By Andrew Meggitt
I have always enjoyed being outside and the outdoors. I am neither unique nor alone in the love of the outdoors. While polymaths are individuals with diverse knowledge and skills, for me this is rooted in my need to fulfill the need to clear my soul with an existential look at nature. Selfishly I prefer to be on trails alone so I try to find the most isolated spots or least trafficked times on those trails. a walk in the woods, trees, park, prairie is good for the mind and body. At one time I made vain attempts to write about the beauty of the things I saw and felt while outside. There is no replacement for the real thing. As I sit here now the birds in our trees are making a late May concerto. attempting to explain this to someone reading and using the appropriate language to place someone in the chair beside mine while the robins, cardinals, juncos, and many other birds sing away like bell ringers of the Sycamores. The point is I did not have the talent to enable a reader to hear the chirps, whoots, beeps and beautiful chips of the birds. So I find solace in the fact that if we take the time to listen and observe for ourselves there is elegance and meditation in the sites and sounds of the outside. I find the vineyard a more severe type of existential experience where the phenomenologist in my person immerses in the moving shapes and growing season of the vines. “Reclaiming the first person in all its immediacy and complexity - acknowledging how entangled this perspective is with the world we perceive, lies at the heart of phenomenology.” In essence, understanding how the grapes are, I prefer not to look at them as a tool from which we make wine, but rather the creative force that ties nature to us. I do not remember where I first heard about Forest Bathing, as fate would have it may have been my wife gave me the book. In 2019 Nat. Geo. couldn't decide if it was a fitness trend or a mindfulness. It did start in the 1980’s “ as a physiological and psychological exercise called shinrin-yoku (“forest bathing” or “taking in the forest atmosphere”). The purpose was twofold: to offer an eco-antidote to tech-boom burnout and to inspire residents to reconnect with and protect the country’s forests.” While the roots of modern forest bathing are in Japan, we all understand that time spent immersed in nature is good for us. There are numerous accounts throughout culture and history of consciously connecting with what is around you. This is not just for the wilderness lovers or the day hikers, we don’t need 100000 acres of wilderness to connect with nature. A city park and classical music is shown to have produced health benefits, such as a walk in the park, in the woods, and meditation. The long term benefits to physical and mental health are documented by professionals not espoused by a ranting winemaker. In short, do yourself an enormous favor 4 times a week, take fifteen minutes to spend with nature and yourself, stare at a tree if need be, watch a creek, find a space that works. You will feel better. and please for heaven's sake don’t fall for one of the many cool titles this practice has. Get grounded and get outside.
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By: Andrew Meggitt
In my many life questioning philosophical conversations with fellow polymuse Dan. One conversation with no answer that grows on the verbal agar often is that of the children, family and the values we think we are instilling in the children. There are many rabbit holes Lewis Carroll would be proud of. We have at times discussed this in relation to greed and the selfish, not the wealthy or rich but the greedy. There is a difference, wealth and riches can be measured by many vessels, the soul, happiness, family, ecumenical well being, spirituality and well money. Greed is well, greed - selfish desire for wealth and power or food. There is nothing wrong with being wealthy or rich. 98.00 % of us have at sometime in our life have said under our breath, that would be nice. Nice house or whatever, we all suffer from the chartreuse monster at some point. As we are about to send the young men into the world from our house we have had numerous talks about greed is bad and wealth is good. It is a fine line is it not. What is wealth Dad? Wealth is happiness with your place in the world, are you contributing, are you serving the community in some way, do you help with conservation, are you kind and honest. Values will be different in every home. We place value on very different parts of our own lives, mine are love, family and the wonderful public lands we have in the USA. At some point I have to help them understand that they need to provide for themselves and/or whoever they choose to have in their lives, if they do not already both are far smarter than I am. All this said it is a work in progress, time will tell. In recent times I have observed greed and selfishness, the grab it now mentality. We have observed this play out in the workplace, in the political arena and many other places. It is detrimental to those third parties caught in the trample for the pursuit of more. This in turn creates negative environs in which we are forced to continue to navigate while picking up survivors on the way, often confused as to why they may have been treated in a certain way for example. The question at hand is when is enough and what is enough, the pursuit of more is engrained in the national psyche, but the pursuit of what. This flows from understanding your own value system and being able to change course and maintain your own integrity. More is not terrible, could be more love, more spirituality, more income, more family. When we think of an action we are about to take, would we want it read in our eulogy, is it something that makes us proud? |
Andrew MeggittSteward of The Vines, Dan WynnIntellectual Surfer, About UsWe are part of a group of polymaths who believe that true intellectual growth comes from diversity and discovery. This place is a portal to navigate the vast landscape of human intellect and discover the transformative role of creativity and its relationship to being human. ArchivesCategories
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