Frank Forencich Asks – Where’s My Habitat?

Frank Forencich of Exuberant Animal points out an issue with the way we approach ourselves in the world in a recent blog post.

His complaint is that we (as individuals, and culturally) separate ourselves from our habitats to such a degree that we’ve lost touch with reality.

I couldn’t agree more.

However, I wonder how to go about changing this. And in this post, I ask for your feedback.

Below is my response to Frank’s blog post. Please let me know your thoughts on how to do this – how to get people reconnected with their habitat, with the land that gives them life, in a visceral way.

The oil spill in the Gulf is at least in part a result of our society’s (societies’) addictive use of oil…we can’t separate the drillers from the people for whom they are drilling.

People are so distracted from anything real (habitat)…what will bring them back to awareness? How does one engender awareness?

Science is a process of thought that relies on separating things. It takes dynamic systems and “analyzes” them – breaks them down into “constituent parts” – which is a fallacy. Once you’ve killed and dissected a dog, where is the dog? It isn’t there anymore…a bunch of “parts” are.

We extend this tendency (or habit, whatever it is) into philosophical, religious, economic, and political thinking…

That is, it always comes down to – “This piece is wrong/bad, we must fix it.”

Thus, from the get-go, we’re off on the wrong foot. If we interfered, and that’s what “broke” it, how can we “fix” it by interfering again?

Better to stop doing.

Massive Oil Spill

The massive oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico continues to pump oil out into the sea.

My friends are dismayed, and want action to remedy this problem, and its cause(s).

When I see the pictures, my heart drops like a stone, and I’m unable to really think clearly, without sadness and pessimism clouding my mind.

Worse still, after my mind begins to wonder at this devastation, it moves on immediately to similar environmental disasters that human beings are committing all over the world right now.

Can we change this? How? What is the source of this?

I see one source in the dissociation of people from their “tools.” From everything they use, they are further and further removed. Things become “mere things.” We suddenly are no longer connected in a cycle of creation and destruction. We stand outside of it and look on…passersby, observers, voyeurs of our own self-destruction.

Don’t look at the images anymore. Look into your heart. Find it there. Where did that self come from? What sustains/sustained it? That is the path out of this mess.

To “go under,” as Nietzsche once said…