Still wiggling into my world here on Substack. How’s About Saving the World? has become Suzanne Taylor’s Evolution Revolution. It needed my name to show on incoming emails and the old title was too long for that.
When I first heard that Israel and Palestine were exchanging rocket fire, it got to me – how we humans, the most advanced creation that 13.8 billion years of evolution has spat out, put out resources for what kills us rather than what serves us. And, all the while, a climate monster we’re not resisting is on the way, destroying what’s in its path while we are cowering without the resolve to stop it. What would it take for some spark of “mad as hell and not going to take it anymore” to light our fire? Instead of focusing on we’re doing, I say to look at what we’re feeling. We need some team spirit for humanity.
Here's my question. Can we get a movement going to spread the idea of how awesome we are? We are humans, damn it, and that’s a very great thing!
“Our deepest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our deepest fear is that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness that most frightens us. We ask ourselves, 'Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, fabulous?' Actually, who are you not to be? You are a child of God. You’re playing small does not serve the world. There is nothing enlightened about shrinking so that other people won't feel insecure around you. We are all meant to shine, as children do. We were born to make manifest the glory of God that is within us. It's not just in some of us; it's in everyone. And as we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give other people permission to do the same. As we are liberated from our own fear, our presence automatically liberates others.” - Marianne Williamson
That quote still is everywhere because it rings a bell. I’m proposing we deal with coming into a new spirit in the land, where the fundamental is love of life, not fear of it, altruism and not greed. Get massive cooperation to tune humanity into how awesome humanity is. Influential people do hallelujahs. Billionaires use their fortunes to help the world. Everyone with their lights on take on purpose to be heroes, caring more about inspiring the rest of humanity than doing anything else. There is a taste of inborn goodness in us – like that love of America the Great that used to pervade – that we’re looking to have a smorgasbord with. If people who are wised-up to loving life took it on to uplift others, we would be agents of our own evolution. This is a doable, here now. If Oprah got this bright idea, in no time I bet the world would be vibing differently.
Here’s something I just did – for an example. I wanted to share a link to a piece from the NYT, but you need a subscription for access to all its articles so I wrote a Letter to the Editor from my tune-humanity-into-its-greatness bandwagon:
Perhaps the NYT could consider a policy change. With all articles behind paywalls, how about some pieces be exempted? I just read The Turtle Mothers Have Come Ashore to Ask About an Unpaid Debt. Robin Wall Kimmerer so compellingly proposes “we need a change in worldview, from the fiction of human exceptionalism to the reality of our kinship and reciprocity with the living world” that I want to share a link to it far and wide. Could the NYT do a public service removing the paywall from content that will help humanity evolve?
I’ve pasted the piece in here because the NYT has that paywall. (For NYT subscribers or people who still have freebies coming, here’s it is.) Everyone could start their cheerleading by passing along this moving tune-in to the beautiful soul of humanity.
The Turtle Mothers Have Come Ashore to Ask About an Unpaid Debt
By Robin Wall Kimmerer – September 22, 2023
Dr. Kimmerer is a plant ecologist, a writer and a distinguished teaching professor and director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry. She is the author of “Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants,” and was a 2022 MacArthur fellow.
Each summer I teach at the Cranberry Lake Biological Station, a remote wilderness field school in the Adirondacks. It is a community of scientists and students, surrounded by rich forests and glittering lakes, where bears and loons are our neighbors. We may think we’re learning about wild lives, but in fact, we are learning from them.
One of our best teachers returns every summer, just after the solstice, clambering her way up a steep bluff from the lake under cover of darkness, to lay her eggs in the warm open sand of our volleyball court. With powerful bearlike paws she flings the sand aside. Her sharp-snouted mouth open and gasping for breath, she rests for a minute. Then she digs some more with fierce maternal commitment and utter disregard for the students who surround her, snapping photos as eggs like leathery Ping-Pong balls leave her body. When she has covered them safely, entrusting them to the earth, she makes her way back to the water.
She and I, we go back a long time, to a story we both remember, a creation story of my people, the Potawatomi. It is a story of how the troubled world was cleansed by a great flood and our new home was made on the back of a turtle who gave herself so that we might live. It was the gifts of the animals and the seeds of the plants who made this paradise.
The turtle reminds me that I owe my small human life to the generosity of the more-than-human beings with whom we share this precious homeland. The Earth was made not by one alone but from the alchemy of two essential elements: gratitude for her gifts and the covenant of reciprocity. Together they formed what we know today as Turtle Island, or North America. In return for their gifts, it’s time that we gave ours.
We have betrayed the millions of other species with whom we share this leafy paradise with an extractive culture that threatens their inherent right to be. Turtles among us carry a warning: We need to acknowledge our unpaid debt and create solutions that protect not only our species but our more-than-human relatives as well. They want to live, too.
As our creation story attests, snapping turtles are long-lived, solitary beings who walked with dinosaurs. They leave the water only to lay eggs and can make extensive overland journeys to find just the right spot.
As predictable as the solstice, this mother comes every year. We know her by the little notch marked in the edge of her shell. There are hundreds of sandy places for a snapping turtle nest, but for some reason, this one chooses to bring her offspring to us. Our students are thrilled to witness this. It is a highlight of their field biology summer. But they also want to play volleyball. So the herpetology class carefully unearths the eggs and with loving care takes them to another site the students have prepared and measured to be sure it’s a good place for incubation: warm, dry sand, safe from predators, so that the baby snappers will hatch.
A few years ago, there was a second mother in just the same spot on our volleyball court. That had never happened before. The next day there was another. And another. One day there were two basking right on the welcome mat of the camp headquarters. In all, more than a dozen snapping turtles came among us in a dozen days. A deluge of turtles.
As scientists, we were asking: Why? Why would reclusive, solitary beings struggle up a rocky bluff and walk into a community of 100 humans? Why did all these turtles come to us in unprecedented numbers to do their most important thing? When our students went to find suitable transplant sites for the repeated batches of eggs, they found one answer. The sand spits the turtles favor were underwater from unusually heavy rains. As the lake level rose, they had to seek higher ground. It seemed to me that the snapping turtles had become climate refugees.
Here’s the thing that haunts me.
I think the turtles headed for high ground with a kind of desperation to ask us to pay attention, to see that we teeter on the brink of climate catastrophe with our plant and animal relatives disappearing in waves of extinction. Science, armed with models to predict the coming changes, is a powerful tool for addressing these crises. But it is not the only one. As a scientist, I hear the indisputable data, and also a message, simultaneously material and spiritual, carried by snapping turtles: The Earth asks more of us than gratitude.
Green technology, renewable energy, regenerative economics and restoration of forests, prairies and wetlands will all be part of the changes we need. But these solutions cannot come at the expense of the Indigenous people who help safeguard up to 80 percent of the world’s remaining biodiversity and whose environmental science and worldview illuminate a path forward.
We need more than policy change; we need a change in worldview, from the fiction of human exceptionalism to the reality of our kinship and reciprocity with the living world. The Earth asks that we renounce a culture of endless taking so that the world can continue.
It is no longer a matter of small acts of stewardship, not enough to tenderly move the eggs from one place to another, when there are no more places for them to go. Not enough to write praise songs for turtles, not enough to study the hormones that change the sex of the turtle eggs when the temperature rises.
The Earth asks that we give our considerable gifts, in return for all we’ve been given and in return for all we have taken. We are called to a movement made of equal parts outrage and love.
We humans carry gifts of our own. We are scientists and storytellers, we are change makers, we are Earth shapers riding on the back of the turtle. We are each called upon to resist the forces of destruction, to give our gifts, to first imagine and then enact a world whole and healed. When the turtles come among us, asking for help, we must remember that at the beginning of the world they were our life raft, and now, so much closer to the end, we must be theirs.
I’m not Oprah, who would start much bigger, but in my visionary fantasy a little ripple of people getting on this bandwagon to uplift humanity spreads to become the great transformer we’ve been looking for! Over to you all…
With most subscribers being carried over here from when I was using Constant Contact and not being familiar with the Substack world, I get direct replies to each post that I’d prefer to get here so we can have the conversations I’ve been trying to generate. It’s simple to sign up. First-timers to Substack will need to create an account.
Consider me a fellow Cheerleader for Team Cosmos!
Your awesome, inspiring article is written in the same spirit and with the same truly revolutionary, heart-centered perspective I spoke from in a Zoom call today addressing the meta crisis, held in an online community I’m active in.
I felt called to share a powerful dream I had two years ago in which I was acting as an effective shepherd for others as we move through the Apocalypse. I was effective because I didn’t let fear or panic overwhelm me. I knew--and accepted, even appreciated--that we were going through a traumatic, tragic experience as a species, so I not only remained calm, I was cheerful. It wasn’t that I was denying reality, but that I was able to hold space for the sorrow and grief of this Moment while staying earnestly upbeat.
Someone on the call told me her son had been listening in and agreeing with everything I said and called me “cheerfully morbid.”
It’s funny, because I am a fan of The Grateful Dead and “cheerfully morbid” connects to the paradoxical nature of reality.
Last, THANK YOU for your personalized style, sharing how you are growing into using this app for your writing. Your openness about that process inspires me that it’s time I get to my “September Project” of re-starting my weekly blog posts but doing it over here on Substack. So I’ll close with a question: Do you have any advice based on your experience about using Substack? (I’ve been on Medium for 4 years and Wordpress for 8 before that).
Anyway, you REALLY are onto something with the human-loving and encouraging suggestions in this post! I could say more about why I believe, so long as a person isn’t faking it, this perspective and Spirit looks like a very successful path forward based on my understanding of studying astrology for the past few years, but I’ve written more than enough.
Just, please, KEEP WRITING!!
Partnership is key. I'd love to share my work on regenerative leadership - actions that help the planet thrive. By working WITH the Earth, using her principles, we can actually make headway into a new way of living that is LIFE centric. Let's play! https://bridgetopartnership.com