Introduction to No Solid Ground: Renewable Contentment and Sustainable Happiness in an Age of Uncertainty
I ran to the rocks
I ran to the rocks
To hide my face
The rocks cried
out,
No hiding place
There’s no
hiding place
Down here
My Lord, what a
morning
My Lord, what a
morning
My Lord, what a
morning
Fare thee well
Fare thee well
In that great
gitting-up morning
Fare thee well
Fare thee well
The stars will
fall from heaven
Fare thee well
Fare thee well
Like wax the
mountain meltin’
Fare thee well
Fare thee well
The seas
they’ll be a boilin’
Fare thee well
Fare thee well
The moon with
blood a drippin’
Fare thee well
Fare thee well
— Eighteenth-century African-American folk
song
For who so list into the heauns
looke,
And search the
courses of the rowling spheares,
Shall find that
from the point, where they first tooke
Their setting
forth, in these few thousand yeares
They are all
wandred much: that plaine appeares.
For that same golden
fleecy Ram, which bore
Phrixus and
Helle from their stepdames feares,
Hath now
forgot, where he was plast of yore,
And shoudred
hat the Bull, which fayre Europa bore.
And eke the
Bull hath with his bow-bent horne
So Hardly
butted those two twines of loue,
That they haue
crusht the Crab, and quite him borne
Into the great
Nemaean lions groue.
So now all
range, and doe at random roué
Out of their
proper places farre away,
And all this
world with them amisse doe moue,
And all his
creatures from their course astray,
Till they
arriue at their last ruinous decay.
— Edmund Spenser, from the Proem to Book V
of The Faerie Queene
Something is dying, and
something new is being born. We’re now coming to the end of a great cycle of
time, known as the Piscean Era, and many of us are starting to sense the subtle
beginnings of a new era, the Age of Aquarius. We’re also coming to the end of
an even greater cycle that the human community now has very little memory of.
This forgotten grand cycle of time is a pivotal theme of this book. These two
cycles of time, and their effects on the earth and life, were well known to
antiquity. Knowledge of them is codified in many of the oral and written
records from around the globe that have been preserved by our ancestors and
handed down to us for tens of thousands of years, though our modern
interpretation and understanding of these records blur and diminish their important
messages. As a result, the human community now fails to recognize the effects
of these profound transitions taking place during this time at the end of time,
before time begins anew; transitions that we’re not separate from in any real
way.
In Part I of this journey: A
Very Modern Madness, we’ll examine a fast-moving convergence of change taking
place in Earth that is resulting in increasing uncertainty in human society.
We’ll also discover our ancestor’s profound oral traditions and texts, symbols,
objects, and architectural structures that are intimately linked to the cycling
nature of time and space. And we’ll look closely at these cycles and the
transition zones that exist between segments of them. The end zone of each
great cycle, the ancients tell us, brings a wide range of potential
catastrophes and cataclysm: climate extremes, seismic and volcanic activity,
falling meteors, rising seas, species die-off, social disorder, malaise, and
madness. This section of the journey will remind us that we have faced many,
and we will face many more of these convergent events in the future, as we move
deeper into the currently unfolding transitions. And as we’ll see, modern
science is increasingly confirming what our ancient ancestors knew and
carefully preserved for us for tens of thousands of years.
Our ancestors, around the
globe and extending far back into the mists of time, were acutely aware of
these cycles and cultivated ways of life that emphasized the intimate and
innate relationship that exists between us, Earth, and the sky, in order to build
fluid, adaptable societies that protected health and wellbeing and that
furthered the chances of human survival during periodic celestial and
terrestrial upheavals. They possessed a vast and precise knowledge, accumulated
over countless thousands of years, of the rhythmic patterns of existence that
periodically result in disorder, decline, and catastrophe here in Earth. In
stark contrast to our ancestors’ clear perception of the earth and sky, and
their place within them, modern people have forgotten that we exist within
continuously regenerating and degenerating patterns and processes over which we
have no control. In our alienated state of being, we’ve built a towering,
mediatized, global society that depends on a stable Earth and sky, but when we
look carefully at the archaeological, geological, climatological, historical,
mythological, and cosmological record, we see that no such stability has ever
existed. This lack of awareness means human society will relatively soon face
upheaval without knowledge or preparation. A strong argument exists that we are
already in the midst of upheaval, but that we are unaware of its current
extent, toll, and threat. This alienation from the actuality of the meta-environments
that we exist in and depend on for our survival is a very modern madness that
keeps us from experiencing authentic contentment and happiness.
In Part II of this journey:
Being Sane, we’ll look at our society’s conditioned patterns of thought that
are the common cause of this madness. These patterns of thought, dissociated
from Earth and sky, and cultivated by people and institutions that are not
working in our best interests, are resulting in growing confusion, discontent,
anxiety, disease, and endangerment. We’ll examine the subtle messages we
regularly receive from orthodox institutions and corporate organizations, and
the accumulative effects of these messages that make us think life should be
about speed, consumption, and a relentless pursuit of individualism. We’ll also
look at ways of recovering a clear understanding of where we really are so that
we can begin to relate to the patterns and processes of the earth and sky as
they really are, and to ourselves as we really are. By cultivating a clear and
direct relationship with the earth and sky that we’re inseparably embedded in,
which was central to our ancestor’s vision of life and existence, we can create
the internal conditions for a renewable contentment and a sustainable, even
profound, happiness. These states of being then inform our intentions and
actions in ways that skillfully benefit our life and society, no matter how
unstable the world becomes in this Age of Uncertainty.
In modern society, we tend to
be skeptical of contentment and happiness, even as we persistently pursue them
in often futile and misguided ways. Our ancient ancestors knew that real
contentment and happiness are the only things that make living worthwhile and
that prevent us from collectively going mad and destroying life on a grand
scale. To become acquainted with these elusive birthright states of being,
individually and collectively, we’re going to have to face habitually
overlooked elements of the natural world, society, and our own lives. This book
explores what has been forgotten and carefully avoided. It looks at the evidence
in both ancient records and contemporary scientific data, as well as other
interesting and sometimes surprising places, for a remembrance of forgotten
cycles of time and their effects on all life. It presents the ancient
understanding that there is no solid ground to be found in any aspect of
existence. It observes that in this uncertain in-between zone that we find
ourselves in, which is both an ending and a beginning, enduring contentment and
genuine happiness are rare experiences. And it concludes that it is our
forgetfulness of where we actually are and our denial and ignorance of what is
actually taking place that make them rare.
This is a challenging book
that potentially has a happy ending (it’s up to you). The journey it maps leads
outward and upward as well as inward and downward, for the purpose of
cultivating an effective and renewable contentment that organically gives birth
to a sustainable, even profound happiness. During this journey, we’ll look
underneath rocks, peer into deep shadows, and return to long-forgotten and
carefully avoided places. Some of what we encounter on the path may be
unfamiliar territory and difficult to comprehend, acknowledge, or accept. We’ll
discover truths that are inconvenient, even unsettling, about our world, our
society, and ourselves: well-kept secrets that have been hidden right in front
of us and deep within us. If we have the courage and commitment to make this
uncertain journey and see it through, it will move us: it has the potential to
dissolve the amnesia and blindness that alienate us from our human birthright
of renewable contentment and sustainable happiness. But, as will become evident
during the journey, the clock is ticking. Let’s get started …
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