Sunday, June 10, 2012

A Plan of Action?

A gorgeous, blue-sky day dawned this morning.   After I read some particularly grim news stories about the "law of retribution" in Libya, where the insurgents who overthrew Gaddafi are now hunting down former Gaddafi supporters, torturing, and killing them with ruthless abandon in the absence of anything resembling an actual system of justice or due process, and in Brazil, where ranchers are enslaving and brutalizing peasants and forcing them to chop down rainforests illegally, I stepped out on my back porch and caught sight of my magnificent daylilies opening up in the first light of the sun--red ochre, beige, bright yellow. These, like a fresh breeze, dispersed the vile and depressing thoughts induced by the morning's headlines and left me feeling light and bouyant, as I stepped out to water my squash patch, basil, tomatoes, cucumbers, greens, and peppers.

The world is a mess, but the Earth is magnificent still. We have not destroyed it yet.  All of these thoughts led, during my morning meditation, back to my sustaining fantasy.  What might happen if...

I created a "Dharma Gaia Circle"--an ecumenical, ecological Sangha or meditation group, based on the following:


  • Understanding " Dharma" as a Principle, Precept, and Practice, and as that which all the world's authentic religious traditions hold in common, despite their different (culturally influenced) ideologies.
  • Understanding "The Four Paths to the Sacred" as a schema for understanding and accepting every religious tradition on the planet as a legitimate Path to the Sacred. Seeing, that is, all religious traditions as as admixture of Dharma and identity politics, and on that basis, welcoming those of all faith traditions to our Circle.
  • Regular Meditation, based on the following basic injunction (on the breath): Breathe, Observe, Let Go, Abide. (Supplemented by various other Dharma Practices, at our own discretion).
  • Expansion of the above into the Tenfold Dharma Gaia Mantra as a core daily practice:
    • Breathe, Observe, Let Go (Abide)
    • Be well, Do Good Work, Keep in Touch (Abide)
    • Learn, Teach, Heal, Create.
  • Understanding and embracing "Gaia" as the Living Earth--a self-organizing, self-regulating Complex Adaptive System, unique in the solar system, and hence irreplaceable--as our first allegiance.
  • Committing ourselves to both Vertical (Body-Mind-Spirit) and Horizontal (Self-Community-Planet) healing by engaging in the Four Gaian Commitments:
    • Learning Gaia 
    • Teaching Gaia
    • Healing Gaia
    • Creating Gaia.
  • Studying and Practicing the discipline of Satyagraha as an an expression of our commitment to Heal Gaia:
    • Cultivating Self-reliance (Swaraj)--starting with our own gardens and communities.
    • Speaking Truth to Power (Satya)--starting in our own communities 
    • Engaging, when necessary, in Nonviolent Noncooperation with Evil (Ahimsa).
    • And doing all of the above mindfully, strategically, and relentlessly.
  • Once such a Dharma Gaia Circle is securely established, undertaking an effort to disseminate it elsewhere AND to reach out to any and all other religious traditions to encourage them to establish similar initiatives within the scope of their own governance and traditions (e.g. among Christians, a Mustardseed Project based on "The Parable of the Mustard Seed")
  • Establishing, when resources become available, one or more Dharma Gaia Practice Centers to provide opportunities for others in the community to Learn, Teach, Heal, and Create.
This is how I hope to save the planet.  Who knows?  It might actually work--but as Gandhi ceaselessly reminded us, the important thing is to renounce the fruits of action and "just do it" with mindfulness and integrity--or as Thich Nhat Hanh says, to BE the change we hope to bring about in the world.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm confused by your use of the word "create" in this four-step process. Isn't healing (reordering) the closest thing to creation that we humans are capable of, and isn't it sufficient?

Tom Ellis said...

Well--perhaps--since effective healing--of oneself, another person, or a larger community--generally entails elements of creativity. But I think of "creating" as adding something altogether new--whether solving a problem, conceiving of a problem to be solved, producing a work of art-- in an entirely new way. And creating is, of course, the great mystery. No one knows where creativity comes from.