We all want and need to walk towards the light. Moving into, through and beyond life’s mystery is innate. Discovering that the riddle has no answer should not stop us from engaging with this great unknown.
Both Richard Dawkin’s book, The God Delusion, and Christopher Hitchens’ book, God is Not Great, seek to separate science from spirituality. I have no argument with their contention that religions, (especially Judaeo/Christian/Islamic) have poisoned the world, but they throw the baby out with the bath water when they argue that humans need not walk a spiritual path.
The sacred text I keep returning to is the one written over hundreds of million years of evolutionary history and constantly proclaims awe, mystery and grandeur. Such a magnificent bible as this is enough to keep me in a constant state of grace and thankfulness.
Ann Druyan, CEO of Cosmos Studios and wife of the late Carl Sagan, gave a speech a few years ago where she questioned why science and religion couldn’t get along.
This makes no sense and it leads me to a question: Why do we separate the scientific, which is just a way of searching for truth, from what we hold sacred, which are those truths that inspire love and awe? Science is nothing more than a never-ending search for truth. What could be more profoundly sacred than that?
It’s a catastrophic tragedy that science ceded the spiritual uplift of its central revelations: the vastness of the universe, the immensity of time, the relatedness of all life and it’s preciousness on this tiny world.
Ann Druyan feels that the roots of this antagonism run very deep. They’re ancient, she says.
We see them in Genesis, this first story, this founding myth of ours, in which the first humans are doomed and cursed eternally for asking a question, for partaking of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. It’s puzzling that Eden is synonymous with paradise when, if you think about it at all, it’s more like a maximum-security prison with twenty-four hour surveillance. It’s a horrible place.
So here are Adam and Eve, who have awakened full grown, without the tenderness and memory of childhood. They have no mother, nor did they ever have one. The idea of a mammal without a mother is, by definition, tragic. It’s the deepest kind of wound for our species; antithetical to our flourishing, to who we are.
Their father is a terrifying, disembodied voice who is furious with them from the moment they first awaken. He doesn’t say, “Welcome to the planet Earth, my beautiful children! Welcome to this paradise. Billions of years of evolution have shaped you to be happier here than anywhere else in the vast universe. This is your paradise.” No, instead God places Adam and Eve in a place where there can be no love; only fear, and fear-based behavior, obedience. God threatens to kill Adam and Eve if they disobey his wishes. God tells them that the worst crime, a capital offense, is to ask a question; to partake of the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge. What kind of father is this? As Diderot observed, the God of Genesis “loved his apples more than he did his children.”
To me, the true nature of the void remains unknown. For the good of all humankind and all living beings, I would hope that the superstitions of both religion and science give way to a joined acceptance of a universal truth that simply says, “Wow”. In the end, we will all pass through this particular portal of time. Where we exit from and where we will re-enter, is anyone’s guess. My footprints, and yours, will soon enough fade away, but let the love we have expressed throughout this life flow along the currents of time a little while longer.
Posted by Peter Adams at 01:10 PM.
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Beyond Windgrove •
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Sally paints, I carve. But of what? And, why?
Hard questions to answer even though we both constantly pursue answers.
Speaking for myself, I suppose that, if anything, I am trying to make visible the numinous quality of nature; at least give hints of it. But it is so complex that I sometimes tire of asking the questions. What helps, though, is thumbing through the well worn pages of any of my poet’s books. Today, it’s Rilke’s “Book of Hours: Love Poems to God” (translation: Anita Barrows and Joanna Macy).
Wir durfen dich nicht eigenmachtig malen
We must not portray you in king’s robes,
you drifting mist that brought forth the morning.
Once again from the old paintboxes
we take the same gold for scepter and crown
that has disguised you through the ages.
Piously we produce our images of you
till they stand around you like a thousand walls.
And when our hearts would simply open,
our fervent hands hide you.
Writing in Germany about the Italian artists, Rilke also said:
Ich habe viele Bruder in Sutanen
I have many brothers in the South
who move, handsome in their vestments,
through cloister gardens.
The Madonnas they make are so human,
and I dream often of their Titians,
where God becomes an ardent flame.
But when I lean over the chasm of myself --
it seems
my God is dark
and like a web: a hundred roots
silently drinking.
This is the ferment I grow out of.
More I don’t know, because my branches
rest in deep silence, stirred only by the wind.
Just maybe I shouldn’t spend so much time trying to figure things out. Just maybe I should just keep carving and let what flows out of my hands speak what needs to be spoken.
I live my life in widening circles
that reach out across the world.
I may not complete this last one
but I give myself to it.
I circle around God, around the primordial tower.
I’ve been circling for thousands of years
and I still don’t know: am I a falcon,
a storm, or a great song?
Posted by Peter Adams at 10:50 AM.
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Art •
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Today is an important day in Windgrove’s history as it marks the end of one stage and the beginning of another. This new stage is about enhancing the existing infrastructure at Windgrove and to allow for the design, building and running of small programs that will deal with the creative process of healing ourselves, the land and the world at large.
Nearly three years ago, a planning process involving eco-development consultants, the Tasman Council, surveyors, road construction crews, lawyers, land conservancy people, environmentalists, friends and neighbours was begun. In the mail this week I finally received the titles to two new blocks of land: that portion of Windgrove’s land that has been subdivided off as a strata title development. The long wait and protracted negotiations have insured that whoever buys into Windgrove will be buying into a very unique, special and stunning landscape.
In the book, “The Devil in Tim: Travels in Tasmania”, the author writes: If there is a piece of paradise on this earth, the sculptor and environmental philosopher, Peter Adams, has come close to finding it with his coastal property Windgrove, overlooking Roaring Beach and Storm Bay on the western side of the Tasman Peninsula. Tim Bowden then proceeds for the next eight pages to describe what is here. Not bad publicity, if one is looking for it.
Well, I am, because Tim Bowden’s honest words, rather than those of a real estate agent’s, is what will help sell the land.
Both blocks (one at 9 acres and the other at 15 acres) border the Roaring Beach Conservation Area (a status almost akin to being a National Park), have excellent views to the ocean and have excellent building aspects to the solar north. The land is strata titled which means that, although they will be privately owned, the blocks will remain part of the whole of Windgrove and are protected by the established by-laws of Windgrove. For the most part, these by-laws reflect environmental concerns, thereby, protecting all households living at Windgrove from damaging development. More importantly, the by-laws ensure that those who chose to live here do so because they are in accordance with and supportive of Windgrove’s philosophy of living in harmony with the environment.
The driveways have already been put in and the two house sites (nestled in coastal trees around 30 metres/100 feet above sea level) have been cleared and are ready for building upon.
And so today, my partner, Sally, and I are officially announcing the sale of a portion of our home, Windgrove, to the public; first, via this blog and later in the year, through other channels. My reason for going through this blog is that I feel that anyone who has been a regular reader of “Life at the Edge” will understand what is on offer and how living here and being surrounded with good neighbours is as important as the view from the window.
For anyone interested in building a home here and joining the Roaring Beach community for a life of relative quiet surrounded by native bush and a fantastic surf beach at your doorstep, well, this is your chance. To chose to buy this land is to also chose to support the future of Windgrove as the money earned will be invested back into the many aspects of Windgrove.
For further information or to register an expression of interest, please contact:
Posted by Peter Adams at 09:20 AM.
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News •
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Oh, Lord.
Life has tumbled me in so many harsh ways that, now, the bones of this scrubbed body lie clean and free of the last resistance to Love.
Take these then,
And, at cliff’s edge, place in a nest of she-oak needles, lichen and bedfordia.
Softly,
Your heart flies in on dimming light. Touches down, caresses. Makes me feel finally whole.
Posted by Peter Adams at 12:08 PM.
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Personal •
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So who comes to Windgrove to partake in its natural beauty and restive charm?
Disembarking from the bus are 50 people from the states of New South Wales and Victoria; here in Tasmania and Windgrove (last Friday) as part of a tour organised by the Australian Garden History Society. These people are mostly 40 years of age and above (way above).
The bottom photo, from a weekend visit by Heidi Douglas and Paul Oosting on either side of my camera shy partner, Sally, are people of a much younger generation.
Between the two groups, are there generational clashes or do they share some things in common? Being at Windgrove certainly gives them a bonding of sorts. But beyond that, what I hope is that all of them are motivated enough in their concern for the earth that they will use whatever skills and talents they have to speak out for the care of the earth. Either that, or use their financial resources to fund others to speak for them.
I enjoyed guiding the Garden History society around as they were truly knowledgeable, inquisitive and understanding about the environment. Who knows on what side of the political fence they stood? What I can infer, though, is that they would want the environment and, especially, Tasmania’s natural heritage, to be protected from unscrupulous development. Wood chips; no way. Pulp mill; no way.
Heidi is being sued by the southern hemisphere’s largest timber company, Gunns, because of a documentary film she made about the woodchip industry in Tasmania. Paul heads up the Wilderness Society’s anti-pulp mill task force. For little earned money, both have invested much of their time and emotional energy for the sake of us all. We, of the baby boomer and older generations, owe them much gratitude for carrying the activist banner we might have dropped behind as weariness, pessimism and a touch of cynicism crept into our lives.
Sally’s painted stone mandala is an engagement present. Like the older generations before them, one thing Paul and Heidi will be honouring is the tradition of getting married.
Now, if only someone in the bus tour or elsewhere would help with Heidi’s legal costs.
Posted by Peter Adams at 06:12 PM.
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Visitors •
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Still Another Day #VI
Pardon me, if when I want
to tell the story of my life
it’s the land I talk about.
This is the land.
It grows in your blood
and you grow.
If it dies in your blood
you die out.
Pablo Neruda
A bit worn at the edges and nearly camouflaged, the simple message is still there after two years. Tree took that human written word—once sharply white, crisp, handmade, newly formed—and transformed it into itself: into bark; into bleeding stains of growth and aged lichen-grey peels.
Four letters attached to tree make redundant what tree already knew. Still knows. It was always there, this love within the tree. Only us humans needed to have it spelt out. When will we ever learn? When will we ever learn?
Yesterday.....an email from a friend who had just returned from Scotland:
meanwhile jet lag is keeping me awake - as are the log trucks now every fifteen minutes or so down the southern outlet - on this still night they are like a great roaring decelerating down the hill into town then rumbling down Macquarie Street - what a madness it all is - out there in Europe green is huge - what idiots run our govt down here.
Yesterday.....the editorial in the newspaper asked the question: Should more Tasmanian forests be protected from logging? I replied: The real tragedy is that the question is even asked. To continue putting to the axe aged forests thousands of years old, creates a wound in Tasmania’s psyche as great as the stain of its brutal convict days.
We keep denying the life sustaining power of nature; of its immense capacity to love us back into wholeness. Pardon me, but when the last of the ancient trees are cut down, what then?
Posted by Peter Adams at 11:09 AM.
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Mail Bag •
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