Thursday, May 3, 2007

Response to Gatta’s “Making Nature Sacred”/ by Mikey Famiglietti

Certainly humans occupy a privileged place in this scheme, since they most obviously represent the “intelligent part of the system” and are uniquely qualified to know and to respond to the beauty of God’s self-communication” (65).

I once heard that humans are the only organism that can picture their own demise. This is why we have religion… the wonder of how we got here, our purpose for existing, and where our spirit goes after this life. These are the unsolved mysteries of the universe, that we all struggle with. I always wondered if other animals wonder about these things, but I don’t think many other animals have reached that stage of evolution. But if they don’t wonder about these mysteries, what is the meaning of their life? If they can’t wonder like we can…does that mean their life is meaningless? They don’t make scientific discoveries and develop philosophies like we do…we do have a very special place on this planet…we have a very special relationship with god in comparison to all the other organisms on this planet. We can somewhat interpret God’s messages and recognize his glory through his beauty. I’m glad to be human and have this relationship with Him.

Return to Lion’s Bridge/ By Mikey Famiglietti

As I traveled down the path a patch of yellow flowers along side of the path caught my eye. They all looked so delighted to be alive, reaching high for the sky, radiating a vibrant yellow. I could not resist, I picked one and stuck it under my nose. The scent of the season quickly filled my nostrils. I stared at the flower, observing its many pristine features. The petals, indistinguishable from each other, connected together in perfect harmony, forming a perfect disc. The core of the flower had its own character, a bit more orange than the petals. It held the flowers potent aroma, bearer of the scent of spring. This single flower will spread its beauty across the land, by an insect, the flowers’ carrier of life. This flowers beauty will be experienced by many, but only for a brief moment. It brings the scent of the season, summer is just beyond the horizon, I enjoyed it while I could. Lion’s Bridge is coming back to life…

Response to Lanes “Landscapes of the Sacred”/ by Mikey Famiglietti

From the security and stability of place we are aware of the openness, freedom, and threat of space” (221, Lane).

From the security and stability of a small town, I do not feel threatened. I am just a part of the community, everybody living completely different lives somehow…in harmony. I am about to leave this place to go camping in Colorado for a week. I have the freedom to do whatever I please, away from the expectations of the people I normally come in contact with, away from the worries of school and work, away from the discipline of practicing guitar 6 hours a day…I’m going to be free. But in contrast, I am going to be far away from the security and stability of my life right now. Out in the wilderness I’m just part of the food chain, I’m nothing special away from this place. Out in space, I could easily get lost, I have no point of reference away from this place. I don’t have a sanctuary to come back to every night in Colorado, I have no comforts away from this place. I don’t know a single soul in Colorado, a very threatening feeling, I feel the threat of space being away from this place…but that’s part of the full experience.

Tuesday, May 1, 2007

Solace Psychology -Jennie Pahl

"personality traits greatly found within these people are self-confidence and assertiveness."



This chapter from The Solace of Fierce Landscapes helped me to really tie everything I have been learning in psychology into this course. It totally make since as to why self-confidence and assertiveness would be two very important personality traits found in those who want to hike rugged trails. I admire the fact that Lester did the research to find out more about the kinds of people who do go on harsh hikes. It would make since that they are mentally strong before going on the hike, because they endure alot of hardships while hiking. If they break down mentally it could be a disaster for their person.

Solace God and desert -jennie Pahl

"God is a desert to be entered and loved, never an object to be grasped or understood."


This one sentence in the Solace of Fierce Landscapes book moved me like none other. I sat and pondered on it for a while. If you break down what is being said it is very true! God is a vast expansion of somewhat unknowns which resembles the desert. You are suppose to love God and have the up most respect and he is to be the center of your life, but no matter how hard you try God can never become an object to be grasped. We will never be able to physically hold him. Nor will we ever be able to understand him. I know personally when I don't understand what God did or decides to do I dwell on the question, but as my mom frequently tells me he does everything for a reason. Never second guess him he is all knowing and all love just trust. This sentence made me understand what my mom has been telling me for years!

Jennie Pahl -Wilderness that has molded me

Vaguely I remember the conversation my parents had with me and my siblings about moving the Chesterfield, Virginia. My brothers were upset that they had to leave their tree fort and could no longer terrorize the cows that backed up to our 12 acres of land, but I had no feelings about the situation. This move was going to be a radical learning experience for me for the next 9 years of my life, and I hadn’t the slightest idea.
At the age of four I was thought to be a very independent child and loved to explore. I found myself drawn to the massive woods behind my house. I would walk to the edge and my heart would begin to beat faster and faster, this was my wilderness just as the west and space were at one time man’s wilderness. I ventured in to find a world of amazing new things. Sitting on a log about two hundred yards from my house I could see nothing, but the trees which engulfed me. For the first few visits I found myself staring in amazement and looking straight up at the colossal pine trees.
After a while I began to notice the little bugs that crawled along side of me on the decaying tree trunk. I was a little taken back and scared, but I kneeled down and watched them ever so swiftly glide across the bark and tunnel between it. Walking back that afternoon I noticed some fungus growing on the end of the tree trunk. Being the curious kid I was I picked up a small twig and poked it. I wanted to see what exactly it was growing from. After only finding the end of the tree trunk I ran home and anxiously waited for my dad to come home so he could explain to me what this green stuff was.
As the years flew by I watched the seasons change the woods behind my house. I loved being in them every second of the day that I could. One day when I was in second grade I saw my first wild bunny rabbit. It was white with a gray spot on his chest. He just sat there staring at me a still as a statue. I didn’t want to scare him so I tried hard to not even breathe. About three seconds later he broke off his intense staring and continued to munch on some kind of vegetation growing from the ground. This was the first encounter of hundreds that I had with the bunnies. Up until this point the woods had always been my way of learning and growing through the exploration of wilderness. Little did I know my journey would lead me to what I feel is the most powerful spiritual connection I have ever had the honor of experiencing.
Being the youngest of three which meant having two older brothers was often what I felt was my curse. Growing up I got picked on, beat up, and yelled at and these woods were always so good to me. They were inviting, comforting, and a fun escape, in short, they were my very own dream come true. At the age of nine I told on my brother for locking me in my room, and he told me the next day that I was not what my parents had always told me. He explained that a "nice surprise" in parental terms meant I was an "accident". In his exact words I was on this Earth only because Mom and Dad’s form of birth control had failed. Jonathan, my brother, went on to tell me that my parents hated me and didn’t want me. So I packed my bookbag and ran away to the woods.
Once in the woods I found a nice place that seemed to have a little opening through the trees straight above where you could see the sky. I found myself on my knees crying and praying to God that he just take me away. For that moment which seemed like an eternity I could feel the embracement of the wilderness and God around me. It was then I realized these woods, this wilderness, was more than just a habitat as I had been taught when I recreated it in play-dough for my third grade project. These woods would see me through something that still effects me to this day.
My Mother decided the Christmas of 2000, that she would be happier without my Father. This was everything I had ever known. I found myself in the woods that year the day after a horrendous ice storm begging God to let Mom change her mind. I prayed about not letting Daddy go to hell for Mom’s selfish deciscions, and for the family to help us get through. As I fell to my knees with tears in my eyes I could hear the trees around me breaking and falling to the ground. It was like they too were dying with me, they were just so overwhelmed they snapped and fell to their death like my heart. As strange as it sounds that was the last time I was in those woods before they developed it 3 years later (and turned it into over five hundred single family homes), and to this day I can still remember the exact feelings that had come over me laying on the icy ground. After over three hours I was still there sobbing on the ground, but the whole time I was not alone I was being embraced by my father (God), the one who guided my family through the horrific experience. Around dusk my Daddy found me in the woods after hours of looking for me and as he carried me out like a helpless baby I knew these woods would become, but a foreign place when the house was sold.
My experience in those woods was a big part of my life. Through them I learned so many amazing life lessons, and came to know God ouside of boring hymnals and church. God revealed himself to me when we were inside of the wilderness that reflected everything great and amazing that he accomplished and made for us to enjoy. To this very day when I feel burdened or want to connect with God I turn to some form of nature, whether it be the beach, woods, or mountains I know where to look for that embracement every Christian longs for.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Having New Eyes

Katy Pelchy
Having New Eyes
Landscapes of the Sacred

“Traveling is a fool’s paradise. We owe to our first journeys the discovery that place is nothing.” In a sense, Emerson is right. The sacred place never guarantees a thing. Going to Jerusalem does not automatically grant the pilgrim wisdom or zeal. “The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes,” wrote Marcel Proust, “but in having new eyes.”

While I agree that, at times, a place’s significance means nothing, I also avidly believe that traveling has worth far beyond what people could ever expect. Traveling causes people to realign their axis mundi, and in doing such they learn and grow both spiritually and personally. There is no equivalent to traveling. You cannot get the same experience sitting in your backyard as sailing in the open sea. There is simply no comparison. Traveling enriches the life and soul and opens the mind to different cultures, beliefs, and entirely different worlds.

I do, however, agree that “the real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.” THIS is the point of traveling. One cannot help but have new eyes when in view is something completely new and unheard of. A person’s axis mundi is unlikely to be opened and expanded when in familiar surroundings. Therefore, while traveling is not imperative to discovery, it cannot help but aid it, for when exposed to completely alien habits, landscapes, and cultures, it is almost impossible to not have one’s eyes opened in the midst of discovery.