在第五省的生活和工作的回忆和自然

I. McCarthy
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引用次数: 1

摘要

这篇文章将概述我自己的系统旅程,在我的生活和工作中,参与和远离更自然的包容。回想起来,我可以看到,从童年起,我的生活就充满了可持续发展的实践,因为我的父母种植了我们大部分的食物,从不扔掉任何将来可能有用的东西。在我的第五省协会中,一个是农民的女儿,从小对农村有很深的了解,另一个是生态和气候活动家。在此之前,我是如何做到没有将所有这些整合成一个更连贯的系统路线图的呢?我感谢罗杰·邓肯(2018)和我的许多同事在这个问题上提醒我,我已经知道和经历了什么,以及如何回收利用,因为它可能是一个更有用的未来(西蒙和索尔特,2020;帕默,2014;Santin, 2020;Triantafillou et al., 2016;爱德华兹,2020)。它们帮助我回忆起与自然实践有关的经历,在我们的实践中爱和殖民的可能性,共同创造的爱尔兰本土治疗实践,以及我一次又一次看到的深刻的精神实践的经历,这些实践不仅在我自己的生活中,而且在客户和僧团的生活中培养了韧性和平静。在爱尔兰语中,“athlsamimneacht”是韧性的意思。athlsamimneacht直接翻译过来就是跳跃(越过/进入)一个浅滩,一个开放的空间或两个物体之间的空洞。我对这个翻译产生了共鸣,因为它指出了一个在凯尔特意识中非常重要的有限空间,当然也是第五个省空间。也许适应力或运动障碍是我们所有人在突然出现、恐惧和压力的泛型危机世界中所需要的(Simon, 2021)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Re-Membering and Naturing my Life and Work in a Fifth Province
This paper will outline my own systemic journey of engagements and movements in and away from a more natured inclusion in my life and work.   Looking back, I can see that from childhood my life was filled with sustainability practices in that I had parents who planted much of our food and never threw away anything that might be useful in the future. In my team, the Fifth Province Associates, one was a farmer’s daughter and grew up with a deep knowledge of our countryside and the other was an ecological and climate activist. How had I managed not to put all this together into a more coherent systemic roadmap before now? I thank Roger Duncan (2018) and many of my colleagues here in this issue for re-minding me of what I already knew and experienced, and how it could be recycled as it were for a possible more useful future (Simon & Salter, 2020; Palmer, 2014; Santin, 2020; Triantafillou et al., 2016; Edwards, 2020). They have facilitated me to re-member experiences around nature practices, the possibilities for love and colonisation in our practices, the co-creation of an indigenous Irish therapy practice and my experiences of a deep spiritual practice which I have seen over and over again to foster resilience and equanimity1 not only in my own life but also in the lives of clients and those in our Sangha. In the Irish language, the word for resilience, athléimneacht is interesting. Athléimneacht directly translated means jumping (across/in) a ford, an open space or a hollow between two objects. I resonate with this translation as it points to a liminal space so important in Celtic consciousness and of course a fifth province space. Maybe resilience or athléimneacht has been called forth as a need in all of us by the sudden advent, fear and stress of a world in panmorphic crisis (Simon, 2021).  
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