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The Call to Recover a Sense of Place Fred Lanphear, Contributing Editor
You do not have to be good.
You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert, repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves.
— Mary Oliver, “The Wild Geese”
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We have vague memories of a natural
world rife with magic and mystery. As adults, weren’t we
supposed to put aside such “childish” views? And yet,
our intimation — shared with Native Americans — that “The
Earth is alive,” is a stubborn one. We dwell among “other
beings, other forms of awareness, our voices interweave
among others more-than-human.”1
Step outside at dawn and catch the mere snippet of a bird’s
song, and you are instantly transported back into this primal
oneness with the world. It is only a matter, as the poet Mary
Oliver says, of letting “the soft animal of your body love what
it loves.”
In this extremely mobile society in which we live, “place”
may be experienced as transient. How do we ground ourselves
in place and time when there is no sense of permanence or
personal connection? And what is the cost of failing to do
so? The poet Wendell Berry says that if you don’t know
where you are, you don’t know who you are. It is
that sense of place that contributes greatly to defining our
own identity and, in turn, our responsibility for our
earth home.
We are living in a time when each of us is beckoned to
discover a personal relationship to the land and our natural
surroundings. For some of us, the challenge is to
participate in shaping and/or sustaining the immediate
landscape that connects us with the natural world and our
rightful place in it. For others, it is daring to immerse
oneself in the natural world that is accessible to them and
to become intimately related. For still others, it is
reflecting and recreating the memories and images of
childhood, or other times in their lives, when they were
most “in touch” with the natural world. For all of us, it is
a time of recognizing the impact we as humans have on the
planetary ecosystem and to work towards more sustainable
patterns that respect the delicate balance of nature.
Go to The Call to Live in Community
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Further Reading & Useful Links |
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 | The Dream of the Earth by Thomas Berry (Sierra Club Nature and Natural Philosophy Library, 1988) A profound description of our relationship to the natural world which lays out a path of becoming connected to the “larger sacred community to which we belong.” |
 | A Sand County Almanac by Aldo Leopold (Oxford University Press, 1949) This text is a classic description of an intimate journey with nature. It beckons us to be in touch with our natural habitat through disciplined, sensitive observation, and it establishes an authentic context for the declaration of a new land ethic. |
 | The World Is a Waiting Lover by Trebbe Johnson (New World Library, 2005) Through a profound personal encounter, Trebbe Johnson discovered that erotic longing is often linked to a greater, more soulful longing, and that following that longing, which she calls the Beloved, can lead to a more compassionate ― and passionate-―
engagement with the world. Though a personal story, the book weaves a modern myth of its own, about the different guises (and occasional disguises) of the Beloved and the obstacles, mirages, enchantments, and treasures encountered on the search for its elusive embrace. |
| Back to Earth: Tomorrow's Environmentalism by Anthony Weston (Temple University Press, 1994) |
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