at least you have skin mites. Plus the thousands of mitochondria in each
of your cells. We are basically just big skin bags of ecology - before
we shit we have twice as much anaerobic bacteria in our bodies than
human cells. The stuff leaches out of my gums - through my skull.
"All the bacteria living inside you would fill a half-gallon jug; there are 10 times more bacterial cells in your body than human cells, according to Carolyn Bohach, a microbiologist at the University of Idaho (U.I.), along with other estimates from scientific studies." yeah then each cell emits 100,000 biophotons per second. And the biophotons are all coherently quantum coordinated as a holographic multi-modal laser. And those biophotons store information non-locally as quantum entanglement (the 5th dimension as a black hole-white hole). The Universe then exists inside us - beyond spacetime itself. It's pretty trippy - don't take a strong DMT-root dose with MAOI seeds - as all that serotonin 2a receptor activation causes all the biophoton coherency to manifest directly without your thalamus doing any inhibition of the biophoton signals. Then you realize that your external biophoton perceptions are just a reflection of your internal biophoton signals via the non-local quantum entanglement as the Cosmic Mother 5th dimension.
yes when you say, "our brains" - you really mean Western civilization
brains since the native Indians were taught to think of seven
generations into the future. I just did a blog post on Ladakh (little
Tibet) that is similar - the rocks were considered to have spirits
inside them - so certain rocks were not moved since they were sacred.
But now with Westernization education this is all being lost.
https://thewire.in/environment/ladakhs-ut-status-should-ensure-its-uniqueness-is-not-stolen-by-development
So there is a great documentary called "Ancient Futures" on Ladakh -
by Helena Norberg-Hodge. It's on youtube if you want to watch it - I can
dig it out if you can't find it. So it used to be that one male in
every family was trained as a monk and the whole culture is focused on
meditation. But now instead the males are trained to be like Rambo and
Baywatch. So Western civilization is based on dopamine-cortisol
addiction which is a fancy way of saying ejaculation addiction. The
celibacy training for males is based on female serotonin-oxycotin
bliss-joy-love of the right side vagus nerve connection from the
reproductive organs to the right side of the heart. So amazingly our
brains with left brain dominance are cut off from our lower body
emotions - since the left side vagus nerve does not connect to the right
side of the brain but the right side vagus nerve connects to the lower
body to the left side of the brain (via the right brain). So because our
brains are no longer holistic therefore our human culture is also no
longer holistic. Most of nature is female but ejaculation addiction by
male primates (Chimpanzee culture of rape-warfare) is based on a quick
fix addiction that has destroyed ecology. So yes really Life is based on
an asymmetric proton gradient - and it is stored up in our bodies via
the vagus nerve (via serotonin and lecithin and potassium). Even Wilhelm
Reich figured this out back in the 1930s!! He didn't know how to
"store" the orgone energy in the body via celibacy - but he realized the
source of it.
Ladakh’s Union Territory Status Should Mean Ladakh’s Values Are Not Stolen By Development
Ladakh’s villages have thrived in the belief that humans
do not form the centre of the natural world but are merely inhabitants.
The recent decision could stand to harm this view.
Padma Rigzin, The Wire
The southern boundary of the village Hemis-shukpachan is marked by a
mountain called Ri-gochey. It dominates the landscape so much that the
valley in which the village is situated looks like one of its feet. And
where the toes of the foot would be, stands a sacred grove of juniper
trees. This is the northern boundary of the village.
In Ladakhi language, juniper is known as
shukpa. Thus the name of the village, situated 80 kilometres west of Leh, is derived from this sacred grove.
The grove surrounds a small hillock, and is dotted with several
springs. The availability of water sustains a healthy local ecology. The
juniper trees stand tall in the grassland propped up by the spring
water, while shrubs and thorny bushes play supporting roles there. In
the summers, the grove is as green as any picturesque image of Kashmir
will be. In the winters, the grassland is covered in an ice sheet
reminding one of
beyond-the-wall scenes of Game of Thrones. This is the physical aspect of the grove.
But there is more to this material reality. For the grove is surrounded and inhabited by transcendental forces known locally as
lha and
lu. As such the northern most juniper tree, called
ama-shukpamo reverentially,
is the presiding deity of the grove, and the protector of the northern
boundary of the village. The southern boundary, on the other hand, is
protected by the deity who lives at the base of Ri-gochey.
Army trucks in Ladakh. Credit: Flickr/Pranav Bhasin CC BY NC ND 2.0
My ancestral house is situated not far from the sacred grove. In the
house, there is a big rock on the ground floor. It is part of a wall
separating two rooms. One half of the rock juts out in
yo-khang, the winter kitchen-cum-living room of traditional Ladakhi houses. The other half bulges out in the fodder storeroom.
The rock is not an ordinary rock. It is the residence of a
lu, a spirit
that lives in stone, water and the earth. This is why no one has dared
to move it, let alone break it up to convert it into building blocks.
The rock had been here before my father renovated the house in 1980s.
The rock had been here before my great-grand parents built the house
around it. The sacred rock in our ancestral house is not a one-off case
in the village. The whole village is imbued with sacred manifestations.
The land of the village is sometimes referred to as
lu-sa, the
land of the spirits. According to this worldview, the world is not
merely its physical reality, but rather, invisible living forces and
potencies are constantly present in it and are on the move. The
protector spirits of the village guard against the evils spirits but can
sometimes cause harm to the village if they are offended. As such, the
people of the village have to maintain a cordial relationship with the
spirits, appeasing them with offerings of food and
chang (the Ladakhi brew).
Villagers have to make sure that the purity of the spring waters, where the
lu live, is maintained. If the spirits take offence, misfortune can befall the village.
This belief system is known as “folk religion,” which was co-opted by
Buddhism when it spread to Tibet and Ladakh. “Folk religion” has
remained prevalent in regions with cultural links to Tibet.
In the present context of climate emergency and global heating,
folk religion can teach us how to live.
One of the first things that folk religion tells us is that humans
are part of the world, but not the centre of affairs. The existence of
humans is possible only when there is good relationship with the
residents of the spirit world. So much so that my ancestors did not move
a rock to build a house.
By decentering humans, we could see the point of view of springs,
snow leopards, rivers, spirits, ancestors and so on. Also, belief in
sacred land, water and trees restricts human greed. Humankind’s
relationship with a sacred grove or sacred earth will be based on love,
care, fear and negotiations, and not domination and exploitation.
In safeguarding tradition, Ladakhis need not look towards a futureless past. Photo: Rajeev Rajagopalan/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)
If the worldview of a community is different from that of the
majority then the question of autonomy becomes important. Historian
Prathama Banerjee reminds us that tribal people politics in India has
been about autonomy. In sync with this larger politics of tribal people
was the demand of Ladakhis for an Union Territory status. Now the demand
has been met, Ladakhis have to ponder the meaning of this autonomy.
The idea of autonomy for us should be about preserving the important
ways in which we are not like the mainstream. In the stream of the
mainstream a tree is seen from the lens of botany, a rock from geology.
But for us, a tree or a rock is a host to a spirit.
However, Ladakhis like me have been taught in schools that a rock is a
non-living thing. Sadly, the knowledge of the schools has won over
tradition. This defeat of other(ed) knowledge is known as
cognitive injustice in
academic circles. Autonomy for us, then, should be about realising
cognitive justice. It cannot and should not be about license to pursue
reckless development because the future of our planet lay in respecting
trees, animals and water, and not in higher per capita income.
Unfortunately, people in Leh are shouting the tune of the mainstream.
They are upbeat about the prospect of investments and the resultant
revenue that will accrue to the autonomous council.
Development is their
war cry. To fulfil their dreams,
Ambani has already started knocking our doors.
In this cacophony of progress and development we must take some time
out. Let us bask under the winter sun, sipping butter tea like our
ancestors did. Let us remind ourselves to disempower ourselves and
empower the spirits of our land. Let us take a back seat.
Let us think from the perspective of a snow leopard or a
skiang,
a wild ass. Do they need solar-energy plants in their habitat? In our
quest to be developed we are not listening to the gushing music of
Singay tsangpo, the Indus river, or the silence of the vanishing glaciers.
In invoking the past of the Ladakhis, I am not arguing for a
“futureless past”. That is the business of right-wing organisations. I
am also not asking for a “pastless future”. That was the experiment of
Soviet Union.
Development is also a march towards a “pastless future.” Americans
are developed. Ladakhis are developing. So the idea behind development
is to make Ladakhis like Americans. In the present rush to become
Americans, we are faced with dearth of poets, artistes, philosophers and
indigenous philosophies. For it is they that remind humans we are only
part of this universe – not its centre.
Let me end by quoting the Native American poet Kristi Leora
Gansworth: “The waters accept songs and plants, dried leaves grown and
braided with love, free of chemicals, unaffiliated with factories, the
relationships come from seed, soil, song, sunlight, water. Waters
respond to the offerings, these relations have their own discussions,
and at no time does human interest come first because the human body did
not come first to these or any parts of this breathing planet, this
breathing body we each call our home.”
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India Today
Reliance Industries Limited chairman Mukesh Ambani on Monday announced
that the group will make several announcements related to investment in
the newly formed Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir, and Ladakh in
the upcoming days. Mukesh Ambani also said that the Reliance group will
set up a special task force focused on making investments in Jammu and
Kashmir. Mukesh Ambani was speaking at the 42nd annual general meeting
(AGM) of Reliance Industries Ltd. At the meeting, he also announced
details of the launch of Jio Fiber service.
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Paradise imperilled: The ‘development’ onslaught awaiting Kashmir
Live Mint
A slew of infrastructure projects in Kashmir, now a Union Territory, are
now likely to be fast-tracked. These include road projects totalling
683.31 km, the marquee Zojila and Z-Morh tunnels, and several dam
projects. This LiveMint article says the infrastructure push must be
seen in the backdrop of China’s controversial China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor next door.
The Char Dham road project: Narendra Modi’s Himalayan blunder
Atul Sethi, The Times of India
The 900km, all-weather road enhancing connectivity between four major
Hindu pilgrimage sites is PM Modi’s pet project. It will not only
displace hundreds of people, but create a massive rush of pilgrims,
putting untold pressure on the delicate Himalayan ecology. Experts say
it’s also ill-conceived, given its location on the ‘floodway’ of the
Ganga basin.
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