Conversation, lifestyle and sustainability

This post includes several additions and precisions to the one published in my friend Felix Dodd’s Guest Blog on 26/3/2017 (http://blog.felixdodds.net/2017/03/guest-blog-conversation-lifestyle-and.html)

Alejo holds some graduations, but is reluctant to labels and prefers to be called a conversationalist, if any. Four years after quitting the sustainability arena to navigate ‘the self’, he realizes that learning to live a kind of first-hand life, reducing his market-reliance and consistently rejecting all manifestation of falseness, is the only that he can do for sustainability. With such vision, he is undertaking a centre for Spanish language learning for foreign speakersi.

Conversation, lifestyle and sustainability

Falseness rejection has to do with what one eats or wears; where one buys goods or services from, puts his savings in or travels in holidays to; what’s the goal of the business that one works for or the fuel his car consumes; how one faces relations… rather than with being persuaded that the world outside should follow another evolution pattern and to try persuade others on it. This said, it does not involve that working on the ‘big thing’ (e.g., national or international climate change negotiations) is useless –opposite, it is necessary in this ludicrous world. But such consistent rejection of falseness inevitably leads to the negation of interests diversity very existence; and, might working on agreeing different interests not be an unintended way to reconfirm them? What if such world’s ludicrousness met its way in fewer and fewer beings? On the other side, although international treaties would make global change more feasible, we cannot wait for them, because a huge deal of legislation and time that we don’t have would be needed; and because, at the end, the responsibility would again relie on each and all of us, individuals.

Montaña paseoSome months ago, while in my daily mountain walk, I received a call from a good friend. We held a long talk, and before goodbye he said that he could see himself conversing by my side. Beautiful word, conversation. It derives from latin versare, which indicates movement (turn, change) and from the root con, for ‘in common’. To converse is therefore to ‘move together’. It is not to dialogue (etym. ‘speechify rationally’), or to argue, convince or persuade. It is not a matter of arriving to a final agreement after a discussion. To converse is to move together all along the expression process. Conversation occurs in inverse proportion to the impediments it meets. When interest exists, either to convince, to gain yield, recognition, shame or any other advantage; or when prejudices impede the observation of what is happening, conversation may hardly flow.

UniversoSimilarly, universe is the ‘sole movement’, even when it manifests by means of infinite organisms –out of which we humans are only a case, as lettuces, nails, minerals, water or earth are. We are all manifestations of life’s diversity, concentrations of energy under a temporary specific form. We all feed eachother, being homes to the energy that moves the sole movement and that the sole movement regenerates. So, only universe –or life— may converse, and can only do it with itself, in a continuous learning process.

ecosistemaThe energy that life manifests through each of us, remains after our organic activity comes to an end: our bodies are buried or burnt, then corrupted into humus, liquids or gases, which turn into earth or air, plants or gas flows, into animals that then die and continue the never ending evolutioning process of birth, sacrifice and re-birth that Ken Wilber shows to be driven by certain tenents1, as recent scientific findings support2. The strong controversy that such findings have caused in the scholar field was tackled many years ago. Wilber3 gathered texts by some of the most brilliant physicists in history (Heisenberg, Schrödinger, Einstein, Jeans, Planck, Pauli and Eddington) that agree, even being mystics all of them, in the incapability of science to deal with mysticism. As Wilber puts it: “in the mystical consciousness, Reality is apprehended directly and immediately, meaning without any mediation, any symbolic elaboration, any conceptualization, or any abstractions”. A space of mental silence, thoughts-, emotions-, prejudices-, judgements- and intentions-free, is needed to transcend (and include) science to approach to such apprehension.

FalsenessIt’s not hard to realize how ubiquitous falseness is ‘out there’. When our mind stops convincing us of how good and necessary we are, it might become clear that we also have much falseness inside, that our lifestyles are packed with it. When conversations with friends lead to this issue and, soon after, to their jobs, a barrier consistently arises, normally expressed in an “ok-yes-but…-everybody’s-got-to-make-a-living!” style. The conversation normally ends at this point because, obviously, in our Economics-driven living civilization, jobs are needed. An etymological exposition about the word prostitution could be relevant here, but you can probably guess it out; so it might be more adequate to precise what ‘Economics’ mean here, and what difference is made with ‘economy’.

Let’s convene to call economy (with lower case for being a common word) to the law followed by life through any manifestation, there where (scarce) resources exist. A river flows to the sea having into account the whole: its own power, the power it may gain by meeting more tributaries, the hardness of the rocks and land it meets, … and the infinite complexity. A tree grows with the same criterion, considering the richness of the land where it lies, the power it may gain from other living creatures, the protection to other trees that it may need to remain alive itself… (it might be surprising to learn the new scientific findings about plants’ intelligence5). See bees, ants… And one’s reasoning opens to capture that there is intelligence everywhere. The life expression that each of them is has into account whatever it needs. Animals, plants, microorganisms… populations, communities, ecosystems, biosphere… they are all manifestations of the economy of nature6 — or the intelligence.

On the other side, let’s call Economics (with capital initial for being a convention) both to the academic discipline and also, for a simplifying moment, to the prevalent (and so biassed) understanding of the world’s economy in our civilization. Economics don’t consider all resources (the word resource implies scarcity), but just some of them: capital, land and labour (by the way, is labour scarce, or is its opposed –employment— which is scarce?). They do not, and could ever not by themselves, take into account all what might be grouped under ‘natural environment’ (water, breathable quality air, biodiversity and the incomprehensible variety of resources that nature is –rather than provides with), as far as they have no owner to pay to for its use and they are free-access. So, Economics, by not being holistic (not having into account all resources), necessarily behave anti-economically, breaking the natural balance detrimentally to those resources that they do not consider7. Attempts have been made to bring some natural resources into Economics, but they fail following this inconsiderateness8; and also following increasingly continuous demonstration of human stupidity –which is not, as we know, any scarce. The mantra of the Green Economy that we must give nature a value to protect it is, at least, extremely high risk. A system adopts and adapts what fits into it, and turns the rest down. But, as J. Krishnamurti put it, “it is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society.” Seeds of corruption are powerful: they need very little to flourish there were they are. 

river flowEvidences show that the worlds’ environmental state is deteriorating alarmingly9, if one doesn’t dare to say irreversibly. We can feel the abyss’ breath right before us, and yet our most basic instinct impedes us to realize that hope is just a mere illusion. So we keep on researching, speeching, negotiating, failing to meet, blaming on others and so on, without seing inside us the root of any form of conflict, the very conflict itself. Thousands of species and civilizations have perished before ours11, and ours will follow the same path, no matter how hard to accept it is. Only life is sustainable; nothing else. The more impediments it meets in its flowing, the more energy it delivers through alternative paths, like rivers do, because it’s life who does. Life continues living itself, who knows what way. Who knows if it will count on homo sapiens or not, but it’s sure that on our civilization it cannot count. Neither with the golden calf that presides it.

GardenSomething radically new will necessarily follow irreversibility. Certainly, the future will keep memory of the past12, integrating and transcending it. What depends on us is no longer to prevent what is irreversible, but to care for the earth, in order for novelty to grow from wholesome seeds.

No other mission could possibly be worthier, more enriching, more beautiful and more joyfully compassionate.

i Estilo de Vidas vision (www.estilodevida.org) is that of a centre for conversation and of a strength to join the momentum to a resilient, ecolocal rural lifestyle. It’s missioned through a home for foreign language speakers to learn Spanish.

a fruitful life in the rural environment is a assumed a must also to provide resilience to urban livings nearby, as well as to take in an increasing population that might find in it a refugee from the exclusionary path that the poor shared understanding of economy imposes.

1See http://www.theinnercoach.eu/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Ken-Wilbers-20-Tenets.pdf, extract summarized from Wilber, Ken (1995) Sex, Ecology, Spirituality. The Spirit of Evolution. Boston: Shambhala.

2Kaku, M (2013) Is God a Mathematician? Youtube-Big think Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jremlZvNDuk [Last accessed 24 march 2017]

3Wilber, K (1984) Quantic Questions. Boston: Shambalha.

4Rogers, B. (2006) Poetic Unconvering in Heidegger. Aporia 122. Available from: http://aporia.byu.edu/pdfs/rogers-poetic_uncovering_in_heidegger.pdf [Last accessed 26 march 2017]

5Mancuso, S. and Viola, A. (2013) Brilliant Green. The Surprising History and Science of Plant Intelligence. Island press. Book review available in: https://www.theguardian.com/environment/radical-conservation/2015/aug/04/plants-intelligent-sentient-book-brilliant-green-internet

6Ricklefs, R. and Relyea, R. (2013) Ecology: The Economy of Nature. 7Th ed. New York : W.H. Freeman and Company

7Etchart, A. (2012) Comunidades y negocios sociales: hacia una propuesta sistémica. Public Policies and Territory.  Politics and Terrirories 1 (3). [Last accessed 24/3/2107]. English version here.

8See: Heelm, D. (2009) Climate-change policy: Why has so little been acheved. In: Helm, D. and Hepburn, C. (2009) The Economics and Politics of Climate Change. Oxford NY: Oxford University Press.

9Fathehuer, T. (2014). New Economy of Nature- An Introduction. Heinrich Böll Stiftung, Ecology 35. Available from: https://www.boell.de/sites/default/files/new-economy-of-nature_kommentierbar.pdf [Last accessed 26/3/2107]

10Krishnamurti, J. And Bohm, D (1985) The Ending of Time.  NY: Harper San Francisco. Available from: http://www.jiddu-krishnamurti.net/en/the-ending-of-time/1980-04-01-jiddu-krishnamurti-the-ending-of-time-the-roots-of-psychological-conflict [Last accessed 26/3/2107]

11Montesharrei, S., Rivas, J. and Kalkay, E. (2014) Human and Nature Dynamics (HANDY): Modeling Inequality and Use of Resources in the Collapse or Sustainability of Societies. Ecological Economics 101, 90-102. Available from: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921800914000615

12Laszlo, E. (2004) Science and the Akashic Field: An Integral Theory of Everything. Rochester, Vermont: InnerTraditions.