Looking At Time
With A Capital T
by: Maya Talisman Frost
I keep a fossil on my desk at
all times. Whenever I feel rushed or find myself creating a sense of urgency, I
pick up the fossil and caress its polished surface. It's over 200 million years
old. Suddenly, returning that phone call or meeting that self-imposed deadline
doesn't seem nearly as critical. My ancient arthropod reminds me that, in the
scheme of things, this moment is indescribably insignificant. I find that
remarkably comforting.
True story: I brought the fossil
with me as a sort of visual aid for a presentation I was giving on
sustainability at Intel. As I opened the car door in the Intel parking lot, the
fossil slipped out of my bag. It crashed to the pavement, the asphalt
shattering the tip of my favorite piece of history. I'm trying hard to avoid
seeing any deep meaning in that disturbing little incident.
Anyway, I've been stroking that
poor broken fossil a lot this week. I'm not freaking out about anything. I've
just been spending some time thinking about time.
Is life a function of time, or
is time a function of life?
This is worth spending a
considerable amount of time (or life?) contemplating. For those of you in a
hurry, I've got this short sound bite answer: It depends on what kind of scope
you're using.
My brother has worked for a
nearby scope manufacturer for over twenty years, so my answer is colored by my
familiarity with lenses and the way they magnify reality. You might come up
with a response based on, say, your connection to compost. Or combustion
engines. Or maybe blood cells. Me? I'm going with scopes.
I would say that time is a
function of life whenever we are simply going through the motions of the day or
looking at our accomplishments or failures over the course of our lives. We can
divide periods of living into convenient packages--that wondrous year in Miss
Green's first grade class, the bust-your-butt blur of college, the years in the
old house on Birch Street, and on and on. You've got your own compartments.
We use time. It allows us to
keep things organized, both in our day planners and in our minds. It's a
helpful ordering mechanism.
It's hard to get a grip on the
enormity of time when we view it in terms of appointments, lunch hours, and
television time-slots. If we pull waaayyy back and look at it, then life
becomes a function of time instead of the other way around.
We don't tend to pay attention
to any of that while getting ready for work in the morning. We don’t think much
about Time with a capital T. That's because we're looking through the lens of
the microscope. Well, haul out the telescope. Take a look at gigantic periods
of Time. Consider unfathomable chunks of eternity.
We've been in the Cenozoic era
for about 65 million years now. It started way back with the extinction of the
last non-avian dinosaurs. The most recent Cenozoic period, the Quarternary,
started a mere 1.8 million years ago, and has seen the development of humans
from the very earliest use of tools and rudimentary language to the present
flip-phone/camera/email devices that are all the rage today. That's quite a
progression.
I'm thinking we've sort of maxed
out the Cenozoic era. It has served us well in many ways, but frankly, it's
getting a bit tired. Seeing as how humans were the ones to name the eras in the
first place (that part is definitely time as a function of life), it's
perfectly reasonable that humans should declare when the next one is starting.
It's fairly arbitrary anyway. There's certainly some wiggle room--at least a couple
hundred thousand years.
Can we start the new one now?
Please?
Here's an idea--why not put a
little thought into the next era? Instead of documenting the progress--or
decline--of species, why not plug in a little intention and see where that
takes us?
I wish I'd thought of that
first, but I didn't. Thomas Berry and Brian Swimme coined the term
"Ecozoic era" in The Universe Story, and then Berry went on to talk
about what that might look like in his book, The Great Work. Berry describes
the Ecozoic era as one holding the promise of humans living in a mutually
enhancing relationship with all life forms.
This sounds pretty groovy, but
it's not viewed as a Utopian concept. It's a viable proposition.
The first steps have been taken
to build the foundation for a realistic movement toward this new era. The
Center for Ecozoic Studies is at the forefront, but a number of scholars of all
stripes are coming together to do some planning. There's not a gloom-and-doomer
in the bunch. In fact, they are catapulted by hope and possibility. They take
this work very seriously but embrace it joyously.
We should, too. We humans have
come a long way from pounding rocks in a cave. We're perfectly capable of
looking forward and envisioning an unprecedented era capitalizing on
cooperation and awareness as guiding principles. We do it in the movies all the
time. Why can’t we do it for real?
I'd like to propose that we
consider utilizing the concept that life is a function of time. Let's think
about what it means to plan an era. Our cave ancestors couldn't imagine the
world today. We have the advantage of the knowledge of history and a growing
understanding of the forces that propel a planet through its evolutionary
journey.
Like it or not, we've got a
certain responsibility to use these fabulous frontal lobes. You don't have to
be a scientist to think about the future of the Earth. You're human. Think
about it because you CAN.
Look for fossil moments in your
day to consider the universe, and grasp the opportunity to render yourself
temporarily insignificant.
Just watch out for asphalt.
About The Author
Maya Talisman Frost is a mind
masseuse. Her course, Massage Your Mind!: Defining Your Life Philosophy, has
inspired thinkers in over 70 countries around the world. She publishes the
Friday Mind Massage, a free weekly ezine serving up a satisfying blend of
clarity, comfort and comic relief. For more information, visit http://www.massageyourmind.com or http://www.mindmasseuse.com.
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