"I want the soon-to-be-adults of the future to know that it is entirely possible to create health and harmony and that all the new inventions and fancy technology can support this if technology is used as a tool and not as a means to replace or change nature (as if nature would ever let humans win at this anyway. Ha!)"
Western "civilization" bears upon it a particular daunting responsibility to develop an ability to look within, critique and transform...even compost...itself in the interest of joining many in the rest of the world who seek to illuminate and empower traditions of social harmony, political clarity and the interconnection of humanity (again) with the profundity of nature and the nurturance of Mother Earth. There are people working tirelessly within this daunting and frustrating context of colonialism, corporate hegemony and the heartless destruction and exploitation of nature. We can find some of these amazing people in the embattled classrooms, labs and burgeoning gardens of what many call a miseducational system. Lisa Lambert is just one of these teachers, bringing her personal experiences, her wisdoms, her grounded scholarship, her warrior heart as gift to all the children that pass, luckily, through her classrooms. She calls us to think and feel and do more deeply as we preside over the lives, learnings and growth of children and that of our own vital presence in our communities and on this earth. - Ukumbwa Sauti
People say children don’t know anything. I’m
not so sure this is true. I believe they know a lot, more than most adults.
When I was a child I was always drawn to the
outdoors. There was a vibration out there that I could never access when I was
indoors. Of course, at the time I didn’t know what it was, I just knew that I
felt ‘right’ being outside. That space held me and comforted me, taught me and
delighted me. Whenever anything wasn’t ok, nature was my church. Whenever I had
a question, if I was quiet enough and I paid attention, it would tell me the
answer.
The connection felt stronger near places like
oceans, ponds and in the rain. I noticed that water was the thing that
connected all of it, it’s constant flow touched and fed all of us. I had so
many questions about the world outside. I never knew any adults that could
answer them, at least not in the way that I wanted. I most certainly never met
any adults that liked being outside as much as I did. I was generally shushed
or shamed and allowed to be seen and but not heard, I was ‘only a girl’ after
all, why would my thoughts be important?
So I stayed quiet and I studied the absolute
to make sense of the relative. I investigated everything. I read anything I
could get my hands on. I dug in the dirt. I nursed wild animals. I examined how
water made puddles and how the wind moved the trees. Nature led me to science
and science became my teacher and gave me a voice, but nature was and will
always be, my mentor. I was happy to find a source to offer me concrete answers
to my seeking, a world of prescribed solutions, all gleaned from wild places.
By studying biomimicry, I expanded my interest
in biology, then to medicine, then specialized to botany, ecology, engineering,
geology and then outward to astronomy, the universe and beyond. There I found
myself led to philosophy and religion, and the natural extension of the spiritual,
here I discovered ethereal ancestors and from there I was led back to nature,
always nature.
I’m a science educator now. I feel like I know
two languages. One is the logical human made one with essays, formulas and
lists and the other is the enigmatic ever flowing reverberation of energy that
cannot be created or destroyed, but only channeled. I have the honor of
spending my days serving families and children as a public school teacher and I
still deeply believe that children intuitively come to class knowing everything
they need to know. Do they have the schmantzy words or ‘theory’ to explain it
in the way that our conditioned old dead white guy science model wants? No,
that type of colonial language is not present. But children have a heart intelligence, a curiosity, a enthusiasm
for exploring. They come to me with a creativity and ingenuity in figuring
things out, an openness to new and different things and an inner knowing that
the cycles and flow of ALL of it are important. I help them articulate their
knowing.
A very young child can easily see the
importance and safety of interconnectedness.
Somewhere between infancy and adulthood we humans have forgotten how to
access this expansive beauty of reverence and ease. All the answers to all the
worlds problems are held in this simple collaborative connected space, if only
adults could have the wisdom of that child. If only education didn’t mean
extinguishing this inner knowing. Is it possible to teach children these two
languages, the standardized one and the real one? Is it possible to keep them engaged and
caring as they age out of our school systems? Is it possible that we all can
soften and flex and discover, the way kids are born to do?
I’m not sure if growing up today is any harder
than it was decades ago. It’s always been hard to be a little kid in a grownup
selfish world.
Nowadays, kids are getting diverted away from the natural world
sooner in life and are more likely to grow up not even understanding the very
ground they stand on. Things like weather, animals and even their own biology
become problems to oppress instead of the inherent beauty that they are. This
is a BIG conceptual missed opportunity. This attitude coupled with ages old
‘norms’ further keeps children inside by playing out the false story of nature
as gross and uncomfortable or dangerous . Ignorance, fear and hatred of the
unknown migrates pervasively into kids daily lives and as a consequence the
natural world and so many who live in it are suffering. We see it in the news every
day.
The connection between humans and nature is clear. The solution to the
major human and global issues in the world is not to divorce ourselves from the
outdoors, sequester ourselves inside and only interact in air-conditioned rooms
with electric screens. The solution is to jump in the mud and mix both these
worlds in a spectacular primordial futuristic fusion that supports sustenance,
equality and responsible stewardship of our planet.
I want the soon-to-be-adults of the future to know that it is entirely possible to create health and
harmony and that all the new inventions and fancy technology can support this
if technology is used as a tool and not as a means to replace or change nature
(As if nature would ever let humans win at this anyway. Ha!). With steady kind
attention, our climate will be remedied, water will be clean and freely
available, racism and patriarchy will be smashed, healthcare will be replaced
by caring AND health for the body and the mind, there will be abundant
affordable healthy food, cultures and religions will be celebrated, unfair
wealth structures will be leveled, there will be clarity of intersectionality on every
level and, yes, new sustainable accessible technologies will be invented to
solve energy demands.
This isn’t the future, it’s happening now, these little
rumbles. Classroom by classroom, garden by garden, neighborhood by neighborhood
and with every kid who looks into a flower or at a bug and asks, “I wonder why...?”.
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