to be imported, and we wouldn’t see price relief at the pump.

7. The current moratorium was put in place decades ago to protect us from the danger of oil spills along our coastlines and beaches.

6.  Burning fossil fuels like oil causes global warming, which causes stronger hurricanes, which will threaten the very offshore drilling rigs being proposed, which will contribute to even more global warming.

5. To avoid the worst impacts of global warming, we need to switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy within the next 10 years. The billions of dollars that would be spent on offshore oil drilling just postpones the inevitable transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

4. Oil exploration requires massive seismic testing – which threatens whales and dolphins.

3. Oil prices are set on the global oil market, so American oil is no cheaper than Saudi oil. We won’t get a discount for oil drilled in the U.S.

2. We can’t solve the world’s energy problems with the same drilling that created them.

1. Renewable energy is available now, so it’s time to walk away from fossil fuels and toward a clean energy future.

Furthermore:

  • The United States burns 24 percent of the world’s oil, yet we only have 3 percent of the world’s oil reserves. CITATION: Energy Information Administration, “U.S. Crude Oil, Natural Gas and Natural Gas Liquid Resources, 1999 Annual Report,” DOE/EIA-0216 (99) (December 2000).
  • There is no correlation between increased drilling and lower gas prices. The number of drilling permits increased by 361 percent from 1999 to 2007. And yet gas prices more than doubled in that time. CITATION: A new investigative report from the House Committee on Natural Resources studied the current system of drilling permits on federal lands and in federal waters.
  • Drilling for more oil in the U.S. won’t result in lower gas prices because oil prices are set on the global oil market. This means that all oil produced around the world is sold all at the same price. As U.S. citizens we wouldn’t get a discount just because we drilled for it on U.S. soil. CITATION: This site explains why crude oil prices are similar all around the world. Prices vary only to reflect the cost of transporting crude oil to that market and the quality differences between the various types of oil.
  • By requiring all automobiles in the U.S. to achieve 35 mpg by 2020 we will save 1 million barrels of oil per day. CITATION: New York Times article, citing The Union of Concerned Scientists in their reporting.

An excellent resource on Clean Energy 101 has been put together by the Union of Concerned Scientists. It’s introduction states:

No single solution can meet our society’s future energy needs. The answer lies instead in a family of diverse energy technologies that share a common thread: they do not deplete our natural resources or destroy our environment.

Renewable energy technologies tap into natural cycles and systems, turning the ever-present energy around us into usable forms. The movement of wind and water, the heat and light of the sun, heat in the ground, the carbohydrates in plants-all are natural energy sources that can supply our needs in a sustainable way. Because they are homegrown, renewables can also increase our energy security and create local jobs.

There’s a lot to take in regarding this matter. Fortunately much of the work has been done for us. All we have to do is absorb some of the information, and then make choices on how we spend our dollar, our voice and our vote. We can no longer abdicate the responsibility of being informed. Political commercials, sound bytes, the ticker tape at the bottom of your TV screen are simply not enough to guide our choices in the face of today’s complexities.

The facts are readily available. It’s a matter of increasing our brain’s processing power by getting involved. This means an end to being spoon-fed regurgitated swill, told what to think, and getting by with low-information slogans. Just as you seek the best information when it comes to your health, diet, kids, and your spirituality, so must it be the same in every matter, for every minute counts and as global citizens our roles and function are so much more significant than even a generation ago.