When is competition valuable?
Posted on Jul 3rd, 2008
by
David
This is in Response to the Questions and Reflections for July 03, 2008:
I think that healthy competition is a great way to build character and is necessary for evolution, whether it's with others or with ourselves. I like the distinction of competing with as opposed to competing against. The latter can often lead to negativity and division, while the former can lead to positive growth and connection/camaraderie. In recognizing that taking anything too far can be harmful though, competition may not always be appropriate and can even be a significant cause of excess stress and anxiety if our lives revolve around it.
Personally, I grew up in a family with a lot of healthy competition and I know that we've all become closer and have grown because of it. Even with the occasional dispute ;) we seemed to create deeper bonds as we responded to each other with respect and openness.
In fact, it seems to me that competition is a natural phenomenon that impacts virtually every facet of life, including the natural world. For example, competition supports the survival and development of healthy plants and animals, it has positive effects on creativity and innovation in the marketplace... Even the survival and growth of the human species is dependent in some measure on natural competition. I don't see a functioning planet without it.
Personally, I grew up in a family with a lot of healthy competition and I know that we've all become closer and have grown because of it. Even with the occasional dispute ;) we seemed to create deeper bonds as we responded to each other with respect and openness.
In fact, it seems to me that competition is a natural phenomenon that impacts virtually every facet of life, including the natural world. For example, competition supports the survival and development of healthy plants and animals, it has positive effects on creativity and innovation in the marketplace... Even the survival and growth of the human species is dependent in some measure on natural competition. I don't see a functioning planet without it.
Got junk... mail?
Posted on Jun 12th, 2008
by
David
Junk
Check out GreenDimes. It's basically the Eco focused equivalent of the Do Not Call Registry, but it's for Snail Mail. They make it easy for us to get a handle on all of the waste that shows up in our mailboxes daily. And, it's only $20. Plus, there's even a free version that guides you on how to do it yourself. Personally, I'd rather pay the money so that I know it's actually going to get taken care of (rather than getting lost in my to do list). I do like the fact that they offer options though. They'll even plant a tree (or send you a buck) when you sign up for the free version; five trees for the paid version.
They've received a ton of great press and their interface is super easy. I was done in a few minutes. Give it a shot and spread the word if you like what they're doing.
GreenDimes
"Why are we using $5 million of our money to pay you to stop junk mail? Because junk mail sucks! And we want to help you stop all the credit offers and other crazy stuff that's clogging your mailbox!
Since 2006, we've helped hundreds of thousands of people... Now we want millions! So instead of buying TV and banner ads, we decided to do something HUGE to show how much we care about this problem. With our new do-it-yourself service, GreenDimes Basic, anyone can clean up their mailbox for FREE. Folks who want us to do the work, monitor their account every month, provide 24x7 customer service and plant 5 trees on their behalf can choose our GreenDimes Premium for just $20."
Gaia Pro
Posted on May 6th, 2008
by
David
What is Gaia Pro?
Imagine participating in a 24/7 online LOHAS Conference or Green Expo, where you get not just a 'booth' to advertise the basics of your business, but the opportunity to communicate and share your expertise with new (and established!) customers and clients.
A Gaia Pro subscription gives you a professional presence within the Gaia Community—and the means to reach hundreds of thousands of seekers.
Gaia Pro members get an interactive page in our thriving online directory of socially, environmentally, and spiritually aware businesses—on a site that’s already home to thousands of individuals passionate about building a better future.
Your sleek Pro page lets you:
Gaia Pro. Where conscious business lives!
Launching later this week.
Imagine participating in a 24/7 online LOHAS Conference or Green Expo, where you get not just a 'booth' to advertise the basics of your business, but the opportunity to communicate and share your expertise with new (and established!) customers and clients.
A Gaia Pro subscription gives you a professional presence within the Gaia Community—and the means to reach hundreds of thousands of seekers.
Gaia Pro members get an interactive page in our thriving online directory of socially, environmentally, and spiritually aware businesses—on a site that’s already home to thousands of individuals passionate about building a better future.
Your sleek Pro page lets you:
- Connect your clients and customers with each other, growing a community around your business
- Feature testimonials contributed by those who love your work
- Join a network of colleagues in the LOHAS space
- See your business not just in our directory, but in our community and in community search results
- Contribute to our Tips & Inspiration, gaining broader exposure in the Gaia Community and recognition as an expert your field
Gaia Pro. Where conscious business lives!
Launching later this week.
Tagged with: gaia, pro, gaia pro, conscious business, conscious, business, listing, directory, professional
Prickles & Goo
Posted on Mar 27th, 2008
by
David
Alan Watts and South Park?!? An unlikely (yet entertaining) combination. Check it out below.
*If you're not familiar with his work, boy are you in for a treat! Check out the Alan Watts website or sign up for his podcast here at Learn Out Loud.
“We could say that meditation doesn't have a reason or doesn't have a purpose. In this respect it's unlike almost all other things we do except perhaps making music and dancing. When we make music we don't do it in order to reach a certain point, such as the end of the composition. If that were the purpose of music then obviously the fastest players would be the best. Also, when we are dancing we are not aiming to arrive at a particular place on the floor as in a journey. When we dance, the journey itself is the point, as when we play music the playing itself is the point. And exactly the same thing is true in meditation. Meditation is the discovery that the point of life is always arrived at in the immediate moment.” ~Alan Watts
Enjoy the movies!
Prickles & Goo: Alan Watts Trey Parker Matt Stone South Park
Music and Life - Alan Watts
Tagged with: alan watts, trey parker, matt stone, south park, music, life, prickles, goo, philosophy, dance
So far this year on planet earth...
Posted on Feb 24th, 2008
by
David
... from this perspective anyway. Here's a list of some things I’ve been checking out in 2008
Some audio in the player right now
Do YOU Do It or Does IT Do You? – Alan Watts
We may be much more than who we think we are.
The Book of Secrets – Deepak Chopra
Unlocking the Hidden Dimensions of Your Life
The New Man – Casey's new site
Beyond the macho jerk and the new age wimp.
Gamma Meditation System – Dr. Jeffrey Thompson
You have to check this out (article below).
"Work"
So far we've launched:
myGaia start page
Gaia+ with resonance engine (and more features on the way)
and
the new Gaia.com navigation page (just last week)
Man.... I can't begin to tell you how amazing this team is. Stay tuned for what's next.
(Gaia Pro to come in April)
Latest Books
Spiritual Warfare – Jed McKenna
“Self-deceit is the hardest habit to break cuz it tells us that we ain't self-deceived.”
“I want what's best and I trust the universe, not my little brain, to be the judge of what's best and how best to make it happen.”
"Your thoughts and emotions determine your dreamstate reality. That's where you start. From there it's just a matter of simplifying the equation and eventually seeing that your thoughts and emotions are your dreamstate. It's all consciousness, you are just consciousness. There is nothing else. Once that goes from thought-level concept to full emmersion awareness, you naturally merge with the currents instead of being tossed about by them."
The Untethered Soul – Mickey Singer
"Eventually you will see that the real cause of problems is not life itself. It's the commotion that mind makes about life that really causes problems."
"When you close down and protect yourself, you are pulling a shell around the part of you that is weak."
"Your consciousness is actually experiencing your mental model of reality, not reality itself."
Does It Matter? – Alan Watts
"A living body is not a fixed thing but a flowing event, like a flame or a whirlpool: the shape alone is stable, for the substance is a stream of energy going in at one end and out at the other. We are particularly and temporarily identifiable wiggles in a stream that enters us in the form of light, heat, air, water, milk, bread, fruit, beer, beef Stroganoff, caviar, and pate de foie gras. It goes out as gas and excrement - and also as semen, babies, talk, politics, commerce, war, poetry, and music. And philosophy."
New Good Food – Margarett Wittenberg
"My work has also given me the chance to participate in national and international advisory groups exploring some of the deeper issues about food and how to work together to deal with them. Primary topics have included the short- and long-term of pesticides and other pollutants on out food supply, sustainable agriculture, genetic engineering, sustainability of wild seafood, aquaculture, and the welfare of food-producing animals from birth through slaughter."
iTunes tracks that I'm digging
"The Trick Is to Keep Breathing" - Garbage
"Innocente" (Edit) - Delerium & Leigh Nash
"Alice" - Venus Hum
"Heartburn" - Just Jack
Friend’s Websites
EduFire – Jon
An amazing new concept in education.
Just Perception – No one
Just perception... without a perceiver
Feel Good Vibes – Ninja
Brighten your day
thinkArete – Brian
Concentrated wisdom for the busy self-actualizer
Travel and geography
I've been living in Boulder for most of the time these days and have been enjoying the mountians and new friends. It feels like spring could be here soon. I can't wait! Fingers crossed
Took a long weekend off in January to go to Joshua Tree with Beth to get some alone time, to relax, and do some relationship work that we found through the Hendrick's Institute. Good stuff! We stayed at this great little private villa on 5 acres of magical land just outside the park. We highly recommend it if you ever make it out that way.
Went to Florida on retreat (and I use that term loosely) for the weekend a couple of weeks back with Sean, Casey, Jason, and some other great folks to meet with the "mighty guru" behind this site. ;) It was a weekend full of great conversations, altered states, lots of laughs, swimming, and even a beer or few.
Back to LA later this week to see my beautiful woman and to have a guys weekend with Benj and Mr. Johnson while our goddesses are at a workshop.
Hopefully taking my first real vacation since we launched Zaadz in ’05. Yes!!! The idea at this point is Bali (our dream accomadations) and if all goes well, we’ll be there this spring.
Maybe we’ll spend 10 days here too
Articles I've just read
Double Vision – John Welwood
Duality and Nonduality in Human Experience
Organization at the Leading Edge: Introducing Holacracy – Brian J. Robertson
A practice for organizational entities
Sound - Medicine for the New Millennium - Center for Neuroacoustic Research
Check out the audio by Dr. Jeffrey Thompson (up top) for the experience
On the screen
Into the Wild
A great movie (and book) about a young man who leaves society behind and walks is own parth. The cinematography is outstanding! (and the soundtrack is great too)
Paprika
A dream within a dream. This is an amazing animated adventure!
LOST
If you haven’t had a chance to check out this show…. You’re missing out! It’s thoroughly entertaining, thought provoking, and is constantly revealing deeper messages. Probably the best TV show I've ever seen (although that's not saying much as I don't really watch much TV).
You can rent the first three seasons on DVD or download it on iTunes.
Some quotes that have caught me
You can easily judge the character of a man by how he treats those who can do nothing for him.
~James D. Miles
Belief means not wanting to know what is true.
~Nietzsche
We do not "come into" into this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean "waves," the universe "peoples." Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe. This fact is rarely, if ever, experienced by most individuals. Even those who know it to be true in theory do not sense or feel it, but continue to be aware of themselves as isolated "egos" inside bags of skin.
~Alan Watts
Every man takes the limits of his own field of vision for the limits of the world.
~Arthur Schopenhauer
To fear death, my friends, is only to think ourselves wise, without being wise: for it is to think that we know what we do not know. For anything that men can tell, death may be the greatest good that can happen to them: but they fear it as if they knew quite well that it was the greatest of evils. And what it is but that shameful ignorance of thinking that we know what we do not know?
~Socrates
It is the truth that frees, not your effort to be free.
~Jiddu Krishnamurti
Live as if you were to die tomorrow.
~Mahatma Gandhi
I/We would love to hear what’s new with you so far this year too. How about one thing that you're fired up about right now?
Does this planet amaze you as much as it does me?
Tagged with: new, consciousness, travel, quotes, books, movies, lost, alan watts, michael singer, jed mckenna, food, into the wild, neuroacoustic, sound, healing, retreat, freedom, mind, universe
Meet the Gaia Team
Posted on Feb 7th, 2008
by
David
We’re updating the Gaia “About” page, and this is my chance to officially introduce myself. So… Hi!
My Name: David Pearson
Official Title: Director of Operations & Business Development
Unofficial Title: Explorer
What's your role at Gaia Community?
I lead the development of relationships with key partners and I’m responsible for operations, advertising & the Pro Tools. I’m also a member of the Executive Council, which is comprised of Jason, Siona and me. As team leaders, the three of us support one another in our respective roles and make decisions regarding the community as a whole. I’m formerly the COO of Zaadz and have been around since the very beginning. I feel honored to play a part in creating this amazing community.
What do you most enjoy doing (or what are your greatest passions)?
My greatest passion in life is exploring (whether it’s in the physical or the metaphysical world). I’m constantly striving to grow, learn, and experience all I can about what this life has to offer. I enjoy the quiet (and the not-so-quiet) of nature, the depth of relationship, the knowledge of books, the wisdom of stillness, the love and laughter of family and friends, the fascination of looking into another’s eyes, the touch of my beloved, the experience of good music, the power of new thought, the adventures of the dream world, and the awe of nothingness. I do my best to cultivate balance in all areas of life, and I recognize and appreciate paradox. I strive to step out of my own box constantly and I feel most free when I dive deep beneath the surface into the unknown. Most of all, my goal is to laugh every day (often at myself) and to have fun while enjoying this show.
What's your favorite thing about our community?
I am constantly blown away by the energy and vision of the people who make up this community. It’s endlessly inspiring to hear all of the different voices - individuals, groups, and organizations - who are devoting their energy to making positive changes in the world. The different areas of focus here range from consciousness and self-development to spiritual, environmental, health and wellness, political, and even financial, and there is plenty of diversity of opinion. But the common thread is the unwavering desire to make the world a better place and to be a part of that positive change, however each individual may define it. The members of this community are committed to bringing together these different points of view - even those that are seemingly in opposition - into a safe space where we can discuss, learn, share and grow with one another in more ways than we ever could have imagined. It’s truly amazing!
What do you love about working here?
I love the fact that my passion and ideals are aligned with my profession. Plus... I get to work with a team made up of some of the most inspiring people I’ve ever met.
Meet the rest of the Gaia Team
I lead the development of relationships with key partners and I’m responsible for operations, advertising & the Pro Tools. I’m also a member of the Executive Council, which is comprised of Jason, Siona and me. As team leaders, the three of us support one another in our respective roles and make decisions regarding the community as a whole. I’m formerly the COO of Zaadz and have been around since the very beginning. I feel honored to play a part in creating this amazing community.
What do you most enjoy doing (or what are your greatest passions)?
My greatest passion in life is exploring (whether it’s in the physical or the metaphysical world). I’m constantly striving to grow, learn, and experience all I can about what this life has to offer. I enjoy the quiet (and the not-so-quiet) of nature, the depth of relationship, the knowledge of books, the wisdom of stillness, the love and laughter of family and friends, the fascination of looking into another’s eyes, the touch of my beloved, the experience of good music, the power of new thought, the adventures of the dream world, and the awe of nothingness. I do my best to cultivate balance in all areas of life, and I recognize and appreciate paradox. I strive to step out of my own box constantly and I feel most free when I dive deep beneath the surface into the unknown. Most of all, my goal is to laugh every day (often at myself) and to have fun while enjoying this show.
What's your favorite thing about our community?
I am constantly blown away by the energy and vision of the people who make up this community. It’s endlessly inspiring to hear all of the different voices - individuals, groups, and organizations - who are devoting their energy to making positive changes in the world. The different areas of focus here range from consciousness and self-development to spiritual, environmental, health and wellness, political, and even financial, and there is plenty of diversity of opinion. But the common thread is the unwavering desire to make the world a better place and to be a part of that positive change, however each individual may define it. The members of this community are committed to bringing together these different points of view - even those that are seemingly in opposition - into a safe space where we can discuss, learn, share and grow with one another in more ways than we ever could have imagined. It’s truly amazing!
What do you love about working here?
I love the fact that my passion and ideals are aligned with my profession. Plus... I get to work with a team made up of some of the most inspiring people I’ve ever met.
Meet the rest of the Gaia Team
Tagged with: Gaia Community, Team
What Lies Beneath?
Posted on Jan 20th, 2008
by
David
Though this post is written mostly from my perspective and my experience, it's based on a dynamic that my girlfriend Beth and I are consciously working with in our relationship. Much of the awareness I have gained in the last two years has been sparked by our interactions and deep discussions about our relationship and our own inner work. To make things more interesting, I've asked her to add her feminine voice/perspective here and there. In this process of discussing, editing and polishing this post together, we basically wound up co-writing it. In that sense it is very much a joint effort, and Beth has offered many insights and observations regarding her sense of these dynamics that have helped me deepen my understanding of myself (as you'll see below). And for that, I have a tremendous amount of love and gratitude for this absolutely amazing woman.
An exercise in feeling and awareness
Feeling pain can be a scary thing. I'm not talking about the secondary sensation that's left after being able to overcome (or cover over) pain; I'm talking about the underlying, raw and authentic energy of pain that's there before there is a reaction to it. Anyone can block outAlmost pain. I'm actually something of an expert at putting up walls to feelings that I'm not comfortable with or that somehow feel too painful in one way or another. This capacity serves a purpose in the physical realm, but what I'm mostly concerned with here is the pain I feel in the inner, emotional realm. I've been blocking out this kind of pain for most of my life, but it's only in the last few years that I've realized and begun to notice it on a regular basis. The more I'm able to witness it, the more areas in my life I see it happening. Whether it's something small like an insult from someone else driving in traffic, or something big like the pain I feel because of an intense disagreement with my significant other (no matter how sweet is, it does happen once in a while), I notice that my mind seeks to protect me from the energy or emotion that's trying to surface and be embodied. The process goes something like this: Emotional pain, sadness, sensitivity or something else threatening, uncomfortable, or otherwise "unacceptable" arises. Almost before I can perceive this, internal walls come up that block off my connection to my heart and numb me out, masking the initial energy. Simultaneously, my mind rushes in to swap the intense feeling for something else that's seemingly easier to handle (most often, some amalgam of anger/blame/criticism directed at someone or even something else). Put another way, my mind switches one type of emotion for another to protect itself from possible emotional harm instead of completely engaging in the purity of the original emotion, simultaneously creating fear of that emotion and setting a mechanism of egoic control and protection into place. I have also observed, and Beth has acutely felt, that these secondary emotions are located and experienced predominantly in my head, not my heart.
Essentially, what is actually occurring (despite the stories my ego likes to convince me are "true") is that I am cutting myself off from my own authentic experience and cutting myself off from my connection with others. In other words, through resisting the original emotion, I am actually resisting life itself. When I (consciously or unconsciously) resist these energies within me, I suffer. The result is often anger, shutting down, blame, etc., which also frequently leads to suffering in those closest to me, setting up a nasty downward spiral. I see so clearly now that when I do this I am pushing myself out of the truth of present moment and into a falsely constructed pseudo-reality that seems somehow easier or less scary for my ego to bear. But it's ironic that what seems like an escape from pain can often be a direct line to more suffering... for myself and those around me.
For as much awareness as I am cultivating around this phenomenon, getting to the bottom of it is no easy task. I'll use the example of disagreements that come up in relationship with Beth. We'll be arguing back and forth for a while and in some instances, she will get upset and maybe even start to cry.* I hate to see this on many levels, but what is most interesting to me is that sometimes Beth's pain will cause me to shut down. Her emotional upset makes no sense to my intellect, so my intellect will actually get mad about it. But I have also realized recently that there is another dimension at play: I am actually getting mad because Beth is inhabiting an energy that I am afraid to touch…vulnerability. At some point in my development, I learned that it was weak to show emotional vulnerability (or maybe any vulnerability) and unconsciously decided to put a wall up in front of it. This seems to be very common for men (or anyone with a masculine essence) and can sometimes actually be appropriate and useful, but much of the time it's getting in the way. Through my relationship with Beth, I'm starting to see that this tendency is cutting me off from a vital part of my existence - my emotional capacity (or what Beth would label the "inner feminine” - I still have trouble with that term though - I guess I have more work to do ;), which governs my feeling function, my capacity to relate and connect, even my ability to find meaning and joy in life. I know deep down that facing and embracing this disowned part of myself is actually helping me integrate to a higher level of consciousness, which will in turn help those around me (and so the world evolves).
*On this point, Beth offers the following insight from her own perspective: The reason that I may cry while having an argument with David is almost never due to the substantive issues at hand or anything else that can be logically understood through the rational mind or intellect. Rather, my crying arises from a bodily felt sense of disconnection in the relationship - losing energetic touch with each other's heart and spirit. This incredible ache runs through my body, in painful contrast to the deep and vibrant bond that I am accustomed to feeling with him, and my tears spring forth. In these moments of conflict, there is little doubt that both of us are raising protective walls which are responsible for blocking our felt sense of connection - there is individual work for both of us on staying open and connected through difficult moments. And....I would offer that it is a gift of the feminine in relationship to feel when the heart connection is lost, to cry out in pain as a result, and to thereby offer her masculine counterpart an opportunity and a portal to re-open or open more deeply to the energetic heart and to our larger nature (the opposite of closing down our boundaries of self to the skin-encapsulated ego). It has been my experience that this often happens for men through the compassion that is engendered when a woman cries - particularly if she cries with an open heart (which is no small feat, mind you). If he can resist the fear that turns to anger and just hold her pain, they will melt together and the pain is instantly dissolved, as if by magic. Both will be the richer for it.
Adding to Beth's observation, perhaps the craziest thing about recognizing this wall I put up to my vulnerability is recognizing the power that this wall actually has. I have watched myself recognize these patterns in the moment and have known that all Beth needed was a reassuring hug…it’s really often that simple...but even while I knew what I needed to do and why, there have been times when I couldn't overcome this blockage and open my heart when I wanted/needed to. I was out of control. The emotional wall actually had power over me. While it would eventually loosen its grip (often all I need is a little time alone to reflect, which Beth is trying her best to understand and respect), it has nevertheless been very shocking to experience this kind of powerlessness. There is also some irony here, since my ego is probably afraid of vulnerability and emotional pain precisely because these feelings are so often associated with powerlessness and being out of control. Could it be that allowing myself to open to and fully experience what a given moment has to offer actually (albeit paradoxically when the moment holds pain and vulnerability) offers me access to the deepest source of power there is?
Another amazing practice for me on this aspect of my journey is parenting. Since being with Beth, I have the great (and sometimes daunting) privilege of helping her raise this little guy into who we hope will become a strong, loving, happy and socially responsible adult. What a practice!! I'm learning now what probably all of you parents out there already know - that parenting can be one of the most challenging (and potentially growth-producing) aspects of our lives. Through interacting with Benjamin, Beth and I are compelled to look deeply at ourselves. We recognize our own walls and our own sensitivities in a whole new light and context. When emotional situations arise with Benjamin that trigger our own vulnerabilities and shadow qualities (around which we usually build walls), we have a choice. We can react unconsciously or habitually, which will probably cause Benjamin to begin the arduous wall-building process himself. Or, we can actually recognize our own trigger points and take this golden opportunity to show him a different way, thereby breaking through our own walls and healing old wounds that we may not have even known existed. It's a beautiful thing.
I've actually broken down before as I noticed this happening with Benjamin. In different circumstances when he's been scared or frustrated, I've noticed that the surfacing emotion in him was something that I was afraid to face in myself and I began to feel a vague sense of panic. My first impulse was to react with my own frustration or logic to shut him down or talk him out of his experience, but I have found that if I can breathe through and open to the experience, something new starts to emerge. In all likelihood, I blocked out the emotion he's experiencing when I was close to his age and it's been lying dormant inside of me until that very point when it came into my awareness again through this interaction with him. (What a gift!) Because of the difficulty that I'd had in experiencing that feeling, my knee jerk reaction was to protect Benjamin from what I feared myself…until I realized that I was perpetuating the cycle. At that point I was able to hold space for him to experience what he was experiencing, which allowed my wall to come down, which in turn created space for me to experience the emotion and also a deeper connection with him. It was very moving. I literally re-lived that long-suppressed emotion again through a child. I felt free again!
Through all of this life unfolding, I've learned to feel feelings that were formerly foreign and strange to me, and I've become increasingly agile at recognizing when I'm about to retreat behind my walls before I do so - and sometimes I can keep it in check. But even when I can't, I'm still growing. In a certain sense, these protective reactions that come up in me are not all bad. In fact, they are much more like friends than enemies. These reactions are the indicators of something that is broken or blocked inside of me; something that is covering up the true experience happening underneath. These reactions are like signs pointing me at the real stuff from which I'm unconsciously hiding. That's a good thing. Otherwise, I would never even know. Inherent to all of this, I've recognized that when I protect my weaknesses, I cease to grow. I realize that I cannot prevent disturbances from entering my world, but I can decide how I respond to them...and I recognize that disturbances are actually my very good friends. Awareness is the first step. If I consciously feel my feelings instead of unconsciously reacting to them, not only am I in a more empowered position from which to act, but I also become more deeply engaged in life itself. I used to think that this type of inquiry would make me "less of a man." But… I am realizing that this type of awareness and integration actually makes me much more balanced, strong, and wise; which to me, makes me much more of an empowered man (even if it does hurt like *#@! at times). Btw, Beth agrees... with a tear of joy in her eye. ;)
**********************************
“We cannot be more sensitive to pleasure without being more sensitive to pain.”
~ Alan Watts
~ John Welwood
"The word "surrender" is often interpreted as giving up, as weakness, as admitting defeat. Although this is one way to use the word, we will use it in a different way. Surrendering means letting go of your resistance to the total openness of who you are. It means giving up the tension of the little vortex you believe yourself to be and realizing the deep power of the ocean you truly are. It means to open with no boundaries, emotional or physical, so you ease wide beyond any limiting sense of self you might have."
~David Deida
A Treasure Worth Protecting
Posted on Dec 26th, 2007
by
David
I've received multiple emails about this and just read the following article on kswild.org. It's a shame that this type of thing can still happen now-a-days. Let's not let this one slip through the cracks. Please share...
Shocking new plans were just announced to ramp up logging on 2.6 million acres of public land in western Oregon by clearcutting old-growth forests and reducing protections for salmon-bearing creeks and streams.
The BLM proposes to increase old-growth logging by 700% over the next decade.
This outrageous scheme was unveiled August 10th when the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) released the draft Western Oregon Plan Revisions (WOPR), a new management plan for public forests stretching from the Willamette Valley to the Siskiyou Mountains.
According to The Oregonian, the BLM's draft plan would boost logging of trees 200 years and older sevenfold over the next decade. Yes, you read that correctly, a 700 percent increase in logging Oregon's last old-growth forests! This huge increase in logging would come from opening up currently protected streamside forests and old-growth reserves to clearcutting.
How you can help
It is time for Congress to step in and legislate a solution to this ongoing problem that continues to leave our precious old-growth forests, clean water and salmon-bearing streams in jeopardy. Since the Bush Administration will likely ignore public comments that it receives on the WOPR, please take a minute to call Senator Ron Wyden at (503) 326-7525 and request that Congress find a solution to this madness. Ask that Congress pass legislation to protect our remaining mature and old-growth forests on public land, and instead focus management in previously logged areas that are in need of thinning. If you live outside of Oregon, click here to find your Senators' phone numbers and urge them to settle this problem once and for all.
Visit www.oregonheritageforests.org to learn more, read talking points and send an automatic email to the BLM and your elected officials.
________________________________________
MORE ON THE WOPR...
In the early planning stages for WOPR, over 90% of the nearly 3,000 comments submitted to the Bush Administration asked for the protection of mature and old-growth forests. Most Oregonians want the BLM to embrace thinning second growth forests, safe-guard communities from wildfire and protect what remains of our nation’s ancient forests.
Unfortunately, the Bush Administration’s preferred alternative outlined in the WOPR would manage over one million acres of our federal forests in Oregon as Timber Management Areas–managed solely for rotation forestry–whereby thousands of acres of ancient forests would be converted into industrial tree farms every year. Under the WOPR, wildlife, salmon, recreation and clean water would play second fiddle to timber profits.
Losing ancient forests
The WOPR covers six districts of the BLM: Medford, Roseburg, Eugene, Salem, Coos Bay and the Klamath Falls area of the Lakeview District, which is approximately 2.6 million acres of public land in western Oregon (that is a forested area larger than the states of Rhode Island and Delaware combined!). Forests in the Rogue, Umpqua and Willamette River basins are primarily affected, as well as many of Oregon’s coastal watersheds.
The WOPR has three primary alternatives, and the outlook for Oregon’s federal forests under the agency’s preferred Alternative 2 is grim. The BLM would clearcut 139,700 acres (over 200 square miles) of mature and old growth forest while building 1,000 miles of logging roads per decade, converting pristine ancient forests into monoculture tree farms. Clearcutting would become the preferred logging method, and 24% of all logging would target trees 200 years and older.
The WOPR effectively pulls the BLM forests out from the scientific framework of the Northwest Forest Plan. The Northwest Forest Plan was enacted in 1994 and is considered one of the most advanced plans to conserve forested ecosystems – while allowing continued logging of some older forest. Every alternative in the WOPR, however, would greatly increase the logging of mature and old-growth forests to levels before the Northwest Forest Plan.
There is a better way
Oregonians don’t have to choose between a healthy timber industry and their old-growth forest heritage. At a time when public consensus over old-growth protection and plantation thinning has never been stronger, the Bush Administration is handing over our ancient forests to the timber industry.
Many Oregon forest managers are already moving beyond the conflicts of the past. By focusing on previously logged public forestlands - many of which are now overgrown and in need of thinning - they are providing wood to local mills while actually improving conditions for fish and wildlife and keeping saws out of old-growth forests.
Collaborative groups including the Siuslaw National Forest bring together loggers, local governments, conservation groups and others to design projects with broad community support. The Siuslaw is consistently among the largest timber producers of any National Forest in Oregon.
Please call Senator Ron Wyden today at (503)326-7525 and ask that Congress pass legislation to protect our remaining mature and old-growth forests on public land, and instead focus management in previously logged areas that are in need of thinning.
Click here for more information and a “Citizen’s Guide” to commenting on WOPR before the January 11, 2008 deadline.
Visit www.oregonheritageforests.org to learn more, read talking points and send an automatic email to the BLM and your elected officials.
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
~Margaret Mead

“The hostile attitude of conquering nature ignores the basic interdependence of all things and events—that the world beyond the skin is actually an extension of our own bodies—and will end in destroying the very environment from which we emerge and upon which our whole life depends.”
~Alan Watts
Please consider getting behind this and passing it along via email or blog (today). The planet needs us.... which [to me] means that WE need us!
An Exercise in Empathy and Compassion
Posted on Nov 28th, 2007
by
David
Have you ever been in a situation where someone looked miserable, discouraged, mad, or somehow they just annoyed you? Have you then asked yourself, what is their problem or… why can’t they merely enjoy life instead of being such a “downer”? Well, in all honesty, I have (once or twice ;). Whether it’s someone in traffic who is honking and swearing or someone in the market who’s zooming past everyone with an angry look on his or her face, it can be easy for me to fall into judgment about them. The problem though (as if there is only one), is that I’m in no position to judge. I have no idea what’s going on their world. They could be having one of the worst days (or months) of their lives. In fact, there’s even a chance I’ve been that person (once or twice ;) and it’s funny how the perspective changes when the shoe’s on the other foot.
Anyway, this concept really hit home when I was on an airplane a few weeks back. I was sitting next to a woman who looked dismal and barely even acknowledged me, and from my perspective, looked like she could care less that anybody else even existed. I tried to make eye contact and shoot her a smile a couple of times and then decided to read my book. We sat in silence for almost the entire flight and I had forgotten about her for the most part, but there was still something that was troubling me. Why did she have to be so cold, I thought to myself? Why was I getting caught up in it? Again, other personal issues come to mind. Maybe it was my own fear or insecurity or even my projection on how others “should” act towards other people. But this is another story for another time.
Eventually, we began talking. At first it was small talk but the conversation soon shifted… big time. I was shocked and humbled when she shared the devastating news that she had lost her husband unexpectedly a few weeks earlier as a result of a bicycle accident. He had been in a coma for quite some time and she had to make the inconceivably difficult decision to take him off life support (based on his living will). I personally can’t envision many circumstances that would be more challenging to go through than this. Unless, maybe, having to explain to your 6 year old child why her father is no longer with us, which was in fact, another part of her story.
I can’t imagine the pain that she was going through. It is literally outside of my capacity at this point in time. The one thing that I could do was simply to be there with and for her. The result was a connection on a level that I had never before experienced with a complete stranger. We shared tears, fears, smiles, love, and a deep appreciation for life and its fragility. Our conversation affected me in a way that I could never have imagined as we opened up to each other. It pretty much threw me right out of my box! It was a night I won't soon forget.
What I realized, beyond what I just wrote about, was that my inability to get out of my own head sometimes severely shifts my energy and the energy of those around me in a negative way. Having a negative relationship to life (however subtly) causes me to make assumptions about others that may be way off-base, and that sometimes lead me to respond with coldness. The coldness can spread like a subtle disease to those around me, creating walls upon walls upon walls. I see this a lot these days. You know what I’m talking about, right? We are the ones who create it. It’s not them. Them doesn’t exist. We’re in it together and we can change our experience and enrich the lives of those around us just by being open and empathetic. Imagine a world in which everyone's first response to others is from love rather than putting up these walls that keep us from experiencing true connection.
Obviously, this is a pretty extreme example of the experience others are having, but this type of thing is happening around us all of the time, albeit on a lesser scale. Maybe the other person was just fired, dumped, diagnosed with an illness, up all night with their child having nightmares, or is simply having a bad day. I've noticed this can even happen in small, seemingly insignificant situations with friends. I've made assumptions or thought the worst about what's going on with friends and maybe I've even acted on those assumptions. Scary huh? I do this more often than I'd like to think, and I bet I'm not the only one. So I'm asking myself: Why not open up rather than close down? What if I consciously decide to come from a place of not knowing and not assuming? There's really no down side, and I'm much more likely to find what’s real and to connect on a much deeper level... because doing this seems to magically create space for the heart to enter the picture. And, this is a good place to be when choosing to respond... with feminine or masculine compassion.
Imagine moving through the world with the notion that each person we run into could use our help instead of focusing on how their negativity is affecting us. Imagine that we have the power to change their day or even their life. What I realized in a new way from that experience on the plane is that we do. I found that all I have to do is drop my judgment and my assumptions and listen from the heart. It’s actually quite simple and yet, can be one of the most difficult things to do at times.
In love and gratitude…
Concepts
Posted on Nov 2nd, 2007
by
David
When perception is stronger than mindfulness, we recognize various appearances and create concepts such as "body," "cat", "house," or "person". . . On some clear night, go outside, look up at the sky, and see if you can find the Big Dipper. For most people that is a familiar constellation, easy to pick out from all the other stars. But is there really a Big Dipper up there in the sky? There is no Big Dipper up there. "Big Dipper" is a concept. Humans looked, saw a certain pattern, and then created a concept in our collective mind to describe it. That concept is useful because it helps us recognize the constellation. But it also has another, less useful effect. By creating the concept "Big Dipper" we separate out those stars from all the rest, and then, if we become attached to the idea of that separation, we lose the sense of the night sky's wholeness, its oneness. Does the separation actually exist in the sky? No. We created it through the use of a concept. Does anything change in the sky when we understand that there is no Big Dipper? No.
- Joseph Goldstein, Insight Meditation from Everyday Mind
Hmmmm, I wonder in what other areas of our lives do these concepts effect our experience? My feeling is that it happens in just about every facet of our lives. Our attachment to this partiality and our need to define everything is causing us to look at life (and ourselves) in a limited and fragmented way. I feel that this is limiting our potential experience of experience itself. We feel like these separate beings in "here" living in an alien world out "there," yet we are as much of a product of the universe as anything else that we observe from this side of our lens. Think about it. When do we actually make a decision that is completely untouched by our conditioning and these patterns that we refer to as self? These patterns are the result of billions of years of unfolding. When we let go of this concept of separate self and the identification that comes with it, something changes. We have the ability tosee be the bigger picture. To me, this is what realization is, and the illusion is not that we don't also exist as separate beings, it's that we are exclusively identified with an existence that is a partial concept of what we really are. An amazing concept no doubt, just a limited one.
- Joseph Goldstein, Insight Meditation from Everyday Mind
Hmmmm, I wonder in what other areas of our lives do these concepts effect our experience? My feeling is that it happens in just about every facet of our lives. Our attachment to this partiality and our need to define everything is causing us to look at life (and ourselves) in a limited and fragmented way. I feel that this is limiting our potential experience of experience itself. We feel like these separate beings in "here" living in an alien world out "there," yet we are as much of a product of the universe as anything else that we observe from this side of our lens. Think about it. When do we actually make a decision that is completely untouched by our conditioning and these patterns that we refer to as self? These patterns are the result of billions of years of unfolding. When we let go of this concept of separate self and the identification that comes with it, something changes. We have the ability to






