All life depends on food. It is that commonality that connects diverse species and is the basis for a relationship with our environment. From the microorganisms in the soil food web like the mycorrhizal fungi that exchange nutrients with plant roots to the woke gourmand at Chez Panisse ordering roasted, pasture chicken and local organic greens, all species depend on the cooperative interactions of the web of life to eat.
For those of us inspired by indigenous wisdom, biomimicry and regeneration, we understand that food and agricultural are the biological, cultural and commercial nexus at the center of many important issues that touch people’s lives day-after-day — and the health of the biosphere we all live within.
How many of us, who are fortunate enough to have three meals daily, are mindful of all that it takes to get food to our plates? As we nourish our bodies, do we slow down enough to feel a sense of gratitude, kinship and responsibility to those who work in the fields, to the land where it is grown, and to the seeds and stocks that support our vitality?
Food Web, our newest Bioneers newsletter, will share the stories, explore the issues and celebrate the people whose work builds local food systems that serve people and embed ecological stewardship into agricultural practices. The diverse stories of food culturally and spiritually nurture our identity as humans and inspire the quest for food sovereignty – the right to define, design and determine how our food system will serve nature, individuals and the community. Food sovereignty is a grassroots movement that is taking power back from an industrial system that sickens people and damages ecosystems. This democratic, locally-adapted movement is building a food system that is fair, healthy and regenerative.
In each topical issue of Food Web, you’ll find:
An overview of an important topic within the food-justice sphere (recent examples: fire, resilient food systems, redirecting the power of business)
A brand new story that delves into a specific food-related issue or change-maker (recent examples: how Indigenous cultural burns renew life; redesigning the food system for health, inclusion and climate resilience; the healing promise of plant medicines)
Tips, quotes, and statistics from people on the frontlines of the food justice movement
Supporting stories and content from Bioneers and around the web, to help you understand the full breadth of the issue
Sign up for the Food Web newsletter and learn more about how a transformed food system can be a source of community wealth, creative culture, and individual health, as well as a way to fulfill our sacred calling as humans for environmental stewardship.
And please let me know what topics and people you would like to see covered in the Food Web.
Sincerely,
Arty Mangan Bioneers Director – Restorative Food Systems
The ecological and social crises we are facing require urgency and collaboration on a vast scale. While organizers and activists rally relentlessly for a habitable planet, corporations have continued to seek larger and larger payouts at the expense of the home we all share. As much as these times are characterized by exploitation and degrading ecological health, our present moment is also marked by unstoppable world changers, many of whom are organizing grassroots, local movements for a regenerative economy that restores social and ecological well-being.
This Earth Day, we share content from community leaders as they discuss building equity & regenerative democracy toward a sustainable future.
This article contains the content from the 2/01/2021 Bioneers Pulse newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter straight to your inbox!
Frontline Leadership to Transform the World
Exploitation, corruption, and the degradation of Earth’s ecosystems have characterized the economic trajectory leading to our present crises. In this panel discussion, we hear from four brilliant leaders on building a regenerative economy to restore social and ecological well-being.
In this keynote address, Daily Acts Executive Director Trathen Heckman illuminates the power in small daily acts of courage and conviction, in small groups of unstoppable world-changers, and small gardens that revitalize communities and reconnect us to nature’s operating instructions.
The Power of Community: Aligning Governments and Grassroots for Urgent Climate Action
The climate-change ship has left the harbor, and we face the urgent need to accomplish many goals simultaneously. Luckily, there are many examples of effective pathways forward for integrated climate action. By leveraging collaboration across multiple sectors, visionary leaders are outlining revolutionary blueprints for the next wave of essential work. In this panel discussion, grassroots climate action leaders discuss the power of community collaboration to create widespread change.
How Jackson, Mississippi, Imagines a Cooperative Future
Cooperation Jackson is “building a solidarity economy in Jackson, Mississippi, anchored by a network of cooperatives and worker-owned, democratically self-managed enterprises.” The group’s progressive initiatives help workers in Jackson take ownership of their work and the success of their communities. In this article, Bioneers speaks with brandon king about Cooperation Jackson’s model for success and its plans to scale.
Earth Day Live: Restore Our Earth | EarthDay.org will kick off this Earth Day Live Digital event on April 22nd at 12 PM Eastern Time with a series of panel discussions, workshops, and performances that focus on emerging green technologies and restoring ecological prosperity.
Leaders Summit on Climate | In close collaboration with international government officials, the Biden administration will convene with world leaders to discuss emissions reductions, finance, job creation, and adaptation. The summit will take place April 22nd-23rd.
American Climate Leadership Summit | Building off of the Leaders Summit on Climate, the American Climate Leadership Summit will convene on April 27th- 29th. Bringing together 1,000+ international climate leaders, the summit will facilitate discussions that foster solutions to the current climate crisis.
As author Michael Pollan observes: “The two biggest crises humanity faces today are tribalism and the environmental crisis. They both involve the objectifying of the other – whether that other is nature or other people.” How do we re-weave that web of relationships, and focus on our likenesses rather than our differences?
In this program, racial justice advocates john a. powell, Eriel Deranger and Anita Sanchez explore how overcoming the illusion of separateness from nature and each other requires building bridges rather than burning them. They say the fate of the world depends on it.
Featuring
john a. powell, Director of the Othering and Belonging Institute and Professor of Law, African American, and Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley.
Anita Sanchez, bestselling author, consultant, trainer and executive coach specializing in indigenous wisdom, diversity and inclusion, leadership, culture and promoting positive change in our world.
Credits
Executive Producer: Kenny Ausubel
Written by: Kenny Ausubel
Senior Producer and Station Relations: Stephanie Welch
Host and Consulting Producer: Neil Harvey
Producer: Teo Grossman
Program Engineer and Music Supervisor: Emily Harris
This is an episode of the Bioneers: Revolution from the Heart of Nature series. Visit the radio and podcast homepage to find out how to hear the program on your local station and how to subscribe to the podcast.
Subscribe to the Bioneers: Revolution from The Heart of Nature podcast
Transcript
NEIL HARVEY, HOST: As author Michael Pollan observes: “The two biggest crises humanity faces today are tribalism and the environmental crisis. They both involve the objectifying of the other – whether that other is nature or other people.”
So how do we re-weave that web of relationships, and focus on our likenesses rather than our differences?
Professor john a. powell of UC Berkeley’s Othering and Belonging Institute says it’s really complicated – and undeniably imperative. In that question hangs the fate of the world as we know it.
john a. powell is an internationally recognized scholar and activist in the areas of civil rights, structural racism, and democracy. He’s the author of “Racing to Justice: Transforming Our Concepts of Self and Other to Build an Inclusive Society.”
john a. powell spoke on a panel at a Bioneers conference…
john a. powell: There’s these two big stories, and one story’s about a smaller and smaller “we”. In fact sometimes that “we” gets so small it becomes—it stops being a “we” altogether. It becomes “I”. And we actually have a word for it. We call it “narcissism”. And where everything’s about me, or my little group, everything else that’s outside of me and my group is seen as a threat. And the way that I deal with that threat is to dominate. And so we divide the world up, not just for nomenclature, but for deciding who gets dominated and who are the dominators.
The story of humans, and this small we, is the humans are here to dominate, control, exploit, and that’s the dominant story we still live with.
john a. powell speaking at a recent Bioneers Conference
And we actually have another name for it. That story is called capitalism. Everything is to be taken, to be used. So what happens when it’s all used up? Well, there are other planets. We can go some place. We can literally break from the Earth and start all over again. So that’s the dominant theme. It’s not just story, we organize our whole economy around it. We organize our structures around it. And once you start looking for it, you see it everywhere.
So literally, up until the late ‘60s, we had in many, many states—not only were we separating people based on their race, we’re saying it’s against the law, it’s a crime for people of different races to marry. Many of you were born in the ‘60s, but we had large numbers of people running around the country today reasserting, not implicitly, not as my friend Ian Haney Lopez would say, not a dog whistle, but with a bull horn, saying we need to restore white supremacy, white nationalism; we need to dominate. They’re growing more and more people in the United States who say, “What is this thing, equality? We don’t believe in equality. It’s natural for people to be with their own.” And their own is this small race, religion, this small we. What comes from that is putting kids in cages, and literally, you have people saying “Those are not our kids, they don’t belong here”.
And we’re doing it over and over and over and over again. That’s the major story we’re fighting about. Do we have a large ‘we’ where everybody belong? Where whales belong, where children belong, and I don’t care if they’re from Syria, or if they’re from Mexico, or if they’re from Kansas, but everybody belongs. That’s a really important, but radical, concept.
In the context of a world where authoritarianism, where ethnic nationalism is sweeping the globe, it sounds sentimental to be talking about belonging. It sounds quaint to be saying we care about the Earth. When there are 80 trillion or $700 trillion dollars worth of fossil fuel still buried, why would you leave it in the ground? Okay, so you’re going to mess up the Earth, but we could take that $700 trillion and go to Mars. F’ the Earth. And what’s our response? How do we bridge, when do we bridge? It’s very easy to say if they’re going to f’ us, we’re going to f’ them. If they’re going to break with us, we’re going to break with them. If they say we don’t belong, we’re going to say you don’t belong.
Notice when we’re doing that, we’re adopting their framework. And I don’t say to anyone who’s been abused, been traumatized, if they want to fight back, if they want to be angry, sometimes it’s appropriate to be angry, I don’t say not to be angry, but I say we can’t stay there.
HOST: It’s complicated indeed. The ancient tribal instincts we carry as human beings no longer serve us – not in an irretrievably interconnected world that gets smaller by the day – nor in a globally shared biosphere that we’ve broken by objectifying and exploiting. We’ve institutionalized the structures of dominators and dominated. We’ve built our economy and society on them.
How do we build bridges rather than burn them? How do we change our societal pronoun from “me me me” to “we?”
Again, john a. powell…
JP: One of the things about healing, you hear a lot about self-care. Very small in the larger scheme of things. You can only do so much for yourself. If you’re doing all your care by yourself, it’s sad. It is sad. Care really requires a community. I participate in a lot of mindful practice, and people will say it’s like first do your work inside. And I always come back with Don Cherry, who’s a beautiful jazz musician, and he used to say “The inside is not, and the outside is too”. [LAUGHTER] Yes. Exactly. [LAUGHTER] What he’s saying is that duality between inside and outside is problematic.
And healing, in part, is bridging with yourself. What we do when we’re broken – literally think about it, when we’re really struggling, we say we’re broken, meaning that we no longer belong to ourselves. And we do that not in sequence, not sitting down in a cave by myself, it’s like we do it in relationship.
And part of what bridging requires is space to hear and engage in what’s called empathetic and compassionate listening. Now, again, we’re suspicious of that. This person just said something terrible to me, I don’t want to hear from them. I don’t want to know about their suffering. I’m pushing them outside the circle of humanity.
And there’s wonderful stories of people who have suffered a lot and used their suffering as a bridge. And I say because this is hard work, and because—let’s start off building short bridges. Don’t go to the most extreme. And some of you have heard me say when I talk to Pastor Mike, when he says, Do I have to bridge with the devil? And my response is: Don’t start there. [LAUGHTER]
But also be careful who you call the devil. Because we know deep down inside there is no “other”. So if I’m cutting myself off from someone, for whatever reason, I’m cutting myself off from myself, and that’s the deep, profound spiritual work.
We have a “we”, and if the we does not become real, if belonging does not become real, the bad news is then the “we” does not survive.
HOST: For those people seeking to build bridges where angels fear to tread, often it’s the hellish predicament of “damned if you do and damned if you don’t”.
What do you do when your own group attacks or shuns you for reaching out to bridge with the “other”? And what if there’s plenty good reason to be suspicious and defensive?
As an Indigenous person, Eriel Deranger has often found herself caught in that crossfire. She is a member of the Athabasca Chipewyan First Nation. She comes from a family of Indigenous rights advocates fighting for the recognition, sovereignty and autonomy of their Indigenous lands and territory in Canada.
She co-founded Indigenous Climate Action and serves as Executive Director. She spoke at a Bioneers conference.
ERIEL DERANGER: And it’s so hard to build those bridges. And I know as an indigenous woman from Canada, a lot of folks think Canada’s like super—Oh, you guys have great relations with your government. Indigenous people are so well represented. But the reality is, is that’s like a fallacy. There’s this appearance that there’s this construction of a bridge happening that never actually gets worked on. They’ve got all the tools laid out, and they’ve done nothing to build these bridges. It creates these optics and these illusions.
And so over the years, we’ve seen this disenchantment from indigenous folks not feeling like there’s a sincere effort to build those bridges with us. And like that question is: Who builds this bridge? Who takes the lead? Who takes on those responsibilities? And a lot of the folks that are invested, that are making profit off the marginalization of others – whoever those others are, and it’s diverse in wherever you are—and those others can also be other beings. Let’s be real. This isn’t just about humanity. The othering of other species as if those lives are less valuable. By sort of default, humanity has already othered ourselves from the rest of the natural world, and I feel like that’s a huge challenge.
And as an indigenous person in Canada, navigating these places where a lot of my family – I’m the first generation to not be ripped out of my family’s home and forced into a residential school or the boarding schools that they had in the United States; I’m the first generation. And so when you think about the trauma, the intergenerational trauma of being fearful, not just of white people. Let’s be real. Fearful of the education system, fearful of systems of government, fearful of participating in those systems, because they will take everything that makes you away, and so that you break and you divide, and you put yourself like into these little boxes and you hide, and you protect what you still have. And then when you step outside of those things, those people that hold all that trauma and pain, first they say, don’t do it, and then when you do it, they say, oh no, now you’re not a part of us. And so you end up in these struggles of like how do you actually take the steps to build the bridge when there’s so much hurt and there’s so much trauma that is blocking the ability to build these bridges?
Eriel Deranger speaking at the 2015 Bioneers Conference
HOST: Broken systems – broken people – broken trust in a broken world. It’s a tough gig that gets ever tougher when people translate their wounds into broken systems of domination and power.
Eriel Deranger says the question becomes, “How do we heal?”
ED: It can be really hard when you have these traumas and these things that separate us. They separate us because things have been broken. We’ve been broken. The traumas create this fear. And then that perpetuates into, if you have positions of power and domination, and you enact oppression, and that can actually—that’s where the break happens. The break happens when you actually deny the right for someone to belong to those groups, to the societies.
And that’s where the struggle comes on how we – we have to overcome these traumas. Healing is a fundamental part of getting to a place of stopping the othering and building those places of belonging, so that we can effectively build those bridges without those coming after us and cutting those lines just as we connect them.
And the courage that it takes to be like, I’m going to do this out of love. Not out of strategy, not out of all of these things, but to come from it from the love – for me, in the work that I do is I do this for the love of my people. I take on these challenges and I put myself oftentimes in harm’s way for the love of my people.
I receive backlash from my own community. And then when I sit in these spaces where I’m told I don’t really belong, I receive backlash from there as well. But I continue to move forward, because I know at the root of this, the bridges that we’re building – and you find those allies that say, I want to build those bridges too. And then suddenly you start to build these little tiny bridges, these little tentacles, and you’re right, it’s not like a linear thing. It’s more like a web. It’s like there’s all these little pieces where you find here, and then here, and then here.
HOST: When we return… we hear from author Anita Sanchez on forgiveness as an act of transformation that can expand our circle of belonging.
This is, “Re-Weaving the Web of Belonging” on the Bioneers: Revolution From the Heart of Nature.
HOST: For Anita Sanchez, the political became deeply personal at a young age. Today, as a highly experienced professional at the top of the game working in the areas of diversity and inclusion, leadership and Indigenous wisdom, she attributes her work to the trauma of the race-based murder of her father.
How do you forgive the unforgivable?
Anita Sanchez
ANITA SANCHEZ: As that little 13-year-old, whose father was killed, murdered—he was an alcoholic, so he went every day to get a drink after work. After shoveling coal, he would go and get a beer. But that day in 1967, early that day in that corner bar, a white man and a black man were having a fight, and my father shows up in the afternoon. The white man returns and he just sees my dark-complected father in the same chair, and fires several bullets through his head, and kills him on the spot. Now I’m a 13-year-old. What, now what am I supposed to do with that?
That was bad enough. But what happened the week after is the white woman and a little white boy who was probably about 13, too, came to the door and introduced themselves as the wife and the son of the man who murdered my father, and I was with my mom. And she said, “I had to come tell you, Mrs. Sanchez. You needed to know my husband was a good man. He never would have killed your husband if he knew he was Mexican and Native American. He thought he was black.” And she started going on about what black people were. And my mom, who’s very Earth indigenous but also very Catholic, and I remember her shaking. She just yelled at a stranger, and I never saw her do that, telling her “Stop; you don’t even know what you’re saying; you don’t even know the kind of hatred you’re teaching your son, but you get off my porch. I’m going to try really hard to pray for your soul, but you get off my porch.”
What happened, over time, listening to these white people talking, they were sharing stories that their parents taught them they were better than us. But they were also dealing with their own healing, and they were slowly – not fast enough for me – but changing [LAUGHTER] some behaviors and policies and programs, and I’m watching. And they weren’t just flaky things, some major things were happening.
And so I invite you to do the work, because there’s a lot of goodies that—Like why do I want to go into that suffering? Well, because it’s freedom. What I found is by using the gift of forgiveness, the gift of healing, is that I’m able to be in unity with other, belong to many more. That illusion of separateness in my own separate wall comes down. Oh my gosh, it not only keeps out the bad things, it keeps out the good things. I wouldn’t know these people, or you.
So be about your healing, and be hungry for it, because it is possible. That’s what I want to say, at this point—it’s going to sound crazy, and I’m going to pass it—I truly believe and know for me: there is absolutely nothing that is unforgivable. Absolutely nothing that can’t be healed, absolutely nothing that we can’t do if we really are fully in it in unity.
We make it sound really heavy, and it is heavy, there’s a heavy side. But there’s a joyful part. I never go anywhere – I’m never alone. I get lonely, but I am never alone, because that hoop of life only knows “we”. Well, I saw the loss, I saw what happens when we really hate each other.
HOST: There is nothing that cannot be healed, says Anita Sanchez, if we are fully in unity – in community.
And as Mohandas Gandhi said, “An eye for an eye will make the world blind.”
But it’s still really complicated. As they say in the sports world, “no pain, no gain.” Yet most people have an aversion to pain and suffering and to facing our fears – even if it may mean our ultimate freedom and greater peace.
How do you reconcile these opposing forces?
Eriel Deranger says that peaceful co-existence acknowledges our unity, but it also requires healthy boundaries, self-protection and a supportive community.
ED: We often have this aversion to conflict, to pain, we want to minimize and mitigate our lives to be as painless and hurt-free as possible. But the reality is we need to be challenged in order to grow. And sometimes those challenges come with pain and adversity, and we need them.
We also have to talk about how we protect ourselves. I see people put themselves in harm’s way too much, having too much empathy that leads to them being abused or manipulated. And we have to be very careful about taking care of self, but recognizing that self is part of community.
There’s this really great book, I’ve read it like three times. It’s called Joyful Militancy. And it’s really about how we absolutely have to be prepared for those who challenge our perceptions, even to challenge our core values, and that we have to like not limit ourselves into those little siloes, and that we have to bridge those divides. But we also have to be careful that, yes, that nothing is unforgivable, but that doesn’t mean you need to have it in your life. You know? You don’t invite your abuser to live in your home, but you can forgive them.
It’s not simple, like, oh, we just need to have full compassion and open our doors to everyone, and if you’re not compassionate and you don’t want to accept me for my mistakes, even though I’ve hurt you over and over again, then you’re not doing this right. That’s not it at all. There is the need to create your own boundaries for your own preservation of self so that you don’t get traumatized, so you don’t lead to those disconnections that actually will other you. And again, we need community in order to navigate these things with health and with grace.
HOST: As john a. powell says, don’t start by trying to bridge with the devil.
Yet in many ways, that’s exactly what Nelson Mandela faced in South Africa: a life-and-death war against the colonial Apartheid system founded in blood-soaked racial hatreds and divisions – othering of the highest order and the lowest depravity.
JP: Nelson Mandela is in prison, in South Africa, and he’s head of the ANC, which is fighting a war against the Afrikaners. So it’s not a good situation. And literally he’s having family members killed by the South Africans. So he has reasons to be very concerned, and a lot of anguish and suffering.
There’s a big riot in South Africa, and Soweto is sort of the heart of it. The Soweto riots. What was the issue that lit the riot, the issue that was focused on, was the Afrikaners decided that the instructions would be done in Afrikander, so everyone would have to learn the oppressive language in order to go to school. And the people of South Africa, the blacks of South Africa said no way, and they start rioting.
At the same time, Nelson Mandela is asking his prison guards in Robben Island to teach him Afrikander. And they do. And a couple of things happened. So 1) when the prison guards started teaching him Africander, they actually start trying to soften his position in prison. They’re saying, You no longer have to break rocks; we actually began to see your humanity, so you don’t have to do all these terrible things. And he says no. Make no differentiation between me and all the other people in prison. So if you said no one has to break rocks, that’s fine, but I will not accept special treatment. And he’s getting up in age already.
Then he comes out of prison, and he meets with the president of South Africa, and he says—they’re meeting about a ceasefire to stop the war that’s killing thousands and thousands of people—and the president says, I think we can possibly do this, but first you have to meet with the general who’s head of the Africaner army and convince him. Now this general has actually called black South Africans monkeys. He says they’re not human. He don’t believe they can govern themselves. And he believed the whites can win the war, but he has to meet with Nelson Mandela.
So he goes to Nelson Mandela’s house, and he gets there, and Nelson Mandela’s servants let him in. He sits on the couch. In front of the couch there’s a coffee table, and on the other side of the coffee table there are chairs. Nelson Mandela comes in. The general’s sitting on the couch. And Nelson Mandela doesn’t sit in the chairs, he comes and sits next to the general on the couch. [LAUGHTER] The general was very uncomfortable. [LAUGHTER] And Nelson Mandela says, Would you like some tea? And the general says yes. Nelson Mandela does not call his servants – and he has servants – to fix the tea. Nelson Mandela gets up, goes into the kitchen, and fixed the general’s tea and comes back and serves him tea. This makes the general even less comfortable. [LAUGHTER]
And so the general said, Look, I’m here to talk about a ceasefire. I think it’s a terrible idea, but let’s talk about it. And Nelson Mandela says fine. So for the next two to three hours they have a conversation about the ceasefire. The entire conversation takes place in Africander. The general leaves Nelson Mandela’s house and his entourage says, How did it go? And he says, I don’t like this Nelson Mandela guy, but he can convince anybody of anything. [LAUGHTER] [APPLAUSE]
He agrees to the ceasefire. By some accounts, he saved over 100,000 lives. When Nelson Mandela is sick and dying, and the general comes forward and goes to Nelson Mandela’s family, and he says, I’d like to make a eulogy for Nelson Mandela. His family has not forgiven this general but they can’t completely refuse. And they say, You’ve got 15 minutes, whatever you can say in 15 minutes.
The general gives the eulogy for Nelson Mandela in Xhosa, Nelson Mandela’s native language. [AUDIENCE RESPONDS] And there are a lot of stories like this. This is bridging. So the hurt wasn’t gone. One thing to remember, Nelson Mandela had not laid down his arms. He still had an army. He was still willing to fight. He was still willing to protect themselves. But he also was willing to bridge. And so it’s not sequential. It’s a complicated, messy process, but it’s real. [APPLAUSE]
The regulatory landscape and social attitudes surrounding visionary plants and psychedelic compounds are in rapid and dramatic flux. A great deal of new scientific research has revealed exciting potential medical uses for these molecules, while dynamic, ever-growing, and mutating psychedelic subcultures continue to expand globally. But with this explosion in new interest comes challenges. Will profit-focused investors seek to corner the legal use of psychedelics and monopolize the resulting profits, further marginalizing the Indigenous cultures who discovered these plants millennia ago and developed robust healing methodologies with them? Will this new “medicalization” of sacred substances forsake the underground subcultures that further explored the use of psychedelics starting in the mid 20th Century?
This week, we explore the world of plant-based medicines through the words of leading experts.
This article contains the content from the 2/01/2021 Bioneers Pulse newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter straight to your inbox!
Sacred Medicines, Creativity, Evolution & the Paradigm Shift
With the rapidly changing scientific, social, commercial and regulatory landscape surrounding the use of sacred plants and psychedelics more generally comes a number of challenges. How do we approach the future of consciousness expanding medicines in our society so that the debt owed to the Indigenous cultures who discovered these potent healing modalities is honored, and so the profit motive doesn’t totally desacralize their use? In this panel conversation, three longtime leading experts on sacred plant use—Paul Stamets, Katsi Cook, and Françoise Bourzat—wrestle with this and other questions.
Human-Visionary Plant Relations in the Anthropocene
In this edited and excerpted transcript of a 2020 Bioneers Conference panel, botanical luminaries—Mark Plotkin, Karyemaitre Aliffe, and Kathleen Harrison—share their perspectives on the growing global fascination with certain plant species and what their embrace tells us about the current zeitgeist.
A Virtual Psychedelic Summit on the Globalization of Plant Medicines and Indigenous Reciprocity (Buy Tickets Here)
April 23-25, 2021 – Presented by the Chacruna Institute for Psychedelic Plant Medicines
This global virtual summit will bring together Indigenous leaders from throughout North, Central and South America as well as researchers, practitioners, community builders and other experts from around the world who will discuss the potential benefits and harms of the globalization of psychedelic plant medicines and explore how we can offer reciprocity to honor the Indigenous cultures and traditions that these medicines come from. It is vital that members of the psychedelic community help support Indigenous groups and the traditional spiritual and ecological knowledge they preserve and practice. This gathering is a follow-up to the conference, Plantas Sagradas en las Américas, held in Mexico in 2018. Like that previous conferences, this event reflects the mission of Chacruna by applying a multidisciplinary approach for creating intercultural dialogues and building bridges between Indigenous traditions and mainstream psychedelic science and policy.
Paul Stamets – Psilocybin Mushroom Medicines: A Paradigm Shift in Global Consciousness
Should psilocybin mushrooms come to market as People’s Medicine or Profit Medicine? Paul Stamets, one of the world’s leading authors, inventors, educators and entrepreneurs in the field of mycology, shares his thoughts on the latest research and the rapidly evolving landscape of psychedelic medicine.
Visionary Plant Consciousness & Psychedelics | Check out this collection of eye-opening talks and panel discussions from the Bioneers archives on sacred, vision-inducing and consciousness-altering plants and other “psychedelic” substances.
The Reluctant Psychonaut: How Psychedelics Changed Michael Pollan’s Mind | In this Bioneers podcast episode, acclaimed journalist Michael Pollan shares a travelogue of his reportorial and personal journey with psychedelics.
Although humanity is rapidly degrading the biosphere, condemning countless plant and animal species to extinction, simultaneously there has been a great deal of remarkable new research into plants’ perceptual and cognitive abilities as well as an enormous renewal of interest in certain plants (e.g. ayahuasca, psilocybin mushrooms, cannabis) as potential physical and psycho-spiritual healing agents.
In the following edited and excerpted transcript of a 2020 Bioneers Conference panel, botanical luminaries share their perspectives on: the growing global fascination with certain plant species and what their embrace tells us about the current zeitgeist; what we can do to help support the land protection and human rights struggles of Indigenous peoples who are the custodians of the world’s greatest plant knowledge in biodiversity hot spots globally; and related topics. Featured speakers are Mark Plotkin, renowned ethnobotanist and award winning eco-activist, co-founder of the Amazon Conservation Team and best-selling author of such texts as: Tales of a Shaman’s Apprentice and Medicine Quest: In Search of Nature’s Healing Secrets; Karyemaitre Aliffe, MD, physician-scientist, leading expert on the healing properties of cannabis, who has taught at Harvard and Stanford and has 35+ years’ experience in natural products research, including explorations in many remote regions globally; Kathleen Harrison, co-founder, President and Projects Director of the nonprofit, Botanical Dimensions, a revered ethnobotanist renowned for her unique explorations of often hidden aspects of plant-human relationships. Moderated by J.P. Harpignies, Bioneers Senior Producer.
J.P. HARPIGNIES: We’re living in an ambiguous, paradoxical time. On one hand, certain specialists are calling this era the Anthropocene, in other words the first epoch in the multi-billion-year history of our planet in which it’s not asteroid impacts or volcanic activity or tectonic shifts that are the main shapers and drivers of our planet’s geology and climate and life, but us humans. And news flash, we’re doing a pretty terrible job. Our plundering of the natural at an unsustainable pace is driving countless animal and plant species to extinction, and we’re destroying many ecosystems. And yet, paradoxically, there seems to simultaneously be an enormous revival of love of the natural world, a craving for everything natural. It’s as though we’re romanticizing that which we’re destroying.
J.P. Harpignies
There are many aspects to this new love of nature, but the aspect that we’re here to discuss today is an exponential growth in recent years of interest in and use of certain psychoactive, mind-manifesting, consciousness-altering plant species. This fascination is certainly understandable because a number of these plant species have remarkable capacities to in some cases heal, soothe, inspire, perhaps even enlighten us on occasion. It has to be said they also have the capacity to confuse and mislead, because sometimes these plants have their own agendas; they can be tricksters. But that’s a whole other level of discussion.
One important thing that needs to be stated at the onset, though, is that whoever is going to partake of these substances would do best to approach them with a great deal of humility and to draw upon the wisdom of those traditions that have millennia of experience in navigating these states of consciousness, and that’s of course above all the Indigenous cultures who discovered and developed the use of these plants, most often to enhance their communication and negotiation with unseen forces and with the other species with whom humans are inextricably interlinked in the web of life. So those of us who partake of these plants have a special responsibility. We owe these Indigenous peoples an immense debt, and it behooves us to do everything we can to help support them in their struggles to defend their lands, their rights and their cultures.
Our own culture seems to me to be entering a sea-change moment in its relationship to these plant species. We’re seeing more and more medical research on potential therapeutic uses of these plants; and we’re seeing a lot of venture capital suddenly pouring into this domain. Some of this can turn out to be very positive because there certainly are some so far fairly intractable conditions, such as PTSD, depression and end-of-life anxiety that conventional medicine hasn’t been very good at addressing, and it’s possible that medicalized versions of these plants could turn out to be more effective in relieving the suffering of a number of the people with these sorts of ailments.
That said, there are also great risks in this endeavor in that the deep flaws in our psyches and in our society—the gross inequities, our intense Narcissism, our lust for power and wealth, etc.—could distort and pervert our relationship to these hitherto sacred substances. In some instances, we could also love some of these plants to death by overharvesting them in the wild. There are many issues that are raised by the growth of interest in and use of these plants, and (segue) I cannot think of a better group of people to wrestle with these thorny questions than the panelists we have here today: Mark Plotkin, one of the great ethnobotanists and conservation activists on the face of the planet, one of the greatest allies of Indigenous Peoples in the Amazon helping them protect their lands and rights, and the author of several classic books on these topics. We also have with us today Kathleen Harrison, a long-time ally and friend of Bioneers going back decades, who in my opinion is one of the most original and unique thinkers in the ethnobotanical community. She has done decades of field work and research, including in the Amazon, but especially among the Mazatec in Mexico, and in fact her daughter is making a film about the long-term relationship of their family to a family of Indigenous healers in the Mazatec country. Kathleen founded Botanical Dimensions, a small but cutting-edge ethnobotanical education organization based in Occidental, California, I urge all of you to support, if you can. So, Kat, it’s great to be here on a panel with you again, be it in a virtual form.
Last, but certainly not least, is Dr. Karyemaltre Aliffe, a remarkable physician/scientist who has devoted decades to study of and research on plants around the world. He’s worked in over 50 countries, has taught at Stanford and Harvard, and he’s become one of the leading researchers and developers of cannabis-based medicines. I’m really eager to hear what these luminaries have to say. We’ll start with Mark Plotkin.
MARK PLOTKIN: An important point I want to make is that, in general, there’s a big difference between taking a whole plant with all the complex compounds it contains and taking a pharmaceutical drug based on just one supposedly “active” ingredient found in a plant. Take quinine (Cinchona officinalis): that tree, native to the Andes, has probably saved more lives than any other tropical species because it’s long been the most effective treatment for malaria. The modern Western scientific approach has been to isolate one of the alkaloids found in the plant and make pharmaceutical anti-malarial drugs based on it, but the massive use of that sort of single alkaloid has resulted in the malaria-causing plasmodium parasite beginning to develop resistance to it. I have a physician friend in Colombia who tells me he is able to treat even quinine-resistant malaria by using the whole bark from the tree instead of the pills, because the bark contains 15 different compounds and the parasite has a much harder time developing resistance to it.
Mark Plotkin
The modern scientific reductionist approach repeats the same sorts of mistakes over and over, and it’s one reason we’re facing more and more drug-resistant diseases. Useful in treating malaria is another plant: Artemisia – yet the pharmaceutical industry is repeating the same pattern as with quinine, and once again we’re sure to generate artemisia-resistant malaria. I’m not saying we should never develop synthetic drugs based on compounds found in plants, but we have to do it carefully, and we need to have far more understanding of and respect for nature’s complexity, because, honestly, our supposedly scientific, high-tech methods often fail or create unintended consequences because they are far too simplistic in their approach to very complex, interdependent living systems.
For example, scientists are very interested in thermophilic organisms that thrive in very high temperatures (near volcanic vents, etc.) because they might have valuable uses in a wide range of industrial applications. They found one promising specimen at Yellowstone and brought it to their lab, but when they grew it in their petri dishes, the organism had not retained its heat resistant properties. They went back to the site and found that it grew in some sort of symbiosis with another bacteria, so they tried to add that one to the mix, but that did not work, either. Once they looked more closely, they found that that bacteria had a virus in it that must also play some role in that bacterium’s properties. The thermophilic property was a product of an entire mini ecosystem, not one easily isolated factor!
Time and time again, we look at nature and want to snatch and grab one gene, one bacterium, one alkaloid and bring it back to the lab and make a useful, uniform product that we can mass produce and make money from, but it’s just not that simple. That’s not how nature operates. And most of the time we don’t listen to the people who know the most about how nature operates and what it can teach us, and that’s the Indigenous people in the most biodiverse places on the planet.
A perfect example of this is the green monkey frog. The use of some of its skin secretions by some Amazonian tribes in Peru as a vision-inducing substance was reported by the remarkable explorer Loren McIntyre back in 1969 (there’s a great book about his travels and discoveries, Amazon Beaming). Scientists have only recently been finding new proteins and some very promising antimicrobial compounds in these frog secretions, which could help us against drug-resistant bacteria, among other things. The psychoactive properties of what they often call “Kambo” have also elicited the fascination in recent years of some people in psychedelic subcultures.
A few years ago, I was visiting some people I have long known in the Trio tribe in Suriname (a tribe I profiled in my first book, Tales of a Shaman’s Apprentice), and I mentioned the green monkey frog that people in Peru (3000 miles from Suriname) use, and one of the shamans said: “We have that frog here too, and we use it for hunting and divination, just like the people in Peru!” And I told him that couldn’t be possible. No one had ever reported it in Suriname, and I’d been working there for 33 years and never seen it. He said, maybe that’s because it lives up in the canopy. I said “I’ve been here 33 years, and you never told me about this?” Well, he said “You never asked me about it, and, by the way, there’s another frog we use for divination purposes.” It turned out it was from a completely different genus, and here it was in a totally different part of the Amazon, and no scientist knew about it. It takes a long time to gain the trust of people sometimes, and you have to be really patient and listen really carefully, and Western
Another example is the fungus Cordyceps. My colleague Glenn Shepard was long interested in a plant called piripiri, a chemically-inert sedge related to grass that tribes in the western Amazon have long told us is an effective female contraceptive and also has other properties. When researchers tested it in the lab, they couldn’t find any chemical activity at all, but Glenn Shepard, who speaks Machiguenga and has worked with that tribe for decades was talking to one of the Machiguenga shamans about this and the shaman gave him the plant to take. Soon thereafter, Glenn felt great and began juggling masterfully, something he had never been able to do well previously. He began studying the plant in a bit more detail, and found that the secret of the sedge isn’t the plant itself but a species of cordyceps fungus which contained seven new-to-science alkaloids. Again, scientists looking for the single ingredient missed the complex fungal-plant relationship.
Now I’m not arguing against the creation and use of modern, synthetic drugs based on natural molecules. After all, the great chemist Albert Hoffman created LSD-25 based on compounds from the ergot fungus which is related to the fungus found by Glenn Shepard. Nonetheless, we still need shamans and curanderas/curanderosand microchips to build the medicine of the future, which I think will be some sweet spot somewhere between those two approaches. And we still need to develop the patience to listen with respect and patience to the ones who know best what nature has to offer us, the Indigenous shamans and healers, if we don’t want to miss the opportunity to discover new (to us) anti-virals, anti-malarials, entheogens, etc., all of which we are most likely to desperately need in the years ahead. There’s a lot more out there. The rainforest has answers to questions we have not yet asked!
KAT (KATHLEEN) HARRISON: I am also an ethnobotanist, but of a different sort. I have worked a lot with Native people in South America and Mexico, and in other places. I try to study the worldview that seems to arise from the plants that grow in specific parts of the earth, in specific cultures. I have specialized in plants of ritual of all sorts, plants that are important in story and mythology, and of course the psychoactive species, the ones that a number of so-called “Westerners” have embraced in the last half century—ayahuasca, “magic” (i.e. psilocybin-containing) mushrooms, and others. Some of these, after they were “discovered” by non-Indigenous people, have been embraced by these new enthusiasts and, in some cases, propagated elsewhere far and wide, very far from their original roots, from the places where they evolved in nature and in relationship with the human culture of those places. The (most often Indigenous) people from those places are still the knowledge-holders regarding these plants. Their ancestors discovered how these plants and fungi affect the human psyche and how to use them in a society. For better or for worse, though, these plants have been taken out of their places of origin and their use has spread around the world; we have made them global change agents. There is no going back, but there is still a lot we need to learn from the knowledge-holders and the traditions and from the contemporary Indigenous cultures that hold them. We are still just really at the beginning of our understanding of these plants and the wisdom they can reveal, but, unfortunately, we don’t have time to take much longer in discovering how to respect and embrace these species in the most productive ways.
Kathleen Harrison
These species have the capacity to open our minds to time and history. They can sometimes help us hear the ancestors, our own ancestors. They can force us to confront our current global crises, including the destruction of the oceans and rainforests and of many people who depend on these places who have been decimated and marginalized. But one of the big problems that we Westerners have is that we now have these plants, this gift that we were given (or that we took without permission in some cases), but we don’t necessarily know how to use these extraordinary tools to achieve the greatest good because we, and our culture are not attuned to the wisdom they can bring.
The consciousness that comes with ayahuasca, mushrooms, some mescaline-containing cacti and some other visionary plants, carries the message that we are all part of a collective, that all of nature operates as a collective, but our highly individualistic culture doesn’t allow many of us to grasp that fundamental truth. Plants pull down sunlight and transform it every minute into nourishment for all the beings on the planet, including us, and some fungal species operate as the nervous system, the connectors between all of the plant species. They’re all operating in community, in constant conversation with each other. They are not here for humans. They are here because they are part of life, and this is how life works, which is actually probably why we are here too. Unfortunately, we tend to forget that.
I’d caution the people who are doing research these days, developing the future of what one might call “medicalized” or “institutional” psychedelics — which for better or worse (that’s a big topic) is underway and impossible to stop. I’d ask that they not turn their backs on the ways of seeing that Indigenous traditions have discovered and nurtured, nor on the experiences and accumulated wisdom of those of us who participated in the psychedelic revolution of the 1960s and 70s.
My sense is that this transformative moment is a sort of initiation. Even this virus and how it’s overturned everything we thought we knew in the world is an initiation in the classic sense of shamanic initiation, in which we are sorely tested and dismembered, then have to figure out how to put our pieces back together to be whole. And I really feel that cannabis and the psychedelic species are part of what nature is offering us to help us remember and really ponder deeply, and then reconstruct the world that has been dismembered, but in a better configuration. And that has to be a collective way of thinking. We each have to be whole enough to stand on our feet and to be able to get up again when we fall down, but we’re not going to save the world if we don’t remember that we have to do it collectively.
For those of us who have the privilege and safety to be able to partake of these psychedelic species and to receive the gifts they offer, it is our responsibility to now move to the collective level. Every time we pursue an altered state of mind, we need to ask ourselves: What can I do for the world? What can I do for the world tomorrow? This is not simply my pleasant or even unpleasant experience. This is my periodic retuning to be a full participant in the world, to remember that I am part of nature, part of this collective, and that we are in a really big crisis. Accessing that higher consciousness that we’ve talked about for decades now can no longer be a purely personal pursuit: we must use it to address the crisis all of life is in. That’s one reason to study the traditions. Traditional tribes, groups, networks of people all over the world from many different traditions, would, when they were facing a major crisis, go into ceremony with whatever their powerful visionary plant or technique was, and seek a collective answer to the situation.
That’s where I think we have a lot of work to do still: we need to move to that sort of practice. We no longer have time to spend our lives having individual experiences. One disadvantage of psychedelics having been kept underground all this time is that there hasn’t been as much communication to the wider society about the actual work that we could do that would help us all, but I also think there are benefits to staying underground. I think that no matter what happens, some sort of underground will continue, and that is okay as long as our collective awakening surfaces more widely and as long as our choices that come out of these visionary states, our insights, are actually embodied and do demonstrable good in the world.
For some of us who’ve done a lot of different explorations of powerful allies of these sorts over the last few decades, some of us for 50, 60 years, it’s a state of mind that is constantly available to us, whether or not we’ve just taken something. We no longer need to take something all the time because we have actually learned to walk in that state of mind, or at least access it intentionally, and there’s a kind of reference or meditation that we can draw upon for advice in how to remember the world, and how to weave it back together again.
Something is being born right now. In the middle of all this terrible pain and suffering which is raging around us, we are learning something; we’re finding a deeper level of our humanity, a realization that we are all brothers and sisters who are suffering together (though some of us far more than others of course), but how do we hold that awareness to not only solve the immediate problem at hand—the stranger who has arrived and seems to have turned everything over—but the greater challenge of now weaving this world together again in a far better version of itself?
If one is open to the “animistic” view that everything in our world is alive and in conversation, then these extraordinary plants are actually “persons.” More and more eco-activists in various countries are advocating that legal personhood be granted to rivers and forests and other species. So if you’re a person who seeks counsel from ayahuasca or psilocybin mushrooms or cannabis or other sacred plants, treat your communication with these other-than-human persons with respect. Realize that we are in a real crunch, but that we need to use the insights offered by these beings to the fullest. Let’s ask them to help us with the awareness that we need to mend the world, but then let’s act together, in community, to embody the changes we need to make.
JP: One common denominator I found in Kat and Mark’s presentations is their emphasis on the need to think holistically. Mark stressed that modern reductionist approaches risk missing a lot when they seek to find the sole “active” ingredient of a plant instead of seeking to understand the complex interrelationships between all the various compounds that synergistically form the whole plant. And Kat drove home that to solve the “wicked” problems facing our species, we have to get beyond perceiving ourselves as atomized individuals and learn to feel and act collectively, as whole communities. Dr. Aliffe, before you delve into your presentation, I was wondering if you have any reactions to what you just heard?
Dr. KARYEMAITREALIFFE: First of all, I want to mention that I’m an enthusiastic fan of both Mark and Kat and the work that they’ve done all these years. I am a physician, schooled and trained at Stanford, and was a Program in Cancer Biology MD/Ph.D. Fellow. There is usually presumed to be a great divide between the medical establishment and what occurs botanically in the rainforest with respect to mind/consciousness-altering substances and Indigenous perspectives; however, post-Stanford, I worked at Shaman Pharmaceuticals with the McKenna brothers and with Mark. Actually, I left Stanford to go there because I found more promise in the rainforest than in the fluorescent-lit dungeons of anesthesia at Stanford.
Karyemaitre Aliffe
I’d like to underscore one thing that Kat mentioned, which was the need to seek wise counsel. We have an opportunity in front of us. There are solutions for many of the health problems we face to be found in the botanical realm. For example, some cannabinoid compounds have shown interesting potential to be of use in coping with certain aspects of Corona viruses by neutralizing the pathogenicity and/or transmissibility of viruses. That could potentially permit companies that have a white-collar work force to resume some operations face-to-face (as opposed to Zoom meetings). We need to keep exploring the botanical realm and not simply wait for pharmaceutical giants in shining armor to provide vaccine solutions, as important as that is.
My background, prior to going to the rainforest, was mainly in molecular pharmacology and clinical pharmacology, very detailed and data-driven disciplines. Currently science is racing to develop and use artificial intelligence and machine learning systems that work with “big data.” Now, on one level, consulting information gleaned from “big data” (if done intelligently) can be another way of seeking wise counsel. It’s an approach geared to the new era we’re entering, the Anthropocene, and it can have value, but let’s not throw out the best wisdom from the Holocene. I’ve worked with a number of traditional healers and shamans, and obviously their methods are altogether different: they certainly don’t rely on statistical data. They’re looking directly at the person or group or situation in front of them, but they are accessing and living and working in the context of enormous flows of information from expanded levels of consciousness—they are processing their own version of “big data” 24/7.
Our culture has almost completely lost that ability to access, understand and harness those flows of information that shamans work with, so maybe we’re coming full circle by using computers to fill in those abandoned regions of our brains, so that we too can now process large flows of data, and if we do that in the right way, that may, among other things, enable us to enter a new era of precision medicine, personalized medicine.
And as a final point, just so everybody is clear, when we refer to Amazon, we’re not referring to the Bezos empire, even though it’s more proximal and prominent in the media. We’re talking about that big forest somewhere that we have a tendency to burn down. No one would ever burn down an Amazon fulfillment center, because then we wouldn’t have fulfillment.
JP: Kat, Dr. Aliffe raises an interesting point, which Mark alluded to earlier as well, which is that, in a sense, we (those of us who have deep respect for these indigenous teachings but are also creatures of the modern world) are hoping that we can find ways to reconcile the best of these ancient traditions with the most fruitful, productive aspects of modern technology and modern science. In that context, there’s been a lot of talk in the psychedelic community about some of the venture capitalists entering the fray and some resistance to some of what they’re proposing. What are your feelings about that, your view of the dangers in these new actors entering this space?
KAT: I think there are significant risks, actually. I think there are parallels right now to what seemed to be the death of herbalism some 500 years ago or so, with the takeover of medicine by the upper classes, by formally educated men with privilege. A lot of folk knowledge was repressed, and people, especially women, who practiced folk healing were oppressed in all sorts of ways. Folk medicine and ancient herbal traditions went underground, and in recent decades it has risen again. Now we have herbalists all over the place, and herbalism has come back as a respectable field, although there’s still a tension between officially sanctioned and unsanctioned healing arts.
I see parallels with that in the modern history of psychedelics, and I think we have to watch out for that sort of takeover, in which certain privileged groups, using money, patents, permitting systems, laws, etc., will claim ownership of the whole domain and marginalize even more those who discovered the uses of these substances and those who nurtured and developed their use for a long time. Some of those new players may do some good, if their activities are part of the whole diverse array, but if they become the dominant voice in the field, that would be a problem. My guess is that a lot will be happening; there will be a lot of new medical research, and the undergrounds will also persist. It will be all things.
The bigger picture, though, is that we need to remember that this is all about nature. We need to be as conscious in nature as we can be, and that is what these plants tell us, if we can hear it. I support the ongoing investigation by the average person of the depth and scope of our minds and our hearts, our ability to engage with the world, and the respectful use of these agents as allies and tools to be able to do that. I hope that just continues and continues.
JP: Mark, I was wondering if you had any further thoughts on the matter, given that you’ve dealt a lot with both worlds. You’ve worked with pharmaceutical companies trying to work with these molecules, and you’ve also defended Indigenous Peoples’ rights to intellectual property, so do you have any quick thoughts about what the risks of this new influx of medical researchers and venture capitalists into this domain might be now?
MARK: Let me offer a personal example. I got an email this morning from Colombia from somebody looking for the seeds of a very obscure ayahuasca species that had originally been identified by my teacher, the legendary ethnobotanist and mentor to many of the leading lights in this field, Richard Evan Schultes. I looked online, and there it was for sale!
The whole world now has access to many of these once obscure botanicals in ways we never dreamed possible, but that brings new sets of problems. What if that rare species is overharvested and disappears? There are so many millions invested in these industries now, both underground and – in the case of cannabis, for example – more and more above-ground, that very little attention is being paid to protecting the original habitats of these plants. And climate change is threatening or causing the extinctions of some species, including psychoactive ones. It will be very hard to preserve many of these species without tackling climate change.
My worry is that, at the same time that we have more and more access to these substances, the roots, both botanical and cultural, are dying. That’s why the Amazon Conservation Team and other groups such as Botanical Dimensions are so focused on defending cultural and biological diversity, so we don’t wind up with a world with no primary forests, in which the only wildlife are cockroaches and pigeons, and all the shamans have passed on without being able to pass on their knowledge and their languages. It’s a conundrum: we have more information and greater access to plants and plant lore than ever before, but we’re also destroying the habitats of those plants at a faster and faster clip. We’re burning the candle at both ends. If there were easy answers, we wouldn’t be discussing this right now. There aren’t any easy answers, but my challenge to everyone who has had important experiences and benefited from these plants and from the cultural traditions that brought them to the world, is to now focus on giving something back: on helping these Indigenous peoples and the lands under threat survive, for all our sakes. How are you paying it forward? That is something which seems to be missing from a lot of these discussions. That’s our challenge.
JP: That’s very important. I think you and Kat have sent us a strong message that at this time in history we can’t just use these molecules solely for our personal healing (as worthwhile as that can be): it’s imperative that we step up and seek to do our utmost to give back. It’s a qualm I’ve long had about the psychedelic underground: a lot of people in it have very utopian ideas and think that if enough folks “change their consciousness” that will miraculously solve the world’s problems without actually having to take concrete actions. They need a wake-up call, all of us do.
Now, Dr. Aliffe, time for your Warholian 15 minutes.
Dr.ALIFFE: One point I’d like to make right off the bat is that these compounds tend to be context specific. As we all know, set and setting are major factors in psychotropic experiences. What does it mean to have a utopian experience in Manhattan or San Jose as opposed to a rainforest? if someone is really seeking a change in the world and believes that some utopian vision will contribute to that change, I would suggest that the first step would be to engage in those experiences in less dystopian environments. I’d recommend avoiding even Disneyland/Hollywood versions of utopia for such a pursuit.
Being in a real rainforest, by oneself, is a psychoactive experience in and of itself. I’ve worked in the Amazon with shamans and doing plant collections, and on one occasion I was walking down a riverbank, seeking a particular plant that grew alongside the river, and I suddenly happened to find myself in quicksand. Prior to that, my only experience with quicksand was in movies or TV shows, but there I was. There was nothing in the whole environment around me to grab hold of. I was too far away from any other people for yelling to do any good (though I admit, I did yell). Perhaps fortunately, there weren’t even any predatory animals around to hear my cries. But one thing I can assure you of is that it was a very different experience than being at home in my bungalow in Menlo Park.
There are no right angles in the rainforest. “Psychoactive,” as defined by the World Health Organization, refers to anything that impacts our cognitive function or mood, so a psychoactive state is not just the result of getting high or taking hallucinogens. Seasonal affective disorder, caused by lack of sunlight, is a depressive disorder. Certain frequencies of light, available in natural sunlight, are associated with beneficial therapeutic benefits. That means that sunlight is “psychoactive.” And anybody with children, or who has ever been a child, knows just how psychoactive sugar can be. It changes behavior. It changes mood, so I challenge us not to have such a narrow idea about what is psychoactive.
Part of my training at Stanford was in anesthesia, intensive care and pain management, including a fellowship in clinical pharmacology. One really interesting thing about the practice of anesthesia is that (even though no one else would state it this way) anesthesia is “psychotropic medicine.” It is the one branch of medicine that deals with psychotropic agents regularly, administers them to patients and observes them real-time (as opposed to writing a prescription and sending them home and having no idea what their experience was or whether they even took the medication). This has some similarities to a shaman’s work: you’re monitoring a fellow human being being psychotropically altered, observing it unfold before your eyes, and your specific objective is to create a mind/body environment that is conducive to this person passing through the ceremony of surgery in an optimal fashion.
In the language of science, of clinical pharmacology, anecdotes carry no weight compared to the gold standard of double-blind studies, and, increasingly, of big data; but every person, every patient I ever managed was “anecdotal.” Everybody, every person, is just one sole patient—i.e. an anecdote—in the operating room. You can’t say: “This person shouldn’t have died because the previous 10 people that I treated using the same protocol did not.” That doesn’t matter to anyone, not to the surgeon or to the family. So even though double-blind studies are important for the pursuit of linear pharmacology, they don’t tell us anything about an individual’s experience. They miss a lot.
Another interesting concept worth looking at because it reveals some other limitations of current scientific approaches is the “entourage effect.” It’s a marvelous little term. It’s nothing new in botanical medicine or in the study of pharmaceuticals, but it is far too often neglected. In the domain of pharmaceutical development, researchers are always studying one single agent at a time, with the Ehrlich “silver bullet” approach. They are not taking in all the complex interactions occurring in the environment, be it the human environment, the physiologic environment, or even in the cellular environment. They just want to observe effects induced by a specific single molecule. But the drugs they develop will ultimately be given to real human beings who are, especially if they’re older, most likely already taking a wide range of other prescription drugs for conditions such as high blood pressure, diabetes, high cholesterol, mood disorders, etc. Most people are functionally engaged in polypharmacy. They’re taking more than one drug, and those drugs have not been studied thoroughly in combination. Is there an entourage effect? Are there complementary activities or even untoward effects from that combination? That’s rarely studied or even considered.
And, of course, when you add in cannabis, large swaths of the medical establishment holding prejudices against it complain that cannabis may interfere with their prescription drugs, as though their prescription drugs were invariably providing a more important therapeutic action than cannabis, and as though some of the drugs they prescribe don’t have potentially dangerous side-effects. Drugs such as Ambien are far more likely to cause people to do all kinds of wildly unpredictable things, while sleepwalking, or even sleep-driving on the freeway, than any amount of cannabis.
Bear in mind that cannabinoids are just enhanced salicylic acid derivatives, the same family of molecules as aspirin. They’re not nearly as esoteric as many current psychotropic pharmaceuticals.
Some of the complexity can be resolved by simply looking at the actual data as it is without any paradigm bias or prejudices; emulating Darwin, who went into the wilds, not with a preconceived notion of trying to prove a theory about the origin of species, but rather as an intelligent, trained observer. He accumulated a great deal of “big data” and then processed it before developing a theory.
Western culture broadly—and Western scientific culture specifically, for all its supposed objectivity—has actually been very unsophisticated and even unscientific in its approach to addressing phenomena of consciousness and of the mind-body relationship. Psychiatry and neurology are just emerging from the Dark Ages; just starting to shed the ill effects of a slew of unproven biases, dogmas masquerading as science. Primarily due to the work of people in Silicon Valley who developed unbiased methods for us to assess large volumes of physiological and medical observations, we have been able to start to put these flawed precepts behind us. Many of the major advances in medicine over the last several decades are due to people who developed digital information technologies, such as MRI, fMRI, CAT scans, ultra-sound, etc.
We now have far greater ability to analyze animal, human, and cellular processes and so look deeper into biological functions. All of these capabilities are digital technology-dependent. They are definitely not because we suddenly have a brighter generation of physicians than we did 40 or 50 years ago. In my area of study, I can say that this enhanced data analysis has benefited the qualities of studies on a range of cannabinoids and has helped us understand their beneficial effects on mood, cognitive function and other conditions. Now we have the opportunity to expand upon it, with, for example, wearable/mobile technologies that have the ability to capture physiological data to achieve levels of data assessment that typically are not available in the U.S. These sorts of devices can, I think, help us deepen our understanding of cannabinoid effects and what differences various medicinal formulations might make.
JP spoke in the introduction about the ambiguity and paradox of our simultaneously romanticizing and destroying the natural world and our need for humility. Part of humility is to observe objectively and not presume that we really know what our ancestors were doing in the Holocene period. We have to remember their cultural context and their reference points were very different. Our culture long associated, and still to some degree associates, the idea of “drugs” with wild behavior such as adolescents stealing cars, seducing girls, robbing convenience stores, etc., but I have never heard of young people in the rainforest “getting high” on ayahuasca and stealing canoes to go party. That’s just not part of the culture. We have to be careful about how we interpret information. For example, recent archeological digs have found evidence in Central Asia of the ritual burning of cannabis and frankincense together, so the popular media published headlines asserting that our ancestors were “getting high.” That’s a cross-cultural assumption, and those tend to be incorrect.
One last thing I’d like to delve into is the relationship of climate change and of environmental contexts on the therapeutic potential of cannabis. The cannabinoids within cannabis that we explore for their therapeutic potentials are “secondary metabolites”—molecules that are not directly involved in the growth, reproduction and proliferation of a plant, but that provide selective advantages over other plants, microbes or even animals that may diminish that plant species’ ability to thrive and proliferate. Secondary metabolite profiles change as plants respond to environmental change. In the case of cannabis plants, such compounds include: cannabinoids, terpenes, and cannaflavins, a class of flavonoid metabolites with enormous anti-inflammatory potential (discovered by one of our esteemed colleagues, Dr. Marilyn Barrett, who worked with us at Shaman Pharmaceuticals). So, when you’re looking at therapeutic compounds in cannabis plants, you have to look beyond just the simple genetics of a particular cannabis strain. You have to study the secondary metabolites—just as in viticulture, where grape quality depends on what the French call the “terroir,” the very specific circumstances and conditions of the soil, rainfall, temperatures, and the general environment. Plants are super-sensitive to their local conditions. Some studies have even shown that if you introduce certain insects intentionally into your cannabis grow, it can induce increased production of particular secondary metabolites.
This has major implications. For example: if you seek to grow cannabis in a highly-controlled, clean and sterile environment, it may not necessarily be to your advantage in terms of producing the types of therapeutic compounds you want. When consumed by humans, cannabinoids interact with our endocannabinoid system; and own endocannabinoids (endogenous cannabinoids) are derivatives of arachidonic acid, a common molecule in human and plant physiology that is involved in stress responses. To simplify a bit, the point is that there is continuity between plant and animal (and therefore human) physiology. When plants are stressed, they produce molecules to help manage those stressors, and these molecules can often help humans manage stress. So, if you’re raising pampered, unstressed plants, you may not produce the therapeutic compounds you are seeking. This is another example of the need to look at whole of complex systems, and where the plant and the work you’re trying to do fit into the larger world, where everything is interconnected.
JP: Thanks, Dr. Aliffe. Your comment about the terroir reminded me of my friend Jeremy Narby, who refers to the Pucallpa region of Peru as having the equivalent reputation for ayahuasca as Bordeaux has for red wine. One of the things that all of you are driving home is the complexity of the plant/human relationship and the pitfalls of excessive reductionism. Even though a lot of our science is necessarily based on reductionism (we need it, for example, to understand molecules and DNA in exquisite, infinitesimal detail), some of these substances we’ve been discussing are extremely complex and the cultural relationships humans have developed with them over long periods of time are very complex, but our culture has a tendency to want the magic bullet to solve every problem, and it’s pretty clear from all you’ve shared here today that the approach that searches for magic bullets won’t generally work with these plants (and I would add that it’s a good idea to avoid bullets in general) and that we need to strive to keep reminding ourselves of the larger interconnections both to nature and to human cultures to maintain a “right relationship” with these plant allies.
Some of the questions that have come up from the audience are about what people can do beyond the psychedelic experience. Kat, you touched upon this, but can you offer any further thoughts on other practices or forms of consciousness that might help people carry forth any insights that might have come to them from sacred plant use and that might help them put their best foot forward in the real world, helping them in joining efforts to address the collective problems we face?
KAT: These sacred plant experiences, and I include cannabis in this, can reveal things to us. We discover something hidden, and we can actually learn to look for what’s hidden. We can learn to look under the stone or behind the veil and behind the next veil. These are metaphorical ways of talking about opening our perceptions to what is there that we are missing, and these experiences can help us do that, but when we walk in the daylight, in the daily world, we need to remember to seek to keep those perceptions open. We need to remember that our worldview in any given culture defines what is apparent and in front of us, and in a materialistic/matter-based worldview, as we have had in the West for quite a while, that means that unless we work hard to perceive beyond our culture’s blinders, we’re going to miss a lot. I think that’s part of the complexity you’re talking about.
I think it helps to think about how people at another time or in another culture or with another worldview might perceive something. We need to cultivate a lot more humility about what we know. For instance, it’s only really recently, in the 21st Century, that our science has started to understand the immense importance of fungi in maintaining life on this planet. That whole invisible, underground fungal universe, all around us, right under our feet, turns out to be an absolutely critical piece of the web of life, but we largely ignored it and knew very little about it, and that’s just one example. So, basically, my advice is: look deeper, look longer, and teach children to always wonder what’s behind the surface of things.
JP: Mark, any thoughts on this?
MARK: I think the past predicts the future, and if you want to know how best to communicate a message, look at how people did it in the past. I do want to broaden our conversation about plants a bit. We forget that the most significant mind-altering plant in history has probably been the wine grape. It’s a roughly $325 billion dollar industry annually and growing all the time. You want to talk about fostering creativity? One of the great Greek poets said no poem was ever written by a drinker of water, and it’s been a central factor in Western culture for millennia. That said, it does have drawbacks. A clever observer said decades ago that if you give five guys alcohol, they’ll start a fight, but if you give them cannabis, they’ll start a band, so all these things need to be appreciated judiciously in their own way.
And now our culture has access to all these psychoactive plants that were largely unknown to it (outside of very small circles of cognoscenti) until very recently. Large quantities of people know have access to many more stimulating plants and fungi than ever before, and there are also, with electronic communications and social media, many more ways to communicate at incredible speed. These powerful tools bring a lot of opportunity and a lot of challenges. Each one of us is going to have to assume a lot of responsibility to figure out how best to learn, teach and act. It’s a daunting challenge we all face.
We have to remember that things will keep changing and new tools and opportunities and challenges will emerge and that it’s impossible to predict precisely what will happen. Who could possibly have guessed decades ago that ayahuasca, which only a handful of botanists and anthropologists in our society had even heard of and was associated with vomiting and terrifying visions, would be sweeping the world? Will Kratom, barely known outside of Asia until very recently, now emerge as a major anti-addiction treatment? Whole new (to us) categories of psychoactive plants and substances might yet emerge from rainforests and other ecosystems.
JP: We only have a few minutes left, so let me ask each of you if you have a parting thought about what you think is most important for people to take away at the current time about our relationships with these powerful plant species?
Dr.ALIFFE: I think we have to resist the push that is likely coming to apply a materialist reductionist standard to the study of and creation of medicines from plant teachers, because that standard is diametrically opposed to diversity. It seeks to generalize limited observations to large populations, and in that sort of generalization, there are certain to be concomitant errors (usually referred to as “side effects”). Diversity, beyond demagoguery and social issues, is really about “big data.” Honoring diversity can be accessed by opening dialogues with the other, and that other can be Indigenous peoples and other cultures, but it’s also within ourselves, the big data within. All of us are relevant. All data matters because all experience matters. That’s where the truth is.
MARK: To try to bridge what Kat and the good doctor have said, I’ll go back to the wine example. There are 1,368 varieties of grape that have been made into commercial wines, but 80% of the wines we drink today come from just 20 varieties, another incredible example of our reductionist tendency, and we know what happens in monocultures—they are wiped out when the “right” plague or pest sweeps through. How do we combat our culture’s tendency to impose monocultures? To build resilience we absolutely have to embrace diversity, biological and human, and shape our environment accordingly.
We know we’re currently in a terrible place. The question is whether we’re just going to keep doing the same things that got us into this mess in the first place or if we’ll wake up enough to change course. If we stay on our current course, to cite only one threat, there are far worse bugs out there than COVID-19. Some of those African hemorrhagic fevers will keep you awake at night. COVID, as bad as it is, will seem like a cake-walk by comparison. If we keep invading forests and disrupting ecosystems on a massive scale, it’s not a matter of if but when.
The question is which path we are going to choose, the path of diversity and resilience, or the reductionist monoculture path in which we just focus on the small handful of most profitable crops in the short term or the one alkaloid in a complex plant we think will be most useful to us quickly. The path of diversity and listening and learning from other cultures makes for a better world; the path our society is on now definitely doesn’t, but we can’t just take hallucinogenic substances or go to workshops and drumming circles. It’s not easy at all, but we have to externalize the teachings we receive in our inner work and make real, concrete change out there, in the wider world.
KAT: I’d like to underscore that we really have the opportunity to be in relationship with these species and to ask them to help us as a collective. But to have success in that endeavor, there are two key principles to keep in mind: reciprocity and curiosity. When we seek guidance, we also have to always keep firmly in mind that it is our obligation to give something back—to the plants, to those who share their wisdom with us, and to all of life. And we have to keep being open to seeing more deeply, to keep exploring new ways of seeing the world and of being in the world in order to inform our work in the world. Every single one of us now has the job of healing the world, and these states of mind and these species, these plant and fungal persons, can offer help, but we have to earn that help. Thank you for your attention.
The Chacruna Institute for Psychedelic Plant Medicines’ mission is to provide public education and cultural understanding about psychedelic plant medicines and promote a bridge between the ceremonial use of sacred plants and psychedelic science. Bioneers’ J.P. Harpignies talked to Josh Meadow, Chief Operating Officer of the Chacruna Institute, about the upcoming event.
J.P. HARPIGNIES: Josh, what is the Chacruna Institute hoping to accomplish with your upcoming virtual conference and what do you view as the event’s unique importance?
JOSH MEADOW: This conference is a call to action to bring awareness to issues that are largely absent in much of the mainstream psychedelic discourse. As plant medicines and psychedelic medicine go global, many Indigenous communities and traditions throughout the Americas continue to be marginalized and excluded from the benefits. We believe it is vital that the psychedelic community help to support these groups and the traditional spiritual and ecological knowledge that they preserve. This conference is uniquely important in this regard because it spotlights the importance of Indigenous reciprocity in a way that has not been done before in the psychedelic community. Additionally, in parallel with the conference, Chacruna is going to be launching our new Indigenous Reciprocity Initiative of the Americas, a comprehensive online resource that will allow people to connect with and donate to grassroots Indigenous nonprofits and community initiatives at the local level.
J.P.: Will the conference focus on new developments in the psychedelic domain (such as the questions raised by the influx of venture capital into the emerging business of medical psychedelics, new battles over religious freedom, and the need to diversify the psychedelic community and address racial and gender-related inequities within it, etc.) and what are you hoping to contribute to discussions surrounding these issues during the event?
JOSH: Absolutely. These types of questions are in fact the primary focus of most of our conferences. We have now organized 7 different conferences, each with a unique subject matter, but united by the fact that each has focused on some of the most cutting-edge social and cultural issues in the space, and we have helped push certain topics that were previously unnoticed into the mainstream (of the psychedelic world) discourse. In 2018, our conference Cultural and Political Perspectives on Psychedelic Science featured the first major panel on the commodification of psychedelics, and last year’s Psychedelic Liberty Summit was directly focused on many of these questions. Our conferences were also some of the first to focus on how psychedelics intersect with issues of race, gender and sexuality. Sacred Plants in the Americas II continues this trend, with a variety of topics related to new developments in the domain. In addition to the panels and talks about cultural reciprocity, we are highlighting a variety of unique topics, from plant medicine conservation to healing racial trauma with psychedelics, to psychedelics and sports, to “con-spirituality” (i.e. the disturbing recent trend of some elements of the “New Age” community intersecting with far-right conspiracy thinking), and much more!
J.P.: What do you think makes the Chacruna Institute unique as an institution in this domain, and how do you envision your role in the larger ecosystem of psychedelic-oriented organizations?
JOSH: Chacruna is, in our opinion, a unique organization in the psychedelic ecosystem for several reasons: 1. Our deep commitment to diversity, equity and access: While many organizations now strive for these values, it has been a central part of our mission from day-one to pioneer initiatives supporting and providing a platform for diverse voices, including women, queer people, people of color, Indigenous people and the Global South. We are proud to have a diverse global team, led by a queer couple and with many BIPOC and LGBTQI members. 2. Our academic legitimacy and standards of excellence: Our core team is made up of accomplished Ph.D.s, MDs, PsyDs, social scientists, clinicians and practitioners, and our work is backed by diligent research and rigorous academic standards. We then seek to present this academic information in a way that is highly accessible and easy for a mainstream audience to engage with, without “dumbing it down.” 3. Our influence and impact on the cultural conversation: We have tended to be ahead of the curve, helping start public conversations on many of the social and cultural issues that have since become part of the psychedelic discourse. We have also helped to launch the careers of many new up-and-coming voices in the space.
Ultimately, we see our primary role in the space as bridgebuilders between different domains. This takes many forms, such as bridging the gap between psychedelic culture and psychedelic science, between marginalized and mainstream voices, between big corporate players and small grassroots communities, and between academia and the general public. With our years of experience, diverse global team and many connections to a wide range of groups in the psychedelic community, we are uniquely positioned to promote dialogue and cross-collaboration in the psychedelic space.
Women are leading the struggle for climate justice and ushering in a new approach to creating a sustainable future for our planet. Restoring balance in climate leadership produces equity that fundamentally transforms our relationship with culture, identity, humanity, and the Earth. Creating a livable world without pollution and systemic violence depends on our ability not only to dismantle but to nurture and restore relations with ourselves and each other.
This week, we share wisdom from brilliant women leaders as they discuss their visions for a more equitable climate movement.
This article contains the content from the Bioneers Pulse newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter straight to your inbox!
The Power of Matriarchy: Intergenerational Indigenous Women’s Leadership
In these especially challenging times, the coming together of Indigenous women in leadership is more critical than ever for all people and all cultures to re-evaluate their responsibilities to respect and protect the sacredness of Mother Earth. In this video conversation, hear four inspiring Indigenous women discuss how matriarchy, the sacred feminine, and Indigenous ways play an important part in their leadership.
Women’s leadership fundamentally transforms our relationship with the world to produce equity in justice movements. As feminine resurgence continues to shape the struggle for change, we must move with it to sustain a committed vision of a future for all. In this panel discussion hosted by Sahana Dharmapuri, we hear from leaders Vanessa Daniel, Tia Oros Peters, and Jensine Larsen as they share their visions and challenge us to reckon with the violence of years of imbalanced decision-making.
Ayana Elizabeth Johnson – The Feminist Climate Renaissance: Truth, Courage, and Solutions for the Climate Crisis
A Feminist Climate Renaissance is emerging in the movement for climate justice as women––specifically women of color––are transforming how we approach creating a life-giving future for all. In this keynote address, Ayana Elizabeth Johnson talks about the emerging Feminist Climate Renaissance and draws on wisdom from a brand new anthology by women climate leaders.
Everywoman’s Leadership emboldens and strengthens the leadership effectiveness of women who are diverse in every way and who are reinventing organizations, institutions, and systems while protecting and defending the web of life. Inspiring, strengthening, and connecting women’s leadership is essential to facilitating the systemic transformation needed to shift our societies.
Nature, Culture and the Sacred: Integration and Congruence through Practical Magic
In this excerpt from her new book, Nature, Culture and the Sacred, Bioneers co-founder Nina Simons shares moving stories of women around the world joining together to reconnect people, nature, and the land.
Medicine of the Feminine | In this panel from the Global Sisterhood Medicine of the Feminine Retreat, Bioneers co-founder, Nina Simons, shares the wisdom she gained from her experience as a woman.
Women are innovating our leadership approach by challenging people to think beyond representation and access to power. Women leadership fundamentally transforms our relationship with the world to produce equity in justice movements. Philanthropy must prioritize funding women-led movements to sustain this transformational shift in community building. As feminine resurgence continues to shape the struggle for change, we must move with it to sustain a committed vision of a life-giving future for all.
In this conversation hosted by Sahana Dharmapuri, we hear from leaders Vanessa Daniel, Tia Oros Peters, and Jensine Larsen as they share their visions and challenge us to reckon with the violence of years of imbalanced decision-making.
This is an edited transcript of a panel discussion from the Bioneers 2020 Conference.
SAHANA: My question to all of you is what do you find affirming in your work? Where do you find hope in the midst of this challenging environment?
VANESSA: There is brilliant leadership in Georgia working for over a decade to build the possibility of the voter turnout around the Senate runoff. Groups like New Virginia Majority led a 10-year campaign to re-enfranchise 150,000 people with felony convictions in that state and then registered 20,000 of them to vote back in 2016. After having their voting rights restored, they turned out at a 79% rate to the ballot box during that election. They created the margin of victory necessary to bring in more progressive leadership in the governor’s office. The state has now flipped, and now we see many progressive pieces of legislation moving through Virginia. That ongoing work is why grassroots relationship-building is so critical.
We are in a moment in history where we can turn toward what we have only previously been able to conceive of as impossible. Before COVID, we couldn’t have imagined creating the access kids have to computers they have now. Many people did not think it was possible to defund the police; however, a significant number of school districts have gotten rid of cops in schools following many uprisings. Philanthropy and movements have focused their work inside the beltway rather than collaborating with communities. Transforming our approach to work from the ground up is necessary and critical in creating a new future.
TIA: I agree with Vanessa. We’re not saying that we must forgo men because we are in a time of women; instead, we must restore balance to produce equity in our work. Equity does not simply come when we gather people with different skin colors into the same room. Equity is a balance that comes when we fundamentally transform our relationship with culture, identity, humanity, and the planet. We must dismantle the systems built to devour, colonize, destroy, enslave and hold people captive while stealing our right to things like healthcare. We can’t assume anything’s coming to save us. No policy or law will save us or fundamentally transform our relationship with the world. It is our responsibility to create the world we envision. The call now is to trust Indigenous leaders and women who built those grassroots movements that philanthropy must prioritize.
JENSINE: Something that brings me hope is seeing how feminist movements create spaces that allow people to breathe. They develop these self-sustaining spaces through intersectionalism which makes them able to celebrate everyone’s strength. These spaces create people who––not only can challenge existing systems of oppression––but envision a better future.
Technology propels social justice movements. Today, some of the most significant mass political movements began with little resources, imagination, and fire, so I shiver thinking about an investment in sustaining these movements and fortifying their online connectivity.
SAHANA: That’s terrific. What’s fascinating about what you’re all saying is that the examples you’re giving are very concrete. They’re very tangible, and they are very relatable to the everyday person. I’m hearing and valuing what you all are saying about the role women can play when people listen to us as leaders and when women take action in a valued society and move things forward.
I think one of the things that would be interesting to hear is, if you could wave a magic wand over our world now, what would you like to see be different?
TIA: Change is not some utopian dream we arrive at perfectly without struggle. No magic exists that will suddenly change the violence that ravages our planet and communities. We can dream about that world and, in that dreaming, begin to make it so.
With the new administration, people believe that the struggle is over and Black and Indigenous people no longer need to fight for justice. Some people think that a few women in the cabinet signal an end to the struggle. We cannot lie to each other because there is still a long way to go. We must stay rooted in mindfulness, ceremony, and integrity to sustain a determined commitment to change.
VANESSA: As my great colleague and friend Maurice Mitchell of the Working Families Party and the movement for Black lives says so beautifully: “Biden is a doorway, not a destination.” Progressives made the mistake of thinking representation, and access to power meant we could take our foot off the gas when Obama was elected. We have no more time to continue to make this same mistake, and philanthropy needs to show up to ensure we have the resources to move forward. Of the $75 billion in philanthropy, only .06% go to women-of-color-led work. Progressive organizing led by People of Color must be the recipient of the majority of philanthropic giving. The single most significant force that prevents this from happening is white supremacy, with its tenacious unwillingness to share power and resources. Relinquishing systemic dominance and control is not the same thing as being marginalized.
Let’s be clear about something: white women voted in a more significant majority for Trump after seeing what he was capable of for four years than they did the first time around. Although many white women worked alongside communities of color, we have to be frank about how white liberal women continue to advocate for gradualism around dismantling white supremacy. It would be best if white people were to risk the privileges afforded to them to benefit communities of color and actively dismantle the system that benefits them. We are building a multi-racial movement, and everyone has a place in it.
JENSINE: One of the things I would like to see is for grassroots movements to be supercharged with resources and technology. I want to see a digital mobilization fund, a global women’s mobilization fund, and a digital mobilization fund owned and governed by a participatory parliament representing the world’s women.
A quote I like from Brene Brown goes, “This is not an issue of giving voice to the voiceless. It’s about forcing ears for the earless.” I want people who hold power to listen and relinquish their control and get behind women of color. The Indigenous disability movements at the global level are the most extraordinary yet unheard movements that we must regard with significant consideration. World Pulse is building an alliance with sister organizations and networks across the world to create a resource for these movements to be heard to accelerate the building of bridges.
SAHANA: I have one last question for everyone. Some scholars believe that gender bias is the deepest bias in the human psyche. What in your work informs how we might respond to that? How do we change it?
VANESSA: It’s essential to look at it all together, and that’s why I like the brilliance of black feminists like Kimberly Crenshaw. She brought us the intersectionality framework that allows us to look at race, class, gender within the context of capitalism, colonialism.
The challenge is if gender is the primary organizing force, particularly in the United States, why is it that so many white women voted for a misogynist? We have to look at how gender intersects with white supremacy in this country, which has a powerful primary function.
Many poor white women in this country are losing their homes because they voted against universal healthcare and can’t pay their medical bills because they didn’t want people of color to get a handout. White supremacy trumps gender in significant ways because that is how it operates. We can’t get to liberation by just solving for gender. We have to put white supremacy at the center of that equation and destroy that as well.
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Jensine Larsen is an award-winning digital impact entrepreneur, international journalist, and expert on using technology to strengthen global women’s power. She is the founder of World Pulse, an independent, women-powered global social network connecting tens of thousands of women from 190 countries and bringing them a greater global voice.
Vanessa Daniel is the Founder and Executive Director of Groundswell Fund, the largest funder of the U.S. reproductive justice movement, and Groundswell Action Fund, the largest U.S. institution helping fund women of color-led 501c4 organizations. Groundswell, among other achievements, is the country’s only fund dedicated to supporting access to midwifery and doula care for women of color, low-income women, and transgender people.
Tia Oros Peters (Shiwi) is CEO of the Seventh Generation Fund for Indigenous Peoples, which supports Native Peoples’ community-generated strategies for cultural revitalization, movement building, self-determination, and Re-Indigenization.
Sahana Dharmapuri is the Director of Our Secure Future, a One Earth Future Foundation program, and was previously an independent advisor on gender, peace, and security issues to many major international organizations, including USAID and NATO, The Swedish Armed Forces, and the International Peace Institute.
Bioneers is thrilled to see Congresswoman Deb Haaland (Laguna) appointed as the first Native American Secretary of the Interior. We met with Deb Halaand in 2019 to share our Rights of Nature in Indian Country initiative that she pledged support and interest. As the Secretary of the Interior, Congresswoman Halaand’s responsibilities will involve the conservation and management of 500 million acres of federal lands, most of which are adjacent to tribal reservations, some of which we are collaborating in our Rights of Nature initiative. This potential support from the Secretary of the Interior, who deeply understands issues in Indian Country, is an absolute game-changer for protecting wild spaces for all Americans.
Deb Haaland is a member of the Pueblo of Laguna in New Mexico. In 2019, her appointment as the U.S. Representative from New Mexico’s 1st congressional district was celebrated across Indian Country. We cheered collectively for her and Rep. Sharice Davids (Ho Chunk) from Kansas, as they had finally shattered the glass ceiling for Native people — especially Native women — to see themselves represented for the first time in the history of the U.S. government. To see a Native woman dressed in traditional regalia while taking the oath of office was a moment that took our breath away.
It’s a lesser known and shameful fact that, in 1924, Native Americans were the last minority group to be granted U.S. citizenship as a group. Let that sink in. It was less than 100 years ago that our nation’s First Peoples were the last of the minorities to become legally recognized as citizens of this land.
And there’s more to know. When Deb Haaland was born in 1960, Native Americans still did not have the right to vote in New Mexico, despite being granted full U.S. citizenship by the federal government in 1924. They got the right to vote in New Mexico in 1962, making the Southwestern state the last in the nation to extend it.
Her confirmation as a Cabinet Secretary on the heels of her appointment to US Congress is no less than extraordinary for our community. She is the first-ever congressperson openly committed to working on the epidemic of missing and murdered indigenous women. Haaland would like Congress to hold additional oversight hearings on the issue and ensure tribal justice systems have the resources they need to conduct proper investigations. Also at the top of her list is combating climate change, including the big oil and energy industries, which continues to threaten fragile tribal lands and ecosystems. As Interior Secretary, she will oversee the conservation and management of 500 million acres of federal lands, most of which are adjacent to tribal reservations, including tribes we are collaborating with in our Rights of Nature initiative. The Department of the Interior includes supervision of the National Park Service, the Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Land Management and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, among other responsibilities. Given the initial goals of resource extraction and exploitation that created many of these agencies there are certainly deep structural and bureaucratic hurdles that Secretary Haaland will face, but the reality of having a progressive, caring and earth-supporting Indigenous woman running the show is certainly a reason for hope.
During a moment in time where so much is happening so quickly, it is important to recognize and celebrate major achievements. There are enormous hills still to climb as we work to heal and restore landscapes — and the confirmation of the first ever Indigenous Secretary of the Interior is a significant step in the right direction. Bioneers extends our deepest congratulations to Secretary Haaland and look forward to her leadership and support as we work alongside so many other incredible Native organizations and movement activists towards repairing and renewing our collective relationship with the earth.
This article contains the content from the 3/11/2021 Bioneers Pulse newsletter. Sign up here to get the newsletter straight to your inbox!
It has been a full year since the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic due to the spread of COVID-19 and it has been an immensely challenging time for everyone The impacts have been staggering. As we wrote last March in the introduction to Bioneers collection of content on the pandemic, “While the virus itself is considered “novel,” its emergence, spread and the varied global response has unmasked systemic realities that are certainly less than “novel,” including issues that many in this community have been working on for decades.” Even for those who have never contracted the virus, the anxiety of struggling to make ends meet has been on the minds of thousands of people. The disproportionate impact of the pandemic that communities of color are forced to endure highlights deep structural injustices.
As much as the past 12 months have represented unprecedented hardship and loss, it has also been a time of unforeseen solidarity, care, and growth. The virus has illuminated the interconnected relationship between public health and planetary health by virtue of the virus having originated in non-human animals. Political theater aside, one thing has become clear in the year since the start of the pandemic: Our future as a species depends on the health of the planet we share.
This week, we highlight the voices of some of the people on the frontlines of struggle for human and planetary health in relation to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Public Health – Planetary Health – One Health
The current global pandemic has revealed stark structural injustices embedded deep in our society. Our approach to health has neglected the relationship between socio-economic conditions, planetary health, and public health. As a virus that was transmitted from non-human animals to humans has placed the entire world on high-alert and has disproportionately affected communities of color, it is time we reevaluate the relationship between planetary health and public health. This enlightening conversation features leading experts in the public health arena.
COVID Near the Congo: Our Conversation with a Disease Ecologist Caught Abroad
“Our approach is an attempt to work toward health for humans, animals and the environment holistically because you cannot disconnect these things.”
On her way to the Congo, Belgian disease ecologist and wildlife biologist Anne Laudisoit got stuck in Uganda during their COVID-19 shutdowns. In this interview from May 2020, she chats with Bioneers Senior Producer J.P. Harpignies about zoonotic diseases and how scientists around the world are managing outbreaks.
Planetary Health: Protecting Nature to Protect Ourselves
“These are, indeed, the best of times and the worst of times. But at the heart of the field of planetary health is recognition that the wellbeing of humanity and the degradation of the rest of the biosphere cannot remain disconnected for much longer.”
Planetary health is an emerging field that honors the interdependence of human and environmental health. The book Planetary Health: Protecting Nature to Protect Ourselves provides an overview of this approach — which considers threats to our ecosystems as threats to our own wellbeing, with an emphasis on solutions — and serves as a guide on how to respond. Here’s an excerpt from the first chapter.
The Coronavirus Pandemic and the Invisibility of Nature
As rampant urbanization increasingly severs humanity from the living world, naturalist Michael McCarthy explores the ways in which the “anthropause,” ushered in by the coronavirus, has—on an unprecedented scale—made nature visible again.
Grief, Sacred Rage, Reckoning, and Revolutionary Love | Terry Tempest Williams, Eve Ensler, Valarie Kaur & Nina Simons discuss the power of women reclaiming emotions in service to a greater reckoning with the power of personal and political transformation.
A Keynote Conversation with Chloe Maxmin | Bioneers Co-founder and CEO, Kenny Ausubel, speaks with Chloe Maxmin about her work on Green New Deal legislation, political organizing and building bridges between rural and urban communities through the power of listening and shared values.
The Coming Net-Zero Backlash | This article from GreenBiz highlights the flaws in how net-zero carbon emissions commitments assume that corporations will continue to emit greenhouse gases long into the future forcing us to rely on offsetting the effects of that pollution rather than reduce it.
Some key turning points in human history are not taught in schools, and here’s one. You could reasonably say it was with the invention of farming twelve thousand years ago that we began to separate ourselves from the natural world. Previously we had been an integral part of it: as hunter-gatherers we were wildlife, we were animals, like all the other animals around us—albeit with larger brains and language—as the cave painters of Chauvet and other prehistoric caverns so grippingly make clear. The rhythms and sounds and smells of nature were the only ones we knew; our delights were the delights of nature; our problems and our perils were the ones that nature threw up. But with farming came food surpluses, and with surpluses came settlements, and settlements became towns and then cities; and now towns and cities hold more than four billion people, where we are so far separated from the natural world that nature is not only forgotten but increasingly invisible.
The growing invisibility of nature is a topic that is little regarded by the general public, since such public concern as there is focuses—understandably—on nature’s degradation and destruction. This year we have seen the most drastic estimate yet of the damage human society is causing to the web of life across the globe: the biennial Living Planet Report, published in September by the World Wildlife Fund and the Zoological Society of London, estimated that between 1970 and 2016, global populations of mammals, birds, fish, amphibians, and reptiles plunged on average by 68 percent. It is scarcely to be believed: in less than a human lifetime, more than two-thirds of the vertebrate wildlife of the world has been wiped out. (The condition of invertebrates is probably even worse, but we do not have the same sort of comprehensive figures.)
This is such a monstrous situation, so demanding of our attention, it is no surprise that outside the specialized area of ecological writing, there is little interest in the seemingly lesser question of nature disappearing from view, for much of humanity; and yet it is happening, and it matters just as much. The natural world is not only being destroyed but is also becoming lost to us—we who were formed by it over immensely long periods of time and still carry from it, within us, great and vital inheritances. For although we have been farmers, and subsequently citizens, for about five hundred generations, we were hunter-gatherers for perhaps fifty thousand generations or more, and in recent years we have begun to understand that the earlier period—when we lived as one with nature—is more important for us and for our psyches, even now, than the more recent one.
This understanding has been one of the great advances in human knowledge. Many of the insights about it have come from genetics, from evolutionary biology and the late twentieth-century flowering of neo-Darwinism. In particular they have come from the relatively new discipline of evolutionary psychology, which examines the ways in which the human mind adapted itself to the issues that early members of the species Homo sapiens faced in their daily lives as, over thousands of generations, they evolved inherent traits and instinctive reactions, which are with us still.
You may well be familiar with these developments, but if you’re not, let me give an example. Small children like to hide. If you have children, or if you have observed children closely, you are aware that this is so. If you asked me why, I would say I do not know—yet it might be the case that, tens of thousands of years ago, when predators or enemies attacked early groups of humans, the small children who didn’t hide didn’t survive to pass on their genes to future generations. They were killed—eaten, whatever—and the only genes that were passed on were from children who hid; and so the hiding gene became universal, and now all little kids possess it.
I do not actually know this. But it seems to me a fairly plausible explanation for such an inherited instinct. We possess many of these deep feelings, which go back to our time in the Pleistocene, the pre-agricultural epoch of the ice ages—these sometimes-curious likes, dislikes, and tendencies, ranging from our fondness for sweet foods to our fear of snakes and spiders; from our acute sensitivity to falseness in others to our love of panoramic views. They helped us survive, remain within us, and are known as “human universals.” Taken together, they indicate that the psychological legacy from our hunter-gatherer forebears—from the hundreds of thousands of years when we lived as an integral part of nature and were not separate from it—is formidable, even today. But another development has shown that it is more than formidable: it is the key to who we are.
This is the establishment of the connection between nature and human well-being, physical and mental; I mean the establishment of it as empirically real, even in an era that demands scientific evidence. It, too, is recent. The idea of the consoling power of nature is of course very old, and the regenerative benefits to us of exposure to the natural world had long been supposed, though often in a sort of obvious, generalized, slightly patronizing way: of course a walk in the park will do you good, like a nice cup of tea. It was not until 1984 that we began to open our eyes to the true dynamic character of the link between nature and our psyches, with the publication of Roger Ulrich’s groundbreaking paper in the journal Science, “View Through a Window May Influence Recovery from Surgery.”
Ulrich was an architect specializing in hospital design, and while working at a hospital in Pennsylvania, he discovered something uncanny: over a period of nine years, patients who underwent gallbladder surgery made substantially quicker and better recoveries if they had a natural view from their beds. Some of the windows of the hospital wing looked out onto a group of trees and some onto a brick wall, and those patients lucky enough to have the tree view, Ulrich found, recovered faster, spent less time in hospital, required fewer painkillers, had better evaluations from nurses, and experienced fewer postoperative complications than those who had only the wall to look at. The data were indisputable: they showed that contact with nature, even if only visual, clearly had a measurable effect on people’s well-being.
Ulrich’s remarkable finding sparked an explosion of research into the human-nature connection, and there is now a vast literature illustrating the effects of exposure to the natural world on our physical and, especially, our mental health, which is increasingly becoming part of clinical practice. Nature, it has become clear, is the biggest reliever of stress because the natural world is where we originated, and for our psyches, it remains our home. William Wordsworth may have understood that instinctively, but we now know it explicitly, and our recent understanding of it is a significant historical moment. So it is an awful irony of history that just when we are at last starting to unlock the deep reasons why the natural world matters to us so very much, we are losing sight of it; it is becoming invisible, in every country.
Two great forces are driving this. The first is urbanization, which is rapidly increasing all around the globe. According to the demographers of the United Nations, at some unknown point between July 2006 and July 2007, a momentous milestone was passed: the percentage of the world’s population living in towns and cities exceeded 50 percent for the first time. The latest UN figure, for 2018, is 55 percent, representing 4.2 billion people; it is expected to increase to 68 percent by 2050. So from now on, most people on the planet—indeed, two-thirds of them in thirty years’ time, six billion out of an anticipated nine billion souls—will live urban rather than rural lives.
It may seem a truism to say so, but in terms of contact with nature, to live an urban life in the twenty-first century is something very different from life in towns and cities in earlier ages, when, as Jeremy Mynott points out in his fascinating book Birds in the Ancient World, “Nightingales could be heard singing in the suburbs of Athens and Rome; there were cuckoos, wrynecks, and hoopoes within city limits.” Despite the famous song, there are no nightingales singing in London’s Berkeley Square; and New York’s Central Park, a true haven for bird watchers, is a sort of wonderful exception that proves the rule about cities: in them, nature can be very hard to find. An urban life, especially if you are poor and your town or city is big, means that you are much less likely to have access to the rhythms of the growth cycle; to quiet; to the visibility of the stars; to clean air; to nonindustrialized rivers and natural forests; and to wildlife—to birds and wild mammals, to insects and wild flowers. Instead, you must march to other rhythms, such as the inconvenient working shift, and the snatched lunch break. Neon lighting, taking garishness to new heights, in many cities replaces the stars; smog replaces clean air; and traffic replaces biodiversity, which becomes a folk memory of wild plants and creatures freely existing, seen merely in visual representations. Perhaps the biggest loss of all in living an urban life is the intimate feel for the natural calendar, a feel that was one of the key attributes of our prehistoric ancestors and that has persisted among people living in the countryside. Not entirely lost, perhaps: even in a world of high-rise blocks you know it is warmer and sunnier in summer than in winter—but something subtler has gone. I mean the feel for the switches and the transformations, for the tiny signs, easily stifled by traffic noise and electronic music or submerged by pollution, that changes are underway with the Earth, above all in the great rebirth of spring—signs that have produced intense pleasure, excitement, and indeed reverence in us since we began to be human, and that even today can be among the greatest generators of happiness and of hope.
That’s what gets lost with urbanization. Nearly all of the expected increase in it between now and 2050—90 percent—is expected to take place in Africa and Asia, much of it in their “megacities,” the mushrooming metropolises of ten, twenty, thirty, going on forty million people that will be one of the most notable facets of human geography in the twenty-first century. By 2030 the world is expected to have forty-three megacities, alongside hundreds of “smaller” cities that will unstoppably expand to a million-plus, three, five, seven million people and more. However, in the developed countries of the West, we are largely there already. Our nations are predominantly urbanized, increasingly so since the end of World War II, with the United Kingdom and the United States now having a remarkably similar urban-rural split, with about 82–83 percent of the population in towns and cities and 17–18 percent in the countryside. What is driving the even further distancing of nature for those of us who have left behind the fields and woods is the second great force: the influence of the electronic screen.
It began in the 1950s with the increasing popularity of television, but then, starting in the 1980s with the advent of the personal computer and the computer game, our lives became increasingly dominated by the screen; and this process was given an enormous boost with the arrival of the internet in the 1990s. The great turning away from nature that the screen has helped bring about has been best illustrated with children, especially by the author Richard Louv in his landmark book Last Child in the Woods. Louv documented vividly—and much subsequent research has confirmed—how young people were leaving the world of outside, no longer playing in the fields and woods and parks where their parents played; for their leisure time, they were retreating to the world of the screens, back inside the house. Even in the ’80s it was starting to happen: Louv quotes a boy from San Diego, who said, “I like to play indoors better ‘cause that’s where all the electrical outlets are.” By the turn of the century, the results of children’s consequent alienation from the natural world, Louv said, included diminished use of the senses, attention difficulties, and higher rates of physical and emotional illnesses; and he gave the syndrome an unforgettable name, which really is applicable to us all: “nature-deficit disorder.” But Louv published his book in 2005, when Facebook was in its infancy, and a full two years before Steve Jobs launched the iPhone and, with it, the full-blooded addiction to social media and electronic devices that has become the defining feature of our age. By 2019, 96 percent of Americans owned a cell phone of some sort, and more than 80 percent owned a smartphone, as did nearly 75 percent of the population of the top ten developed countries. That’s where people look now—at their screens. That’s where they direct their gaze. How many look at the natural world? Nature’s invisibility is intensifying far beyond what Louv documented among children fifteen years ago.
In nature, 2020 was not a lost year. Just the opposite.
It is in this context that the coronavirus pandemic of 2020, this great world-historical event, assumes a significance other than that of destroyer of countless lives and demolisher of national economies; for across the globe, directly or indirectly, it has frequently made the natural world visible again, and led people to look upon it, and reflect. It is hard, and to some it may well seem inappropriate, to draw positive conclusions from such a tragic set of circumstances, which have produced such heartache for countless families in country after country, with more than a million dead across the world. Yet with the environment, it is simply the case that the impact of COVID-19 has in many ways, albeit bizarrely and incongruously, been constructive.
The main reason, of course, is the “anthropause,” as it has quickly become known: the great hiatus in human activity resulting from the pandemic-inspired lockdowns in many nations in the first half of the year, which are thought to have involved nearly four billion people in total. In environmental terms, the 2020 anthropause is a colossal event, one of the biggest and most significant ever to have happened to the natural world, certainly since human society began despoiling it on a large scale after World War II. It is a planet-sized breathing space. We have seen something similar before in lesser terms, for example, with the complete withdrawal of human activity from a wide exclusion zone around the damaged nuclear power plant in Chernobyl in Ukraine, leading to the area being reoccupied by wildlife. But the COVID-19 anthropause involves the entire globe; it involves large parts of the gargantuan nature-destroying human enterprise, worth more than $80 trillion, slowing down and coming, if only temporarily, to a halt. Before it happened, it was unthinkable that it might. Now that it has, we look upon it openmouthed. We can get a sense of the gigantic scale of this event from a study released in October on the resultant fall in global emissions of carbon dioxide: in the first six months of this year, the total was an 8.8 percent decrease from the same period in 2019, a drop of more than 1.5 billion tonnes of CO2. Would that we could combat climate change by doing that on an annual basis! The study proclaims, “The magnitude of this decrease is larger than during previous economic downturns of World War II.” In April, at the height of the lockdowns, the fall was 16.9 percent.
The effects on the natural world have, in some cases, been spectacular, and nowhere more so than in the city of Jalandhar in India, whose inhabitants awoke one morning in April to find that their northern horizon had been transformed into something white and shimmering and ghostly—almost a vision, but nonetheless real. It was the snowcapped Himalayas, more than a hundred miles away.
Such has been India’s load of air pollution—from transport, energy generation, and industry—that the more than 850,000 inhabitants of this city in the Punjab had not seen the distant peaks for more than thirty years, yet two weeks after the Indian coronavirus lockdown began, the air pollution had plunged so much that they were suddenly discernible, in all their shining majesty. The citizens of Jalandhar tweeted their astonishment. They tweeted their delight. Lest others elsewhere should doubt what they were gazing at, they tweeted the pictures. And if you look at them, you see the natural world, in the most striking way possible, made visible once more.
There have been many other ways in which nature came to people’s notice once again during the anthropause—largely cases of the natural world prospering, of natural processes resuming, when pressure from the mammoth human enterprise was lessened. Birdsong, drowned out by the noise of modern life, became audible again in many places in many countries. In Venice the canals, no longer churned up by tourist boats, were clear enough to see fish again. Wild boar and deer came back into car-free European cities; in Llandudno in North Wales, wild goats roamed the streets. Jackals appeared in broad daylight in the urban parks of Tel Aviv; pumas were sighted in the center of Chile’s capital, Santiago; and baby sea turtles made it safely to the water on Brazilian beaches empty of sunbathers, joggers, and dogs. Some of these instances were in the nature of temporary novelties, but others were significant and suggested possibilities for the future: to give an example from my own experience, the historic landscape of Richmond Park in outer London was reintegrated and rewilded by the absence of the motor-vehicle traffic that had previously cut it into pieces, and no one who saw it that April, May, and June will ever forget it.
Yet perhaps the most significant way of all in which nature has come back to us during the pandemic is that people have turned to it themselves. This was very noticeable in Britain, where, in a remarkable conjunction, the first lockdown coincided with the loveliest spring that has ever been recorded in the UK. The British spring of 2020 had more hours of sunshine, by a very substantial margin, than any previous recorded spring; indeed, it was sunnier than any previously recorded British summer except for three. It meant that, just as working life in the human world was hitting the buffers, life in the natural world was flourishing as never before, and this almost certainly intensified the renewed interest in nature from people seeking lockdown diversions. Their numbers, it is clear, were substantial.
Let us take just one astonishing figure: the increase in page views for the webcams run by the forty-six Wildlife Trusts that look after nature on a county-by-county basis across the UK. Many people enjoy watching wildlife via webcams, which often show surprising and intimate moments at the nest or in the burrow. In the period from March 23 to May 31, 2019, there were 20,407 page views of the trusts’ webcams; but in the period from March 23 to May 31, 2020, the period of the first British lockdown, there were 433,632 views, an increase of 2,024 percent.
Why such numbers? Because in the coronavirus spring, people turned to the natural world for solace at a time of quite unprecedented stress. Let us remember the colossal size of the event. The British environmentalist and political analyst Tom Burke says: “The COVID pandemic is the first time all eight billion people on the planet have had the same thing happen to them at the same time.” There have been three shocks from it, he says: the health shock, which we will hopefully get over soon; the economic shock, which will take much longer; but also the psychological shock, which will be lasting. With whole populations confined to home, stress was one of the pandemic’s principal effects, the level of which to some extent depended on your circumstances. It was greater if you were poor than if you were rich: it was substantially harder to self-isolate in a small apartment on the fifteenth floor than in a mansion. It was greater if you were self-isolating with people who were difficult, such as demanding children or abusive partners; indeed, with the latter, it could be dangerous or even fatal. It was greater if you were on your own, without support networks. But for millions of people around the world, there was some level of strain and anxiety brought about by the abrupt ending of normal social intercourse, and the very real fear of infection.
Those who turned to nature for consolation found nature up to the task. I was one of them. In the spring lockdown, I walked out every day during my permitted period of exercise, as many people did, seeking the nearest greenery to my home in the London suburbs; in my case, it was the towpath of the River Thames and Richmond Park, the largest of the royal parks, as well as the leafy suburban streets themselves and our small but well-loved garden. The springtime itself was magnificent, with every week bringing wondrous transformations in the natural world, in its trees and wild flowers, in its butterflies and its birdlife; but for it all to be happening against a backdrop of such widespread illness, heartache, and death seemed so tragically incongruous that I thought it required memorializing—it was a unique event. When I found that two friends of mine—Jeremy Mynott and Peter Marren, both accomplished naturalists who lived in the countryside—were quite by chance noting down the spring in detail themselves, we decided to work together and turn our recording of it into a book, which became The Consolation of Nature: Spring in the Time of Coronavirus.
In writing it with them, I did indeed feel that the coronavirus spring was unique, but I also felt that it was not just paradoxical in its character but important, somehow. It seemed to matter greatly for our relations with the environment, in some way even beyond its cherished ability to console, which at first I couldn’t quite put my finger on. But gradually I began to see it, and it was so simple, so obvious, that you were likely to miss it. It was the fact that it was there. The natural world was available to us, even at such a traumatic time. It had not been thrown off course, it had not been knocked out by the pandemic, by this enormous event that was knocking out everything else, which was making 2020 a lost year in human affairs. At this time of chaos in the world of people, nature was a constant, as it has always been. COVID-19 had wrecked, if only temporarily, so many human artifacts; it had stopped business, trade, travel, sports, education, entertainment, and social gatherings of all kinds—but it hadn’t stopped the spring. In nature, 2020 was not a lost year. Just the opposite.
If you saw it like this, you suddenly saw once again the unique worth of the natural world, which produced us and shaped us, which holds our origins, and which remains the true home of our psyches, as Roger Ulrich began to discover—and which, even today, when so many have turned their backs on it, continues to give us everything, from the air we breathe to the water we drink and the food we eat. You saw anew its fantastic power and resilience. You saw the wonder of it. And let me say, you also saw the need for its benefits to be available to everyone, and for the issue of equitable access to nature to rise up the political agenda. Because if we examine the consolation of nature in the coronavirus pandemic, it is only right that we should ask, Who could obtain it? Not everyone, though it was available for more people than implied by the 83–17 percent urban-rural split in Britain: gardens, for example, may have a big influence on people’s lives, and it is estimated that 87 percent of British households have access to a garden. But to state the obvious once more, nature is much harder to find in cities, and the issue of urban green space needs to take on a much greater relevance in the postpandemic era as we try to rebuild our shattered economies in an environmentally sound way—if legislators can deliver that. Legislators everywhere could start by following the example of the Green Party member of the British Parliament, Caroline Lucas, who suggested last year that no new housing development should be sanctioned more than one kilometer from a public park.
I am writing this in November, in the middle of the second British lockdown (hopefully the last). I am still seeking out the natural world each day from my suburban-London home and am now enjoying the autumn colors and the winter bird populations, just as Americans can do with different species from snowy owls to sandhill cranes; and in December, pandemic or no pandemic, the winter solstice comes to us all, which I think of as an immensely happy day, because then the light begins to come back, and nothing can stop it. This sense of nature as an unstoppable force has been strongly impressed on me (and doubtless on many others) by the great world-historical event of the coronavirus, tragic paradox though that may be; nature, which has been lost to sight so widely, has suddenly been made visible once again by the pandemic, by the extraordinary circumstance of the anthropause, and most of all, by people’s own need to seek out nature as a relief from unprecedented stress. Those who have sought it have not been disappointed in the natural world, in its ability to console us, repair us, and recharge us; most of all, in its ability simply to be there, often unrecognized and unacknowledged, but giving life to every one of us, even as human artifacts are crumbling all around.
Writer
Michael McCarthy
Michael McCarthy is a journalist, naturalist, and the author of The Moth Snowstorm: Nature and Joy and The Consolation of Nature: Spring in the Time of Coronavirus, chosen by The Guardian as one of the best nature books of 2020. He is the recipient of the RSPB Medal from the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and the Silver Medal from the Zoological Society of London. He has previously served as the environment editor of The Independent and environment correspondent of The Times.
Artist
Sophia Baraschi-Ehrlich
Sophia Baraschi-Ehrlich is a painter, illustrator, animator, and graphic designer based in upstate New York. She holds a BA in studio art from Skidmore College and works as the assistant art director for Emergence Magazine.
Reprinted with permission of GreenBiz Group. This originally appeared in GreenBuzz, a free weekly newsletter. Subscribe here.
By: Joel Makower, Chairman and Executive Editor of GreenBiz
What, exactly, is “zero”? If that sounds like a Zen koan, it’s not. It’s a foundational question behind what appears to be a coming onslaught by environmental advocacy groups to name and shame net-zero greenwashers. For the past two years, and especially the past 12 months, hundreds of companies and governments around the world have made net-zero carbon emissions their sustainability North Star. It’s a positive step, to be sure: an ambitious, aspirational, even audacious goal, usually made at the highest organizational level, to drastically reduce or eliminate its contribution to the climate crisis. These net-zero commitments align with the goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement as well as a 2018 finding by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change: In order to limit global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, the world must halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and achieve net-zero emissions by mid-century. The urgency ratcheted up last week with a report from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change stating that even with increased efforts by some countries, the combined impact falls far short of what is needed to reach the 1.5 degree goal. The UN called it “a red alert for our planet.”
At least, that’s the intention. The reality is far more complex — and sometimes far less impressive. And, based on recent reports and my conversations with environmental advocacy groups, efforts to call out companies on their subpar net-zero commitments are just now ramping up. Consider a new report from Friends of the Earth International, which calls net-zero “a smokescreen, a conveniently invented concept that is both dangerous and problematic because of how effectively it hides inaction.”
Fake zero?
One problem, the authors suggest, is that many net-zero commitments assume that a company will continue to emit greenhouse gases long into the future, relying largely on offsets to negate its climate impacts.
“Fake zero strategies rely on offsets, rather than real emission reductions,” say the authors. “Real zero strategies require emissions to really go to zero, or as close to zero as possible.”
But reducing vs. offsetting is only part of the problem.
I’ve been perusing the recent reports and, though I read them with the same journalistic skepticism that I bring to corporate and governmental documents, the advocacy groups make a lot of sense — and do so without the gauzy verbiage often used by companies. Among other things, the activists explain the concept of net-zero in a way that is clear and concise and based in science, not CSR or ESG.
A sampling from Friends of the Earth:
“The basic concept of “net zero” can be captured in an equation: greenhouse gas emissions minus removals of greenhouse gases, balancing out to zero. To reach zero, emissions over a period of time cannot be greater than the amount of CO2 that can be taken out of the atmosphere over that same period of time. “
It continues: “Whether or not we can get to zero is not all that matters in thinking about the implications of this equation,” noting that “100 minus 100” and “10 minus 10” both equal zero. Thus, “The first element in the equation is obviously more important than the second.” The fewer tons emitted, the better.
The problems with many net-zero strategies are well-known: They assume that still-unproven carbon-removal technologies will be operating cost-efficiently at scale by some future date. They can require “devastating land grabs” from Indigenous peoples and local communities, mainly in the Global South, to plant trees and enable other nature-based solutions. Because ecosystems can be cut down or lost to wildfire, drought and other things, their carbon-storage potential can be impermanent, thereby undermining a company’s offset calculations. Some commitments rely primarily on a firm’s own emissions and purchased energy — Scope 1 and 2, in carbon-speak — and not enough on their supply chains — Scope 3. And the time horizons — net-zero by 2050 is typical — may put off accountability until it’s too late to change course.
And, not least: Such strategies can shift the burden from emissions reductions to offsets, effectively giving license to companies to pollute endlessly well into the future during a time when emissions should be quickly ramping down.
Put another way, companies may be relying far too much on “net” and far too little on “zero.”
Beyond Pretty Pix
Activists don’t seem to care much for nature-based solutions, a key component of corporate net-zero strategies. “Right now, the only approaches to deliver real carbon removal are based in nature: ecosystem restoration and ecological management of working forests, croplands and grasslands,” noted Friends of the Earth. This, it says, enables companies to “continue to emit at scale, hiding their inaction behind nice-sounding ‘net zero’ pledges and beautiful photos of ‘nature-based’ offset projects. ‘Nature’ is called on to provide a ‘solution’ to their desire to continue with emissions as usual.”
It concludes: “This house of cards will go up in flames, with all of us in it.”
Help may be on the way. Last fall, the Science-Based Targets initiative proposed a framework for “science-based net-zero target setting” and last week completed a five-month public comment period. The final criteria are expected to cover such issues as boundary setting, transparency, timeframes, accountability and other factors.
But net-zero may not even be the be-all, end-all it’s thought to be. “Hitting net-zero is not enough,” wrote the international youth activist organization Worldward in a letter published in the Guardian last November. It advocated a more ambitious goal, “climate restoration,” proclaiming: “We urge activists to start including restoration in their campaigning.”
Advocacy groups, for their part, are honing their messaging. Expect to see growing campaigns to target companies whose net-zero commitments are deemed to be wanting.
I’ll give the last word here to another youth activist, Greta Thunberg (though, given that she’s now 18, we probably should all drop the “youth” moniker). As she admonished the World Economic Forum’s annual meeting last year in Davos, Switzerland:
“We’re not telling you to keep talking about reaching net-zero emissions or carbon neutrality by cheating and fiddling around with numbers. We’re not telling you to offset your emissions by just paying someone else to plant trees in places like Africa, while at the same time forests like the Amazon are being slaughtered at an infinitely higher rate…
And let’s be clear, we don’t need a low-carbon economy. We don’t need to lower emissions. Our emissions have to stop if we are to have a chance to stay below the 1.5-degree target. And until we have the technologies that at scale can put our emissions to minus, that we must forget about net zero. We need real zero.”
Will “real zero” become the next-next thing for climate leaders? If it’s up to some, that term will define what “zero” really means.
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