The Old Ways: Six Essays by Gary Snyder, 1977. I originally read the first part of this book some time ago – like perhaps in 1981 I’m pretty sure my brother Paul gave it (lent it?) to me while I was living with him and Mary at Sunshower, or perhaps I picked it up somewhere else. But I carried it with me ever since then, knowing I’d want to pick it up again. And I’m very glad I did.
This book stretched me, affirmed me, fed me. It is a collection of talks that Snyder (a poet and naturalist) gave in the mid-1970s, and his connection to the earth and to people and spirit is strong.
Here is an excerpt from his essay/talk “Re-Inhabitation” (exactly what I’ve been thinking about!):
“Stewart Brand said that the photograph of the earth (taken from outer space by a satellite) that shows the whole blue orb with spirals and whorls of cloud, was a great landmark for human consciousness. We see that it has shape, and it has limits. We are back again, ow, in the position of our Mesolithic forebears, working off the coasts of southern Britain, or the shores of Lake Chad or the swampls of southeast China, learning how to live by the sun and green at that spot. We once more know that we live in a system that is enclosed in a certain way; that has its own kinds of limits, and that we are interdependent with it.
“The ethics or morality of this is far more subtle than merely being nice to squirrels. The biological-ecological sciences have been laying out (implicitly) a spiritual dimension. We must find our way to seeing the mineral cycles, the water cycles, air cycles, nutrient cycles, as sacramental – and we must incorporate that insight into our own personal spiritual quest and integrate it with all the wisdom teachings we have received from the nearer past. The expression of it is simple: gratitude to it all, taking responsibility for your own acts; keeping contact with the sources of the energy that flow into you own life (i.e. dirt, water, flesh).”
He goes on to say that “part of you is out there waiting to come into you…(there is) no self-realization without the Whole Self, and the whole self is the whole thing.”
Striking words then, and today, as I read them.