4.9 • 944 Ratings
🗓️ 9 October 2024
⏱️ 27 minutes
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This episode of Living Myth begins with the idea that the old terminology of 100-year storms and 1000-year storms makes little sense, since events of that magnitude now happen so often. It becomes difficult to deny that we now live in a world that is more unpredictable, more chaotic, and sadly, more dangerous. As the storms occurring in nature grow greater and move faster, a parallel intensification of cultural conflicts and political storms have also been growing greater and changing with remarkable speed. By now, the two areas of increasing turbulence can be seen to overlap in ways that add more chaos and more unnecessary suffering to those who are caught in the path of the storms.
At the same time that many communities struggle with life-altering losses and remain without water and basic services, the so called “online community” has become inundated with a storm of its own making. The disinformation, lies and conspiracy theories that have become a maelstrom in the political realm, have now been injected into recovery efforts after the recent hurricane in ways that actually endanger rescue missions and make it more difficult for people to get the necessities they need to survive. The aftermath of natural disasters can now include unnecessary and unnatural emotional torment for those already suffering losses of life and livelihood.
As the world increasingly becomes a place of chaos and conflict, we all suffer greater levels of disorientation and overwhelm, even if we are not directly in the wake of the latest natural disaster or shocking missile attack or polarizing statements by those claiming to be leaders. We are all living through a collective loss of soul, for the soul is the missing thing, the unifying element between opposing forces.
The soul is the connective tissue of the world, and without it, the darkness around us can just grow deeper and deeper. Yet, no matter how alienating the outer world can become, the deeper layers of the self and soul remain places of healing and self-forgiveness, that in turn connects us to the unifying source of life that keeps trying to awaken within us and knows how we can each contribute to the healing of a broken world and to the process of renewal that can follow all the chaos.
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0:00.0 | Welcome to the Living Myth Podcast with Michael Mead, where the shifting changing world is looked at from a |
0:16.7 | mythic perspective. |
0:19.3 | This episode begins with the idea that the old terminology of 100-year storms and 1,000-year storms makes little sense, since |
0:28.8 | events of that magnitude now happen so often. It becomes difficult to deny that we now live in a world that is more |
0:35.9 | unpredictable, more chaotic, and sadly more dangerous. As the storms occurring in nature grow greater and move faster, a parallel intensification of cultural conflicts and political storms have also been growing greater and changing with remarkable speed. |
0:55.6 | We are all living through a collective loss of soul, for the soul is the missing thing, the |
1:01.3 | unifying element between opposing forces. |
1:05.0 | The soul is the connective tissue of the world, |
1:08.0 | and without it, the darkness around us can just grow deeper and deeper. There's an old idea that states that there's a poem at the heart of everything. |
1:35.0 | And sometimes, when it seems like the amount of grief in the world is impossible to bear, or when it seems like the conflicts in the world might |
1:47.3 | become so great that life itself can't survive, or when it seems like man's inhumanity to man is growing greater. |
1:58.8 | I go looking for a poem to shift the weight of grief and interrupt the march of tragedy. |
2:07.0 | So today I want to start with a poem. |
2:10.0 | It's called a ritual to read to each other and it was written by William Stafford |
2:16.2 | who once wrote a book called Every War has two losers. If you don't know the kind of person I am, and I don't know the kind of person you are, |
2:27.0 | then a pattern that others have made may prevail in the world, and following the wrong God home, we may all miss our star. |
2:38.0 | For there is many a small betrayal in the mind, a shrug that lets the fragile sequence break, sending with shouts the horrible |
2:48.9 | errors of childhood storming out to play through the broken dike. |
2:55.0 | And just as elephants parade, each holding the others' tail, |
3:00.0 | so that if one wanders the entire circus won't find the park, I call it cruel, and may be the |
3:08.3 | root of all cruelty to know what occurs, but not recognize the facts. And so I appeal to a voice to something |
3:18.1 | shadowy, a remote, important region in all who talk. Though we could fool each other, we should |
... |
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