January/February 2003 Living Now
Earth Changes

by Jesse Wolf Hardin

Anyone not aware of the increase in both natural and human-caused disasters, hasn’t been paying close attention!  "Of utmost importance," Wolf teaches, "are the practical and spiritual lessons they provide."

The Earth is a magical set of processes-- and a tumultuous cauldron, forever subject to cycles of natural stress and catastrophe. The arrival of new life forms has often signaled the disappearance of others, throughout the long history of this Gaian Earth mother. It is nonetheless difficult to name a period in time when there’s ever been this diverse a variety of natural and man made disasters, occurring either simultaneously or in such rapid succession.

Most alarming is the acceleration of events affecting the entire world, taking place right now, including the ecological crisis. As I write this, the American West is in the fifth year of record drought--a chronic condition only slightly alleviated by the winter’s gracious rains. We’ve been beset by ever larger forest fires, and deadly bark beetles have infested many of the remaining stands. The famous Rio Grande is running at a fraction of its normal volume, while the Southeast has nearly been washed away by record breaking floods.

It’s as if Earth and Spirit were jumping up and down, getting ever louder and more shrill in the effort to grab our attention. And indeed, they are!  There are potential consequences should our kind not heed the implorings of the existing shamans and elders, as well as the dire portents of our communicative world. They are reflected in the prayers of the Tibetans and the prophecies of the Hopi. In the nuclear storms of the dark gods Teacatlipoca and Huitzilopochtli, the promise of Quetzalcoatl and the Viking legend of Ragnarok:  human kind-- systematically disenfranchised from sacred self, Earth and Spirit-- could pay an unnecessarily tragic price.

Note that paying a price isn’t the same as either penalty or penance, it’s simply a matter of responsibility: the portentous results of our collective failure to respond. Contrary to certain social and religious dictums, we’re being neither tested nor punished. More accurately, the directive inspirited Earth is probing for new healing, for new ways of being and relationship that can return the whole to balance. She’s probing for those precious empathics who can hear her cries, sense her needs, and feel her cumulative pain. And she’s probing for a reaction, as if to ask "Is anyone home?  Does anyone notice?  Does anyone care?"

The significance of the Earth changes is so great and the social condition so urgent, it’s tempting to reject the implications and duck the assignment. It’s certainly simpler to blame it all on the power of evil spirits, the manipulations of scheming extraterrestrials, the trickery of a hellish devil, the retribution of a wrathful god.... or on an impervious corporate state. It’s a relief on some level to imagine that the forces of destruction are insurmountable, the perpetrators too powerful for us to bother attempting to intervene. But whenever there is a human or institutional cause we share a degree of culpability, and we find both an opening for activism and a chance for reformation. And when the tumult and tragedy are set into motion by something bigger than our mortal hominid kind, we can still assume we have a part to play.... contributing both to the creation of the imbalance itself, and to the global healing that must follow.

We were each born with a body that regulates its internal hungers and heat, triggers the urge to reproduce, and can heal its cuts and wounds. A bodily fever is a valuable curative response to a dangerous infection. While a fever can potentially kill the patient as well as the disease, it’s not some dark force that’s out to get us. In a similar manner, violent earthquakes and viral outbreaks function like a terrestrial fever that indicates--and can sometimes help eliminate--the imbalance and dis-ease threatening the corporal Earthen body. We too are integral elements and agents of planetary being, planetary change, and we have the daily informed choice of being either part of the problem, or part of the cure. Ignorance is not a lack of information; it’s deliberately ignoring the impact of our lifestyles, the results both of what we’ve done, and what we have so far failed to do: ignoring the hushed screams of falling old-growth forests, and of the hundreds of species yearly banished into extinction; ignoring the pleas of motherless children, abused wives, and those hungry homeless camped on our streets; ignoring the preeminent mission of our kind and times, which is to reconnect, re-member, re-sacrament and restore.

There may never be a period of total peace on Earth, and truth is, we’re strengthened and purified by a degree of challenge and travail. But there can and must be a return to balance that supports the flowering and blessing of the whole. The necessary cure will involve a complete remaking or our sense of self, community, purpose and place. It will require new forms of Earth-centered teaching, and teachers who are both visionary and grounded. A future founded in gratitude, and hope that will last. And a return to the sensibilities, sensitivities and values of our sacramental tribal past. We can halt much of the destruction by exposing the facts, and through our most focused, unselfish acts. Even the earthquakes and droughts can be tempered if not tamed, through the depth of our gratitude, the sincerity of our rituals, and the strength of prayers.

In bringing down a deer to eat, our primitive ancestors of every race gave thanks. Indigenous Americans spread cornmeal before the animal’s stilled mouth. An ocean away early Indo-Europeans burned smudge sticks while describing their hungry children to their downed quarry, and promising to praise the creature’s stamina and beauty in songs shared with the entire tribe. It’s time that we, too, spread sacred yellow corn or hallowed tears at the foot of our many gifts. Time that we compose new songs to the source of our sentience and sustenance, bliss and delight. And that we sacrifice all delusion and hesitation, on the miraculous altar of life.

If there is ever a human extinction it will be because we neglected to respond as her "feelers" and healers, failed to fulfill our Gaian and evolutionary role. And if we survive the Earth changes and our own species’ most magnificent mistakes, it will be because we have learned to apply the attendant lessons in ways that benefit not only us but the Earth. It’s then that we’ll truly flourish, body and soul.... serving as her lovers and protectors, ritualists and restorationists, sensors and celebrants again.

Jesse Wolf Hardin is an acclaimed presenter on Earth-centered spirituality and author of Kindred Spirits: Sacred Earth Wisdom (Swan•Raven, 2001). Wolf and Loba share an enchanted riverside sanctuary, teaching Gaian ecosophy, heightened awareness, presence and purpose. For information on their books, programs, wilderness quests or resident internships contact: The Earthen Spirituality Project, Box 516, Reserve, NM 87830 www.concentric.net/~earthway.