Autumn 2020 Newsletter from Earthways LLC
AUTUMN 2020 NEWSLETTER

Greetings! This year, Autumn brings with it smoky skies and great uncertainty. We are living in a very challenging time marked by COVID, rampant fires, and political chaos. Each of us is finding our own way of meeting the hardships that seem to just keep coming. 

A natural response in times of loss and upheaval is action, but also grief. How could we not grieve 1.3 million burnt Joshua Trees in the Mojave Desert, or a million acres burned in the recent Oregon fires, or a migratory bird die-off in New Mexico and the southwest. These types of losses bring on "a kind of vertigo of the soul."* And, we have to ask ourselves, are we watching our planet transition into its end-of-life phase? And if so, what is an appropriate response by people who care? 

We have learned in our many years of guiding and participating in earth-based rites of passage ceremony that grief is a necessary part of any major transition, and the natural landscape can be our greatest companion and ally in times of sadness and despair. Grief expressed to the land is an act of mourning, but it is also a honoring of our essential connection to our mother earth. 

EarthwaysLLC is finding new safe ways of being on the land in community. Your community and your Mother Earth need your attention now more than ever. We hope you will find your way out onto the land sometime soon either in one of our programs or on your own for ritual, restoration or play. Meanwhile, we hope you find inspiration in our current newsletter and we wish for you continued health and well-being. 

With gratitude and awe, 
The Guides of Earthways LLC

*Chris Clarke National Parks Conservation Association

Calling the Circle During a Pandemic
by Scott Eberle, MD

Hmm . . . sitting outside . . . circle well-distanced . . . face coverings in place.  Ah, but it's this light breeze that takes this to another level . . . no way for the virus to linger now.
Can't think of a safer way to be together with other humans. 
Other humans!  Together!  Think of it!
Okay, so maybe that isn't exactly what I was thinking during my first-ever Day Walk with EarthWays.  But it's pretty darn close.
 
Back in July, Sahara Chaldean and I held this program "Sheltering in Nature" - sheltering in nature instead of sheltering in place.  It was one of the first EarthWays programs of the year, and what a joy and revelation it was.  I had not sat in ceremony - in a story-telling circle of this kind - for nine months.  Not since a two-week visit to Death Valley last Fall. 
 
Even in the short form of a day walk, my soul was fed in the best of ways.  And I felt COVID-safe.  What a combo.
 

Vision Fasting As our World is Burning
by Cynthia Eisho Morrow

Sitting on a mountain perch at 8000 feet, I have come to the Inyos to fast. Longing to see my brilliant, beloved Sierras to the west, today, they are not visible at all. The smoke from the relentless fires of the American West has totally obscured them. Heavy-hearted with climate grief, I gaze out and see only a grey-blue sea of sky-cloud-smoke-endless, seamless, where once there were mountains.
 
There is a dying. The adult life as I've known it thus far is dying, has to die. Not unlike those mountains. The Sierras have been there my entire life, witnessing my entire life. Now, gone. They are cloud, smoke, mirage, illusion, empty. My old life is composting, and yes there are seeds planted in that rich soil. What will emerge?

 
Why, then, have to be human?
Oh not because happiness exists,
Nor out of curiosity...
But because being here means so much;
Because everything here,
Vanishing so quickly, seems to need us,
And strangely keeps calling to us...To have been
Here once, completely, even if only once,
To have been at one with the earth-
This is beyond undoing
 
- Ranier Marie Rilke
Recommended Reading


The Nature of Nature
by Enric Sala

In this spirited memoir, world-renowned conservationist Enric Sala weaves fascinating tales of the natural world, revealing how connections in nature promise a thriving economy as well as a healthy planet. 


Upcoming Autumn Program

What Matters Most? A Day Walk for each Season

Series continues on
November 8, 2020
 
Each Seasonal Day Walk will be devoted to one of the four inquiries that matter. We believe all of our relationships with the Earth and each other can be tended, mended and nurtured. What if we take time on the land to contemplate what we need to forgive, what we are grateful for, what it is we love, and what it means to say goodbye? What will be revealed to us if we create a ceremony for each of these important matters?

Please join us for a year of concentrating on reconciling our relationships with the Earth, ourselves and each other through time on the land, deep listening and storytelling.

Guides: Sahara Chaldean, Deborah Greene Jacobi

All of our programs will be following safety protocols according to current CDC, WHO and our local park/lands guidelines. Please contact guides for detailed protocols. 
  
For more details email...

sahara@earthwaysllc.com or deborah@earthwaysllc.com
Bearing Witness
by Laura Weaver

Sometimes we are asked to stop and bear witness:
this, the elephants say to me in dreams
as they thunder through the passageways
of my heart, disappearing
into a blaze of stars. On the edge
of the 6th mass extinction, with species
vanishing before our eyes, we'd be a people
gone mad, if we did not grieve.

This unmet grief,
an elder tells me, is the root
of the root of the collective illness
that got us here. His people
stay current with their grief-
they see their tears as medicine-
and grief a kind of generous willingness
to simply see, to look loss in the eye,
to hold tenderly what is precious,
to let the rains of the heart fall.

In this way, they do not pass this weight on
in invisible mailbags for the next generation
to carry. In this way, the grief doesn't build
and build like sets of waves, until,
at some point down the line-
it simply becomes an unbearable ocean.

We are so hungry when we are fleeing
our grief, when we are doing all
we can to distract ourselves
from the crushing heft of the unread
letters of our ancestors.
Hear us, they call. Hear us.

In my dreams, the elephants stampede
in herds, trumpeting, shaking the earth.
It is a kind of grand finale, a last parade
of their exquisite beauty. See us, they say.
We may not pass this way again.

What if our grief, given as a sacred offering,
is a blessing not a curse?
What if our grief, not hidden away in corners,
becomes a kind of communion where we shine?
What if our grief becomes a liberation song
that returns us to our innocence?
What if our fierce hearts
could simply bear witness?



Thank you, Ruth Bader Ginsburg! May you rest in peace.
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