Wise, Courageous, and Deeply Loving
Quotes From
Joanna Macy
This is a dark time, filled with suffering and
uncertainty. Like living cells in a larger body, it is natural that we feel the
trauma of our world. So don’t be afraid of the anguish you feel, or the anger
or fear, because these responses arise from the depth of your caring and the
truth of your interconnectedness with all beings.
When you look at what is happening to our world
— and it is hard to look at what's happening to our water, our air, our trees,
our fellow species — it becomes clear that unless you have some roots in a
spiritual practice that holds life sacred and encourages joyful communion with
all your fellow beings, facing the enormous challenges ahead becomes nearly
impossible.
Of all the dangers we face, from climate chaos
to nuclear war, none is so great as the deadening of our response.
We are making choices that will affect whether
beings thousands of generations from now will be able to be born sound of mind
and body.
If the world is to be healed through human
efforts, I am convinced it will be by ordinary people, people whose love for
this life is even greater than their fear. People who can open to the web of
life that called us into being.
Yes, it looks bleak. But you are still alive now.
You are alive with all the others, in this present moment. And because the
truth is speaking in the work, it unlocks the heart. And there’s such a feeling
and experience of adventure. It’s like a trumpet call to a great adventure. In
all great adventures there comes a time when the little band of heroes feels
totally outnumbered and bleak, like Frodo in Lord of the Rings or Pilgrim in
Pilgrim’s Progress. You learn to say "It looks bleak. Big deal, it looks
bleak."
It is good to realize that falling apart is not
such a bad thing. Indeed, it is as essential to evolutionary and psychological
transformation as the cracking of outgrown shells.
It is my experience that the world itself has a
role to play in our liberation. Its very pressures, pains, and risks can wake
us up -release us from the bonds of ego and guide us home to our vast true
nature.
It’s walking the razor’s edge of the sacred
moment where you don’t know, you can’t count on, and comfort yourself with any
sure hope. All you can know is your allegiance to life and your intention to
serve it in this moment that we are given. In that sense, this radical
uncertainty liberates your creativity and courage.
Out of this darkness a new world can arise, not
to be constructed by our minds so much as to emerge from our dreams. Even
though we cannot see clearly how it's going to turn out, we are still called to
let the future into our imagination. We will never be able to build what we
have not first cherished in our hearts.
The biggest gift you can give is to be
absolutely present, and when you're worrying about whether you're hopeful, or
hopeless, or pessimistic, or optimistic, who cares? The main thing is that
you're showing up, that you're here and that you're finding ever more capacity
to love this world because it will not be healed without that. That was what is
going to unleash our intelligence and our ingenuity and our solidarity for the
healing of our world.
You don't need to do everything. Do what calls
your heart; effective action comes from love. It is unstoppable, and it is
enough.
Compassion literally means to feel with, to
suffer with. Everyone is capable of compassion, and yet everyone tends to avoid
it because it's uncomfortable. And the avoidance produces psychic numbing —
resistance to experiencing our pain for the world and other beings.
Walk boldly through your life with an open,
broken heart.
The refusal to feel takes a heavy toll. Not
only is there an impoverishment of our emotional and sensory life, flowers are
dimmer and less fragrant, our loves less ecstaticâ but this psychic numbing
also impedes our capacity to process and respond to information. The energy
expended in pushing down despair is diverted from more creative uses, depleting
the resilience and imagination needed for fresh visions and strategies.
We are capable of suffering with our world, and
that is the true meaning of compassion. It enables us to recognize our profound
interconnectedness with all beings. Don't ever apologize for crying for the
trees burning in the Amazon or over the waters polluted from mines in the
Rockies. Don't apologize for the sorrow, grief, and rage you feel. It is a
measure of your humanity and your maturity. It is a measure of your open heart,
and as your heart breaks open there will be room for the world to heal. That is
what is happening as we see people honestly confronting the sorrows of our
time.
Because the relationship between self and world
is reciprocal, it is not a matter of first getting enlightened or saved and
then acting. As we work to heal the Earth, the Earth heals us. No need to wait.
As we care enough to take risks, we loosen the grip of ego and begin to come
home to our true nature.
To be alive in this beautiful, self-organizing
universe — to participate in the dance of life with senses to perceive it,
lungs that breathe it, organs that draw nourishment from it — is a wonder
beyond words.
Gratitude is liberating. It is subversive. It
helps us to realize that we are sufficient, and that realization frees
us.
Action isn't a burden to be hoisted up and
lugged around on our shoulders. It is something we are. The work we have to do
can be seen as a kind of coming alive. More than some moral imperative, it's an
awakening to our true nature, a releasing of our gifts.
No magic bullet, not even the Internet, can
save us from population explosion, deforestation, climate disruption, poison by
pollution, and wholesale extinction of plant and animal species. We are going
to have to want different things, seek different pleasures, pursue different
goals than those that have been driving us and our global economy.
We are our world knowing itself. We can relinquish
our separateness. We can come home again — and participate in our world in a
richer, more responsible and poignantly beautiful way than before, in our
infancy.
The central purpose of the Work that Reconnects
is to help people uncover and experience their innate connections with each
other and with the systemic, self-healing powers of the web of life, so that
they may be enlivened and motivated to play their part in creating a
sustainable civilization.
The web of life both cradles us and calls us to
weave it further.
The future is not out there in front of us, but
inside us.
There's a song that wants to sing itself
through us. We just got to be available. Maybe the song that is to be sung
through us is the most beautiful requiem for an irreplaceable planet or maybe
it's a song of joyous rebirth as we create a new culture that doesn't destroy
its world. But in any case, there's absolutely no excuse for our making our
passionate love for our world dependent on what we think of its degree of health,
whether we think it's going to go on forever. Those are just thoughts anyway.
But this moment you're alive, so you can just dial up the magic of that at any
time.
The heart that breaks open can contain the
whole universe.
Gratitude for the gift of life is the primary
wellspring of all religions, the hallmark of the mystic, the source of all true
art....It is a privilege to be alive in this time when we can choose to take
part in the self-healing of our world.
Future generations, if there is a livable world
for them, will look back at the epochal transition we are making to a
life-sustaining society. And they may well call this the time of the Great
Turning.
Grace happens when we act with others on behalf
of our world.
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