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It must be admitted that the traditional anthropocentric universe has begun to fade under the careful scrutiny of people who are not sentimentalists or who do not childishly seek security in baseless assumptions. A physicist, or a philosopher such as Whitehead, would have to admit that comfortable old concepts such as the distinction of subject and object, or that of agent and act, metaphysical entities such as souls and selves, or even more fundamental notions such as the absoluteness of time and space, are untenable in the light of objective and serious inquiry. The Western world is alive with new ideas, but so far these ideas have not trickled down to the mass consciousness. Most people still have a deep faith in solid substances and believe that their feelings, ideas, and even their own bodies belong to, or inhere in, some mysterious but seemingly irrefutable substance called a self.
Francis H. Cook, Hua-Yen Buddhism: The Jewel Net of Indra
Dependent ArisingĀ
oil on canvas | 30 x 50ā | 2014 Rick Stevens Art
The totalistic world described by Hua-yen is a living body in which each cell dervies its life from all other cells, and in return gives life to those many others. Like the human body, the Hua-yen universe is ever changing, for in it there is not one thing which is static and unchanging, unless it is the law of perpetual change itself. It is an incredible stream of activity wherein when one circumstance alters, everything alters with it. āDo I dare to eat a peach?ā asks one of T.S. Eliotās characters, and the question of action becomes an extremely delicate one to the individual who sees the fantastic interaction of things. Thus in a universe which is pure fluidity, or process, no act can but have an effect on the whole, just as a pebble tossed into a pool sends waves out to the farthest shore and stirs the very bottom. This is hard to see. We can comprehend how a modification in one small part of our body can affect the total organism, but we find it hard to believe that the enlightenment of one monk under a tree in India somehow enlightens us all, or, conversely, that my own intransigent ignorance is a universal ignorance. However, if we can comprehend that the greater whole of which the body is a part is no less organic, and no less interrelated, such an idea is not so unlikely. At that point, the moral life as conceived by Buddhism becomes possible.
Thomas H. Cook, Hua-yen Buddhism: The Jewel Net of Indra

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Worldbuilding isn't about the whole world. Quick exercise: Find every detail in the room you're currently in that, if you plainly described it, would flesh out OUR world to someone hearing about it for the first time. Where was everything made? How did it get to you? Every object in our environment has a history, and the whole social situation around us is reflected in just our man-made environment and our relations with it.
What I am NOT saying is that you need a whole concept of a fictional global economy and history to write about a rug or a table or how a doorframe is built. What I am saying is that experiential details do much more to flesh out a world than knowing every detail of its lore. You can GET to a solid idea of a fictional world just by writing out a description of someone's house and asking "Why?" for every hypothetical object like a toddler.
Dharma Gaia
It was touch and go there, as to whether Iād actually rename the blog with this particular postās title. But further reflection suggests I continue with the arboreal theme, despite the somewhat drastic change in subject matter.
In the dizzying flurry that has been the last couple days, preceded by a couple months of rewarding reading, thought and reflection, and an ever increasing meditation habit, it has become clear that the answer to what was a barely visible, long-term waning attention to the ideas and practices (as much as they ever actually were a part of my daily life, or well-defined enough to pursue) of naturalistic paganism, was to identify the aspects of it which appealed, and strip away all else, which, despite having jettisoned the myth and superstition of Wicca, still felt false, ceremonial, overwrought.
Itās entirely possible that my life as it currently is (not nestled happily in a cottage in the middle of the forest, living off the land),Ā has left me too disconnected from Nature to seek solace from her or attend to her needs as regularly as I should. At the same time, paying tribute to trees when so much of our world, human-occupied, is in chaos/flames, seems... disingenuous.
Which is the long way of saying I have taken my time in coming to the decision to begin practising Secular Buddhism, in place of any further efforts towards Naturalistic Paganism.
You, dear readers, if youāre still reading, are being treated to this revelation/decision because the nature of Tumblr accounts has designated this particular out-of-date blog as myĀ āmainā, which makes deleting it is problematic.Ā
A complete renovation, is thus the only solution.
Renovation is a good word for all aspects of my life at the moment, and social media is not a realm that should be spared from a similar reevaluation and brisk tidy.
This generation calls it minimalism, essentialism, the simple life. In Secular Buddhist terms, I would refer to it as a renunciation, letting go.Ā
WhileĀ a number (oh, yes, many, plural!) of atrophied side/sub blogs have now been downloaded and deleted, there are a precious few Iād like to maintain, and that requires that I not delete this main blog and start afresh, as tempting as it is.
Instead, this writer will transition from a secular examination of the importance of nature, to a secular examination of Buddhist practice. I feel like the fact that I remain non-religious deserves emphasis. This is in the hope that such a declaration will indicate that I am not a hypocrite flitting from one belief structure to the next, but rather a knowledge seeker looking for an ethical code that will seamlessly encourage my ongoing growth as a human being.Ā
Other naturalistic pagans may simply decry me as havingĀ ādone it wrongā, but I find in my time investigating first naturalistic paganism, than secular buddhism, that the latter provides a better guide for all aspects of life. Including, ecology and respect for all life.
Dharma Gaia : a harvest of essays in Buddhism and ecology is actually a book I havenāt read, but rather stumbled upon during related searches and found myself gaping at the title, allowing for this blog-refurbishment epiphany. I will be signing it out from my local university library (not in the public libraryās collection) ASAP. Hereās hoping thereās some method of accessing it in your community as well. Perhaps I should leave that hope until after Iāve read it, to legitimately recommend it, but Iām already salivating at the serendipitous confluence of ideas presented in the title, I canāt really conceive of it as a disappointing read.
More than a random book title, however, is the idea present in many introductory texts on Secular Buddhism of Dependent Origination or Dependent Arising:
āThe understanding that nothing has an independent, fixed existence but arises and ceases within an ever changing matrix of conditions.ā
http://secularbuddhism.org/2013/05/06/the-four-noble-truths/
āEverything is interconnected. Everything affects everything else...No beings or phenomena exist independently of other beings and phenomena.ā
https://www.thoughtco.com/dependent-origination-meaning-449723
For those of you who have been paying attention, this phrasing lends itself to a comparison with another proposed principle, separate from Buddhist thought, called the Gaia Hypothesis.
āThe Gaia hypothesisĀ also known as the Gaia theory or the Gaia principle, proposes that living organismsĀ interact with their inorganic surroundings on Earth to form a synergistic and self-regulating, complex system that helps to maintain and perpetuate the conditions for life on the planet.ā
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_hypothesis
http://www.gaiatheory.org/overview/
Suffice it to say that Secular Buddhist principles have not, to my knowledge, experienced as intensive an examination or harsh a criticism as the Gaia Hypothesis. Which is to say, while I have a hard time accepting the Gaia principle wholeheartedly in the face of such eloquent resistance, I can appreciate that science is still working to understand all the ways in which the various occupants of this world are interconnected and how they (we) affect each other. From this standpoint, I can recognize the truth in the Buddhist principle of Dependent Origination.Ā
Moreover, I take away from the parallel concepts of Gaia and Dependent principles that ecosystems are not only crucial building blocks to sustaining life on Earth, but also important lessons that one can gain wisdom from wherever your eyes choose to rest in the natural world.Ā
The lessons to be gained from ecosystems, from the interconnectedness of all life on earth?Ā Ā
1) All life systems being connected, affect each other, and thus prove the ever-changing nature of the world; this in turn supports the idea that clinging to a fixed state, a moment passed, a material object, is fruitless and causes needless suffering,which upon the realization of such, can be alleviated
2) Part of alleviating suffering is living a skillful, worthy existence, cultivating the right path, by, among other things, not killing, by respecting life.
When youāre part of the world of beings whose actions affect each other, it is not simply morally praiseworthy to practice compassion to your fellow beings, it becomes a senseless act to do them harm.
Buddhist entreaty to practice Harmlessness echoes my earlier encounter with the WiccanĀ ādo no harmā. My veganism follows in these footsteps, yet predates my encounters with either system of thought.
Knowing in your bones that something is wrong, despite not having grown up with a religious dogma stating how you will be punished by a divine tough if you step out of line doesnāt so much sanction amoral action (I was fortunate to be raised by loving parents who instilled a sense of good in me, which allowed the compassionate ethos of veganism to flower years after I left home) as it does occasionally leave one adrift in attempting to make sense to others and yourself why you abstain from certain actions.
Itās not that I really feel the deep-seated need to explain myself to other people anymore (that phase ended in my twenties, thank goodness), but I think we can all use a little support in enhancing personal growth, strengthening moral fibre, clarifying ethical dilemmas. Having a set of logically sound principles, backed by a consideration for the natural world and free of religious pomp, provides me with the best way forward, improving my life in an eco-friendly, compassionate manner.Ā Ā
And it doesnāt hurt that the Buddha purportedly found enlightenment while sitting under a tree.
One last delicious happenstance, without even looking for it? I found initial speculation on the intersection and contrast of the works of Ayn Rand, and Secular Buddhism while madly following rabbit holes of Secular Buddhism on the world wide web (donāt worry, most of my two months of reading has been published works by a variety of authors, so as to ensure I had other reliable sources to back whatever theĀ āinternetā might have to say on the matter).Ā
https://lifeasahuman.com/2011/mind-spirit/spirituality-and-religion/buddhism-and-ayn-rand/
Why does this matter? Ayn Rand, among other incredible works, most notably Atlas Shrugged (the title itself is a pithy metaphor for renunciation if I ever heard one) is also the author of Anthem, a novella wherein the main female character ends the story with the name of Gaia (alt. spelling Gaea). And thus we come full circle in regards to the reinvention of this blog - as it was this intersection of Earth/Nature imagery and Randās philosophy that inspired the URL for this blog. Am I reaching to see kismet where there is only coincidence? Possibly. But itās a poignant conclusion to todayās lesson of interconnectivity.
More Secular Buddhist discourse coming soon. Iām still very much a beginner with a lot of reading and thinking to do, so Iām certain to be speculating and reiterating in bulk for the next while. I recommend sticking around a while to determine whether the nature elements still arise in this blog with the frequency you were previously enjoying. If, however, this blog no longer meets your needs, no hard feelings.
Metta (loving-kindness)
Sukhino va khemino hontu (May all beings be happy and safe.)
Eva - Dependent Arising