Julian Rose
We who engage in postulating solutions to the dominant issues of this time use much energy speculating on unknown outcomes. But how much energy do we use in laying the groundwork for a future of our own making?
How much time do we give to devising the template for the new society we must create?
To bring a dream into reality is hard work: it’s a lifetime’s work at the very least. Yet many hold back from ever embarking—rationalizing that such a quest is a futile exercise that will surely be swamped by a reactionary and repressive status quo.
Somehow, this failure to embark on the single most important mission of our lives characterizes a great swath of sleepwalking humanity—and also a significant percentage of supposed “spiritual aspirants” who confuse the azure bubble in which they live with the stark reality of the new world which needs to be chiseled and honed into existence.
So here are a few suggestions about what can be done now to ensure that life on Earth gets a better chance under our stewardship than under the present and past masters of control.
1. Bring into consciousness a realistic vision of what your neighborhood should look and be like in a positively transformed state.
2. Note down on paper the basic ingredients necessary to bring about this positive change.
3. Add to this mix anyone living in the area you feel could make a positive contribution to this process.
4. Go back through your blueprint and allow your creative imagination to paint in some colorful, innovative elements that will give movement to the plan. For example, music, drama and seasonal celebrations.
5. Check that the simple necessities are in place: local, ecological and integrated food production; fresh water availability; resources for renewable heat and power generation; existence or planting of orchards; woodland areas for timber needs—and all other similar needs that offer food and shelter security within a community intent upon transitioning away from state and corporate dependency.
6. Research current activities in your neighborhood and see what may already touch on the key elements of your vision. There may be two or three such initiatives already being considered or even practiced. But chances are they are not “connected up.”
7. Using your holistically conceived blueprint as the crystallizing factor, get involved in helping create a working symbiosis between these different initiatives so that they each draw benefit from the other and increase the overall awareness of all involved.
8. Book an available space in your local town/village hall or home—prepare your “bigger picture” plan—and map the interconnections that, when all the key elements are functioning fully, will bring renewed life and direction to the whole community.
Having completed these eight steps, alert your local media and invite residents to share the vision which you started. Show what progress has already been made and what still needs to be done. Encourage the formation of working groups to take these different complementary initiatives forward and to periodically share the results of their efforts. So doing, you will forge, bit by bit, a metamorphosis of life in your neighborhood.
Such a project can be done by anyone. No need for any particular qualifications or skills. Just a strong desire to help your community stand on its own two feet and free itself from dependence upon the hierarchical control model which holds so much of society in its thrall.
Very soon your energetic approach will draw fellow enthusiasts to your scheme—while others will back off. This is an essential part of any process of creative change, and one which defines where true commitment can be found and where fake enthusiasm reveals itself for what it is.
I have put this concept to the test and had very positive results. The initiative involved developing a template for a UK market town of 10,000 inhabitants to become largely self-sufficient in locally produced food, fuel and fiber over a fifteen-year period, starting in 2000.
While it was not possible to give as much time as I would have liked to this project, it was possible to share its vision with local motivators and witness a steady process of transformation get underway—which continues to this day. The town in question has since attracted a significant number of national awards for its innovative socioeconomic practices.
Don’t be swayed by the cynical voices who say “it can’t be done.” My reaction to such remarks is to be stirred into ever greater determination to show that it can!
We have one life—at least in this body. It is a brief flash, a spark, which flares up into fire, flickers and transforms into something else. To waste this brief and precious gift by evading its call to action is an error which in all probability cannot be recalled.
If we are serious about turning around the fortunes of this planet, then it’s time for talk and action to become synonymous. If we are not, then it’s time to get out of the way.
This article is offered under Creative Commons license.
Julian Rose is an international activist, writer, farmer and actor. He is an early pioneer of UK organic farming methods and is currently involved in the front line of efforts to keep Poland free from genetically modified organisms. Julian is President of The International Coalition to Protect the Polish Countryside. His book CHANGING THE COURSE FOR LIFE can be purchased at www.changingcourseforlife.info. His latest book IN DEFENSE OF LIFE: A RADICAL REWORKING OF GREEN WISDOM is available at Amazon or can be requested via http://www.julianrose.info.