Last week's quotation, by Friedensreich Hundertwasser, could not be more apposite: "Wenn einer allein traümt, ist es nur ein Traum. Wenn viele gemeinsam traümen, ist das der Anfang einer neuer Wirklichkeit."
Which being translated, means: "When one dreams alone, it is only a dream. When many dream together, it is the beginning of a new reality."
And this week, millions of protesters are gathering to support the Extinction Rebellion movement. So many people have been galvanised into action by the grim realisation that our planet is under threat. That our lives, and the lives of all living creatures and plants, are under threat. That it is almost too late to do anything about it. But that nevertheless, the effort has to be made.
Many Unitarians will be spending at least part of this week down in London to join the protests. I am so glad that we are a part of this, because we only have one planet. They are seeking to help people to understand that there are better ways to live, based on a lifestyle which Unitarian author John Naish calls "enoughness".
Because at the moment we are a society of consumers, with our heads buried firmly in the sand. Natural resources such as gas and oil are running out and the biodiversity on which our planet depends for its health is at risk from the activities of humankind.
Extinction Rebellion has published a book called This is Not A Drill. In it, the authors write: "This is a crisis that requires radical system change on a scale never seen before." They write: "The challenge we now face is extremely daunting. Because the problem, unfortunately, is not just the climate. The problem is ecology. The problem is the environment. The problem is biodiversity. The problem is capitalism. The problem is colonialsim. The problem is power. The problem is inequality. The problem is greed, and corruption, and money, and this tired, broken system. The problem is our complete and utter failure to imagine any meaningful alternative."
The book has some wonderful suggestions for ways in which every person can join the rebellion, by choosing sustainability over consumerism, by campaigning to *make* governments and industry understand what is at stake.
This could be our last chance... let's work together to make it happen.
“I am only one, but still I am one.
I cannot do everything, but still I can do something.
And because I cannot do everything,
I will not refuse to do the something I can do.”
Edward Everett Hale
Showing posts with label John Naish. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Naish. Show all posts
Tuesday, 8 October 2019
Working Together
Labels:
enoughness,
environment,
Extinction Rebellion,
John Naish
Friday, 4 April 2014
Enough Already
You know how it sometimes happens: you receive a certain message / hear a certain idea. It can be from a Facebook post, a talk, an article, an address And once you have heard / read it, once it has squirreled its way into your consciousness, every other thing you hear or read seems to chime in to back it up or elaborate on it. Some may call it synchronicity, but I'm not so sure.
And it has happened to me this week, with the concept of Enoughness. At our District Annual General Meeting at Shrewsbury last Saturday, our Guest Speaker was Brighton Unitarian John Naish, author of a marvellous book called Enough: Breaking Free From The World Of Excess. In his entertaining and inspirational talk, John preached the doctrine of "practising enoughness in a world of more, more, more." He explained that instead of forever chasing after the next goal, the next project, the next gadget, we should appreciate what we have and be grateful. And that we should grow our gratitude by appreciating our bounty.
And it has happened to me this week, with the concept of Enoughness. At our District Annual General Meeting at Shrewsbury last Saturday, our Guest Speaker was Brighton Unitarian John Naish, author of a marvellous book called Enough: Breaking Free From The World Of Excess. In his entertaining and inspirational talk, John preached the doctrine of "practising enoughness in a world of more, more, more." He explained that instead of forever chasing after the next goal, the next project, the next gadget, we should appreciate what we have and be grateful. And that we should grow our gratitude by appreciating our bounty.
John
commented that "gratitude is one of the select number of things in life
for which we cannot actually get enough". Another is spiritual commitment.
He argued that we needed to take the time to go deep spiritually, rather than
skating over the surface, always trying out the next spiritual practice that
promised peace and contentment. He illustrated this by joking: "There
would have been little opportunity in 2nd century Nepal to say, 'Buddhism? Yeah, I've
been exploring that. Really great, inspirational stuff. But then I wanted to
try 'Shamanic Whirling', and both those classes are on a Wednesday evening, so
..."
He
argued that spiritual exploration only bears fruit if we commit to certain
practices, and stick with them. And he concluded by saying that "For me,
and for many of you, I trust, Unitarianism has provided a central thread, a
community, a tradition, and a discipline from within which we can explore the
spiritual wisdom of all the world and of all time, in order to develop our own
ideas, build our own faith, nurture our consciences, and set our moral
compasses. ... Unitarianism
is enough. ... So keep the faith. Keep fast to the heart of your Unitarian
practice. For faith is something that sustains us. And it is something which,
surely, we can never have enough."
Once that note had been struck, on the Saturday, it has continued to sound over and over again during this week. Enoughness is about knowing when you have enough and then being content, whether you are talking about food, or information, or entertainment or work. Enoughness is good. Except for those spiritual "never-enoughs" which John talked about, such as gratitude and commitment and love.
Labels:
contentment,
enoughness,
Geneen Roth,
gratitude,
John Naish
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