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George Lakoff on Language and Climate Action

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July 27, 2022

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George Lakoff on Language and Climate Action

Our ordinary conceptual system, in terms of which we both think and act, is fundamentally metaphorical in nature.

– George Lakoff –

George Lakoff on Language and Climate Action

“Why is it so difficult to act on climate change? Despite growing public awareness of the current climate crisis, the topic of climate change continues to thwart political and social systems across the globe, as it has for over 30 years. The reasons for this vary, but cognitive linguist and philosopher George Lakoff suggests that an inability to act on climate change may be ingrained into our most fundamental linguistic and cognitive systems. Lakoff is an emeritus professor of Cognitive Science and Linguistics at the University of California at Berkeley. He is the best-selling author of Don’t Think of an Elephant and Metaphors We Live By, and Co-host of the FrameLab Podcast. He is an expert in understanding how language is framed to suit personal and political agendas. In this interview, I turned to him to shed light on the linguistic and cognitive barriers to climate action, and what should be done to overcome them.” { read more }

Be The Change

Lakoff’s book Philosophy In The Flesh, coauthored by Mark Johnson, makes the following points: “The mind is inherently embodied. Thought is mostly unconscious. Abstract concepts are largely metaphorical.” More in this in-depth interview with Lakoff from 1999. { more }

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Aanchal Malhotra: Remnants of a Separation

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July 26, 2022

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Aanchal Malhotra: Remnants of a Separation

Memorialization is not a passive practice but an active conversation.

– Aanchal Malhotra –

Aanchal Malhotra: Remnants of a Separation

“Aanchal Malhotra is a writer and historian reorienting the way we think and talk about our past, present and future. Inspired by objects her family had carried with them during the 1947 Partition of India and Pakistan, Aanchal began her journey of collecting and archiving objects, or material memories, treasured and preserved by displaced survivors of Partition, eventually compiled into her debut book, ‘Remnants of a Separation.'” More in this engaging interview with Aanchal Malhotra. { read more }

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Read an excerpt from ‘Remnants of a Separation,” here. { more }

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Three States Of Water

Weekly excerpt to help us remember the sacred.

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Weekly Reading Jul 25, 2022

Three States Of Water

–Natureza Gabriel Kram

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2568.jpgImagine that you’ve never been to Earth. You visit first in winter, where someone introduces you to water. From a glass, they pour it out over your hand. You drink. Remarkable.

Imagine that you walk outside onto a frozen lake. You’ve never seen this substance before. You kick at it with the toe of your boot: solid. You drop to your hands and knees, it grips your palm when you press your hand against it: bone-chillingly cold. What is this, you ask? Your guide replies, water.

Imagine that you walk into a steam room. Hot vapor swirls in an obscuring fog. What is this cloud? you ask. Again, water, comes the answer.

If you encountered water for the first time, wearing her three faces, you would not believe she was a single element. Yet of course, each of these– liquid water, ice, and steam is, indeed, water, in different states. A liquid, a solid, a gas: their physical properties entirely different; contradictory, in fact.

I have now explained Polyvagal Theory to you, through the lens of water. It explains the relationship between the autonomic nervous system and social behavior, and how, depending on whether we feel safe or in danger, it surfaces varying neural platforms that shape our bodily experience, emotions and thoughts, perceptions, and behaviors.

Water, in its liquid state, can be still or fast-flowing yet behaves liquidly. In our analogy, liquid water represents our connection system. This is the neural platform active when we feel safe enough in our bodies to open to connection; it unites the heart and breath with the face and the voice. There is an old adage that some people wear their hearts on their sleeves, but that’s not quite true; we actually wear our heart on our face and in our voice. The capacity of the vagus nerve is reflected in our heart-rate variability and through the expression on our face and the prosody of our voice. […]

You, like liquid water changing to steam, are different when safety is absent. Steam represents the fight or flight system: high-energy defensive response evoked to respond to threat. Steam shows up as fight energy or as flight energy. The emotional correlate of fight is the continuum of anger, from mild irritation to homicidal rage. The emotional correlate of flight is the continuum of fear, from mild worry to terror. […]

Our bodies typically respond to feeling unsafe by shifting from liquid water, to steam, to ice. If steam doesn’t get us safe—if we can’t fight or flee our way out of threat—ice immobilizes us. Its physiological action is a metabolic drop and shutdown, and if it comes on strongly it evokes the release of endogenous opiates (painkillers) to numb us out to impending death. Ice is the threat response of last resort. Whereas the emotional continuum of steam is anger and fear, that of ice is akin to depression. It is a withdrawal, a collapse, a social death. It correlates with dissociation.

Knowing where we are polyvagally—steam, ice, or water—points us toward what we need to come back home. Steam must cool and condense to return to liquid water, but ice can be cooled indefinitely and it will not melt. Supporting wellness requires meeting the needs of present-moment nervous system state. When you are steam, you see as steam sees. And you, and the world, look a certain way. Change the state and the story follows. Condense the vapor back into liquid water and the way the person perceives shifts on its own.

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How do you relate to the metaphor of the three states of water and how our perception is shaped by the state we are in? Can you share a personal story of a time you became aware of where you were, and what you needed to do to come home? What helps you become aware of which state you are in?

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The Egg: A Short Story By Andy Weir

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July 25, 2022

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The Egg: A Short Story By Andy Weir

Don’t wait for an inspired ending to come to mind. Work your way to the ending and see what comes up.

– Andy Weir –

The Egg: A Short Story By Andy Weir

“You were on your way home when you died.
It was a car accident. Nothing particularly remarkable, but fatal nonetheless. You left behind a wife and two children. It was a painless death. The EMTs tried their best to save you, but to no avail. Your body was so utterly shattered you were better off, trust me.
And that’s when you met me.
“What…what happened?” You asked. “Where am I?”
“You died,” I said, matter-of-factly. No point in mincing words.
“There was a a truck and it was skidding…”
“Yup,” I said.
“I…I died?”
“Yup. But don’t feel bad about it. Everyone dies,” I said.
You looked around. There was nothingness. Just you and me. “What is this place?” You asked. “Is this the afterlife?”
“More or less,” I said.””

So begins Andy Weir’s short story, “The Egg.” Weir is an American novelist and former computer programmer, perhaps best known for his book, ‘The Martian.’ Weir was inspired to write ‘The Egg’ after an argument with his aunt, in his words, “I thought her point of view was ridiculous. Then, later I figured if I had lived her life, her opinion would make perfect sense to me. That got me thinking about a system where people live each others lives.” ‘The Egg’ has been translated into thirty different languages. You can read it here. { read more }

Be The Change

Weir has said that this story doesn’t reflect his own beliefs or understanding of reality. “I wanted to come up with some way to look at the world such that life was fair. A way where everyone came out even in the end. This is what I came up with.” What might your own creative response to that challenge be? For more inspiration, here are “10 Mind-Expanding Thoughts on ‘The Egg,'” by Kyle Kowalski. { more }

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How Do You Know If You Are Actually Humble?

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July 24, 2022

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How Do You Know If You Are Actually Humble?

Humility is nothing else but a right judgment of ourselves.

– William Law –

How Do You Know If You Are Actually Humble?

“Despite intellectual humility being the subject of intense scientific study in recent years, there remains debate among scientists on how best to measure it. That debate begins with a basic question: What is intellectual humility? Most scientists agree that being aware of your intellectual limitations and the fallibility of your beliefs is an important part of intellectual humility, but beyond that there isn’t a clear consensus. Some argue that intellectual humility ends there, while others suggest that things like how we view others’ ideas and how we express our beliefs are components of intellectual humility.” { read more }

Be The Change

Take a science-based quiz assessing your intellectual humility here! { more }

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Reflections of a Jungian Analyst

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July 23, 2022

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Reflections of a Jungian Analyst

When our wounds cease to be a source of shame and become a source of healing, we have become wounded healers.

– Henri Nouwen –

Reflections of a Jungian Analyst

At the end of her training, artist and psychotherapist, Rue Harrison had the good fortune to have Gareth Hill as her supervising consultant. At the conclusion of her work with Hill, she asked Gareth if he’d be willing to share some of his own experiences in a recorded interview. What follows is an inspiring example of the archetype of the wounded healer and the deep power of suffering transformed. { read more }

Be The Change

For more inspiration, check out this interview with Michael Lerner, “Whispers of a Wounded Healer.” { more }

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Transforming Apocalypse Fatigue into Action

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July 22, 2022

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Transforming Apocalypse Fatigue into Action

Love the world as your own self; then you can truly care for all things

– Lao Tzu –

Transforming Apocalypse Fatigue into Action

It is possible to transform “apocalypse fatigue,” the defenses that keep us from engaging fully in action on global warming, by sharing stories of those who are making real change happen, bringing the issue closer to home, and empowering ourselves to do what we can. In this TED Talk, Norwegian Parliament representative, Per Espen Stoknes, points to a path of re-imagining climate itself as the living air which is the earth’s skin, an amazingly thin and fragile wrapping of the massive ball which is our home, and inside which we are all connected. { read more }

Be The Change

Consider inner defenses that have kept you from engaging fully in climate action. How can you flip them to simple actions in your daily life?

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How to Transform Apocalypse Fatigue into Action on Global Warming

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An Immense World

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July 21, 2022

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An Immense World

To perceive the world through other senses is to find splendor in familiarity, wilderness in one’s backyard, the sacred in the mundane.

– Ed Yong –

An Immense World

“Made famous by zoologist Jakob von Uexkull in 1909, the term Umwelt refers to the perceptual world experienced by each animal, a highly specific kind of “sensory bubble.” When we walk our dog and she stops to smell every other bush or car tire, she’s taking in through her acutely sensitive nose smells that we take in faintly or not at all. That’s because humans and dogs have two different sensory bubbles, or Umwelten.” In his book, “Immense World: How Animal Senses Reveal the Hidden Realms Around Us,” Ed Yong invites readers into an exploration of how other species experience our world.

{ read more }

Be The Change

Listen to an interview with Yong here on, “How Animals Sense the World.” { more }

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Wendy Sussman: Painting as a Search

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July 20, 2022

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Wendy Sussman: Painting as a Search

You want to unveil something. You want to know the Truth. That’s what’s behind it.

– Wendy Sussman –

Wendy Sussman: Painting as a Search

“Just gravitate to the thing you can easily do. Then all that baggage of being the great artist just flies away and you’re just doing it! That’s really the important thing. But you shouldn’t feel ashamed of yourself because you have an image of what you want to be. The thing is to find a way into it. To get in is real important — not just to stand at the door, over and over, for years and years. Get into the room.” More in this in-depth interview with the late artist, Wendy Sussman. { read more }

Be The Change

Reflect on the thing “you can easily do,” in your own life. Have you found a way in, or are you standing at the door?

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