The past few months I have been getting this persistent gut feeling to change the name of the blog to something that really connects to the earth and to the inter-connectedness of all sentient life on earth. And gradually an idea took shape.
I cycle most days in the morning and what catches my attention - in that moment of being alive and feeling the wind across my face - are the flowers and the trees. And I keep thinking, they are so beautiful. Without flowers and trees, what a barren world our earth would become.
So in dedication to the trees of this planet, I have finally decided to call my blog - onetree. The idea is simple. We are all interconnected to each other through invisible strings of energy - every thing that lives and breathes on this planet. And we all return to the root that unites us and supports us - literally and symbolically.
I was looking for an article on trees that would speak more eloquently than I could about trees and the inter-connectedness of all living beings. Then I came across this latest article from UPLIFT about trees by Sarah Ripper. It was a pleasure reading her article.
Here it is: http://upliftconnect.com/plant-neurobiology-trees-humans/
UPLIFT media channel is dedicated to telling the new story of inspired co-creation. Working together, we can create a better world for all.
Please visit UPLIFT on the Net. They are one of the most inspiring sites on the planet.
Plant Neurobiology Shows
How Trees are Just Like Humans
By Sarah
Ripper on Monday February 27th, 2017
Understanding the Connection
You have
more in common with trees than you think. It’s not such a weird idea when the
emerging field of plant
neurobiology is
seeing increasing collaborations with other fields into the nature of plant
intelligence. These studies are prompting scientists and spiritual communities,
such as Damanhur, to reconsider the scope of communication and adaptation found
in nature.
From a
spiritual perspective, plants can be viewed as the ultimate alliance for human
beings as all life forms part of a spiritual ecosystem where matter and form
co-exist. Within this co-existence, the environment is an integral part of
leading a holistic and balanced life. Science is beginning to echo what
indigenous peoples, tree-huggers, shamans and spiritual teachers have been
saying for a very long time.
We do have far more in common with our leafy
friends than we once thought.
Is being
more sensitive to plant’s feelings the key to future adaptation? Well, plants
have scientifically documented senses just like humans and animals. Thanks to
plant neurobiology’s use of human analogies we can begin to understand how
plants experience senses. According to Professor Stefano Mancuso, who leads the
International Laboratory for Plant Neurobiology at the University of Florence,
plants are a lot more sensitive than animals. He discovered that the very root
apex of a plant has the capacity to detect 20 different physical and chemical
parameters including gravity, light, magnetic field pathogens and more.
Plants
have the ability to detect gravity, light, magnetic field pathogens and more.
Plants
have genes similar to those of an animal nervous system, specific proteins that
have been shown to have definite roles in neural function and whilst they are
not exactly the same as those found in animals, they are believed to behave in
very similar ways. Through recognizing the sensory capacity of the ‘wood wide
web’, a term coined by Professor Suzanne Simard, to describe the interconnectedness
of trees, perhaps we’ll look at their sensory expressions a little differently.
The Importance of Our Plant Life
We know
we need plants to live. With a rapidly altering natural environment, human
population increasing, and changes in weather patterns, particularly
precipitation, it’s important for us to know how plants sense, adapt and
respond to their environment if we are interested in protecting biodiversity,
eating plant-based ingredients and, you know, breathing clean air. Professor Daniel Chamovitz of What a Plant Knows
regards the complex biology of plants as being completely underappreciated and
underestimated, and claims that if we do not embrace and learn from the amazing
complexity of plant life, we may find a host of big problems awaiting us in 50
to 100 years time.
The ‘wood
wide web’ describes the interconnectedness of trees, through their root
systems.
According
to Damanhur’s founder, Falco Tarassaco, during the past few decades more old
growth forests have been destroyed than throughout humankind’s presence since
the Palaeolithic period. He claimed that within 50 years, 50% of all our
planets trees have been felled. These
perspectives or statistics may differ but they make a resounding point – nature
is inseparable from human life, it needs to be respected and protected.
Look deep
into nature, and then you will understand everything better. – Albert Einstein
If we
take a closer look, here are a few things we humans have in common with trees.
We Experience Time
We both
experience the passing of time. From a Damanhurian perspective, plants have a
longer and slower experience of time and life than humans, and an ability to
store collective memory. Trees synthesize subtle and
gross forms of energy to feed themselves – light, water, and nutrients from the
soil; the quantity and quality playing a key role in their overall health and
vitality. The electrical signals in a tree’s tissues travel approximately one
to two seconds per inch meaning their reaction to events takes place within
minutes, hours or days. Because these signals can take several minutes to
travel from the crown of the tree to the roots, trees simultaneously transfer
information through chemical signals sent out from their leaves.
Trees
transfer information through chemical signals sent from their leaves (photo
credit: Kirlian Photography).
We Need Food and Rest
A recent Hungarian-Finnish-Austria
study showed
us that trees also need their rest with the circadian rhythm being measured by
the drooping of leaves overnight, seen as a form of tree sleep. Using laser
scanners, so as not to disturb the exposure the trees had to light, the
branches of 5-metre birch trees progressively drooped by 8 to 10 centimeters,
with their lowest position right before sunrise, and then returning to full
form a few hours after sunrise. It has not yet been determined whether the rays
of the sun, the trees’ own inner rhythm or a combination of the two induce this
tree sleep.
We Digest
Humans,
animals, and plants share some digestive similarities, microbiological
similarities – all of them sustain microcolonies that in turn sustain them. A
plant uses their external ‘guts’ (roots) which somewhat simplifies the study,
in comparison to the internal human and animal guts. Yet scientists have found
the microbial
ecologies that
reside in all these forms of life and considerably impact the development,
health, and wellbeing of their respective hosts.
These microbial helpers share similar job descriptions as they play a key role in gene expression, metabolic processes, and protection against pathogens, and even share evolutionary trends. Just as food quality and choices affect the human digestive system and well-being, so too does the soil health affect the health of plant life.
If we
could see the miracle of a single flower clearly, our whole life would change.
– Gautama Buddha
We Pass on Information
Both
humans and plant life have an intergenerational exchange of knowledge. Damanhurian
researchers claim that if we detach from the green brain (the collective plant
knowledge of the planet), we detach from a connection with planetary memory. This
connection serves humankind in terms of biodiversity and spiritual knowledge,
as well as limiting the knowledge we can access of the human and planetary
experience, which goes well beyond what has been documented by historians in
various world cultures.
Scientists
are discovering not only that neurotransmitter molecules facilitate
cell-to-cell communication, and that the exchanging of carbon from a dying tree
to its neighbors has been measured, but also that the study of plant
intelligence requires an integrated approach to plant signaling, adaptive
behavior and it’s potential impacts for the future. It also reflects back to us
this cyclical and intrinsic collective coexistence. We are not as dissimilar to
plant or animal life as we think we are. We grow, we shed, and we adjust to the
seasonal rhythm of our climate. Just as modern mystic Sadhguru said: You may
attach much of your birth, life, and death, but for Mother Earth, it is just a
recycling process.
The
knowledge that is exchanged between trees can be viewed akin to the
intergenerational passing on of mythology, language, or family stories, tribal
information or spiritual teachings.
Nature
does nothing without purpose or uselessly. – Artistotle
The interconnectedness of trees is taken further by
German forester and author, Peter Wohlleben, in his best-selling book the Hidden
Life of Trees, which draws on revolutionary scientific discoveries as well
as many anthropomorphic examples to describe the social network and family
structure of trees. Wohllenben explains how tree parents ‘suckle their
children’ and suggests that mother trees even have favorites! These family
chats enable trees to share nutrients with those who are sick or struggling,
warn of forthcoming dangers or adjust to weather conditions such as droughts by
altering their water consumption strategies to conserve energy.
Plants
interact as a community, working together to sustain life.
Through
understanding forests as a network, Wohlleben believes
foresters and plantation workers are able to foster healthier trees producing
more timber and living possibly double the lifespan if their social network is
not interrupted by thinning methods which leaves a tree ‘single’. For trees in
protected natural habitats, the social relationships amongst and between
species have another level of depth.
This
world is indeed a living being endowed with a Soul and intelligence… a single
visible living entity containing all other living entities, which by their
nature are all related. – Plato
The green
brain of knowledge and social network mirrors our human family’s, or
community’s, need to belong and contribute to the whole. Damanhurian teachings
ask people to consider that what we see of a tree is actually the plant’s
skeleton; the rest of it is its energy system. The trees’ aura contains parts
of its form that cannot be seen by the untrained eye but can be felt with
practice when sensitizing the hands to feel the subtle energy and walking
around the tree to feel its aura.
Plants
too have auric fields. Left: Organic mushroom, right: Commercially grown.
These
processes are subtle, and their capacity to be measured by our physical senses
or diagnostic tools is limited. However, the Music of the Plants device is a bridge to this type
of understanding, whereby the plants’ vibration is converted into musical tones
and communicated to humans. The plants have to ‘learn’ how to use this device
and, through years of experimentation, Damanhurians have observed that plants
tend to do a scale once they are connected to the machine, just before they
play. They think this is for the plant to understand the tonal possibilities.
It’s also been observed that potted plants have a higher pitch than plants in
the ground. I saw a potted plant connected to the device ‘jam’ with an old oak
tree it was placed beside. The difference in tone and ‘call and response’ was a
tangible and fascinating example of plant communication.
We Have the Potential for Continual Evolution and
Innovation
The
observation of plant signaling, communication, adaptive behavior and purposeful
interrelating with other trees fuels plant science, and its potential
applications and implications for sustainability and research. As human
consciousness expands, perhaps so too does the scope science is capable of
measuring and considering. Biomimicry has already seen an exciting
shift in seeking solutions for problems through nature’s answers – from
mosquito inspired ‘nicer needles’, to what termites can reveal about
construction. A new field of bio-robotics is also developing which could also
be used for lots of purposes, including space applications or environmental
monitoring.
Understanding
the importance of plant life helps us to better conserve and care for them.
Emerging planetoid robots are using the natural function
of plant intelligence to gather data for scientific research. This would have a
trunk, branches, and leaves, just as a real plant, along with artificial roots,
which would be constructed from 3D printers. These robots could be tailor made
for specific needs to further our understanding of the environment both on this
planet and beyond. With what we are beginning to learn about plants and their
thinking, sleeping, and family relationships and their applications, a new
chapter is emerging. As we expand what there is to know, we expand our
possibilities.
Damanhur is an alternative community in Europe.
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