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Water

How to Change the Way We Think about Water

By Jennifer Greene, World Pulse. Posted April 11, 2008.


We need to shift our understanding of water as a commodity to an appreciation for water as a human and environmental right.
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All human beings are deeply affected by water and its movements. When we go on vacation we go to the water. We slide over it, across it, through it. We swim in it. We take part in water rituals and want to be nurtured by water ... we thirst for it.

Yet water, in a very deep way, is a women's issue. It is vital to the role women play in caring for their families. Women bathe and nourish their young, often tend the crops, and are the keepers of the waters. When fetching potable water requires distance, there is less time for the family and abject poverty and disease result.

A Charged Stillness

I have never thought of myself as an activist, but I am active on the path of getting to know water on its own terms. The activism comes in relating water's story as I read it, in sharing the wonder of it, and helping to awaken a consciousness of it.

My task is to find the language of water and to learn it to the best of my ability.

My relationship with water began on the Vermont farm where I grew up. As a child, I stood in mud puddles, watching water enter finely silted brown pools. Such amazing forms in this laboratory! Aware of nature's surging flows, and of the songbird's bright joy, I'd walk in the crunchy, melting snow and listen to the drops of maple falling.

Now I work to change how we think about water -- to shift our understanding of water as a commodity to an appreciation for water as a human right, an environmental right.

This work reaches back to great activists of our modern times. Mother Theresa, Rosa Parks, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr. and Henry David Thoreau, among others, showed us that outward activism arises out of a charged stillness within. Here, in active listening into a situation or condition, we hear and see what to do.

It is a special kind of listening -- a sensitive and intimate dialogue. When one realizes that one is truly being listened to, there is no resistance, only openness and receptivity and the speaker receives and the listener gives back.

Such is the case with water.

Where water can tell its story, on its own terms, there is language and communication. My task is to find the language and to learn it to the best of my ability.

Learning in Nature's Laboratory

The most fruitful way to see the hidden nature of water, is to observe water, to listen to water, and to comprehend how it behaves as it moves.

When we take away water's flexibility, it's balancing capacity, we take away its role as a mediator between life and death.

When we listen, we learn that water serves life through processes of change and rhythm. Water motion is always organized, fluid and flexible. We can understand it as though reading someone's "body language" to assess their state of being.

Water that is allowed to move according to its own nature cleanses itself and sustains life. This is our model for the future. If water is not allowed to move and change and be open to organizing principles, if it becomes stagnant, then it becomes dead.

When we observe water and begin to ask questions of it, allowing it at each level to tell its story, we realize we've accessed something deeper than what can be seen by the eyes.

Sit by a stream and watch the water move. See the form water takes as it moves over rocks ... It flows smoothly and freely, slipping downward into a gulley. See that the bank is still and solid and yet continually changed by the river. See that when water moves freely, it is answered by a system of organic forms, movements and rhythms -- an integrated system of life processes and substances that allows water to mediate all life needs in order to exist on earth.


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See more stories tagged with: water, water shortage, water spirituality

Jennifer Greene is the executive director of the Water Research Institute of Blue Hill, an organization that helps individuals and policy makers understand water's qualitative properties and behaviors.

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View:
Terrorist
Posted by: HeKnew on Apr 11, 2008 12:23 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Direct Democracy

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While I appreciate the author's sentiments...
Posted by: djnoll on Apr 11, 2008 5:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I find myself wondering exactly what she hopes to accomplish with this description of water. Perhaps it is necessary to see water as the basis for all life and its sustenance for someone to become an activist to protect it, but I find myself wondering if this woman can actually embrace fully the need to act now, instead of rhapsodizing about it. Water will become the next oil, and living as I have in the Southwest for the last 30 or so years, I am painfully aware of the devastation that drought has brought to this area, just as those who live in the Southeast have realized in the last year. Talking about water's connection to the soul and to life itself may be wonderful if you are a poet, but when you need it for food production or just for maintaining healthy levels of hydration, you are more concerned with its purity and availability, not its connection to the soul.

Nice piece of writing, but not very helpful, and although it is a nice break from the other rather depressing news of our day, it is like the pieces written over the years that led to the apathy in this country and the problems we have today. I truly wish that writers who are activists would get off the touchy-feely writing and start actually getting angry about the issues that they adopt.

This author is in a position of authority and should not be writing about the transformational qualities of water, but rather getting hopping mad and writing about how our abuse of water and the corporate moves to control it; the affects of global warming on the depletion of water; and the hundred other things that we as human beings are doing to waste water, rather than talking about how wonderful it is for ritual transformation. As literature, this piece is nice, but as activism, it is a waste of space!

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SICK WATER
Posted by: nismx on Apr 11, 2008 6:46 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The USA has been adding rat poison to our drinking water for over 60 years to help Corporations make more money by not having to dispose of Fluorosilicic Acid H2SIF6 classified as a TOXIC WASTE by the EPA. Instead, by controlling Politicians and Government agencies, they convince us it's good for kid's teeth. This makes me sick. Google Christopher Bryson if you want the whole SICK story. Today, 1 in 2 men and 1 in 3 women will get Cancer. Or maybe we should just wait until it's 100%. After all Cancer is BIG BUSINESS in America. Fluoride is also good for obesity, hair loss, heart diseases, bone disease, and lower IQ, just to mention a few. www.flouridealert.org

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Good view
Posted by: carrotwax on Apr 11, 2008 10:33 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is good to see something like that here. I agree that it would also be good to have things we can do about the face of water, but really, I think articles like this are better than yet another depressing look at corporate control of water resources that we have little power individually to affect.

When it comes down to it, cultural changes occur through massive shifts in perception. Over the last 50 years, there's been massive changes on how we view war, gender identities, inequalities, nationhood, etc. Yes, marches and activists helped, but without perception shifts they would have been a voice alone in the woods. I think bringing some beauty and (gasp!) positive spirituality back into activism would be a good thing.

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Want clean water? Stop population growth!
Posted by: stilldreaming on Apr 11, 2008 1:40 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Mother Teresa?! She, a Catholic, did not love humanity, since assuring a good future is correlated with stopping exponential population growth.

I just can't figure how can anyone write about these issues and avoid the obvious: water, like habitable land, is a limited quantity, and even technical innovations and science (wich Mother Teresa's Catholic Church did its best to squash) cannot keep up with our still growing population.

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Better ways to help the environment besides paraphrasing Masaru Emoto
Posted by: stellabloo on Apr 11, 2008 5:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I mean, you are not even giving him credit for those ideas?
... er, I would consider myself a grassroots activist - 6 yrs of treeplanting followed by a career in water and wastewater treatment. That I consider to be a meaningful commitment to better global health.
The fuzzy wuzzy feely-good new age language of the wannabe environmentalist is met with disdain at government levels where decisions are made. Engineers want to know exactly why or why not a particular design will or will not work. Real change comes from within, with a set of concrete solutions that are readily accessible.

I wrote previously about using an activated charcoal Brita-type filter to produce your own "bottled quality" drinking water.
Now did you know that the average North American uses 350 - 400 quarts ( or litres) of water DAILY? That is the real life engineering estimate for new water services. Obviously there are many ways to trim our environmental footprint and the basic fact - all global warming and other doomsday scenarios aside - is that the earth does not have enough resources to sustain us all in bloated Hollywood bling bling style. Consider your karma before buying $20 000 worth of kitchen cabinets for your 2nd home.
Also please remember that ordinary wastewater treatment processes do not remove persistant organic compounds (wonder cleaners, heavy aromatics, metabolized pharmaceuticals, pesticides etc etc )- if you are drawing from an aquifer and possibly releasing back to that same aquifer via rapid infiltration or tilefields, then you are only poisoning YOURSELF. Or the fellow humans who are unfortunate enough to live downstream from you.
Finally, feel free to ask questions of your local municipality. Get involved with your local utilities. They pay people to answer your questions because you pay their bills ;)
(after all, we do really want you to know why your utility rates are going up; it's not a plot)

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