The Invisible Tug Between You and Everything, Episode 10
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I can hardly imagine it
as I walk to the lighthouse, feeling the ancient
prayer of my arms swinging
in counterpoint to my feet.
- Ellen Bass
It's so easy to feel our separateness from everything.
For a start, we always experience ourselves at the centre of our lives, right where our body is, while people and things come and go around us. We can easily conclude that we are the only solid something in the world, while everything else is transient.
And few of us live in the midst of community. We have practices that shape how we work, how we take care of ourselves, how we attend to our lives that emphasise how alone we are, and how self-reliant we must be in order to survive. It's rare to find ourselves bound up in the midst of communities of depth, support and care that remind us in each moment how held we can be.And then there's the whole way our systems of knowing and learning are constructed, deeply influenced by the Cartesian view that we are essentially minds, separate from the world. And our economic system, which deems us useless unless we can prove our productivity.
It's no wonder we can feel so alone, so afraid, so distant from everything. It's no wonder it's so hard for us to feel the way in which each of us matters, in which the world and we depend each upon the other.
But we do matter. And the world does depend upon each of us. And when we're able to remember this, we have a much better chance of doing what we're here to do.
This is the topic we took up in this week's Turning Towards Life conversation, which begins with Ellen Bass's beautiful poem The World Has Need of You, and which you can watch above.
Photo by Everaldo Coelho on Unsplash